Category: archives
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Carman gets extended sentence
Judge rebuffs motion for mistrial before handing down 35-year sentence By:Audrey Levine Robert Carman, 39, of Manville, was sentenced today to 35 years to life in prison after a jury found him guilty of murder in the first degree in June. Mr. Carman was found guilty of beating Jacqueline Bodo, 23, of Manville, to death…
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WW council passes set of redevelopment project principles
Proposal for a ‘contract’ by Councilman Charles Morgan rejected By: Greg Forester WEST WINDSOR Township Council passed its principles resolution for the ongoing redevelopment project last week, but only after a principle included in the document was removed and put off for discussion at a later date. Council members and the mayor objected to…
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Juvenile chicken pox can lead to shingles
Medical science still doesn’t know why the shingles virus may reactivate in one person with certain risk factors and not in another with the same risk factors By: Harpeet Sidhu, M.D. Just as an earthquake can have an aftershock, chicken pox a disease that strikes most people in their childhood can have an…
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A new face for a new era
Princeton Shopping Center gets a makeover By: Katie Wagner Deeann Lemmerling, co-owner of Bon Apetit, in the Princeton Shopping Center, worked hard to improve the interior of her store during the past few years. She repainted the interior, expanded the building to create café seating and hired local artists to paint reproductions of Toulouse Lautrec…
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Rider fraternity president latest to be arraigned
Two more expected to be arraigned Thursday in case of student’s death By: Lea Kahn TRENTON Rider University student Michael J. Tourney, who was president of the Phi Kappa Tau fraternity, was arraigned Friday morning on a charge of aggravated hazing before Mercer County state Superior Court Judge Andrew Smithson. Mr. Tourney, 21, offered…
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Renewing community
Dorothy Moote leads a movement that seeks to balance the scales of justice By: Pat Summers In her comfortable living room overlooking a lush garden that seems to go on forever, five recorders rest on a stand. Of various sizes and colors, they include alto, tenor, soprano and two basses. Dorothy Moote has played these…
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Sherry called to Cal
PU graduate brings lacrosse experience West By: Justin Feil Sometimes you can’t fight a calling. So it seems for Princeton University graduate Theresa Sherry. Growing up in Baltimore as an All-Metro selection in soccer, basketball and lacrosse, coaching was something she saw as beneath a person of her intellect. "I wanted to use my other…
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Letters to the Editor, Aug. 14
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR, Aug. 14 Sad to see shoe shop close To the editor: On July 17, I took a pair of shoes to John’s Shoe Shop on Tulane Street only to discover that the 17th was the last day for shoe repairs. I had known previously that the shop was closing because…
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Guest conductors named for Princeton Symphony
Pulitzer Prize-winner Gunther Schuller and four others selected By: Michael Redmond Pulitzer Prize-winning composer and conductor Gunther Schuller, a recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship the so-called "genius award" who is recognized worldwide as an important figure in American music, will be one of five guest conductors to lead the Princeton Symphony Orchestra during…
