Tuesday, July 5, 2016

Who really captured Robert E. Lee's son in the Civil War? and other top stories.

  • Who really captured Robert E. Lee's son in the Civil War?

    Who really captured Robert E. Lee's son in the Civil War?
    CLINTON â€” Frank Everett White Jr. is trying to correct history. Three days before Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox ended the Civil War, his son George Washington Custis Lee was captured at the Battle of Sailor's Creek in Virginia. The U.S. Army later awarded the medal of honor to Harris Hawthorn of New York for the capture of Lee, a major general in the Confederate Army. According to White, the medal really belongs to his great-great-grandfather, David Dunnels White, a farmer and sold..
    >> view original

  • 2 men charged with gun possession in Newark

    2 men charged with gun possession in Newark
    NEWARK â€” Two city men were arrested Saturday night after officers found them with handguns at a housing complex, police said.  Newark police responded to the John W. Hyatt housing complex, located on Roanoke Court in the city's Ironbound section, shortly before 10 p.m. after receiving an anonymous tip, Capt. Derek Glenn said in a news release. The citizen called police to report that two men were circling through the housing complex with a gun in their vehicle, Glenn said. Based on a vehicle..
    >> view original

  • 4-alarm Newark blaze displaces 28 residents, injures firefighter

    4-alarm Newark blaze displaces 28 residents, injures firefighter
    NEWARK - A four-alarm blaze that spread to multiple buildings in Newark late Sunday displaced 28 residents and sent a firefighter to the hospital for evaluation, authorities said. A four-alarm blaze spread to multiple buildings in Newark late Tuesday. (Photo courtesy of Newark police)  More than 100 firefighters battled the fire, which was reported in a three-story residence on Pennsylvania Avenue shortly after 11 p.m., authorities said. When firefighters arrived, they found multiple three-sto..
    >> view original

  • N.J. gets $4M to beef up security at houses of worship, nonprofits

    N.J. gets $4M to beef up security at houses of worship, nonprofits
    TRENTON — New Jersey religious institutions and nonprofits located in areas considered at high risk for terror attacks and other threats will receive $4.26 million in federal funding to beef up security, the state homeland security office announced on Friday. The money, awarded to the state Office of Homeland Security and Preparedness, will go to 58 different institutions under a program known as the Jersey City/Newark Urban Area Security Initiative. "In today's current threat environment, it ..
    >> view original

  • Multiple crashes yield minor injuries in Clinton Twp.

    Multiple crashes yield minor injuries in Clinton Twp.
    CLINTON TWP. â€” A child suffered apparently minor injuries when the Chevrolet Prism the child was in collided with a Volkswagen Passat on June 24, police said. The accident happened at the intersection of Route 173 and Center Street at 10:50 a.m. Police said a 2013 Passat driven by Anacleide Conceicao-Dealmei, 31, of Newark collided with a 1994 Chevrolet Prism driven by Cynthia Stanford, 62, of Clinton Township, at the intersection of Route 173 and Center Street. The investigating officer iss..
    >> view original

  • 'Devil is in the details' of Christie school aid plan

    'Devil is in the details' of Christie school aid plan
      UNION COUNTY -- When Gov. Chris Christie revealed his "Fairness Formula" education plan that would allocate $6,559 per student in every school district, Rahway Superintendent Patricia Camp learned her school district would get an 18 percent increase in school funding. But Camp is reluctant to accept the numbers at face value. "So Christie's proposal would get us an additional $4 to $5 million in state aid," Camp said. "But how much of that would we get to use for the students versus having ..
    >> view original

  • WATCH: Booker speaks about the vice presidency

    WATCH: Booker speaks about the vice presidency
    WASHINGTON â€” U.S. Sen. Cory Booker declined Sunday to talk about his own vice-presidential prospects while auditioning for the role by attacking presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump. "This is a dangerous man," Booker said of Trump on CNN's "State of the Union." Booker referred questions about his own chances of being vice president to the campaign of presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton. He declined to say whether the Clinton campaign was conducting a background..
    >> view original

  • Wife of Bayonne cop who beat handcuffed man indicted in $20K ...

    BAYONNE — The wife of a former city police officer who beat a handcuffed man with a flashlight was indicted last month in a $20,000 housing loan scheme, according to federal authorities.The June 20 indictment of Rose Lillo, the wife of Domenico Lillo, charges her with aiding and abetting the theft of government funds, as well as making a false report to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.Rose Lillo was charged in February 2015 in connection to the loan scheme but her indictme..
    >> view original

  • Doctor admits role in medical lab bribery scheme

    NEWARK >> A doctor faces up to five years in prison after pleading guilty in a long-running bribes-for-test referrals scheme involving a now-defunct New Jersey firm. Federal prosecutors say 58-year-old Juan Espindola pleaded guilty to violating the travel act by accepting bribes. He faces up to five years in prison when he’s sentenced Oct. 12. Espindola is a Montclair resident who has a medical practice in Clifton. He got the bribes from Parsippany-based Biodiagnostic Laboratory Services f..
    >> view original

  • Scholarship applications: Make them remember you

    Scholarship applications: Make them remember you
    Putting extra effort into the writing of a scholarship application can help an individual make a memorable impression compared to the efforts of numerous other applicants. A few years ago, Rachel Lazar earned the distinction of being awarded the Jack Kent Cooke Foundation (JKCF) College Scholarship, which is given to only about 40 scholars annually. College scholars receive up to $40,000 per year, college planning support, ongoing advising and the chance to network with the larger JKCF Scholar..
    >> view original

Biden Sees 'Significant Breakthroughs' On The Horizon For Cancer Initiative .These 5 Facts Explain Why Brexit Could Lead to a UK Breakup .
"Urgent" air bag danger for 313000 Honda owners .Ku Klux Klan at 150: After Civil War and civil rights, KKK looks to rise again .

No comments:

Post a Comment