Category: archives
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Watershed is awarded major Dodge Foundation grant
The Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation has announced a grant award totaling $275,000 to the Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed Association for environmental and educational programs. The award was part of more than $5 million in grants by the Dodge Foundation to nonprofits in the state and surrounding areas. The Watershed’s municipal excellence program is to receive $100,000…
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Strike leaves borough trash on curb
Waste Management dispute affects many downtown businesses as well. By: Jennifer Potash Princeton Borough residents arriving home Monday evening probably happened upon an unwelcome sight their garbage containers still at the curb full of trash. The borough’s trash hauler, Waste Management, is in the middle of a labor dispute with its Teamsters union members,…
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MILESTONES
Issue of Jan. 11 FINANCIAL SERVICES Theodore "Ted" J. Kompa has been elected for 2005 as vice president-finance of the Commercial Finance Association. Founded in 1944, CFA is a trade association whose members include the asset-based lending arms of domestic and foreign commercial banks, small and large independent finance organizations and financing subsidiaries of major…
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West Windsor seeking new municipal judge
Candidates to be interviewed to replace Judge David Saltman. By: Jill Matthews WEST WINDSOR The township has collected applications and will soon begin interviewing candidates to fill the vacancy left when Municipal Judge David Saltman stepped down from the bench. Judge Saltman, who was appointed to the position in late 2001 after then-Judge Ray…
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High-tech health care
Doctors go digital for a paperless future. By: David Campbell Digitized health care is the wave of the future no more paper files, messy doctor’s handwriting and misplaced lab results. But can technology cure all? Some health-care professionals and industry specialists say not necessarily. Dr. Gabriela Bowers and Dr. Brian Thomas are at the…
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593 accepted on early admission to Princeton University
To make up 49 percent of class of 2009. By: David Campbell Less than a third of the 2,039 high school seniors who applied to Princeton University for early admission got the good news last month. The university accepted 593 students from a pool of applicants who applied to the class of 2009, the university…
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OBITUARIES, Jan. 11, 2005
Gerald R. Covello, Seymour M. Bogdonoff, Frank K. Bennett, Paul K. Weimer, Dr. Horace R. Trumbull, Belle Byer. Gerald R. Covello Headed software firm Gerald R. Covello of Princeton died Thursday as a result of an automobile accident. He was 50. Born in Newark, he lived in East Brunswick before moving to Princeton. He…
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It’s steal and run once again for Dinky ‘kiss and run’ sign
A popular decoration for bedroom and dorm room walls. By: David Campbell When former Princeton Borough mayor Barbara Boggs Sigmund first proposed short-term "kiss and run" parking outside the Dinky rail station in the late 1980s, she probably didn’t anticipate the extra work she was creating for the borough’s Public Works Department. The distinctive signs…
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Benchley seeks moratorium on Witherspoon Street development
A freeze on building while future of a key corridor is worked out. By: Jennifer Potash With many variables regarding the future development of Witherspoon Street still undecided including the pivotal question of whether the University Medical Center of Princeton will relocate from its current site or seek to expand where it is …
