The Great Falls in Paterson is the place to visit after a heavy rainfall. |
The Record's old headquarters at 150 River St. in Hackensack remained an eyesore for much of 2013 -- four years after the Borg publishing family abandoned the city. |
A fence at a railroad station in Pennsylvania prevents pedestrians from crossing the tracks, a safety measure that is scarce at NJ Transit stations. |
Dwight Morrow High School in Englewood, where the elementary and middle schools remain segregated, a story The Record doesn't touch. |
One Friday night in Manhattan, the line to board NJ Transit buses stretched down the escalator to the level below the platforms. |
Increasing traffic congestion was a big story in 2013, but one The Record didn't bother covering. |
To handle greater demand, NJ Transit used longer trains, but often platforms were too short. Above, the New Brunswick station. Passengers would be told to run forward to exit the train. |
Penn Station in Manhattan is owned by Amtrak, which assigns track numbers to NJ Transit trains 10 minutes before departure, setting off a stampede by passengers scrambling for a seat. |
A firehouse on Main Street in Hackensack. |
Publisher Stephen A. Borg's $3.65 million McMansion in Tenafly. |
Part of a display in the NJ Transit Waiting Room at Penn Station in Manhattan. |
Yours truly ran as an independent candidate for the Hackensack City Council, above and below. |
The New World Trade Center is the latest jewel in the Manhattan skyline. |
The first of two 47-story residential towers was nearing completion in Fort Lee. But The Modern's glass facade reflected sunlight and blinded some drivers heading for the George Washington Bridge. |
Recycled copies of The Record are destined to return as toilet paper. |
A winter scene on Englewood's East Hill. |
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