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Peters Township business receives approval for hosting food trucks

Peters Township business receives approval for hosting food trucks
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Son of Superman illustrator reinvents one of father s creations as spokescharacter | News

If a talking reptile or squawking emu can help peddle insurance, a sensible scientist should be a shoo-in for selling research laboratory products. Meet Professor Tipp as the savvy new spokescharacter, if you will, of JDM Lab Solutions, the specialty supply company owned by Peters Township residents Jim and Dawn Mortimer. The typical marketing effort in their field tends not to go far beyond listing what’s for sale, so they decided it would be a good idea to come up with something distinctive and memorable for JDM. James Winslow Win Mortimer (1919-98) at his drawing board And to stoke his creativity, Jim didn’t have to look far. His father, Win Mortimer, was one of the major illustrators of DC’s Superman and Batman during the kings of comic books’ formative years.

Peters Township resident s meal-delivery business, family weather COVID-19 storm | News

The business may be called Girl Friday Cooking Co., but most of the action takes place on Monday. That’s when owner Gretchen McNary and her crew are busy preparing meals for delivery each Tuesday. And with more people than ever placing orders during the COVID-19 pandemic, a correspondingly greater amount of preparation usually is involved. Beth Ali, left, and Gretchen McNary review a delivery schedule. Harry Funk One week, all that work ended up going for naught. “Tuesday at about 1 p.m., my husband called me and said, ‘I have COVID,’” McNary recalled. “What we ended up having to do was get rid of all that food we made. I had to go home and call 120 people, and let them know that they weren’t getting their food.”

Peters Township officials seek clarity regarding streets policy

A decision made by Peters Township Council in May has created a source of confusion for administrators and public safety officials. Council voted 4-3 against the municipality acquiring by eminent domain a small piece of private property for the purpose of building a street connection between two residential plans. According to township manager Paul Lauer, the action runs counter to a long-standing policy that “residential developments should have multiple means of ingress and egress,” primarily to maximize emergency response times. “And there are to be no dead-end streets. In fact, ‘no dead-end streets’ is actually incorporated into an ordinance,” Lauer said at council’s June 28 meeting. “So we’re not clear right now exactly what council is telling us with regard to these streets.”

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