Lorton|News|
Time to Check for Ticks
Lyme disease, spreading rapidly nationwide, can be hard to diagnose, as non-specific symptoms also occur in many other diseases.

Hi, I'm James Cullum, the editor of the Lorton and Fairfax Station Patch sites. I'm a native of San Antonio, Texas, and graduated from Vermont's Goddard College, where I studied creative writing. Over the past ten years, I've covered the White House, Pentagon, U.S. Capitol, Fairfax County and the City of Alexandria.
I seriously picked up photography after the earthquake in Haiti, and spent some time there reporting immediately following the disaster. Internationally, I've reported from Israel, Haiti, Morocco, Algeria, South Sudan and who knows where next. So, I'm a writer and a photographer, but no matter what, it's the writing that truly inspires me.
My favorite authors are Beryl Markham, James Joyce, Kurt Vonnegut, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Hunter Thompson, Guy de Maupassant and P.G. Wodehouse.
I'm also a movie buff. Here's a list of my Top 10 Favorite Films:
Vertigo
Lawrence of Arabia
The Godfather (1 & 2)
Some Like it Hot
The Year of Living Dangerously
A Clockwork Orange
Modern Times
The Third Man
Pulp Fiction
Raiders of the Lost Ark
My parents are Jim and Blanquita Cullum. Jim Cullum is a world-reknowned jazz musician and Blanquita is an internationally-recognized television and radio broadcaster. My sister, Blanquita Sullivan, is a fashion designer and works for Anthropology; sister Bonnie owns a theatre in Austin, Texas; brother Chris owns and operates a food truck in San Antonio and sister Lene works at ClearChannel Radio.
The family is full of artists and entrepreneurs. My goal is to be a good steward of the Cullum name here in Northern Virginia.
Lyme disease, spreading rapidly nationwide, can be hard to diagnose, as non-specific symptoms also occur in many other diseases.

Some businesses are doing surprisingly well.
The Lorton-based company has 1,500 locations in development around the country - here's a bit more behind the business
See his work in building W-9.
LCAC pantry still needs cereal, snacks for kids and mac 'n cheese.
The season starts at the end of August.
His pen and ink drawings take hundreds of hours to finish from his studio at the Workhouse.
Ownership and history collide on a one-lane bridge.
What will happen to the three businesses at the barn during renovation?
Horseback riding, dancing and a giant inflatable slide!
It's a lifelong love story.
What kind of retail business would you like to see here?
Is it curtains for the caped crusader?
How does he manage all those art shows and artists?
It's a food truck, so you have to follow it on Twitter.