As a D.C. Beltway power player, the late Charles W. Colson worked with a "Thank God it's Monday" attitude that meant his colleagues always knew they could contact him about hot topics and decisions.
WASHINGTON — Watergate felon and prison reformer Charles W. Colson, who died Saturday at age 80 in Northern Virginia, was two people. He was Richard Nixon's "hatchet man," the president's "evil genius ...
As a D.C. Beltway power player, the late Charles W. Colson worked with a "Thank God it's Monday" attitude that meant his colleagues always knew they could contact him about hot topics and decisions.
After Richard Nixon lost the 1960 presidential election to John F. Kennedy and the California governor’s race two years later (when he uttered the immortal line to the media, “You don’t have Nixon to ...
Charles W. Colson — who spent seven months in prison for Watergate-era offenses and became one of the most influential social reformers of the 20th century — was the most thoroughly converted person I ...
Charles W. Colson, President Richard Nixon’s hatchet man, who was convicted of obstruction of Justice in the 1970s and went on to found a prison fellowship ministry, died Saturday in a suburban D.C.
As a D.C. Beltway power player, the late Charles W. Colson worked with a "Thank God it's Monday" attitude that meant his colleagues always knew they could contact him about hot topics and decisions.
Charles W. Colson, a man who apparently lived nine lives as a Marine, President Richard Nixon’s “hatchet man” and an evangelical prison minister, has died. He was 80. Read the in-depth story from The ...
As a D.C. Beltway power player, the late Charles W. Colson worked with a “Thank God it’s Monday” attitude that meant his colleagues always knew they could contact him about hot topics and decisions.
As a D.C. Beltway power player, the late Charles W. Colson worked with a “Thank God it’s Monday” attitude that meant his colleagues always knew they could contact him about hot topics and decisions.