If Connor Shellenberger is Mr. May, freshman McCabe Millon may be staking his claim to be Mr. Next May. And the one after that. And the one after that.
Noncitizen voting, already illegal in federal elections, becomes a centerpiece of 2024 GOP messaging
Republicans are introducing legislation and fall ballot measures, ensuring the issue will remain in voters' minds in the months ahead.
Piedmont Door Service celebrated its 30th anniversary with a ribbon cutting ceremony on May 16.
Police Department, Sheriff's Office, host bikers, ceremonies, travel to Memorial Wall in D.C. to honor the fallen.
Mortimer Marshall Sr. served in WWI, with the FBI before returning to Culpeper to serve the community’s grieving families; plaque unveiled at historic building.
First 3rd Thursday of 2024 brings in 800 people
There are any number of homilies about history.
State Police on Monday identified the pilot as Grover C. McCall Jr., 66, of Alexandria.
Culpeper County Department of Economic Development hosted an inaugural Business Appreciation Reception at Old Trade Brewery.
U.S. Rep. Spanberger again calls out USPS amid ongoing disruptions at Richmond Regional Processing & Distribution Center, servicing much of the 7th District.
Connor Shellenberger has scored 130 goals as a college lacrosse player.None was bigger than Sunday’s.
Registered nurse Myra Griffin nominated by patients for gentle demeanor, caring, the connections made with local families in times of illness, emergency.
For the second straight day, Eden Bigham tossed a complete-game gem to lead the Virginia softball team to a shutout win over Miami (Ohio).
This year’s program offered $25 per student to contribute through Give Local Piedmont.
East Fairfax district supervisor David Lee held a town hall meeting at the Culpeper County Library on May 11, his second since being elected to the Board of Supervisors.
The Culpeper Animal Shelter is at 10144 James Monroe Highway (U.S. 29), south of town. Call 540/547-4477.
Virginia Dept. of Transportation scheduled maintenance and road work.
Harrison Didawick's 13th-inning walk-off homer ended a five-hour long game and gave Virginia a sweep of Virginia Tech.
A tractor-trailer was traveling west when an unknown vehicle made an unsafe lane change, causing the truck to run off the left side, hit a guardrail, and overturn in the median, spreading its cargo all over the highway.
Culpeper Baptist CDC started in 1949 in the former church location on East Davis Street; families asked to send in photos, memories for June celebration.
While temperatures can fluctuate year-over-year, the average continues to increase as the climate warms
Tanya Gould met her trafficker as an 18-year-old, during a field trip with friends to an amusement park; now an advocate in the attorney general's office, she was special speaker at Culpeper Crime Victim Witness luncheon.
The Culpeper NAACP will hold a Juneteenth celebration at Yowell Meadow Park on Saturday, June 15, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Alternative school cleans up campus, supports clean water
Virginia Bronze handbell ensemble at Culpeper Baptist
In 1974, President Gerald Ford penned a presidential proclamation in support of Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Week across the country. From May 19-25, we pay homage to the past and present EMS personnel across the nation.
The Virginia softball team shuts out Miami (Ohio) in their NCAA Tournament opener
Mini Tyrrell, 19, has helped raise over $600,000 for pediatric cancer through "Mini's Mission." The Manassas native races in the CARS Tour.
Bennett's charge is to design an offense that not only fits his new personnel, but also remedies the malaise that marked the end of last season
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Culpeper homes with at least five bedrooms.
Gov. Glenn Youngkin added to his record-long list of vetoes, killing 48 measures including those that would add a right to contraception to Virginia law.
The man had driven with the deceased female in the vehicle to numerous locations throughout Washington County, Virginia, for more than an eight-hour period, officials believe.
Read through the obituaries published today in Culpeper Star-Exponent.
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The Elizabethtown graduate transfer is batting .418.
Brian Battie, who transferred to Auburn for the 2023 season, was reportedly shot in the head in his hometown of Sarasota, Florida, and his brother was killed.
Assistant coach Marquita Holmes and Botetourt County Public schools mutually agreed to several changes following a mediation involving the U.S. Department of Education
Tober’s a three-year varsity starter for the Trojans and a captain since her sophomore year. She was a big piece in the 2022 Class 3 state-title run for New Kent.
On the Across the Sky podcast, we delve into the complexities of forecasting seasonal trends and the impact of climate change with special guest Jan Dutton, a meteorologist from Prescient Weather.
🎧 Get a recap of recent financial, health and general interest stories through this special edition of our Hot off the Wire daily news podcast.
🎧 The hosts talk about why too few residential units are being built, and what actions are needed to make change at the local level.
The curtains eventually fall on every popular television program. Sure, "The Simpsons" is still going strong at 35 seasons, but that's the exception rather than the rule.
Designer Anthony Rubio threw the now-annual fashion fete Monday night, sending 18 dogs down the red carpet at New York's American Kennel Club Museum of the Dog. Each canine donned couture similar to what celebrities wore at the Met Gala just two weeks earlier.
Taken together, recent Department of Transportation rules and the final version of the FAA Reauthorization Act amount to good, but not great news for consumers. First, and this was important, we didn't lose anything. Gains are modest, consisting mainly of provisions under consideration for quite a while, but solid and welcome.
In R.O. Kwon’s second novel “Exhibit” (Riverhead Books), the bestselling author of “The Incendiaries” tackles desire and sexuality with compelling and concise prose. Like Kwon, her protagonists are ethnically Korean. “I had the great luck of getting to visit Seoul a couple of times in 2023, both for work and for pleasure,” she said. “It’s the city of my birth, but I haven’t begun to spend as much time there as I’d like. Part of ‘Exhibit’ – toward the end – takes place in Seoul and that section was colored by my travels. It’s an intensely emotional part of the book – someone my narrator loves very much is in desperate peril. I cried a lot while writing it and still can’t read it without tearing up, which also feels colored by Korea.” Based out of San Francisco, Kwon stays in touch with her readers on Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/ro.kwon/) and Twitter/X (https://twitter.com/rokwon). You may learn more about her book at ro-kwon.com.