Category: archives
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OBITUARIES, Nov. 9, 2004
Margaret Cook Wallace, Nathan Levine, Julian Saltz Margaret Cook Wallace Community activist Margaret Cook Wallace, a longtime Princeton resident, died Sunday at home. She was 95. Daughter of the late Edmund D. Cook and Margaret Parsons Hewitt, she was born in Trenton and moved to Princeton in 1926. She was a graduate of Miss Fine’s…
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South volleyball tops unfamiliar foe
Pirates advance to second round By: Justin Feil The West Windsor-Plainsboro South girls’ volleyball team didn’t feel as comfortable as usual for its Group III state tournament opener Friday. "We were a little out of our element," said the Pirates’ Laura Schoenfeld. "We played in (WW-P) North’s gym. Also, it was a noon game and…
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Winning raffle ticket-holder must travel far to claim prize
Capt. Christopher Ix may be on duty with the U.S. Army in Iraq, but he is the proud owner of a new car, courtesy of the Princeton Academy of the Sacred Heart. By: David Campbell An Army Ranger serving in Iraq is the lucky winner of a 2002 Honda S2000 in a fund-raising raffle for…
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New golf course clubhouse is approved
Regional Planning Board gives Springdale Golf Club the go-ahead in a 9-1 vote. By: David Campbell The Princeton Regional Planning Board on Thursday night approved a plan by Springdale Golf Club to build a new clubhouse, driving range and putting green at the southern end of the golf course off Alexander Street. The planning board…
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Red Cross is gearing up for a new post-9/11 role
Area chapter is halfway toward its $6 million fund-raising goal for a new facility, equipment and programs. By: Jill Matthews PLAINSBORO With the heightened need for disaster relief services in a post-Sept. 11 world, the American Red Cross of Central New Jersey announced Thursday its $6 million campaign aimed at funding a new facility,…
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Hun brings out the best in St. Benedict’s
Boys’ soccer team falls in Prep A final By: Justin Feil When the Hun School boys’ soccer team scored three goals in a 6-3 loss to St. Benedict’s last year, it changed the way the Raiders were treated. No longer were they just another New Jersey team, one to overlook on a loaded schedule. Since…
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‘Twelfth Night’
Circle Players find that New Jersey audiences love the Bard, when done well. By: Stuart Duncan There is a general perception among community theater groups that Shakespeare is box-office poison. For that matter, any serious show is suspect. It is far better to stick to Neil Simon, or a bedroom farce, or, if one can…
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‘The Real Thing’
Theatre Intime stages this Tom Stoppard play on the Princeton University campus. By: Stuart Duncan One of the challenges that actors and directors at Theatre Intime on the campus of Princeton University always face is the question of age. Twenty-year-olds are called on to portray characters of all ages. Some are better than others in…
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Among old friends
Bill Bradley talks politics, basketball and life at Friends of the Princeton Public Library annual benefit. By: Jennifer Potash From the state of professional basketball to the state of the union, former U.S. Sen. Bill Bradley (D-N.J.) waxed philosophical on several topics before a standing-room-only crowd at Nassau Presbyterian Church on Friday evening. Mr. Bradley…
