• PRINCETON: Olive May natural food store closes

    By Lauren Otis, Staff Writer    PRINCETON —   Olive May, the natural foods store on Nassau Street whose increasingly sparse shelves had prompted speculation in recent months, has gone out of business.    At the store location at 255 Nassau St. a sign announced that the store had closed and the store contents were the subject of…

  • HIGHTSTOWN: Police Beat

       Jorge Guaman-Geovany, 31, of Deerfield Apartments, was taken into custody Saturday on a $400 North Brunswick traffic warrant. Police said they stopped his car at 9:10 a.m. on North Main Street after they saw it traveling 35 mph in a 25-mph zone.    Mr. Guaman-Geovany also was charged with speeding and being an unlicensed driver. *…

  • PLAINSBORO: New Village Center expansion proposed

    By Kristine Snodgrass, Staff Writer    PLAINSBORO — A proposal for two new buildings in the Village Center comprising 45,000 square feet are expected to go before the township Planning Board later this month.    The proposed buildings would be built on the corner of Liberty Street and Market Square North, cattycornered to the new Plainsboro Library,…

  • PRINCETON: A new director treasures the art museum

    PRINCETON: A new director treasures the art museum

    James Steward, director of the Princeton University Art Museum, in front of the main entrance. Staff photo by Mark Czajkowski

  • HIGHTSTOWN: Still stalled over number of taxicabs

    By Matt Chiappardi, Staff Writer    HIGHTSTOWN — While the Borough Council did unanimously introduce an ordinance that would greatly restrict where taxis can park and idle locally, the issue of how many taxi companies and cabs can operate in the borough still remained unresolved this week.    The ordinance that did get introduced would make it…

  • Parents and kids ‘eat in’ for good nutrition

    Parents and kids ‘eat in’ for good nutrition

    Adi Benito extricates a serving of croquembouche from a tower of caramel-glazed cream puffs made and donated by Terra Momo Restaurant Group for the Labor Day Eat-In/Potluck for School Lunch Reform. Photo by Princeton School Gardens Cooperative)

  • MONROE: Strong defense key for Falcons

    Football opens against RBC By Ken Weingartner, Special Writer    With a roster featuring 21 seniors and eight returning starters on a defense that gave up only 7.3 points per game, Monroe Township High football coach Chris Beagan enters this year with great expectations.    The Falcons, who open their campaign tonight at home against Red Bank…

  • Parents and kids ‘eat in’ for good nutrition

    Parents and kids ‘eat in’ for good nutrition

    Ritu Harrison, who organized Princeton’s Eat-In for School Lunch Reform, discusses benefits to children, teachers and the local economy of replacing processed items with fruits, vegetables and whole grains. Photo by Princeton School Gardens Cooperative

  • WEST WINDSOR: 2 candidates file for Township Council race

    By Kristine Snodgrass, Staff Writer    WEST WINDSOR — Township voters will have two candidates to choose from in November to fill a vacancy on council.    Diane Ciccone of Penn Lyle Road was council’s choice in April to fill the vacancy left by Councilman Will Anklowitz, who resigned from council following his nomination as a state…

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