Category: archives
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WW moves to revoke tax-exempt status for two nonprofits
Issue now before tax court as township searches for ways to increase revenues. By: Shanay Cadette WEST WINDSOR The township has challenged the tax-exempt status of two organizations that bill themselves as nonprofits International School Services Inc. on Roszel Road and Community Options Inc. on Alexander Road as it searches for ways…
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Township ready to start last ‘all-out’ deer cull
Wildlife management firm to begin as early as tonight. By: David Campbell Weather permitting, the fourth year of Princeton Township’s deer-management program could begin as early as tonight, Anthony DeNicola, president of wildlife-management firm White Buffalo, Inc. said Monday. Mr. DeNicola, whose Connecticut firm has a $155,000 contract with the township for what could be…
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Jan. 6, 4 p.m.: Thoughts on the debate
Some not-so-random observations. By: Hank Kalet Some thoughts on Sunday night’s debate: 1. The Democrats seem committed to recreating the debacle that was the 1972 election for them, but not because the candidate they appear likely to nominate former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean is too liberal. What people forget about the 1972 race…
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Catherine M. Lawler
Catherine M. Lawler, 88, of Titusville died Jan. 1 at home. Born in Ewing Township, she resided in Ewing most of her life and moved to Titusville two years ago. Mrs. Lawler retired in 1977 from the Ewing Township Board of Education where she was a cafeteria manager at William Anthiel School for 24 years.…
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Jan. 5, 4:44 p.m.: Remembering the forgotten
Questioning the wisdom of free-market economists and remembering those left in the economy’s cold. By: Hank Kalet E.J. Dionne Jr. cuts to the chase in a recent column in the Washington Post. He asks that we remember the folks the media has made it its business to forget, the folks who government ignores, who do…
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Take pneumonia seriously don’t delay seeking treatment
It is important for the patient to continue taking medication according to the doctor’s instructions because pneumonia can recur if not properly treated. By: Lorraine Seabrook While the widespread prevalence of influenza continues to capture today’s headlines, many people are suffering from a different infection that is just as serious pneumonia. According to the…
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Pictures at an Exhibition
Photographers David Miller and Rhoda Kassoff-Isaac present a duo show at Gallery 14 in Hopewell. By: Susan Van Dongen David Miller took a discreet shot of a girl lighting a candle in a small church not far from the Kremlin (top) and photographed a vendor near Red Square in Moscow (below). Both images are on…
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Dia:Beacon Beckons
Minimalism is maximized in this contemporary art museum. By: Pat Summers Richard Serra’s, ‘Torqued Ellipse II’ (above) and Michael Heizer’s ‘North, East, South, West’ (below), on view at Dia:Beacon in Beacon, N.Y. Located on the eastern side of the Hudson River about an hour north of Manhattan, the city of Beacon, N.Y., is already famously…
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Jan. 5, 4:446 p.m.: More evidence against capital punishment
The story of Darryl Hunt offers another reason to question the death penalty. By: Hank Kalet Bob Herbert offers more compelling evidence that innocents die when the death penalty is used in this New York Times column.
