Parsippany, NJ|News|
Parsippany 4th Grader to Cheer Up Kids in Hospital
The last day to donate rainbow loom bracelets for his charitable cause is Friday.

Kim(at)patch.com (Sorry, the at symbol is not appearing correctly, along with other symbols, hyphens, apostrophes, etc ... in the bio section)
845-891-6816
Originally from: Houston and Dallas, Texas
Birthday: December 16
Bio: Before becoming Nanuet Patch editor, Kim Tran attended the University of Missouri's Journalism school. She graduated with two bachelors: B of Journalism in print/digital news and B of Arts in English. While in school, she was a journalist for the daily newspaper, the Columbia Missourian, as a reporter and copyeditor. She also worked for the university's newspaper the Maneater and freelanced for Vox Magazine and Inside Columbia Magazine.
Kim was born in California and raised in Texas before going to college in Columbia, Missouri. She moved to Congers, NY after graduating to live with her grandparents. Her parents and siblings now live in Seattle, WA.
Beliefs
At Patch, we promise always to report the facts as objectively as possible and otherwise adhere to the principles of good journalism. However, we also acknowledge that true impartiality is impossible and human beings have beliefs. So in the spirit of simple honesty, our policy is to encourage our editors to reveal certain key beliefs to the extent they feel comfortable.
This disclosure is not a license for our editors to inject these beliefs into stories or to dictate coverage according to them. In fact, the intent is the opposite: we hope that the knowledge that our beliefs are on the record will force us to be ever mindful to write, report, and edit in a fair, balanced way. And if you, the user, ever think you see evidence that we failed in this mission, we wholeheartedly invite you to let us know.
Politics
How would you describe your political beliefs?
My beliefs are moderate
Are you registered with a certain party?
No
Religion
How religious would you say you are? Casual, observant, devout, non-religious?
I was raised Roman Catholic and although I am not a member of an individual church or congregation today, I still think that faith is an important aspect of everyday lives. Everyone should have faith in something, even if that something is oneself.
Local Hot Button Issues
What do you think are the most important issues facing the community?
The economy, education and the environment.
Where do you stand on each of these issues?
Economy:
With so many businesses in Morristown, the economy is key in its influence on which businesses stay and go; and indirectly, which jobs stay and go. Everyone's budget sways with the economy from taxes to what you buy at the grocery store.
Education:
The generation of today face many more challenges than those of preceeding generations. From healthier lunch menus and new technology to faculty cutbacks because of the economy, the kids today are growing up very differently than those of an earlier generation.
As the world seems to change a lot faster today, children also need to change and adapt more quickly to prepare to become our world's future.
Environment:
Morristown is very forward in terms of "green" thinking and sustainability efforts. I support the idea that a change in the environment around us needs more than just one person switching to organic foods. It needs multitudes and communities to make environmentally-concious decisions at the individual level.
I started my own vegetable garden this summer as one of the many things I do that hopefully better this earth.
The last day to donate rainbow loom bracelets for his charitable cause is Friday.

Friday is the last day to donate rainbow loom bracelets for his charitable cause.
Hector Cafferata donated a war book and Montville resident Bob Seijas presented the book on behalf of Cafferata.
They are invited to participate in an outdoor tournament at World Class Soccer Academy, NY alongside other league Champions and top teams from around the Tri-State Region.
Team to participate in an outdoor tournament at World Class Soccer Academy, alongside other league champions and top teams from tri-state region.
The Daily Joe, attached to The Music Shop, will have its official ribbon-cutting ceremony Sunday after opening last month.
Attached to The Music Shop, the new café will feature a band and tastings during its grand opening celebration.
The two new counts carry a maximum possible penalty of 30 years in prison and a $1 million fine.
Catch this fall play Thursday, Friday and Saturday this week.
Owner Barry Braverman is thanking his customers with an anniversary sale this Sunday.
Dylan Casler, a member of the UMass marching band, will perform next week.
There are four kids from Montville and one from Towaco in this production. Opening Night is Dec. 7.
You can pay your respects on Thursday and his funeral is Friday morning.
West Caldwell man, owner of three Parsippany businesses, surrendered to federal agents Wednesday morning.
Bacilo Egoavil had $10.60 worth of stolen items in his pockets, according to report.
The resident was gone for three weeks when his TV and other items were stolen.
Incidents happened during the same time frame and neighborhood, but police are unsure if they are all connected.
Vikings routed South Plainfield last weekend to earn chance to play top-seeded Knights.
Three routes will be adjusted soon and the district plans to look at bus routes in the spring to make improvements for fall 2014.