Cover Stories

Foundation gives a future to retired Standardbred racehorses

By Jane Meggitt A horse once headed for slaughter surged through traffic, scaffolding and parked cars on a Manhattan street, carrying a New York City mounted police officer in pursuit...

Strategic Plan Rethinks Modern Library Space In Plainsboro

The Plainsboro Public Library is asking residents to help shape the next phase of one of the township’s...

Real and Remembered

Two hundred and fifty years after the American Revolution reshaped both a nation and a university campus, Princeton...

Landmark Robbinsville Town Center building takes on new role as town hall

Robbinsville has moved into a new municipal building, marking the transformation of one of the most prominent structures...

Go Inside This Week’s Issue of U.S. 1: May 13, 2026

The following stories were originally published in the May 13, 2026, issue of U.S. 1 Newspaper. ...

RFID for Kids — a better leash

Ari Naim tells of an experience that represents every parent’s nightmare. "I was in the dinosaur exhibit of the Museum of Natural History with...

RFID and You: Privacy Concerns

Edward Felten, known for his research on how public technology policy affects computer security and privacy, was the technology speaker at the U.S. 1...

Between the Lines

Two contributors to the 2003 edition of U.S. 1 Newspaper’s summer fiction issues are in the spotlight this month. Michael Slom, who wrote a...

Behind the Scenes at Sirius

Have you discovered satellite radio? For a monthly subscription of $12.95, you could be enjoying some 120 different channels of almost every flavor of...

Soup: The Soul of a Good Restaurant

I couldn’t agree more with Louis DeGouy, onetime chef at the old Waldorf-Astoria and apprentice to Escoffier, who wrote, "There is nothing like a...

Yes! Soup For You in Princeton

‘No soup for you!" Every Seinfeld fan will immediately identify this sentence with the episode that parodied mercurial Manhattan soup store owner Al Yeganeh,...
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