July 6, 2016 - PrincetonInfo
Transcription
July 6, 2016 - PrincetonInfo
© Soprano J ennifer Z etlan at th e G olandsk y P iano F estiv al, page 1 7 ; B illy Coh en in ‘ G od of Carnage, ’ 23; M att K atz on Ch ris Ch ristie, 24 . Contents page 016 6, 2 JULY • 609-452-7000 • PRINCETONINFO.COM F LIRTING WITH THE F OUNDING F ATHER F ound ing F am ily: Richard Stockton, left, and his wife, Annis Boudinot Stockton, a poet. The portraits of Annis Boudinot, by an unidentified American artist, and Richard Stockton, attributed to 18th century American artist John Wollaston, can be found at the Princeton University Art Museum. of a New Jersey Turnpike rest stop or a state college into the stuff of high drama — not portraiture. Stockton’s story is also a reminder of the dangers the imperfect founders of a “more perfect union” faced when they signed their names to create a new form of government — one without the “Divine Right of Kings” — and put their lives on the line so future generations could freely celebrate. r, signed the ndence. Exedding Docwounds on a non-shot of erspoon was tockton, his onment, had sh the cause red; Princeby fire and een pillaged a roofless, an and painic” grasp for ace — that rom a name Morven An Opera for the Mind with music composed by the reader DraMatIS PerSOnae Richard Stockton, a prominent Princeton attorney and delegate to the Continental Congress. Annis Boudinot Stockton, his wife and poet. Julia Stockton Rush, their grown daughter. Benjamin Rush, delegate to the Continental Congress, and later soldier and physician in the Battle of Princeton. Reverend John Witherspoon, John Covenhoven, a New Jerpresident of the B College of New sey patriot and friend. A NNIS OUDINOT Jersey (now Princeton University) Prison Guard. delegate to the Continental TOCKTON WAS British Officer. Sand Congress. The action takes place from JanElias Boudinot, Pennsylvania to January, 1777. AN CENTURY POET delegate18 to theTH Continental Con- uary, 1776, gress and Annis’ brother. a I WITH A 21 ST CENTURY Hannah Boudinot, wife to I S Elias and Richard Stockton’s sister. Morven in Princeton. Mary, a youngOF servant.INDEPENDENCE SPIRIT . with A handsome mansion room Martha, an older servant. high ceilings and large windows that open onto a bright winterJohn Hancock, president of P IA DE J ONG REPORTS scape. Continental Congress. Two servants — the young Mary John Adams, Massachusetts and the older Martha — prepare the delegate S to TOCKTON the continental con- ’ S ON wedding table for festivities. Mary gress. ct cene happily notes that it is wonderful CORRESPONDENCE WITHHG WOASHINGTON . AEN M I. 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Interest may be tax deductible; consult your tax advisor for details. 2 U.S. 1 JULY 6, 2016 To the Editor: The Exotic Bells While the Chamber is always supportive of tax relief, which the Assembly bill provides with the reduction in the state sales tax and the retention of the retirement income exemption, these alone do not go an Aubrey’s June 29 piece far enough in helping revitalize on the carillon at the Princeton Uni- New Jersey’s economy and making versity Graduate College brought our state more competitive and afback memories of when I was fordable. working part-time with Arthur BigWe strongly believe a once-in-aelow, who was the carilloneur for generation opportunity to transquite a few years after World War form New Jersey’s economy will II. be missed if the state Legislature Officially Arthur was assistant does not enact the meaningful tax professor of graphics and universi- reform that was incorporated in the ty bellmaster. He played original omnibus bill. the carillon only on weekEliminating the estate ends and for special occa- Between tax, increasing the earned sions. I was working part The income tax credit, and retime during the midstoring charitable allowLines 1950s as an instructor of ance deductions, along engineering drawing and with an increase in the rereported to him. tirement income exemption, should He was a very interesting guy be enacted now. These reforms will and very serious about the bells. He allow New Jersey to more effectook me up the tower once but tively retain and attract new busididn’t let me touch anything. The ness, new investment, and new mechanical system for striking the jobs. The result will be more opporbells was amazing, especially the tunity and an improved quality of way you used your hands. Aubrey’s life for everyone in our state. story is a wonderful explanation of Thomas B racken one of the university’s most exotic President and CEO, features. Dick Snedeker NJ Chamber of Commerce D Richard K . Rein Editor Diccon Hyatt Business Editor Dan Aubrey Preview Editor Sara Hastings Special Projects Mark Cza j kowski Suze tte Lucas Photography Barbara Figge Fox Senior Correspondent Vaughan Burton Production Jacqueline Barrett Samantha Saloom Michael Zilembo Account Executives Michele Alperin, Elaine Strauss, Pat Tanner, E.E. Whiting, Simon Saltzm an, Julia Case-Levine, Euna K won Brossman, Bart Jackson, Susan Van Dongen, Richard J. Skelly, Doug Dixon, Lynn Robbins, Ron Shapella, Neal Zoren, Aleen Crispino, Barbara Westergaard, Mary Hui, Linda Arntze nius, Scott Morgan, Ilene Dube, Robert Johnson Contributors Lawrence L. DuPraz 1919-2006 F ounding Production Adviser Stan K ephart – Design 198 6-2007 U.S. 1 is hand delivered to all businesses and offices in the greater Princeton area. For advertising or editorial inquiries call 609-452-7000. Fax: 609-844-0180. Or visit www.princetoninfo.com. Copyright 2016 by Community News Service LLC, 15 Princess Road, Lawrenceville 08648. Fund Transportation T he New Jersey Chamber of Commerce is pleased that the bill passed by the State Assembly on June 27 replenishes the Transportation Trust Fund. It is imperative that we begin to invest in the repair and upgrades of our roads, bridges, tunnels, and other infrastructure as soon as possible. This is critical to our state’s economic health and to the safety of the thousands of drivers who use this infrastructure every day. Tourism for Roads I N SI DE Survival Guide 4 Are You Doing Your Job Search Backwards? How to Compromise with the IRS Business Book Club Business Meetings Preview 4 5 6 6 9-24 Day by Day, July 6 to 15 Opportunities Princeton Becomes Stage for Contemporary Music International Piano Festival Returns to Princeton Brothers Seek a Better Sound – On and Off Stage Opera Summer Program Something to Sing About U.S. 1 Singles Exchange Review: ‘God of Carnage’ Katz Talks Christie, Democracy, and a Bridge Saga Cover Story: Hidden History Life in the Fast Lane Classifieds 33 Jobs Richard K . Rein 9 12 16 17 19 21 22 23 24 25 30 34 35 For advertising or editorial inquiries, call 609-452-7000. Fax: 609-844-0180. Mail: 15 Princess Road, Suite K, Lawrenceville 08648. E-Mail: Events: events@princetoninfo.com | News: rein@princetoninfo.com. Home page: www.princetoninfo.com © 2016 Community News Service LLC. For articles previously published in U.S. 1, for listings of scheduled events far into the future, consult our website: www.princetoninfo.com. Copyright 2016 Community News Service LLC. T he New Jersey Tourism Industry Association understands the urgent necessity of funding the New Jersey Transportation Trust Fund. New Jersey’s tourism industry is dependent on roads, bridges, and transportation infrastructure to secure the safe travel of our visitors. We advocate for the elimination of the estate tax as our industry is Continued on page 4 Community News Service LLC CO-PUBLISHER Jamie Griswold CO-PUBLISHER Tom Valeri MANAGING EDITOR Joe Emanski BUSINESS EDITOR Diccon Hyatt ARTS EDITOR Dan Aubrey SPECIAL PROJECTS EDITOR Sara Hastings SENIOR COMMUNITY EDITORS Rob Anthes, Bill Sanservino COMMUNITY EDITORS Samantha Sciarrotta, Vincent Xu EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Laura Pollack EDITORIAL DIRECTOR Richard K. 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NJTIA urges our elected officials to pass legislation that funds the TTF and protects the fund from being used for any purpose other than transportation and infrastructure needs. NJTIA is concerned that the proposed increase in gas tax will be detrimental to the tourism industry by causing visitors to choose to vacation elsewhere and increasing supply costs for many tourism businesses. For this reason, we believe that additional funding to promote the New Jersey tourism industry is necessary. NJTIA strongly believes that any legislation regarding the TTF protect funding for tourism within the hotel/motel occupancy tax. NJTIA also requests that legislature consider balancing the outcomes of this legislation with additional funds from the existing hotel/motel Occupancy tax for the purpose of promoting tourism. Vicki Clark President, New Jersey Tourism Industry Association www.njtia.org SURVIVAL GUIDE EDITOR: DICCON HYATT dhyatt@princetoninfo.com Friday, July 8 Are You Doing Your Job Search Backwards? T he typical way to look for a job is to put a resume together and then look at jobs that match your skill set. “You find a pigeonhole that you might fit into,” says author and motivational speaker Jim Donovan. “But after you’ve been doing that for two years and it hasn’t worked out, you might want to do something different.” According to Donovan, looking for a job the traditional way might be completely backwards. Dono- ral. “At one point, I lived in a car. I van will speak Friday, July 8, from slept in Battery Park, something I 9:45 a.m. to noon at the Profession- do not recommend, and SROs (sinal Service Group of Mercer County gle room occupancies) in Manhatat the Princeton Public Library at tan and the Bronx. These are places 65 Witherspoon Street. The meet- where you live in a small room and ing is free. For more information, share a bathroom with several visit www.psgofmercercounty.org. strangers. Quite interesting,” he The PSG is a networking program writes on his website, www.jimfor professionals who are in a ca- donovan.com. reer transition or looking for jobs. Donovan’s story is of the ragsThat’s a subject area that Dono- to-riches-to-rags-back-to-riches van knows a bit about. He grew up variety. He joined a 12-step proin an Irish family on Staten Island gram, kicked his drinking habit, where his father was a trucker and and re-launched his career down a his mother was a homemaker who different path. At his low point, sometimes worked for K-Mart. Donovan turned to self-help books From such humto figure out ble beginnings, how to get back Instead of trying to fit he became a vidon his feet, but eo tape editor in soon discovered your skill set into j ob the early days of that he could postings, start with TV news, and make a career what makes you hapsoon moved into out of speaking producing corand writing py and figure out how porate videos. himself. He says to do it for a living. With his talent he has sold ‘Concentrate on befor working with about half a milvideotape, Donlion copies so ing happy and sucovan says he far of books like cess falls into place.’ quickly rose to “ H a p p y @ the top of his Work,” “Handprofession and book to a Hapwas enjoying a high-end lifestlye. pier Life,” and “What Are You “My ego ran wild,” he said. Waiting For? It’s Your Life,” which Donovan said his high-flying have been translated into Japanese career fueled an alcohol problem and other languages. that led him into a downward spiHe also lectures and makes edu- STAND OUT among your peers with the Rutgers School of Business–Camden Professional MBA! Crowne Plaza Princeton Conference Center 900 Scudders Mill Rd. Plainsboro, NJ 08536 Rutgers School of Business Camden Campus 227 Penn Street Camden, NJ 08102 Tuesday, July 12 6:00pm - 7:30pm Wednesday, July 13 6:00pm - 7:30pm To register visit pmba.rutgers.edu/infosessions or call 856-225-2700 Ask us about our FLAT TUITION RATE for the Fall 2016 Cohort! Motivational: Jim D onovan speaks on approaching the job search July 8 at Princeton Public L ibrary. cational videos. It’s not a single job, but rather a sequence of endeavors that adds up to a career that he enjoys. Donovan advises the same approach to professionals who may have good qualifications and a long career behind them, but who are having a hard time getting hired by a different company on the same level they were before. “That’s what rainmakers do,” he said. “They put stuff together. They look around ,get creative, and apply initiative.” Donovan said many people have been held back by a “drone mindset” that prevents them from finding work they enjoy.” Donovan said that instead of trying to fit their skillset into job postings, job seekers should start on the other end: start with what makes you happy and figure out how to do it for a living. “Concentrate on being happy and success falls into place,” he said. That career may not end up being a job, he said, especially for experienced professionals who are looking for work at high salaries. An individual company may not be able to hire someone who was vice president of marketing for a major corporation. However, there may be dozens of companies that could hire that person for one day a week. “So you become a consultant and divide your skills among those four clients,” Donovan said. “People don’t want a job. They want income.” The idea that putting together a patchwork of jobs, each without benefits, can replace a traditional career, is a new economic reality for many younger workers. Tech companies such as car service Uber, which promote the “sharing economy,” have accelerated this trend by offering jobs through work-on-demand apps. But many of the jobs available through gig apps are menial, like driving a car, grocery shopping, or running errands. Donovan said that while anyone can be happy in their work, not everyone can be happy in every job. At a low point in his life, Donovan got a telemarketing job. He quit after four hours even though he needed the money. “I don’t agree with staying somewhere and being mistreated,” he said. Other times, he had to take lowpaying work just to survive, but found ways to make it bearable. “I had all kinds of crappy jobs that I had to do to survive,” he said. “Minimum wage work at stores. I had to make it fun, educational, entertaining, or at least palatable.” Donovan said that in seeking jobs and clients, sending out resumes should not be the only tactic. He said business networking events are great places to meet contacts, but that most people who go to them already have jobs. “Show up there, pay your 25 bucks, and work the room. It’s better than sitting there at a computer sending out resumes.” (See page 6 for a listing of area business meetings and networking events.) — Diccon Hyatt JULY 6, 2016 person to negotiate like Davidoff does — he has years of experience dealing with the Byzantine workings of the IRS — there are a few easy tips that are good to keep in mind in case of tax trouble. The first thing is that if you fall behind on taxes, it’s more important to pay the current year’s taxes before starting on the back taxo anyone who falls behind on their es. “A lot of people pay back years first, and taxes and ends up owing money to the IRS, then they get behind the current year and the agency can seem like a faceless govern- have to pay penalties and interest,” Davidoff ment institution that can’t be influenced by said. “A lot of people think you have to pay your actions. But it’s easy to forget that like first in, first out, but in order to resolve anyall institutions, the IRS is composed of peo- thing in the past, the IRS will want you to be ple, and those people can sometimes even be current for the year.” Another thing to keep in mind is that reasoned with. “People think the IRS is all powerful and when the IRS starts sending you letters deyou have no rights and you have to do what- manding payment, your case manager cares ever they say,” said E. Martin Davidoff, an only about getting paid, not about how much accountant and tax attorney based in Day- you owe. There is a separate appeals division ton. But that’s not true, Davidoff said, and he that has the power to waive penalties. The has a track record of successful negotiations case manager however can put you on an into prove it. Davidoff will share his expertise stallment plan so that you can pay smaller in how to make deals with the IRS on Thurs- amounts while negotiating to reduce the balday, July 14 at 8:30 a.m. at Mercer County ance owed. Davidoff said the most common way for Community College. Tickets are $100. For more information, visit www.copeseminars. to get in trouble with taxes is when people who are used to working for an employer, com or E-mail info@taxattorneycpa.com For example, Davidoff recently had a cli- where their taxes are deducted from their ent who owed money to the IRS and didn’t paycheck, switch to being self-employed or pay for several years. Penalties stacked up business owners, and have to keep track of until the man owed $400,000. Davidoff their own taxes. Many fail to pay estimated taxes and are caught withwrote an eight-page letter out the necessary cash to the IRS explaining his when April 15 rolls client’s position, and askDealing with the IRS around. “When people ing that they waive the can be complicated find themselves in that penalties, but the letter for ordinary people, situation, they should at was rejected. So Davidoff least get a consultation followed up with a phone especially because it with a tax attorney or a call and spoke with a manis difficult to get an CPA. They have to underager, persuading him to employee on the stand the rules of the bring the balance down to game,” Davidoff said. a manageable $97,000. phone. The IRS has little“They are not easily inknown rules that taxpayfluenced, but people do forget that on the other end of that phone is a ers can use to their advantage. For instance, human being,” Davidoff said. “Sometimes Davidoff said, if a taxpayer makes an offer those human beings are awful, some of them that is accepted, but they can’t pay right are okay, and some of them are actually very away, a call to the monitoring division will helpful. I was dealing with people who are yield a 120-day extension almost automatinormally just okay, and I made an argument cally. “That’s written down but impossible that hit them.” Continued on following page While it may be difficult for an average U.S. 1 Thursday, July 14 How to Compromise With the IRS T A Balanced Approach for a Natural Look • Face and neck lift • Liposuction • Lip and chin augmentation 609-279-0009 schraderplasticsurgery.com Nicole Schrader, MD FACS Double Board-Certified Facial Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery, Otolaryngology & Head/Neck Surgery, Fellow of the American College of Surgeons MENS PIMA COTTON Paul N. Daly, Esq. and Senior Personal Injury Paralegal, Paul N.Debra Daly, A. 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So why spend the time you could use honing your own skills, doing something as mundane as cleaning or laundry? Let us give you the freedom to pursue your dreams and spend more time with your family. Feeling Smarter? You’re in Einstein’s Alley! Become a member and help make Einstein’s Alley one of the key research and technology hubs in the United States. Go to www.einsteinsalley.org/become-a-member/ or call 609-799-8898 about getting a street sign for your business. Einstein’s Alley, a 501C4 non-profit corporation Accelerating the speed of economic growth in New Jersey to find for a layperson,” Davidoff said. Another rule has to do with a problem that arises sometimes between estranged spouses, when one files their taxes before the other, and they are both claiming each other and the children as dependents. Davidoff said that in this case, when the second spouse files their taxes electronically, the accounting programs will detect that they have been claimed as a dependent and then block them from doing the same. But if they file their taxes on paper, checking the box by hand, it becomes the IRS’s job to solve the discrepancy. Many taxpayers also don’t realize the IRS has not just a national but a global reach when looking for assets. He said many of his Asian clients are surprised to discover the IRS knows about their bank accounts back in their countries of origin, and that they have to pay taxes on the assets there. Davidoff grew up in Rockland County where his father was a dentist and his mother was a Hebrew school teacher. He won’t reveal what the “E” stands for in his name, but jokes that his mother said it stands for “excellent.” He never majored in accounting in school, instead going straight to law school. “I ended up doing tax representation totally by accident,” he said. “In 1996 somebody asked me to do a case, and I said, ‘oh this is interesting, let me do another one.’ And another one. It kind of just became a thing for me.’” He said he likes to represent taxpayers with the IRS because the work is very gratifying. Dealing with the IRS can be complicated for ordinary people, especially because the agency is chronically underfunded and it is difficult to get Your No Obligation Co-Working Solution 50% OFF YOUR ANNUAL AGREEMENT BY JOINING THIS MONTH! Tax Man: Martin D avidoff, a lawyer, has made his mark dealing with the IRS. an employee on the phone. “The system is not user friendly at all,” Davidoff said. He added that it makes a big difference in the lives of his clients when they are able to come up with a plan of action to escape their tax troubles. “It changes their lives because they get a fresh start,” he said. “What we see is a physical change in the person from the time they walk in for a first meeting with me to the time they walk out. Once they have a plan of action and they know they can handle it, that’s when the exhaling starts.” — Diccon Hyatt Wednesday, July 20 Business Book Club I f you have ever devoured a business book and then wondered how to best utilize its wonderful advice you are not alone. Computer code writer and business consultant Mark Simchock has felt the same way, and has started a book club that concentrates on business books. ReadLearnAdapt, or RLA, will host its third meet-up on Wednesday, July 20, at 7:30 p.m. at a site to be determined in the Princeton area. The book to be discussed: “Will it Fly? — How to Test Your Next Business Idea So You Don’t Waste Your Time and Money” by Pat Flynn. Meetings are free. Visit www.ReadLearnAdapt.com or join the group through Meetup. com. Simchock has hosted two meetings so far, and is scheduling them about every six weeks. Once a month is possible but he realizes that people who feel like they’re being compelled to read a new book every month might just stay away. Simchock hopes to attract various types of entrepreneurs, including deep thinkers, curious readers, and open-minded peope who willl be open to live up to the name of the club: to read, learn, and adapt. Business Meetings Wednesday, July 6 1:30 p.m.: Computer Learning Center at Ewing, Text messaging on the iPad and iPhone. $5. 999 Lower Ferry Road. clcewing.org, 609-882-5086. 5:45 p.m.: Princeton SCORE, StartSMART Business Workshop. Class four of five: financial management for business. $135 for entire series. Pellettieri, Rabstein & Altman Law Offices, 100 Nassau Park Boulevard, Princeton. www.princeton.score.org, 609393-0505. Continued on page 8 Call the experts at Taylor Photo! 609-452-9444 At CollaborationCore we provide a cost-effective workplace solution where organizations can concentrate on their mission. Included Services + + + + + + + + + + + Secure office space Furniture Internet access Support team/Reception Address/mail intake Common areas Office Cleaning Utilities Facilities Management Kitchen Amenities/Coffee bar Free On-Site Parking COLLABORATIONCORE.ORG 609-429-4177 3150 Brunswick Pike, Suite 300 Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 CALL US TODAY TO SCHEDULE A FREE TOUR! • Banners • Outdoor Signage • Window Film Graphics • Wall Murals 743 Alexander Road Princeton, NJ 08540 taylorphoto.com JULY 6, 2016 U.S. 1 You know ACCOUNTING... ...now is the time to MASTER IT! 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There’s never been a better time to upgrade than right now; but please don’t wait too long, because values this big will expire long before the Summer does! SAVE NOW ON A NEW HOME COMFORT SYSTEM FROM CALL US TODAY 609-454-6640 Or visit us at: www.PrincetonAir.com/SpecialOffers for more information NJ Master HVAC Lic. #19HC00398 / NJ HIC Lic. #13VH00255200 / PA HIC Lic. #PA001066 *Certain Restrictions & Requirements Apply; Offer expires August 19, 2016. **Subject to Credit Approval. Business Meetings Continued from page 6 Thursday, July 7 7 a.m.: BNI Growth by Referral (Montgomery), Free Networking. Cherry Valley Country Club, 125 Country Club Drive, Skillman. www.bninjpa.org, 908-359-2200. 