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NJ private colleges borrow, build and devise new courses to lure students

NJ county colleges to get dorms? | NJ Spotlight News

The hearing on the bill was odd, with none of the bill’s sponsors, nor anyone else, testifying in favor or against the bill. Assemblywoman DiAnne Gove (R-Ocean) asked if any members knew “why are we doing this right now.” Committee chair Mila Jasey (D-Essex) responded, “I actually don’t have any information on that.” Still, there was a quick call for a vote, which was approved 5-0, with Gove abstaining because she said she wanted more information. The hearing took less than two minutes. Assemblyman Wayne DeAngelo (D-Mercer) later said he introduced the bill at the request of Mercer County Community College. He said the school has some unique programs, including its culinary and aviation programs, that attract students from other counties and even from out of state, as well as “a strong number of international students.”

Archpriest Peter Pawlack 1940-2021 | News, Sports, Jobs

HOWLAND Archpriest Peter Pawlack, 80, fell asleep in the Lord, Monday, April 19, 2021. Fr. Peter was born in Mayfield, Pa. the son of the late Julia Hadginske and Peter J. Pawlack. A younger sister and only sibling recently fell asleep in the Lord. He graduated from (Eastside) New Jersey High School. He attended Rollins College in Winter Park, Fla. and subsequently transferred to Rider College (now Rider University) in Lawrenceville, N.J. to continue his undergraduate studies. He received his undergraduate degree in commerce and industrial management from Rider College. In the fall of 1962, he entered St. Vladimir’s Seminary, Crestwood, N.Y.

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Bucks County Community College student newspaper wins 17 awards

Bucks County Courier Times The Centurion, the student newspaper of Bucks County Community College, won a record 17 awards in the statewide Keystone Media contest for 2021, despite the fact that its staffers had to produce the paper from home due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Competing in the two-year college division, students won awards for articles and news videos on everything from student government elections and a shooting in a Bucks County park, to the pandemic and the presidential election. The contest is run by the Pennsylvania NewsMedia Association. Journalism Professor Tony Rogers, the Centurion’s faculty advisor, said winning 17 awards was a terrific accomplishment in itself. But the awards, for work done in the spring and fall of 2020, mean even more this year.

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