Category: archives
-

For the March 18 issue
Lois E. Armstrong, Florence Dunn, Norma A. Pezzicola, Joan M. Rossier Mulryne. Lois E. Armstrong WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP Lois E. Armstrong, 61, died March 10 at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital at Hamilton. Born in Bayonne, she had been a resident of Robbinsville for the last 15 years. Ms. Armstrong was a 1960 graduate of…
-

Community rallies to aid Kendall Park fire victims
Family may have lost their home but not their love of their community. By: Joseph Harvie The Stephens family lost its home last month in a fire, but it hasn’t lost its faith and love for its community. On Feb. 11, after an accidental electrical fire destroyed its Joline Road residence, the family of four…
-

EPA project safe from federal cuts
Funding for local work already comitted By:Roger Alvarado Although the federal government may slash $8 million in funding for environmental cleanup projects at toxic Superfund sites across the country, funding is not in jeopardy for the creosote contamination cleanup project at Manville’s Rustic Mall and the nearby Claremont residential development. Last week, Gov. James McGreevey…
-

Baseball squad looks strong in scrimmage
Baseball By: Jim Green In order for the Lawrence High School baseball team to bounce back from its 2-18 campaign of a year ago, it will need, among other things, to be tough. To that end, two accomplished football players will be adding their talents to the Cardinals roster this season. And if Monday’s season-opening…
-

The magical land of Lahaway, Part 7
HISTORICALLY SPEAKING Subtitled "The Road from Hornerstown" by R.P. Dow, secretary of the Brooklyn Entomological Society, this installment was written for the Oct. 5, 1916 Allentown Messenger. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Imlay are comparatively newcomers, for it was rather less than thirty years since they came to this farm from Cream Ridge. To the…
-

Drunken drivers face extended jail visit
New law allows for 8-hour detention. By: Lea Kahn Drunken drivers who pass through Lawrence Township may find themselves guests of the Lawrence Township Police Department until they sober up, under an ordinance that gained final approval Tuesday night. The ordinance allows the police to hold onto a drunken driver until that person’s blood alcohol…
-

The art of history at Monmouth Junction School
Fifth-graders take a multidimensional approach to the history of the presidency. By: Joseph Harvie The students at Monmouth Junction School are combining history, poetry and art in a mural project about three U.S. presidents. Fifth-graders at the school are nearly finished with pastel murals of three presidents, George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and current president, George…
-

Kendall Park man takes helm at South Brunswick Family YMCA
Tom Libassi hopes to take ideas from the corporate world to make YMCA programs stronger. By: Sharlee Joy DiMenichi Leaving the corporate world to take the helm of the South Brunswick Family YMCA was a welcome change for Tom Libassi. "Now I get paid to do a job I love," said Mr. Libassi. Mr. Libassi,…
-

Peace Corps member gets important lessons in world living
Washington Township resident, Lisa Scorsolini, remembers her Peace Corps service in the town of Stepanavan, Armenia. By: Sarah Winkelman WASHINGTON The smiling faces look out from the photos that captured a moment in the past. Lisa Scorsolini looks through the pictures, remembering the time she spent in a country halfway around the world. From…