7 a.m.: BNI Tigers Chapter, Weekly networking. West Windsor Athletic Club, 99 Clarksville Road. www.bni-tigers.com, bni.tigersnetworking@gmail.com. 7 a.m.: BNI Top Flight, Free. Americana Diner, Route 130 North, East Windsor, 609-915-0458. 7 a.m.: Central Jersey Business Association, weekly networking breakfast, free. Perkins, East Windsor, 800-985-1121. 7 a.m.: Networking and More, Networking for business professionals and entrepreneurs. $2 per meeting, first visit complimentary. Keller Williams Realty, 100 Canal Pointe Boulevard, Suite 120. www.networkingmore.com, tom@ aficac.com. 609-883-5206. 7 a.m.: Pennington Elite Networking, weekly networking, free. Ulrichsen Rosen and Freed, 114 Titus Mill Road Unit 200, Pennington, 609-529-5491. 11:30 a.m.: Princeton Chamber, Luncheon. Leecia Eve, VP at Verizon. $50, $70 nonmembers. Princeton Marriott. www.princetonchamber.org, 609-924-1776. INJURED at work or in a motor vehicle accident? WE CAN HELP. CALL 855-670-HURT (4878) Got a Meeting? Notify U.S. 1' s Survival Guide of your upcoming business meeting ASAP. Announcements received after 1 p.m. on Friday may not be included in the paper published the following Wednesday. Submit releases by Email ( meetings@ princetoninfo.com) , fax ( 60984018) , or mail ( U.S. 1, 15 Princess Road, Suite K , L awrenceville 0864) . All events are subj ect to last minute changes or cancellations. Call to confirm. Friday, July 8 7 a.m.: BNI Driven, Networking. Dolce and Clemente’s, Robbinsville, 609-575-3318. 7 a.m.: BNI Growth Connections, Networking. Hopewell Railroad Station, 2 Railroad Place, Hopewell. www.bnimercer.com/ chapters, 877-317-1077 x7. 9:45 a.m.: Professional Service Group, Jim Donovan on “ Taking Charge of Your Life: How to Stop Chasing Rainbows and Land the Job That Fits You Perfectly.” Princeton Public Library. www.psgofmercercounty.org, psgofmercercounty@gmail.com. 609-9249529. Monday, July 11 1:30 p.m.: Computer Learning Center at Ewing, iPad basics. $15. 999 Lower Ferry Road. clcewing.org, 609-882-5086. Tuesday, July 12 7 a.m.: BNI Business Synergy, Networking. Ibis Plaza, 3535 Q uakerbridge Road, Hamilton. www.bnimercer.com/chapters, 609-581-2211. 7 a.m.: BNI Ivy League, Free networking event. Eatery at Overlook, 100 Overlook Center. www. bniivyleague.com, 609-450-8877. 1:30 p.m.: Computer Learning Center at Ewing, Do your own scanning. $5. 999 Lower Ferry Road. clcewing.org, 609-8825086. Wednesday, July 13 7 a.m.: BNI Falcons, Networking. Prestige Diner, 610 Route 33, East Windsor. www.bnimercer/ com/chapters, 732-425-5733. 8 a.m.: South Lawrence Township Business Card Exchange, First meeting of new networking group. Google Groups: south-lawrencetwp-nj-biz-card-exchange@googlegroups.com. Michael’s Restaurant, 2991 US 1, Lawrenceville, nick@nickmellis.org. 609-3934349. 1:30 p.m.: Computer Learning Center at Ewing, iPad basics. $15. 999 Lower Ferry Road. clcewing.org, 609-882-5086. Thursday, July 14 7 a.m.: BNI Growth by Referral (Montgomery), Free Networking. Cherry Valley Country Club, 125 Country Club Drive, Skillman. www.bninjpa.org, 908-359-2200. 7 a.m.: BNI Tigers Chapter, Weekly networking. West Windsor Athletic Club, 99 Clarksville Road. www.bni-tigers.com, bni.tigersnetworking@gmail.com. . 7 a.m.: BNI Top Flight, Free. Americana Diner, Route 130 North, East Windsor, 609-915-0458. 7 a.m.: Central Jersey Business Association, free. Perkins, East Windsor, 800-985-1121. 7 a.m.: Networking and More, for business professionals and entrepreneurs. $2 per meeting, first visit complimentary. Keller Williams Realty, 100 Canal Pointe Boulevard, Suite 120, Princeton. www.networkingmore.com, tom@ aficac.com. 609-883-5206. 7 a.m.: Pennington Elite Networking, free. Ulrichsen Rosen and Freed, 114 Titus Mill Road Unit 200, Pennington, 609-529-5491. JULY 6, 2016 ART FILM LITERATURE U.S. 1 9 DANCE DRAMA MUSIC PREV I E W DAY-BY-DAY EVENTS, JULY 6 TO 15 pREV iEW EditoR: dan aUB REy dan@princetoninfo.com EV E- mail events@princetoninfo.com F or more event listings visit www.princetoninfo.com. Before attending an event, call or check the website. Want to list an event? Submit details and photos to events@princetoninfo.com. F or listings of meetings, network ing groups, trade associations, and training organiz ations, see Business Meetings in the Survival Guide section. Wednesday July 6 Jazz & Blues Vanessa Perea Group, New Brunswick Jazz Proj ect, Esquina Latina, 25 Liberty Street, New Brunswick. www.nbjp.org. Vocalist Vanessa Perea featuring Matt Chertkoff, guitar, George Delancy, bass, and Reggie Q uinerly, drums. No cover charge. 7 to 10 p.m. On Stage Live Music Dick Gratton Solo Jazz Guitarist, Trenton Social Restaurant & Bar, 449 South Broad Street, Trenton. www.thejazzman.tripod. com. 6 to 10 p.m. On Stage The Buddy Holly Story, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-8622121. www.bcptheater.org. Musical features more than 20 of Holly’s greatest hits. 2 p.m. Sister Act, Plays-in-the-Park, Capestro Amphitheater, Roosevelt Park, 1 Pine Drive, Edison, 732-548-2884. www.playsinthepark.com. Musical. Bring a chair. $7. 8:30 p.m. Film Suffragette, Hamilton Public Library, 1 Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. Way, Hamilton, 609-581-4060. www.hamiltonnjpl.org. Free. 7 p.m. Hollywood Summer Nights, Princeton Garden Theater, 160 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609279-1999. www.princetongardentheatre.org. Screening of “ Pretty in Pink.” 7 p.m. Dancing Ballroom Newcomers Dance, American Ballroom, 1523 Parkway Avenue, Ewing, 609-9310149. www.americanballroomco. com. Group class included. $10. 7 to 9 p.m. Contra Dance, Princeton Country Dancers, Suzanne Patterson Center, 1 Monument Drive, Princeton, 908-359-4837. www. princetoncountrydancers.org. Instruction followed by dance. $8. 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Food & Dining Cornerstone Community K itchen, Princeton United Methodist Church, Nassau at Vandeventer Street, Princeton, 609-924-2613. www.princetonumc.org. Hot meals served, prepared by TASK. Free. 5 to 6:30 p.m. History Wednesday Night Out Series, Hopewell Public Library, Hopewell Train Station, Railroad Place, Hopewell, 609-466-1625. www.redlibrary.org. Free. 7 p.m. Ent liStingS: W all W oRthy A juried exhibit by the Princeton Photography Club at RWJ Hamilton’s L akefront Gallery opens with a reception Thursday, July 7. The exhibit, on view through September 15, features 65 works of art by 31 artists. Pictured above is ‘The Wrestler,’ a photograph by Hy L ovitz. For Families Shopping News Outdoor Concerts Pencil and Paint Family Art, Hightstown Library, 114 Franklin Street, Hightstown, 609-4481474. www.mcl.org. Express your creativity by drawing in pencil or painting in watercolors. 7 p.m. Beach Read Fiction Sale, West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road, Princeton Junction, 609799-0462. www.mcl.org. $1 per hard cover book, $.50 per paperback, or $4 per bag. Sale runs through Saturday, July 9. 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Courtyard Concert Series, Princeton Shopping Center, 301 North Harrison Street, Princeton. www.princetonshoppingcenter. com. The Chuck Lambert Band. Free. 6 to 8 p.m. Odessa K lezm er Band, Thompson Park Gaze bo, Thompson Park, Forsgate Drive, Monroe. www.odessaklezmer.com. An evening of international music. Free. 6 to 8 p.m. Music in the Park, Weeden Park, Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609219-9300. www.lawrencevillemainstreet.com/events/musicpark.htm. RGM Project, contemporary blues/jazz/funk fusion band. Free. 6:30 p.m. For Teens The Writing Proj ect, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Group to help students improve their writing skills. For 11th and 12th graders. Register. 1 and 2 p.m. Lectures Get Healthy Food to Those in Need, EARTH Center, Davidsons Mill Pond Park, South Brunswick, 732-398-5273. Symposium is to assist food pantries, soup kitchens, social service agencies, and churches throughout Middlesex County. 6:30 p.m. The Life of Mary Shelley, Ewing Library, 61 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-882-3130. www.mcl.org. Discussion about “ Frankenstein” author Mary Shelley with Camden County College professor Lorraine Moran. Registration required. 7 p.m. Outdoor Action Walk and Picnic, Stony Brook at Greenway Meadows Park, D& R Greenway Land Trust, 1 Preservation Place, Princeton, 609-9244646. www.drgreenway.org. Beverages and dessert provided. Walk begins at 6:30 p.m., led by Jeff Hoagland, education director, Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed Association. $5 donation. Register. 5:30 p.m. Socials Adult Coloring Club, Ewing Library, 61 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-882-3130. www.mcl.org. Registration required. 7 p.m. K nitting Circle, Lawrence Library, 2751 Brunswick Pike, Lawrenceville, 609-989-6920. 7 p.m. Thursday July 7 Jazz & Blues Jerry Weldon Group, New Brunswick Jazz Proj ect, Hyatt Regency, 2 Albany Street, New Brunswick. www.nbjp.org. No cover charge. 8 to 11 p.m. Live Music Thursday Evening Jazz , Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-7374465. www.hopewellvalleyvineyards.com. Al Oliver. Free. 6 to 9 p.m. Live Music Open Mic Night, Grover’s Mill Coffee House, 335 Princeton Hightstown Road, West Windsor, 609-716-8771. www.groversmillcoffee.com. 7 p.m. Art Pop-Up Art Gallery, Wondrous on Witherspoon, 14 1/2 Witherspoon Street, Princeton. Now on view through Sunday, July 31. Exhibition features local artists including Leon Rainbow, Ilene Dube, Suzanne Dominguez, Florence Moonan, Elizabeth Aubrey, and Trudy Glucksberg. Create your own art with materials avilable at gallery. Created by Princeton artist Priscilla Snow Algava; Curated by her former student Shannon Rose Moriarty. 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Wall Worthy Opening Reception, Lakefront Gallery, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital Hamilton, 1 Hamilton Place. www. princetonphotoclub.org. Juried exhibit from the Princeton Photography Club, featuring 65 pieces of artwork from 31 artists. On view through Thursday, September 15. 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. The Owl and the Pussycat, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, Princeton University, 732-997-0205. www.princetonsummertheater. org. Adaptation of an Edward Lear poem for children. $12. 11 a.m. The Buddy Holly Story, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-8622121. www.bcptheater.org. Musical features more than 20 of Holly’s greatest hits. 2 and 7:30 p.m. God of Carnage, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, Princeton University, 732-997-0205. Yasmina Reza’s Tony Award-winning comedy about adults resolving a playground dispute between their sons. $29.50. 8 p.m. Sister Act, Plays-in-the-Park, Capestro Amphitheater, Roosevelt Park, 1 Pine Drive, Edison, 732-548-2884. www.playsinthepark.com. Musical. Bring a chair. $7. 8:30 p.m. Family Theater Alice In Wonderland Jr., Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, PA, 215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org. 30-minute production for kids, by kids. $10. 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Film Thursday Evening at the Movies, Ewing Library, 61 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-882-3130. www.mcl. org. “ Youth.” For ages 18 and up. Registration required. 6:30 p.m. Foreign and Independent Films at Your Library, Lawrence Library, 2751 Brunswick Pike, Lawrenceville, 609-989-6920. www. mcl.org. Screening of “ Secrets of War.” 6:30 p.m. Hollywood Summer Nights, Princeton Garden Theater, 160 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609279-1999. www.princetongardentheatre.org. Screening of “ The Maltese Falcon.” 7 p.m. Film Series: Girl Power, Princeton University Art Museum, Brown/Dod Q uad, Princeton University, 609-258-3788. www.artmuseum.princeton.edu. Screening of “ True Grit.” In the event of rain, film will be shown at 8 p.m. in McCormick Hall 101. 