Dress Barn near Farragut North
The Hoover Fisher Flower shop in the Woodmoor Shopping Center has many fun gifts for your Valentine, such as these teddy bears.
Cafe Soleil, one of the many places to eat near Farragut West
Valentine's Day cookies on display at the Woodmoor Bakery.
Aria near Federal Triangle
Born in 1926, John Coltrane grew up in High Point, North Carolina. He played E-flat horn and clarinet, switching to alto saxophone at the age of 15. Coltrane studied at the Ornstein School of Music in Philadelphia and served in a Navy band in Hawaii. In the late 1940s, Coltrane played for bandleaders Eddie Vinson, Jimmy Heath and Dizzy Gillespie, and in 1953, he joined the Johnny Hodges Septet, playing tenor saxophone full-time.
Ida B. Wells, anti-lynching advocate and a proponent of suffrage and civil rights.
Carnivores: people for whom the word "tofu" resonates with about as much familiarity as "quantum physics" or "proper hygiene."
Amnesty International is holding a write-a-thon on Feb. 18 in an effort to end violence against women. The event is part of an world-wide campaign.
A branch of Legal Sea Foods within walking distance of Farragut North
The Hoover Fisher Flower shop in the Woodmoor Shopping Center has beautiful flower arrangements.
Junior Elena Ramsey picks out fun holiday cards for her Valentine.
The Ronald Reagan Building, one of the many beautiful structures near Federal Triangle
The Old Post Office near the Federal Triangle Metro station
Firehook Bakery near Farragut West
Click here for more pictures from Farragut West.
Junior Brian Nieh sings "Ocean Avenue" by "Yellowcard."
Magnets perform a traditional Chinese ribbon dance.
Seniors Ana Karimi and David Crawford swing to the beat of "Sing, Sing, Sing."
National Theatre on Pennsylvania Avenue
Nine Blair students were selected as 2004-2005 Presidential Scholars award candidates. These students represent half of all MCPS candidates, according to the MCPS Bulletin.
The Washington Monument is one of the many famous D.C. landmarks within walking distance of the Smithsonian Metro station.
Araminta Ross, born in Maryland around 1820, worked both as a house slave and a field worker for a family in Dorchester County. Ross was an advocate for slaves' rights and was even hit at one point by a brick while protecting a fellow field worker. As a result, Ross had to deal with a condition that sent her into bouts of deep sleep, presumably narcolepsy, for the rest of her life. In 1844, Ross married John Tubman and took his last name while changing her first to Harriet.
Barami within distance of the Farragut West Metro station
We found 33339 results.