The Washington Times

Easter

Latest Easter Items
  • Dust off the gloves: Snow White rivalry heats up

    Hollywood's Snow White rivalry is heating up.


  • Gap between dueling Snow White movies shrinks

    Hollywood's Snow White rivalry is heating up.


  • George Poveromo's Salt Water Sportsman National Seminar Series will be at the Doubletree Hotel in Annapolis on Feb. 4. Go to www.nationalseminarseries.com for complete details. (Courtesy of Dr. Ken Neill)

    Gene Mueller's Fishing Report

    Although the close-in Atlantic Ocean in Virginia and North Carolina continues to deliver great catches of tunas and striped bass, this also is a good time to think of planning outings to the Tarheel State's surf and inlet waters that are not far from the Virginia border.


  • BOOK REVIEW: 'Reefs and Shoals'

    Check the log, shipmate: Dewey Lambdin has left Alexander Kent and C.S. Forester hull-down in an ocean of words and is closing on Patrick O'Brian as the most prolific historical novelist to celebrate a Royal Navy mariner during the age of sail.


  • The home at 1519 Pathfinder Lane in West McLean is on the market for $1,199,000. The four-bedroom home was built in 2005.

    Resale of the week: Comfort, convenience, community all in one

    The neighborhood of West McLean is conveniently close to downtown Washington and Tysons Corner, but many residents love it even more because of the community activities.


  • ** FILE ** In this December 2011 file photo, President Obama with first lady Michelle Obama and their daughters, Sasha and Malia, walk from the White House to attend a Sunday service at St. John's Church, where every president since James Madison has worshipped. (Associated Press)

    Inside Politics

    President Obama and his family attended a worship service Sunday morning at an Episcopal church just across the Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House where presidents frequently have visited.


  • Carry Nation spelled her name "Carrie" earlier in life but preferred the spelling "Carry" once she became a Prohibition zealot. She often said that Prohibition "would carry a nation." (Associated Press)

    Prohibition crusader's legacy fades in Kansas

    Turn-of-the-century teetotaler Carry A. Nation began her campaign against drinking by busting up saloons in Kansas, which to this day has some of the strictest liquor laws in the country. But even in the town where her legacy is enshrined, the influence of the hatchet-wielding crusader is waning.


  • Gene Mueller's Fishing Report

    Outstanding catches of striped bass and occasional hookups with spotted sea trout are possible over many areas of the Chesapeake Bay.


  • Army National Guard Sgt. Danny Sousa (center) and others from the 79th Troop Command work alongside  firefighters to clear trees and make roads passable in Barre, Mass., on Monday, Oct. 31, 2011. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

    Oct. storm disrupts Halloween across Northeast

    Twelve-year-old McKenzie Gallasso was deciding between dressing as a witch or a werewolf when the phone rang with bad news: Halloween had been canceled.


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