8:30 p.m. Inspired by the women featured in the exhibition “ Women, Art, and Social Change: The Newcomb Pottery Enterprise,” this year’s series celebrates women in film. Continued on following page 10 U.S. 1 JULY 6, 2016 Abstract & Conceptual: Art by Abigail L orraine, right, is on view at Small World Coffee’s Witherspoon Street cafe through July. Works by her mother, Gail Pillitteri, are on view at the Nassau Street cafe. Receptions for both take place Saturday, July 9. Health Gift Cards Available Ample Parking! Tommy Zucchetti Anthony Zucchetti 25 Route 31 S • Pennington, NJ 08534 (in the Pennington Shopping Center) • Fab Five Happy Hour! Sunday thru Friday 609-730-1244 • Sunday Champagne Jazzdiamondsofpennington.com Brunch info@diamondsofpennington.com • Diamond's Famous "Sunday Gravy" • Friday Night Dinner Shows Mid-Jersey Advert.pmd Tommy 1 25 Route 31 S • Pennington, NJ 08534 (in the Pennington Shopping Center) • DiamondsNJ.com Zucchetti609-730-1244 Anthony Zucchetti 1 Wellness History OF THE Organic Garden State diamondsofpennington.com info@diamondsofpennington.com Stuffed Up and Can’t Breathe?, West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road, Princeton Junction, 609-275-8901. www.mcl.org. Dr. Michael Lupa discusses common sinus problems and treatment options. 7 p.m. Debtors Anonymous, Slackwood Presbyterian Church, 2020 Brunswick Avenue, Lawrencev1/30/2014, 12:01 PM ille, 800-421-2383. www.debtorsanonymous.org. Welcome to those with money problems, overspending, underearning or debt. Free. 7:45 p.m. 25 Route 31 S • Pennington, NJ 08534 (in the Pennington Shopping Center) 609-730-1244 G E T A TA S T E Capital City Farmers Market, Mill Hill Park, 165 East Front Street, Trenton. www.destinationtrenton. com. Every Thursday through October. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Princeton Farmers Market, Princeton Public Library, Hinds Plaza, 55 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www. princetonfarmersmarket.com. Live music from 12:30-2:30 p.m. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. 1/30/2014, 12:01 PM Whole Earth carries a wide selection of locally grown produce from the Garden State’s best organic growers. During the summer, we get fresh deliveries of local organic produce several times a week. Stop in today and sample the bounty of New Jersey’s organic farms. Benj amin Franklin in London, The David Library of the American Revolution, 1201 River Road, Washington Crossing, PA, 215-493-6776. “ Benjamin Franklin’s British Decades: From Royalist to Revolutionary” presented by author George Goodwin. Free. 7:30 p.m. Kids Stuff Ninj a Sleepover, Robbinsville Library, 42 Robbinsville-Allentown Road, Robbinsville, 609-2592150. www.mcl.org/branches/robbr.html. Children of all ages can create a ninja puppet. After the program, the ninja puppets will spend the night at the library. Children may pick up their ninjas starting at 9:30 a.m. on July 8. Register. 6 p.m. or 7:15 p.m. Bingo for Children, Ewing Library, 61 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-882-3130. www.mcl.org. For children ages 5 to 10. Registration required. 7 p.m. For Teens 360 NASSAU ST. • PRINCETON WHOLEEARTHCENTER.COM L O C A L LY O W N E D • I N D E P E N D E N T The Writing Proj ect, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Group to help students improve their writing skills. For 11th and 12th graders. Register. 1 and 2 p.m. Sips and Sounds, Terhune Orchards Winery, 330 Cold Soil Road, Princeton, 609-924-2310. Performance by Jerry Steele. Rain or shine. Free admission. 4 to 7 p.m. Friday Wine & Music, Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-737-4465. Christina Havrillia playing blues/ rock. Free. 6 to 9 p.m. Summer Wine & Music Series, Crossing Vineyards & Winery, 1853 Wrightstown Road, Washington Crossing, PA, 215-4936500, Ext. 19. www.crossingvineyards.com. The Eric Mintel Q uartet playing American jazz. $20. Bring lawn chair. Rain or shine. 7 to 9 p.m. Open Mic Jam, Hopewell Valley Bistro, 15 East Broad Street, Hopewell, 609-466-9889. www. hopewellvalleybistro.com. Hosted by Jimmy Mac. 8 p.m. Smoked Ice Party Band, The Sticky Wicket, 2465 South Broad Street, Hamilton, 609-439-0007. Classic rock, oldies, and Motown. No cover. 9:30 p.m. Outdoor Action Pontoon Boat Nature Tours, Mercer Lake, Mercer County Park, West Windsor, 609-4484004. View great blue herons, painted turtles, and rose mallow in bloom. Boat seats 15. No children under age 6 permitted. Tickets sold at Mercer County Marina day of tour. $10 to $12. Noon and 2 p.m. Shopping News Beach Read Fiction Sale, West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road, Princeton Junction, 609799-0462. www.mcl.org. $1 per hard cover book, $.50 per paperback, or $4 per bag. Sale runs through Saturday, July 9. 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Singles Dinner at Non Solo Pasta, Yardley Singles, 900 West Trenton Avenue, Morrisville, PA, 215-7361288. www.yardleysingles.org. Registration required. 6 p.m. Socials Plainsboro American Language Social Club, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, Plainsboro, 609-275-2897. www. lmxac.org/plainsboro. For adults who want to improve their English language abilities and deepen their understanding of U.S. culture. Register by E-mail to eslplainsborolibrary@gmail.com. 6:30 p.m. World Tavern Trivia, Firkin Tavern, 1400 Parkway, Ewing, 609771-0100. www.firkin.org. Hosted by Eric Potts. 7 p.m. Friday July 8 Jazz & Blues John Bianculli, Italian Bistro Lounge, 441 Raritan Avenue, Highland Park, 732-640-1959. Solo piano. No cover. 6:30 to 10 p.m. Marianne Solivan Duo, New Brunswick Jazz Proj ect, Due Mari, 78 Albany Street, New Brunswick. www.nbjp.org. No cover charge. 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Outdoor Concerts Bill and Casey Show, Thomas Sweet, 183 Nassau Street, Princeton. www.thomassweet.com. 7 to 10 p.m. Pop Music K enny “B abyface” Edmonds, State Theater, 15 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732-2467469. R& B and pop singer-songwriter. $45 to $85. 8 p.m. Art 09-730-1244 Restaurant & Lounge Italian Italian Restaurant & Lounge Farm Markets Positive Psychology: Promoting Human Flourishing, Tigerlabs, 252 Nassau Street, Princeton. www.tigerlabs.co. Rebecca Nyquist, of the UPENN Psychology Department, and Adnan Shamsi, of mySherpa Coaching Group. Free. 7 to 8:30 p.m. Resume Review, West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road, Princeton Junction, 609-2758901. www.mcl.org. Librarian Mary Astarita will review resume for grammar, layout, and overall presentation. Registration required. 7 p.m. 31 S • Pennington, NJ 08534 ennington Shopping Center) Wine u Chevy u Argentine Tango, Viva Tango, Suzanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609948-4448. vivatango.org. No partner necessary. $15. 9 p.m. Live Music Anthony Zucchetti Ruby u Sapphire u Dancing staurant & Lounge 4 Rooms for Corporate or Private Italian Restaurant & Lounge Parties Continued from preceding page estaurant & Lounge The Farm Roll that was scheduled for May 21 has been postponed to September due to weather. Visit bluemoonacres.com/events. Lectures Annual Juried Exhibit, Gallery 14, 14 Mercer Street, Hopewell, 609-333-8511. www.photogallery14.com. Opening reception. Featuring work from 24 photographers. On view through Sunday, August 7. 6 to 8 p.m. Exhibition Opening, Alfa Art Gallery, 108 Church Street, New Brunswick. www.alfaart.org. New Brunswick Art Salon Part II: Watercolor and Mixed Media, “ Movements in Nature: Perspectives of Being” featuring representations of the nuances of nature, using watercolor, and mixed media from over a dozen artists. On view through Saturday, August 20. 7:30 to 10 p.m. On Stage The Owl and the Pussycat, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, Princeton University, 732-997-0205. www.princetonsummertheater. org. Adaptation of an Edward Lear poem for children. $12. 11 a.m. Disney’s The Little Mermaid, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 455 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857. www.dpacatoat. com. In a kingdom beneath the sea, the young mermaid Ariel longs to leave her ocean home and live on land. $15. 7:30 p.m. chetti July 7 JULY 6, 2016 The Buddy Holly Story, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-8622121. www.bcptheater.org. Musical features more than 20 of Holly’s greatest hits. 8 p.m. Willy Wonka, K elsey Theater, Mercer Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road, West Windsor, 609-570-3333. www. kelseytheatre.net. Musical based on the Roald Dahl classic. $20. 8 p.m. Sherlock’s Veiled Secret, OffBroadstreet Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-2766. Sherlock Holmes comes out of retirement. $27.50 to $31.50. 8 p.m. God of Carnage, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, Princeton University, 732-997-0205. www.princetonsummertheater.org. Yasmina Reza’s Tony Award-winning comedy about adults resolving a playground dispute between their sons. $29.50. 8 p.m. Sister Act, Plays-in-the-Park, Capestro Amphitheater, Roosevelt Park, 1 Pine Drive, Edison, 732-548-2884. www.playsinthepark.com. Musical. Bring a chair. $7. 8:30 p.m. Family Theater Alice In Wonderland Jr., Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, PA, 215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org. 30-minute production for kids, by kids. $10. 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Snow White, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 455 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857. www.dpacatoat.com. $5. 11 a.m. Film Maggies Plan, ACME Screening Room, 25 South Union Street, Lambertville, 609-397-0275. Romantic comedy. $8. 7 p.m. City of Gold, ACME Screening Room, 25 South Union Street, Lambertville, 609-397-0275. www.acmescreeningroom.org. Documentary about ethnic cooking in Los Angeles. $8. 8:45 p.m. Dancing Dancing Under the Stars Series, Central Jersey Dance Society, Albert Hinds Plaza, Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-945-1883. www.centraljerseydance.org. Music by DJ Lou Becerra. No partner needed. Free. In the event of inclement weather, dance will be moved inside the Princeton Public Library. 7 to 10 p.m. Ballroom Social, American Ballroom, 1523 Parkway Avenue, Ewing, 609-931-0149. www. americanballroomco.com. Group class included. $15. 7:30 to 10 p.m. Folk Dance, Princeton Folk Dance, Suzanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609-912-1272. www.princetonfolkdance.org. Beginners welcome. Lesson followed by dance. No partner needed. $5. 8 to 11 p.m. Comedy Comedy Show, Take 5 Gourmet, 1065 Washington Boulevard, Robbinsville, 609-443-6800. www.take5gourmet.com. Free. 7:30 to 9 p.m. Food & Dining Dishing Up New Jersey, Cherry Grove Farm, Lawrenceville Road, Lawrenceville, 609-2190053. www.cherrygrovefarm.com/ farm-dinners. Celebrate 10 years of cheese-making at Cherry Grove Farm with a farm-to-fork dinner. Half-hour farm tour, followed by a cheese and beer tasting, hors d’oeuvres, and fourcourse family style dinner. $85. 6 p.m. Wellness Meditation, Fellowship in Prayer, 291 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 732-642-8895. Led by Acharya Girish Jha. No experience needed. Register. Free will donation for first class. 7 p.m. U.S. 1 History Fife & Drum Taptoe Concert, Old Barracks Museum, 101 Barrack Street, Trenton, 609-396-1776. www.barracks.org. Music begins at dusk. Recreation of an 18th century summer evening. $10 to $25. 7 p.m. For Families Family Game Night, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. 6 p.m. Lectures Job Seeker Sessions, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. For professionals who are seeking new employment. 9:45 a.m. Outdoor Action K ayak Tours of Mercer Lake, Mercer County Park, West Windsor, 609-888-3218. Basic kayak instruction before the tour. $25 to $30. Registration required. 9:30 a.m. to noon. Native Plant Sale, D&R Greenway Land Trust, Johnson Education Center, 1 Preservation Place, Princeton, 609-924-4646. www. drgreenway.org. Plants are available in quart and gallon-sized pots. 3 to 5 p.m. Shopping News Beach Read Fiction Sale, West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road, Princeton Junction, 609799-0462. www.mcl.org. $1 per hard cover book, $.50 per paperback, or $4 per bag. Sale runs through Saturday, July 9. 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Singles Concerts at Shady Brook Farm, Yardley Singles, 931 Stoney Hill Road, Yardley, PA, 215-736-1288. www.yardleysingles.org. $5 cover. 