Jennifer Harper
Articles by Jennifer Harper
Tight budgets mean less bang for July 4 bashes
So much for the rockets' red glare, not to mention the cadence of the town band or the parade of high-stepping locals. Published June 22, 2009
Inside Politics Weekend: Papa-palooza
Father's Day offers something even querulous Republicans and Democrats can agree on. TV dads. Published June 21, 2009
ABC employees donated heavily to Obama
As indignation turned to outrage Thursday among critics of an ABC News prime-time special on President Obama's health care policy, The Washington Times has learned that ABC employees gave 80 times as much money to Mr. Obama's 2008 campaign for president than to his rival's. Published June 19, 2009
Don’t worry, be happy, health study says
Say hello, get socializing and be happy. Medical researchers have established a direct link between a buoyant, outgoing personality and better health. Published June 18, 2009
Voight meets harsh political criticism
Jon Voight is at the cusp of a cultural moment. Fellow actors and celebrities are not heaping criticism on the silver-screen conservative following his feisty criticisms of President Obama, made in a speech before Republicans and in The Washington Times last week. Published June 17, 2009
GOP fears slant in ABC news special
Relations between ABC News and President Obama are being criticized as becoming too intimate, as the network announced it would produce a prime-time broadcast from the White House that includes questions solicited from viewers without equal time for the Republican point of view. Published June 17, 2009
Study links pigs to flu pandemic
Mexican drug lords, anti-immigration activists, crafty Republicans and greedy drug companies have all been cited by the public as causes for the pandemic. But according to scientists, the source begins with pigs as innocent as these. Published June 16, 2009
Inside Politics Weekend: Hardball’s toll
The heavy partisan stroke and rigorous demands of MSNBC's "Hardball" and other cable opinion programs exact a price from those journalists who appear on them. It ain't easy. Published June 14, 2009
CDC plans massive swine flu immunization
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday released numbers showing the extent of the swine flu outbreak in the United States, one day after the World Health Organization officially declared the illness - also called H1N1 - to be a worldwide pandemic. Americans should anticipate a massive immunization campaign in late September. Published June 13, 2009
Buyers in the wings for Boston Globe
Cliffhanger has turned into a melodrama between parent company and billion-dollar baby. Published June 13, 2009
Long-awaited shift to digital TV arrives
The big DTV moment is here - like New Year's Eve, labor pains or the millennium. After months of hand-holding public service announcements, intense how-to workshops, television specials and confusion over discount coupons, Americans will finally get their DTV. Published June 12, 2009
How Tweet it is, AP style decrees
The press is cleared to Tweet. Published June 12, 2009
Times wins 10 SPJ awards, 6 first-place
The Washington Times won 10 awards Wednesday for reporting, photojournalism and criticism in the Society of Professional Journalists' local 2008 Dateline Awards contest. Published June 11, 2009
New York Times aims to sell Boston Globe
After months of family squabbles, the New York Times is interested in finding a new parent for its billion-dollar baby. Published June 11, 2009
EXCLUSIVE: Voight calls Obama ‘good actor’
Actor Jon Voight likens the Obama administration to a Hollywood script, rife with technique and craft, very compelling but not necessarily real. Published June 10, 2009
Boston Globe union says no to givebacks
After two months of public drama between the New York Times and the Boston Globe, members of the Boston Newspaper Guild voted Monday night to turn down the Times' demands that the union come up with $10 million in concessions on wages and benefits -- or risk the shuttering of the paper. Published June 9, 2009
Inside Politics Weekend: Needing America
President Obama is a cheerful traveler and apologizes for all sorts of things with great sincerity and flair. His speechifying is almost unparalleled. But wait a minute. Gruff observers will have none of it, even as the engines of Air Force One cool down from overseas flights this week. Published June 7, 2009
Studies: Conservatives easier to disgust
Conservatives are more easily disgusted than liberals when it comes to such squeamish things as maggots, questionable toilet seats and the prospect of eating monkey meat, studies show. Such sensitivity, it seems, plays a role in their ideology and moral values. Published June 6, 2009
Coverage uneven for abortion doctor, soldier
Two apparent politically motivated slayings within 24 hours resulted in some very uneven news coverage. The press paid far more attention to the killing of late-term abortion provider Dr. George Tiller than it did to Army recruiter Pvt. William Andrew Long. Published June 5, 2009
New Zealand rated most peaceful, U.S. 83
Americans pining for a peaceful existence might consider moving to New Zealand, the most peaceful nation on Earth, according to the 2009 Global Peace Index released Tuesday by an Australian-based research group that counts former President Jimmy Carter, Ted Turner and the Dalai Lama among its endorsers. Published June 3, 2009