Category: archives
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Arts Council proposal on the front burner
Revised expansion plan faces board review. By: Jennifer Potash The Arts Council of Princeton takes the next step Wednesday in its quest for approval of a controversial expansion project. The arts organization’s application is on the Wednesday agenda of the Site Plan Review Advisory Board of the Princeton Regional Planning Board, which will meet at…
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PU hoops looks beyond exams
Tigers have time before Ivy opener By: Justin Feil The Princeton University men’s basketball team never got ahead in its 57-53 loss at Minnesota on Saturday, but the Tigers are hoping its latest narrow loss will but them ahead of Ivy League competition in three weeks. Princeton, which does not play due to exams until…
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Walsh has solid effort at Pirate
Fares well against top competition By: Justin Feil In his brief swimming career, Quentin Walsh has endured some tiring moments. His introduction to West Windsor-Plainsboro High South swimming as a sophomore was just a warm-up. Last fall, he joined the Hamilton Aquatics club team, and fought to complete any workout in his first month. His…
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MILESTONES
Week of Jan. 13-15. LAW International law firm Reed Smith has added aviation attorney Patrick Bradley as a partner in its Princeton office. Mr. Bradley concentrates his practice on the defense of aviation and other product liability actions. Much of his work involves the defense of airlines, aircraft and component parts manufacturers, and pilots in…
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Zoning approval for drugstore held up by design debate
Consultant criticizes appearance of Eckerd building. By: Shanay Cadette WEST WINDSOR The decision to build a proposed Eckerd drugstore on Princeton-Hightstown Road is still up in the air, but some township officials clearly don’t like its design. After hours of discussion Thursday, the Zoning Board of Adjustment was no closer to approving the request…
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Jan. 13, 4:40 p.m.: Rhetoric of morality
Democrats finally link morality to fairness. By: Hank Kalet E.J. Dionne Jr.s column in today’s Washington Post remarks on the changing rhetoric of the Democrats and their recent use of the word "moral," linking the notion of morality to community and the responsibility of a government to its citizens. Whether this rhetoric will work, I…
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Jan. 13, 4:35 p.m.: Bad news for Bushies
A former administration official speaks out about the president in a new book. By: Hank Kalet More evidence that President George W. Bush is a little stingy with the truth, courtesy of former Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill. In a book due out today, Mr. O’Neill charges that the administration began planning the Iraq War several…
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Helen Goulding Butterfoss
Helen Goulding Butterfoss, 89, of Pennington died Jan. 8 at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in Hamilton. Born October 16, 1914 in Trenton, she moved to Pennington in 1955. One of the first to graduate from the then new Trenton Central High School, she went to Trenton Normal School, the new Trenton State Teachers’ College…
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Montgomery to begin picking up Christmas trees
MONTGOMERY The Montgomery Township Department of Public Works will begin its curbside holiday tree collection Thursday. The collection may take several days, but to ensure that the tree is picked up, residents are asked to place it at the curb before Thursday. For those who prefer to drop off their trees, an area of…