6:30 p.m. KNEAD OUT HUNGER A portion of all proceeds “feed the knead” and support local food banks through our non-profit organization, Piccolo Family Foundation. We are supporting the fight to end hunger, build healthier lives and empower the community as a whole. It’s foods that tastes good, for people who do good. KNEAD OUT HUNGER Take a Walk on the Wild Side: Jeff Hoagland leads a walking tour of Stony Brook at Greenway Meadows Park on Wednesday, July 6. Adults and children can enjoy a picnic and learn about the creatures that live in the stream. Socials Annual Blueberry Social, Bordentown Historical Society, Friends Meeting House, 302 Farnsworth Avenue, Bordentown, 609-298-9163. Blueberry desserts served on the lawn. 6 to 8:30 p.m. Code for Princeton Hack and Learn Night, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www. princetonlibrary.org. Techies of all skill levels are welcome. Register at the Code for Princeton Meetup Page, www.meetup.com/codeforprinceton. 6 p.m. Saturday July 9 Jazz & Blues Jazz Saxophonist James Stewart, Candlelight Lounge, 24 Passaic Street, Trenton. www. jazztrenton.com. Long running weekly jazz event featuring guest and regional performers. $10 minimum. 3:30 to 7:30 p.m. Continued on following page FREE PIZZA * FREE PIZZA Sunday - Thursday 11-10pm Friday - Saturday 11-11pm Follow Us * Wednesday, KNEAD OUT March HUNGER 30 KNEAD OUT March HUNGER30 Wednesday, LIVE MUSIC TUESDAYS & THURSDAYS Noon – 9 p.m. * Noon – 9 p.m. * FREE PIZZA FREE PIZZA Welcome Wednesday, March 30 Pizza • Pasta • Salads • Sandwiches TUESDAY: FLAMENCO STYLE BAND, a Spanish art; THURSDAY: LATIN POP/ JAZZ BAND. Both evenings 7pm-10pm. to a world of fresh, Wednesday, March 30 all-natural ingredients, Noon – 9 p.m. one-of-a-kind pizza and – 9 p.m. Noon endless pastabilities! HAPPY HOUR - $2 TAPAS Time has been extended to Friday & Saturday 10pm till closing & Sunday 8pm till closing. Monday - Thursday 4:30-6:30 & 9pm till closing. ULTIMATE PIES Mix, match and mingle our crusts, cheeses, toppings and sauces to create your ultimate pie. Choose from three types of freshly made pizza dough, a variety of cheeses, and 30+ protein and veggie toppings. Our pizzas are flash baked in a 1,000°F state-of-the-art Wood Stone pizza oven. Your order will be ready in less than three minutes, so grab a table and get comfortable. We’ll bring out your food in no time! 100 Campus Town Circle • Ewing, NJ 100 Campus Town Circle • Ewing, NJ piccolopronto.com 100 Campus Town Circle • Ewing, NJ piccolopronto.com FREEpiccolopronto.com PIZZA with any donation, music, great prizes and more! PASTA AND MORE FREE with any donation, 100PIZZA Campus Town Circle • Ewing, NJ FREE PIZZA any donation, music, greatwith prizes and more! piccolopronto.com music, great prizes and more! FREE PIZZAtowith anyArea donation, All proceeds will be donated Trenton Soup Kitchen (TASK). Need100 moreCampus choices? TryTown ourto pasta dishes with an array ofNJ different All proceeds will be donated Trenton Area Soup Kitchen (TASK). Circle • Ewing, piccolopronto.com THANK YOU TO SUPPORT FROM: 29 Hulfish Street • Princeton, New Jersey 08542 sauce options, or customize one of our amazing salads and sandwiches. It’s all made to order and absolutely delicious! Follow us on PIZZA with anyand donation, music, great prizes more! proceeds will FREE be donated to Trenton Area Soup Kitchen (TASK). 609-963-4200 music, great prizes and more! All HANK YOU TO UPPORT FROM: YOU TO T FROM: *Limit one pie per customer. proceeds will beCampus donatedTown to Trenton Soup Kitchen (TASK). 100 Circle,Area Ewing, NJ Follow us on All proceeds will be donated to Trenton Area Soup Kitchen (TASK). piccolopronto.com THANK YOU TO *Limit one pie per customer. us on Follow Follow us on SUPPORT FROM: THANK YOU TO SUPPORT FROM: *Limit one pie per customer. *Limit one pie per customer. *Limit one pie per customer. Follow us on 11 609-252-9680 • 609-683-9359 fax www.mediterrarestaurant.com • info@terramomo.com 12 U.S. 1 JULY 6, 2016 oppoRtUnitiES Audition scheduled to begin in early September, 2016, at The College of New Jersey, on Mondays and Wednesdays from 1 to 5 p.m. Each volunteer must complete 80 hours of training. For more information e-mail sass@womanspace.org or call 609-394-0136. Roxy B allet is holding auditions for its December production of “Nutcracker” on Saturday, September 10, at Canal Studios, 243 North Union Street, Lambertville. Sought are dancers ages 4 to 18. $35 audition fee. Registration required. For more information visit www.roxeyballet.org or e-mail info@roxeyballet.org. K elsey Theater is holding auditions for its upcoming production of “Billy Elliot” at Mercer County Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road, West Windsor. Children’s audition will be held Wednesday, July 13, from 7 to 10 p.m., Saturday, July 16, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Sunday, July 17, from noon to 5 p.m. All children must be at least 8 years old by their audition day. Adult auditions will be held Monday, August 8, and Wednesday, August 19, from 7 to 10 p.m., and Sunday, August 14, from 1 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 10 p.m. Be prepared to perform 32 bars in the style of the show with sheet music. Show runs December 30 to January 15. For more information e-mail billyelliotatkelsey@gmail.com. Contests L awrence Township’s growth and redevelopment committee is seeking nominations for the annual Awards Program for Economic Development. The awards are presented to businesses, individuals, and civic groups that have enhanced the community in one of the following ways: for job growth, building or renovating a structure that improves the quality of life in the community, or by participating in local activities that benefit the residents. Nomination forms can be found online at www.lawrencetwp.com. For more information e-mail alink@lawrencetwp. com. Hamilton Township has announced its annual photo contest for the 2017 municipal calendar. Members of Hamilton’s Economic Development Advisory Commission will select submissions they believe best convey what visitors shouldn’t miss throughout the year in Hamilton. Enter up to three photos with a brief description and month. Photos should have minimum dimensions of 3000 x 2400 pixels. Photographs must be submitted to ddegregory@hamiltonnj. com no later than Friday, October 7. For more information visit hamiltonnj.com/photocontest. Volunteer Mercer County Police Departments and Womanspace, Inc., are currently accepting applications for volunteers to become members of the Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Victim Response Teams. The team members will work in conjunction with the police to provide support, information, and referral at the time of a domestic violence or sexual assault crisis. Training for the team is July 9 Continued from preceding page Summer Camp Westminster College of the Arts at Rider University will be offering a Contemporary Vocal Camp from Sunday to Saturday, July 17 to 23. Students will delve into jazz and contemporary music and be introduced to vocal stylings, including scat and a cappella. Michelle McNulty, supervising casting director of NBC’s The Voice, will lead a master class. To register or for more information visit www. rider.edu/summerarts or call 609924-7416. Registration is open for children ages 9 to 14 to attend K .E.O . Camp, located at 21 Route 31 North, Suite B, Pennington. The camp is designed to instill in students the skills and confidence found in today’s global business leaders. Topics include effective communication, public speaking, business analysis, business management, budgeting, and the art of investing. The camp will be held from Monday to Friday, August 15 to 19, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Registration fee: $375. For more information visit www.kepcamp.com or e-mail emily@caruentertainment. com. Princeton Public L ibrary is offering a free eight-day immersion program intended to foster a love of learning language and to build language skills for first through sixth graders. Led by high school students, it focuses on beginning grammar, vocabulary, and culture skills for Spanish, French, and Mandarin. The Language Leap program runs from Wednesday, August 10, to Friday, August 19. Registration is required at http:// bit.ly/1ppZLyy. John Bianculli, Italian Bistro Lounge, 441 Raritan Avenue, Highland Park, 732-640-1959. Solo piano. No cover. 7 to 10 p.m. Live Music Saturday Wine & Music, Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-7374465. www.hopewellvalleyvineyards.com. The Jackalopes playing country. Free. 6 to 9 p.m. Chevy Chevis and Band, Mercer County Park Festival Grounds, 1638 Old Trenton Road, West Windsor, 1-800-298-4200. www. mercercountyparks.org. Free. 6 p.m. Carole Lynne, Jester’s Cafe, 233 Farnsworth Avenue, Bordentown, 609-298-9963. With Jerry Topinka on guitar and Nick Palmer on bass. 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Outdoor Concerts Music in the Park, Greater Eldridge Park Neighborhood Association, Eldridge Park, Lawrenceville. www.gepna.org. The Beagles. 5:30 to 8 p.m. Summer Concert Series, Mercer County Park Festival Grounds, West Windsor. www.mercercountyparks.org. Chevy Chevis and Band. Free. 6 to 10 p.m. Lauren & Paddy, Thomas Sweet, 183 Nassau Street, Princeton. 7 to 10 p.m. Jeff & K aren, Thomas Sweet Cafe, Montgomery Shopping Center, 1325 Route 206, Skillman, 609454-5280. www.thomassweet. com. Classic rock/folk acoustic duo. 7 to 10 p.m. Pop Music K ap ‘N’ Friends, 1867 Sanctuary, 101 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609392-6409. www.1867Sanctuary. org. Classic oldies pop. $20. 7 p.m. Ever y N ig ht is “ IN T H E B IZ N ig ht @ K IX X ! Summer Romance Package The package includes: Luxury guest room, 5-course dinner with traditional wine pairing and small bottle of Prosecco in the room I’ve Got a Golden Ticket: ‘Willy Wonka’ continues at Mercer County College’s K elsey Theater through Sunday, July 10. Pictured are Jonah Silberman as Charlie Buckett, Sheldon Z eff as Grandpa Joe, left, and Steven Smith as Willy Wonka. ” Art Pastels en Plein Air, Arts Council of Princeton, Morven Museum & Garden, 55 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609-924-8777. www. artscouncilofprinceton.org. Learn to create fresh landscape sketches outdoors with Steve Smith. For ages 17 and up. $150. 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Two-Day Photography Workshop, Arts Council of Princeton, Morven Museum & Garden, 55 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609-924-8777. www.artscouncilofprinceton.org. Learn the elements of good artistic composition with Bill Blanchard. Saturday Show us proof you work in a restaurant or bar & receive 10% off your bill from 10pm till close! WEEKLY SPECIALS Starting at $525 Join Us for Happy Hour Monday – Friday • 5:00PM – 7:00PM Featuring Discounted Small Plates, Classic Cocktails, & Wine Classic Margarita The Peacock Inn, a 16 room luxury boutique hotel & fine-dining restaurant in the heart of Princeton. Ranked as the top restaurant in Princeton, and one of the Top 15 in New Jersey by Zagat! A credit card is required to confirm reservations. 20 Bayard Lane | Princeton, NJ 08540 | (609) 924-1707 Please visit our website for the complete menus: W W W . T H E P E A C O C K I N N . C O M MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY NOW BOOKING BANQUETS PARTIES, SHOWERS, WEDDINGS, AND MORE Martini Monday $2 off all Specialty Martinis Ladies Night Half Price Specialty Drinks for All Ladies Wing Wednesday Half Price Wings Thirsty Thursday $5 House Margaritas $2 COORS LIGHT OR YUENGLING DRAFTS ALL DAY EVERYDAY! TGIF Thank God It’s Fireball! $3 Fireball Shots Suds Saturday $1 Off All Craft Beers Sunday Funday $5 House Bloody Mary, Mimosa or Screwdriver w w w. k i x xg r i l l a n d b a r.c o m 4591 Route 27 • Kingston, NJ 609-497-9500 JULY 6, 2016 class focuses on shooting at Morven; Sunday class focuses on digital studio editing at the Paul Robeson Center, 102 Witherspoon Street. For ages 15 and up. $120. 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Allez les Bleus, Gallery 353, 353 Nassau Street, Princeton, 803334-8838. www.gallery353.com. An early start to Bastille Day featuring artists who are all partFrench. Refreshments and French music, including La Marseillaise. 