The Washington Times

Topic - Cherry Hill

Subscribe to this topic via RSS or ATOM
Related Stories
  • Camden County Prosecutor Warren W. Faulk announces Oct. 4, 2012, in Camden, N.J., that three teachers and two administrators at a southern New Jersey high school have been arrested on charges stemming from allegations involving sex with students. (Associated Press)

    Teachers, bosses charged in N.J. school sex scandal

    Six months ago, a student came to Triton High School Principal Catherine DePaul with a disturbing story: She believed another student was involved in a sexual relationship with a teacher at the school, and she'd seen explicit text messages the two had exchanged. At that moment, prosecutors say, a cover-up was put in motion.

  • American Scene: 'NJWeedman' convicted of pot possession

    Jurors in New Jersey have delivered a mixed verdict at the trial of a marijuana activist who lives in California and goes by the name "NJWeedman."

  • Furor after NJ hometown removes Landon plaque

    There's a bonanza of controversy and a big mess in a little New Jersey town over a decision to move a plaque honoring hometown celebrity Michael Landon.

  • Demonstrators wave signs and shout as unionized workers and supporters turned out Feb. 25 outside New Jersey's Statehouse in Trenton, N.J., to rally in support of Wisconsin public employees who at the time were locked in a battle over collective-bargaining rights. (Associated Press)

    Anger brews over government workers' benefits

    When Erin McFarlane, 36, looks at public workers, she sees lucrative pension benefits she doesn't ever expect to get. And it makes her angry.

  • Making first artificial leg

    James Edward Hanger was a healthy man of 18 and a sophomore at Washington College in Lexington, Va., when he decided to fight in the War Between the States. Local officials considered him too young to join the Confederate army, but when he found an ambulance corps vehicle carrying food and other supplies for the Confederacy, he simply made himself part of the group leaving his hometown of Churchville, Va.

  • Making first artificial leg

    James Edward Hanger was a healthy man of 18 and a sophomore at Washington College in Lexington, Va., when he decided to fight in the War Between the States. Local officials considered him too young to join the Confederate army, but when he found an ambulance corps vehicle carrying food and other supplies for the Confederacy, he simply made himself part of the group leaving his hometown of Churchville, Va.

More Stories →

Happening Now