5 to 8 p.m. Opening Reception, Trenton City Museum at Ellarslie, 299 Parkside Avenue, Trenton, 609989-3632. www.ellarslie.org. “ Against All Odds, Inspired by Paul Robeson.” Art exhibition inspired by Paul Robeson’s life-long battles for racial justice, economic justice, and peace. On view through Sunday, September 11. 7 to 9 p.m. Architecture Stony Brook Walking Tour, Historical Society of Princeton, Updike Farmstead, 354 Q uaker Road, Princeton, 609-921-6748. www.princetonhistory.org. 90-minute hike follows a portion of the trail George Washington took from Trenton to the Princeton Battlefield. $5. 2 p.m. Dance Dancing and Dessert, Recreation and Cultural Center, 641 Plainsboro Road, Plainsboro, 609-799-0909, Ext. 1719. /www. plainsboronj.com. Dance lesson with Candace Woodward-Clough. For ages 16 and up. No partner required. Register. 7 p.m. NoName Dance, Central Jersey Dance Society, Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Princeton, 50 Cherry Hill Road, Princeton. 609-945-1883. www.centraljerseydance.org. East Coast Swing lesson, 7 to 8 p.m. Open dancing to California Mix dance music, 8 to 11 p.m. No partner needed. $15. 7 to 11 p.m. On Stage The Owl and the Pussycat, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, Princeton University, 732-997-0205. www.princetonsummertheater. org. Adaptation of an Edward Lear poem for children. $12. 11 a.m. The Buddy Holly Story, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-8622121. www.bcptheater.org. Musical features more than 20 of Holly’s greatest hits. 2 and 8 p.m. God of Carnage, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, Princeton University, 732-997-0205. www.princetonsummertheater.org. Yasmina Reza’s Tony Award-winning comedy about adults resolving a playground dispute between their sons. $24.50 to $29.50. 2 and 8 p.m. Disney’s The Little Mermaid, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 455 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857. www.dpacatoat. com. In a kingdom beneath the sea, the young mermaid Ariel longs to leave her ocean home and live on land. $15. 7:30 p.m. Willy Wonka, K elsey Theater, Mercer Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road, West Windsor, 609-570-3333. Musical based on the Roald Dahl classic. $20. 8 p.m. Sherlock’s Veiled Secret, OffBroadstreet Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-2766. Sherlock Holmes comes out of retirement. $27.50 to $31.50. 8 p.m. Sister Act, Plays-in-the-Park, Capestro Amphitheater, Roosevelt Park, 1 Pine Drive, Edison, 732-548-2884. Musical. Bring a chair. $7. 8:30 p.m. Family Theater Snow White, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 455 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857. www.dpacatoat.com. $5. 11 a.m. U.S. 1 13 Hollywood Nights: ‘The Maltese F alcon’ screens at the Princeton Garden Theater on Thursday, July 7. Film Maggies Plan, ACME Screening Room, 25 South Union Street, Lambertville, 609-397-0275. Romantic comedy. $8. 7 p.m. City of Gold, ACME Screening Room, 25 South Union Street, Lambertville, 609-397-0275. Documentary about ethnic cooking in Los Angeles. $8. 8:45 p.m. Comedy Catch a Rising Star, Hyatt Regency, 102 Carnegie Center, West Windsor, 609-987-8018. Register. 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Fairs & Festivals Euro-American Auto & Motorcycle Show, German-American Society Picnic Grove, 215 Uncle Pete’s Road, Yardville, 609-5851932. www.trentondonauschwaben.com. Trenton Danube Swabian Association. $15 vehicle registration, $10 for motorcycles. Free public admission. Rain date July 10. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Faith K irtan, Bhakti Vedanta Institute, 20 Nassau Street, Princeton, 732604-4135. bviscs.org. Discussion, meditation, and Indian vegetarian luncheon. Register by E-mail to princeton@bviscs.org. 1 p.m. Food & Dining Blueberry Bash, Terhune Orchards, 330 Cold Soil Road, Princeton, 609-924-2310. Pick your own blueberries, pony rides for children, music, blueberrythemed foods and wine, and more. Through Sunday, July 10. $5. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Farm Markets Pennington Farmers Market, Rosedale Mills, 101 Route 31 North, Pennington. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. West Windsor Community Farmers’ Market, Vaughn Drive Parking Lot, Princeton Junction Train Station, 609-933-4452. Produce, meats, woven fibers, honey, jams, flowers, baked goods, and pre- pared foods. Rain or shine. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wellness Discussion and Meditation, Princeton Bhakti Vedanta Institute, 20 Nassau Street, Suite 116, Princeton, 732-604-4135. www. bviscs.org. Meditation, Kirtan, Bhakti yoga, and more. 2 p.m. Continued on following page Your Dream Dress For Less 7/16/16 Saturday Only. No appointments necessary. The Perfect Dress in Lawrenceville New Jersey is participating in the National Bridal Sale Day. The largest price reduction of stock gowns we have ever done. We are here in your community and stand by you on one of the most important days of your life, your wedding day. Please support your local brick and mortar bridal store. Choose from our best sellers and new 2016 dresses! Choose from our best sellers and new 2016 stock Sophia Tolli, David Tutera and Allure Bridal gowns Regularly $1100 - $2025 Sale Price $499 - $1099 Mother of the Bride and Groom gowns and Social Occasion Regularly $398 - $998 Sale Price $199 - $499 Prom Gowns (includes 2016 styles) Regularly $199 - $499 Sale $49 - $125 All accessories such as Veils, Jewelry, Shoes, Handbags On SALE up to 75% off ticketed price Preview our Bridal gowns at www.theperfectdressonline.com*** Don't miss the largest sale of the year at The Perfect Dress! Todd Pownell’s simple adornments mix the sensual clarity of moonlight with the hard splendor of our planet’s profound mineral veins. As artisans we perfect these elements and deliver them, home to the sweep and tenderness of the body, like treasure washed onto sand. 2490 U S Highway 1 (Brunswick Pike) Lawrenceville NJ 08648 609-882-0012 * Sale gowns and accessories on sale are in store stock only. Take your dress or accessory home the same day No items can be ordered at the sale price. ** Pre-sale appointments available. For $25.00 make an appointment Thursday or Friday 7/14-15 and have a consultant help you pick your gown. If you buy a gown at the appointment, the $25.00 will be taken off the sale price of your dress or accessory. If not, you will receive a store credit for that amount. *** not all the gowns, dresses and accessories listed on our website are in our store. The website only gives you an representation of what types of items we carry. 47 Palmer S qu are West, Pri n ceton , NJ 0 85 42 dan deli on j ewel r y.com • 60 9.92 1 .03 45 14 U.S. 1 JULY 6, 2016 July 9 Continued from preceding page History Saturday & Sunday July 9 th & 10 th 10am - 5pm Blueberry Bash FOOD J une 2 8& & 29 1 0 - 5 FOOD Saturday Sunday th 10am - 5pm “Everything “Everything Blueberry” July 7 th & Blueberry” 8 Pick Pick Your Your Own Own Blueberries Blueberries Blueberry Blueberry Bake-Off Bake-Off Contest Contest Sunday Sunday MUSIC MUSI C FUN FUN 6/28 H e a vy Tra ffic ffi c Blue Grass Band FOOD George the George and the Dragon Dragon Puppet Puppet Show Show 6/29 J . Swaand rr “Everything Blueberry” Kids’ Kids’ Games FOOD F OODGames Pick YourBlueberry” Own Blueberries Saturday: “Everything Pony Rides Pony Rides Borderline Blueberry Pick Your OwnBake-Off Blueberries Contest Sunday Wagon Rides Wagon Rides Blueberry Bake-Off Contest Sunday FUN Sunday: FUN F UN Store Farm Farm Store Open Tucker’s TaleOpen Puppet Theater Backdoor Tucker’s Tale Puppet Theater Kids’ Games Winery Kids GamesTasting Room Open Noon to 5 PM Pony Rides Pony Rides Sat. - Swinging Dixie Wagon Rides Wagon Rides Wagon Sun. - Beth Coleman Band Farm Store Open Farm Store Open PYO Blueberries Winery Tasting Room Open Noon - 5 PM 330 Cold Soil Rd.Lawrence 330 Cold Rd. 330 ColdSoil Soil Rd. Lawrence Lawrence www.terhuneorchards.com www.terhuneorchards.com 609-924-2310 www.terhuneorchards.com Weekdays 9-7 • Weekends 9-6 60 9 9 2609-924-2310 4-23 1 0 2651698 New York City During World War II, West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road, Princeton Junction, 609-275-8901. www.mcl.org. Lecture with NYC tour guide Marty Schneit. 10 a.m. Guided Tour, K user Farm Mansion, 390 Newkirk Avenue, Hamilton, 609-890-3630. www.hamiltonnj.com. Free. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Colonial K ids Day, The 1719 William Trent House Museum, 15 Market Street, Trenton, 609-9893027. www.williamtrenthouse.org. Learn how children lived in colonial America. Play popular colonial games, write with a quill pen, make a yard doll, and more. $3 per child; free for adults. 1 to 3 p.m. Mark Twain Steamboat Cruise, Steamboat SPLASH, 1 Boat Launch Access Road, Lambertville. www.steamboatclassroom. org. Learn about the Delaware River, the newspaper publishing business, and what life was like in the late 1800s from “ Mark Twain,” performed by storyteller Charles Kiernan. Live music from an oldtime string band. $35. Rain date Saturday, July 16. 3 p.m. For Teens Art of Improvisation, Robbinsville Library, 42 Robbinsville-Allentown Road, Robbinsville, 609259-2150. www.mcl.org/branches/robbr.html. Learn the art of comedic improvisation with the Robbinsville High School Improv Team. For children in grades 5 to 8. Register. 10:30 a.m. Lectures Authentic Indian cuisine in a quiet, elegant setting Customized Catering Available LUNCH Mon - Fri: 11:30 am to 2:30 pm Sat - Sun: 11:30 am to 3:30 pm DINNER Sun - Thurs: 4:30 pm to 10:00 pm Fri - Sat: 4:30 pm to 11:00 pm Reserve Your Office Meetings, Birthdays, Graduations, Weddings, or Any Special Event in One of Our Elegant Private Rooms Phone: 609-275-5707 • Fax: 609-275-9503 E-mail: contact@crown-of-india.com 660 Plainsboro Rd. • Plainsboro, NJ 08536 Daddy Boot Camp, Hamilton Area YMCA, 1315 Whitehorse-Mercerville Road, Hamilton, 888.897.8979. www.princetonhcs.org/calendar. Men-only course designed for fathers-to-be to gain parenting knowledge. 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Outdoor Action Second Saturday Walk, Abbott Marshlands, Hamilton/Bordentown, 609-924-4646. www.drgreenway.org. Learn about the diverse habitats of the marsh and its rich history. Free. Register. 10 a.m. to noon. Mushroom Walk, Hunterdon County Sourland Mountain Preserve, 233 Rileyville Road, Hopewell, 609-309-5155. www. sourland.org. Learn about wild mushrooms with Jenifer Nina Burghardt, of the New Jersey Mycological Association. Registration required. 10 a.m. to noon. Group Walk, Princeton Canal Walkers, Turning Basin Park, Alexander Road, Princeton, 609638-6552. 3.5-mile walk along canal. Free. Inclement weather cancels. 10 a.m. Great Stream Exploration, Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed Association, Kunkel Park, off King George Road, Pennington, 609737-7592. www.thewatershed. org. Exploration of wildlife in and SPIDER VEINS? ET YOUR LEGS VEINS? SPIDER SPIDER VEINS? GREADY ! SUMMER LEGS SETPIDER VEINSG?ETFORYOUR G YOUR LEGS READY FOR SUMMER! READY FOR SUMMER! ! READY FOR SUMMER ET YOUR LEGS is Scott A. Sundick, MD Jonathan A. 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Pontoriero, MD THE CARDIOVASCULAR CARE GROUP Mark Dedicated to Total Cardiovascular CareW. Moritz, MD Raymond J. Holmes, MD Scott A. Sundick, MD Jonathan A. Levison, MD Michael Ombrellino, MD Michael Harry Agis, MD D. Addis, MD Mark H. Kumar, MD Clifton • Morristown • Princeton •W. Moritz, • • Shrewsbury • THE•J.CARDIOVASCULAR CARE GROUP Princeton Shrewsbury • MD • Mark Raymond Holmes, MD• Morristown Sparta Dedicated to Total Cardiovascular Care • Springfield • Westfield Michael Ombrellino,|MD Michael D. Addis, MD 908-224-0735 | www.veininstitutenj.com www.theveincenternj.com 609-246-0785 Clifton • Morristown • Princeton • Shrewsbury www.veininstitutenj.com • www.theveincenternj.com Sparta • Springfield • Westfield 908-224-0735 www.veininstitutenj.com • www.theveincenternj.com around the Stony Brook. Registration required. Free. 10:30 a.m. to noon. Nocturnal Geocache Adventure, Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed Association, 31 Titus Mill Road, Pennington, 609-7377592. www.geocaching.com. Use a GPS and flashlight to navigate through the night to a bonfire. $10 suggested donation. Register. 8 to 10:30 p.m. Night Hike, Nature Center at Washington Crossing State Park, 355 Washington Crossing Pennington Road, Titusville, 609737-0609. Explore the park on a naturalist-guided hike and campfire. Bring a flashlight. Register. 8:30 p.m. Schools Open House, Farringtons Music, Montgomery Shopping Center, 1325 Route 206, Skillman, 609924-8282. www.farringtonsmusic. com. Information about music lessons, camps, and activities. Free trial lesson. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Shopping News Beach Read Fiction Sale, West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road, Princeton Junction, 609799-0462. www.mcl.org. Final day of sale. $1 per hard cover book, $.50 per paperback, or $4 per bag. 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Socials Yarnworks, Ewing Library, 61 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-8823130. www.mcl.org. Join Lee Pellegrino and other knitter and crocheters. Registration required. 2 p.m. Sports G Amazing results without surgery using simple sclerotherapy and new laser treatments. NJ’s largest and most respected vascular practice is now delivering innovative and exceptional care in Amazing results without surgery using simple seven convenient locations. We are here to help! Amazing results without surgery using simple sclerotherapy and new laser treatments. Vascular Specialists: NJ’s largest and most respected vascular practice is sclerotherapy and new laser treatments. Salvador A. Cuadra, MD Clifford M. Sales, MD now delivering innovative and exceptional care in Combizrespected Rezayat, MD vascular practice Michael A. Pontoriero, MD most NJ’s largest and seven convenient locations. We are here to help! Amazing results without surgery using simple Against the Odds: An exhibit honoring the life of Paul Robeson opens at Ellarslie, the Trenton City Museum, with a reception on Saturday, July 9. Pictured is D avid Meadow’s ‘Not Wanted.’ THE CARDIOVASCULAR CARE GROUP Dedicated to Total Cardiovascular Care Saturday Horse Show, Hunter Farms North, 246 Burnt Hill Road, Skillman, 609-924-2932. www.princetonshowjumping.com. Free. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Premier Boxing Champions, Sun National Bank Center, 81 Hamilton Avenue, Trenton, 609656-3234. www.sunnationalbankcenter.com. Undefeated rising super featherweight contender Mario Barrios takes on former title challenger Devis Boschiero. $24. 9 p.m. Sunday July 10 Classical Music Christine Anderson, Solo Handbell Superstar, 1867 Sanctuary, 101 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609392-6409. www.1867Sanctuary. org. “ Ringing for All Seasons” with Marianne Lauffer on piano. $20. 3 p.m. So Percussion Opening Concert, Matthews Theater, Lewis Center, 185 Nassau Street, Princeton. www.sopercussion. com. “ Music for Wood and Strings” by Bryce Dessner. Free. 7 p.m. Josu de Solaun, The Golandsky Institute International Piano Festival, Taplin Auditorium, Fine Hall, Princeton University, 609258-9220. www.golandskyinstitute.org/symposium. Spanish pianist performs a pre-release preview of his upcoming Naxos recording of music by 20th century Romanian composer George Enescu. $10 to $30. 8 p.m. Folk Music Ragtime Relics, 1867 Sanctuary, 101 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609392-6409. www.1867Sanctuary. org. Folk/American roots series. $20. 7 p.m. Live Music Sunday Jazz Brunch, Diamonds of Pennington, 25 Route 31 South, Pennington, 609-7301244. Bob Smith & the Ambiance Duo. Three-course brunch $29.95. Noon to 3 p.m. Jazzy Sundays, Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-737-4465. Piano, Bass & Jazz. Free. 2 to 5 p.m. Broken Angels and Ill, Championship Sports Bar, 931 Chambers Street, Trenton, 609-3947437. $10. 4 p.m. Jason Callaghan, Tiger Noodles, 260 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-252-0663. Solo jazz guitar. 5:30 to 8 p.m. World Music Carillon Concerts, Princeton University Carillon, 88 College Road West, Princeton, 609-2583654. Rachael Perfecto, of Connecticut, and Jakob DeVreese, of Belgium. Free. 1 p.m. JULY 6, 2016 Art Meet the Photographers, Gallery 14, 14 Mercer Street, Hopewell, 609-333-8511. www.photogallery14.com. Annual Juried Exhibit, featuring work from 24 photographers. On view through Sunday, August 7. 1 to 3 p.m. Opening Reception, Gourgaud Gallery, Cranbury Town Hall, 23A North Main Street, Cranbury. www.cranburyartscouncil.org. “ Allentown Art Guild Member’s Show,” featuring work from 8 local artists in pastel, oil, acrylic, and more. On view through Friday, July 29. 1 to 3 p.m. Opening Reception, Plainsboro Library Gallery, 9 Van Doren Street, Plainsboro, 609-275-2897. www.mcl.org. “ Capture? Or Sweet Release” by Jesse Vincent, which features multiple dark wood panels set with nails and intertwining lengths of wire. On view through Wednesday, July 27. 2 to 4 p.m. Vincent is the education coordinator at Artworks Trenton and currently lives in Levittown, PA. More of her art can be seen at jessevincentcreation.com. Remembering Paul Robeson, Ellarslie, Trenton City Museum, Cadwalader Park, Trenton, 609989-1191. www.ellarslie.org. A talk on the American performer and activitist by Denyese Leslie, Witherspoon Street Presbyterian Church historian and Paul Robeson House Advisory Committee in Princeton. Presented as part of the Robeson inspired exhibition “ Against All Odds,” created in collaboration the Paul Robeson House and the African American Cultural Collaboration of Mercer County, and on view through September 11. Free. 3 p.m. On Stage The Buddy Holly Story, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-8622121. www.bcptheater.org. Musical features more than 20 of Holly’s greatest hits. 2 p.m. Willy Wonka, K elsey Theater, Mercer Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road, West Windsor, 609-570-3333. www. kelseytheatre.net. Musical based on the Roald Dahl classic. $20. 2 p.m. God of Carnage, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, Princeton University, 732-997-0205. www.princetonsummertheater.org. Yasmina Reza’s Tony Award-winning comedy about adults resolving a playground dispute between their sons. $24.50. 2 p.m. Sherlock’s Veiled Secret, OffBroadstreet Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-2766. Sherlock Holmes comes out of retirement. $27.50 to $31.50. 2:30 p.m. Disney’s The Little Mermaid, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 455 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857. www.dpacatoat. com. In a kingdom beneath the sea, the young mermaid Ariel longs to leave her ocean home and live on land. $15. 7:30 p.m. Bouchelle, Lenny Fattori, Harry Filkin, Bob Haines, Greg Recchia, Ernie White, and more. Benefits TOPAC. Noon to 5 p.m. Family Theater Fairs & Festivals Snow White, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 455 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857. www.dpacatoat.com. $5. 4 p.m. Bastille Day Celebration, Alliance Francaise of Princeton, Turning Basin Park, Alexander Road, Princeton. www.allianceprinceton.com. Enjoy French music, a French sing-along, and more. Bring a picnic lunch and a dish to share. $10. Register. Noon to 3 p.m. Equestrian Grand Prix and Family Day, Hunter Farms North, 246 Burnt Hill Road, Skillman, 609-924-2932. Pony rides, show jumping, dog and pony exhibitions, and more. $10 parking. Noon to 2 p.m. Film Painting the Modern Garden: Monet to Matisse, ACME Screening Room, 25 South Union Street, Lambertville, 609397-0275. $15. 5 p.m. Good Causes Dinner in Remembrance of Loved Ones Lost to Addiction, The Overdose Prevention Agency Corporation, DeLorenzo’s Pizza, 147 Sloan Avenue, Hamilton, 609-581-0600. www. overdosepreventionagency.com. Unlimited pizza, salad, beverage, and dessert for $30. Live music by Bob Bandiera, Gene Boccia, Lisa U.S. 1 15 Summer Nights: A fife and drum taptoe concert on F riday, July 8 , at the O ld Barracks Museum in Trenton, offers a recreation of an 18 th century summer evening. Farm Markets Singles 31 & Main Farmers Market at Campus Town, Route 31 and East Main Boulevard, Ewing. www.31mainfarmersmarket.com. Produce from Cherry Grove Farm, Z Food Farm, Pineland Farms, Griggstown Farm, and Fulper Family Farmstead. Cooking demonstrations, health screenings, nutrition counseling, and physical fitness activities, and other events will be held each week. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Dinner at Metro Grill, Yardley Singles, 172 Scotch Road, Ewing, 215-736-1288. Register. 4:30 p.m. Food & Dining History Blueberry Bash, Terhune Orchards, 330 Cold Soil Road, Princeton, 609-924-2310. Pick your own blueberries, pony rides for children, music, blueberrythemed foods and wine, and more. $5. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Guided Tour, K user Farm Mansion, 390 Newkirk Avenue, Hamilton, 609-890-3630. www.hamiltonnj.com. Free. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. For Seniors Music We Grew Up With, K user Park Gaze bo, 390 Newkirk Avenue, Hamilton, 609-587-2490. Songs from the 1940s, ‘50s, and ‘60s. Free. 6 p.m. Sports for Causes Rotary 5K Race to Benefit Veterans, Robbinsville-Hamilton Rotary, Veterans Park, Hamilton. www.rhrotary.org. $25. Sign-in for runners until 8:30 a.m. Race begins at 9 a.m. 7:30 a.m. Continued on following page 16 U.S. 1 JULY 6, 2016 Brighten Up Your Summer With The Smile You’ve Always Wanted! BUY ONE, GET ONE FREE ® Whitening In Office Only ($400 Value!) Invisalign® Implant-Tooth Replacement® Lumineers® Veneers One Visit Root Canal Snap-On-Smile® TOOTH FA RY family dental Dr. Marjan Habibian 503 Plainsboro Rd. • Plainsboro, NJ 08536 609-452-2600 • www. ToothFairyFamily.com Ser vi ng t he Co mmun ity f o r O ve r 20 Ye ars SERVING NY, NJ and PA TRI-STATE AREAS Low Back Pain? Neck Pain? Extremity Pain? Princeton Becomes Sound Stage for Contemporary Music S o Percussion will wake up the regional music scene with a series of free concerts of contemporary and innovative music in a variety of Princeton area venues. Events run from Sunday, July 10, through Sunday, July 24. The internationally connected group with a name derived partly from the Japanese for “to play music” has been a part of the Princeton landscape for nearly a decade with its annual two-week So Percussion Summer Institute (SoSI) — now celebrating its ninth year — and as Princeton University performersin-residence. The four-member group, composed of Eric Cha-Beach, Josh Quillen, Adam Sliwinski, and Jason Treuting, will also celebrate its 15th anniversary by featuring performances of So commissions by contemporary composers. That includes works by Princeton University composers Paul Lansky, Steve Mackey, and Dan Trueman; Pulitzer Prize winners Steve Reich and David Lang; Turkish-born New York composer Cenk Ergun; and American innovator Bryce Dessner. Nearly 40 musicians participating in the summer institute will also be performing. The following schedule of events is free and all ages are welcome. Sunday, July 10, 7 p.m.: So Percussion Opening Concert, “Music for Wood and Strings” by Bryce Dessner. Matthews Theater, Lewis Center, 185 Nassau Street, Princeton. Tuesday, July 12, 8 p.m.: Duomo Concert, Matthews Theater, Lewis Center, 185 Nassau Street, featuring “Three Poems for Two Percussionists” by Nathan Jones; “Songs from the Infinite Plane,” by Brett Dietz; “Double Brim,” Quinn Collins; “Settle,” Sarah Hennies” and “Glow,” Dave Molk. Thursday, July 14, 7: 30 p.m.: SoSI at Small World Coffee, 14 Witherspoon Street, Works by SoSI student composers. Sunday, July 17, 8 p.m.: Princeton Composers Concert, Matthews Theater, Lewis Center, 185 Nassau Street, world premieres by Princeton graduate student composers. Monday, July 18, 7 p.m.: SoSI at the Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, performing “In C” by influential American composer Terry Riley. Tuesday, July 19, 7: 30 p.m.: SoSI Outdoors at the Albert Hinds Plaza, at Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street. Thursday, July 21, 1 p.m.: SoSI at the Princeton Record Exchange, 20 South Tulane Street, off Nassau Street. Friday, July 2, 8 p.m.: Open Composer Readings, Matthews Theater, Lewis Center, 185 Nassau Street, readings by So Percussion of new works by SoSI student composers. Saturday July 23, 7 p.m.: Summer Institute Closing Concert, Matthews Theater, Lewis Center, 185 Nassau Street, with “the socalled laws of nature, part 2,” by David Lang; “Threads” (excerpt), Paul Lansky; “It is Time” (excerpt), Steve Mackey; “Neither Anvil nor Pulley”(excerpt), Dan Trueman; “Mallet Quartet,” Steve Reich”; and “Music for Wood and Strings,” Bryce Dessner. So Percussion will also be heard at Lincoln Center for several performances including “Reich/Reverberations,” featuring the music of major American composer Steven Reich, July 16 through 21, and with “So Percussion Triology,” featuring music by Reich, Dessner, Lang, Ergun, Trueman, Lansky, Mackey, and modern masters Iannis X enakis and John Cage, July 28 through 30. For more information, visit www.sopercussion.com/education/summer-institute. JOHN D. LIPANI, MD, PHD, FAANS, FACS Dr. Lipani is the founding Director of Princeton Neurological Surgery and the JD Lipani Radiosurgery Institute. A board certified, fellowship-trained neurosurgeon and specialist in spinal surgery, using state of the art minimally invasive and non-invasive techniques. “ Monday July 11 “ • Herniated Discs • Spinal Stenosis • Spinal Tumors Continued from preceding page We take pride in treating every patient like family. 3836 Quakerbridge Road, Suite 203 • Hamilton, NJ 08619 Phone: 609-890-3400 • Fax: 609-890-3410 www.princetonneurologicalsurgery.com Classical Music Fabrizi o Chiovetta, The Golandsky Institute International Piano Festival, Taplin Auditorium, Fine Hall, Princeton University, 609-258-9220. www.golandskyinstitute.org/symposium. Swiss pianist makes his Princeton debut with “ 300 Years of Masterworks for the Piano.” On the program are Johan Sebastian Bach’s “ Herzlich tut mich verlangen” (adapted by Kempff) and French Overture; American composer George Crumb’s “ Dream Images” Featuring ingredients from Local Farms prepared by well-known Chefs from The Terra Momo Restaurant Group: Eno Terra Mediterra Teresa Caffe Terra Momo Bread Co. Chefs: Terry Strong Hillary Uricks Joseph Voller Marco Santana Jeff Marfil Cody Sells Thursday July 21, 2016 5 pm Cocktails • 6:30 pm Dinner All Fresh And Local • Live Music by Ocean Country Band $100 Per Person • $150 Per Couple – Pay Pal Register Online: sustainablelawrence.org Benefiting the Green Teams and Sustainability Organizations of Mercer County and selections from “ Makrokosmos” ; and Schubert’s “ Sonata in B-flat major.” $10 to $30. 8 p.m. Outdoor Concerts Blawenburg Band Summer Concert Series, Hopewell Train Station, 10 Railroad Place, Hopewell. www.blawenburgband. org. Free. Rain will cancel event. 7:30 p.m. On Stage Sister Act, Plays-in-the-Park, Capestro Amphitheater, Roosevelt Park, 1 Pine Drive, Edison, 732-548-2884. www.playsinthepark.com. Musical. Bring a chair. $7. 8:30 p.m. Literati How to Make a Poem, Arts Council of Princeton, Paul Robeson Center for the Arts, 102 Witherspoon Street, Princeton. www. artscouncilofprinceton.org. Study a different aspect of poetry each week. Classes run Mondays through August 22. No class August 1. $120. 7 to 9 p.m. Mother Daughter Book Club, Hightstown Library, 114 Franklin Street, Hightstown, 609-4481474. www.mcl.org. “ Mr. Penumbra’s 24 Hour Book Store” by Robin Sloan. 7:15 p.m. LGTBQ Book Club, Hopewell Township Library, 245 Pennington-Titusville Road, Pennington, 609-737-2610. www.mcl.org. “ I’ll Give You the Sun” by Jandy Nelson. 7:30 p.m. Comedy Open Mic and Workshop, Eric Potts, Trenton Elks Club, 42 Decou Avenue, Ewing. www.ericpotts.com. 7:30 p.m. Farm Markets Monday Farmers Market, Greenwood Ave Farmers Market, 427 Greenwood Avenue, Trenton, 609-278-9677. Features Jersey Revolutionary Ideas: The D avid L ibrary of the American Revolution in Washington Crossing presents ‘Benjamin F ranklin’s British D ecades: F rom Royalist to Revolutionary,’ a lecture by George Goodwin, on Thursday, July 7. Goodwin is the author of the new book, ‘Benjamin F ranklin in L ondon.’ fresh and tropical produce, meat and eggs, nutritional education, health screenings, and live music. 2 to 6 p.m. Mental Health Support Group, The Push Group, Saint Mark United Methodist Church, 465 Paxton Avenue, Hamilton Square, 609-213-1585. For men and women with anxiety disorders. Free. 7 p.m. JULY 6, 2016 Kids Stuff Tail Waggin’ Tutors: Giselle & Pistal, Pennington Public Library, 30 North Main Street, Pennington, 609-737-0404. www. penningtonlibrary.org. Read to therapy dogs. For ages 5 and up. Register for 15-minute slot. 4 to 5 p.m. Science Lectures Life in the Universe, Ewing Library, 61 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-882-3130. www.mcl.org. Learn about NASA space exploration from presenter Mike Buttitta. Registration required. 7 p.m. Socials U.S. 1 17 International Piano Festival Returns to Princeton T he Golandsky Institute’s 13th International Piano Festival is bringing a solid week of summer classics, jazz, and show music to the Princeton University campus. The six-part recitals performed at Taplin Auditorium at 8 p.m. start on Sunday, July 10, when Spanish pianist Josu de Solaun performs a preview of his upcoming Naxos recording of music by 20th century Romanian composer George Enescu. The concert also includes Brahms’ Six Piano Pieces; Granados’ two “Poetic Waltzes” from “Goyescas”; Albeniz’s “Cordoba”; and Manuel de Falla’s “Andalusian Fantasy.” The series continues as follows: Monday, July 1 1 : Swiss pianist Fabrizio Chiovetta makes his Princeton debut with “300 Years of Masterworks for the Piano.” On the program are Johann Sebastian Bach’s “Herzlich tut mich Hand Embroidery Basics for Beginners, Hickory Corner Library, 138 Hickory Corner Road, East Windsor, 609-448-1330. Register. 7 p.m. Meeting, Mercer County ItalianAmerican Festival Association, 2421 Liberty Street, Hamilton, 609-631-7544. www.italianamericanfestival.com. Looking for volunteers for the 2016 county festival. 7 p.m. Meetings, PFLAG Princeton, Trinity Church, 33 Mercer Street, Princeton, 609-683-5155. www. pflagprinceton.org. Programs to promote the health and well-being of gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender persons, as well as their families and friends. The transgender sub-group meets the specific needs of families and friends of transgender and gender variant people. The mission provides emotional support, education, and resources in a safe, confidential, and non-judgmental atmosphere. The groups meet separately. 7 p.m. ESL Conversation Class, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609-2752897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Register. 7 p.m. Socrates Cafe, West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road, Princeton Junction, 609275-8901. www.mcl.org. Philosophical discussion. 7 p.m. Washington Crossingcard Collectors Club Meeting, Union Fire Company, 1396 River Road, Titusville, 609-737-3555. www.wc4postcards.org. Postcards on Operation Iraqi Freedom with Personel Observations shown by Bob Snyder. Auction to follow meeting. 8 p.m. Tuesday July 12 Classical Music Duomo Concert, Matthews Theater, Lewis Center, 185 Nassau Street, Princeton. www.sopercussion.com. SoSI concert series featuring works by Nathan Jones, Brett Dietz, Q uinn Collins, and Dave Molk. Free. 8 p.m. Wei Luo, The Golandsky Institute International Piano Festival, Taplin Auditorium, Fine Hall, Princeton University, 609-2589220. www.golandskyinstitute.org/symposium. Seventeen-year-old pianist performs “ Discovering Beethoven, Bartok, Chopin, and Albé niz.” $10 to $30. 8 p.m. Jazz & Blues Performers: Jazz pianist Bill Charlap, above, soprano Jennifer Z etlan, and pianist Josu de Solaun. verlangen” and “French Overture”; American composer George Crumb’s “Dream Images” and selections from “Makrokosmos”; and Schubert’s “Sonata in B-flat major.” Tuesday, July 12 : Seventeenyear-old Chinese pianist Wei Luo presents Albeniz’s “Iberia, Book 1”; Beethoven’s Sonata No. 21, the “Waldstein”; Chopin’s Barcarolle, Op. 60; Bartok’s “Out of Doors” suite; and Chopin’s Scherzo No. 2. Thursday, July 14 : Metropolitan Opera soprano and Broadway Sister Act, Plays-in-the-Park, Capestro Amphitheater, Roosevelt Park, 1 Pine Drive, Edison, 732-548-2884. www.playsinthepark.com. Musical. Bring a chair. $7. 8:30 p.m. Film Summer Movie Series, State Theater, 15 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732246-7469. www.StateTheatreNJ.org. Frozen. Free. 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. Summer Documentaries Series, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. “ Very Semiserious: A Partially Thorough Portrait of New Yorker Cartoonists.” 7 p.m. International Folk Dance, Princeton Folk Dance, Kristina Johnson Pop-Up Studio, Princeton Shopping Center, 609-921-9340. www.princetonfolkdance.org. Ethnic line and circle dances of many countries. Beginners welcome. Lesson followed by dance. No partner needed. $5. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Literati Tuesday Night Book Club, Bordentown Library, 18 East Union Street, Bordentown, 609-298-0622. www.bcls.lib.nj.us. “ The Given Day” by Dennis Lehane. 7 p.m. Faith American Jewish Experience Lecture Series, Jewish Historical Society of Central Jersey, Jewish Family Services, 52 Concordia Shopping Center, Monroe, 732-2494894. www.jewishgen.org/jhscj. “ Terrorism, Immigration Restriction, and the Jews” presented by Stephen Eisdorfer, of the National Havurah Institute. $2. 10 a.m. Farm Markets Farmers’ Market, Robbinsville Township, Behind New Municipal Building, Union Street. Fresh food, live music, food trucks. 3 to 7:30 p.m. Summer Sounds: Concerts on the Lawn, Mary Jacobs Memorial Library, 64 Washington Street, Rocky Hill, 609-924-7073. www.SCLSNJ.org. Ragtime Relics. Inclement weather will move the concert indoors. 6:30 to 8:15 p.m. Snap Circuits, Bordentown Library, 18 East Union Street, Bordentown, 609-2980622. www.bcls.lib.nj.us. For children ages 9 and up to build circuit projects. Technology expert Sujit Pal will explain electrical basics and how electricity flows. 6:45 p.m. Rehearsal, Princeton Garden Statesmen, Community Middle School, 55 Grovers Mill Road, Plainsboro, 609-647-6416. www. princetongardenstatesmen.com. Barbershop chorus features men’s a cappella singing. Music training provided. 7:30 to 10 p.m. Primary Care Practice – What’s It All About, RWJ Fitness and Wellness Center, 3100 Q uakerbridge Road, Hamilton, 609-584-5900. Dr. Shankar Santhanam, board certified in family medicine. Free. 6 to 8 p.m. Meeting, Central Jersey Genealogical Club, Hamilton Township Library. www. cjgcnj.com. ‘Historical Newspapers’ by Carolyn Dorsey. 7 p.m. Beginner Python Class, West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road, 609-7990462. www.mcl.org. Computing programming course for beginners presented by Will Grondski. Bring a laptop and download Pop Music On Stage The Buddy Holly Story, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-862-2121. www.bcptheater.org. Musical features more than 20 of Holly’s greatest hits. 7:30 p.m. Python 3.4.2. Register. For ages 13 and up. 7 to 8:30 p.m. Singles Pizza at Vince’s, Yardley Singles, 25 South Main Street, Yardley, PA, 215-7361288. www.yardleysingles.org. 6 p.m. Socials World Tavern Trivia, Wildflowers Too, 255 Route 156, Yardville, 609-585-5483. www. wildflowerstoo.com. Hosted by Eric Potts. 7 p.m. Kids Stuff Lectures gram announced from the stage during the event. The International Piano Festival is part of the Golandsky Institute’s annual symposium July 9 to 17 and attracting participants from around the world to learn about the Taubman Approach to help musicians prevent or overcome playing-related injuries. Tickets range from $10 to $30, available at the box office, 7 p.m. concert nights, or by telephone at 609-258-9220, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., beginning Friday, July 8. For more information, go to www.golandskyinstitute.org. Wednesday July 13 Jazz & Blues Doris Spears Trio, New Brunswick Jazz Proj ect, INC American Bar & Kitchen, 302 George Street, New Brunswick. www.nbjp. org. No cover charge. 8 to 11 p.m. Continued on following page Dancing Dan Giannone Band, New Brunswick Jazz Proj ect, Garden State Ale House, 378 George Street, New Brunswick. www.nbjp. org. No cover charge. 9 to 12 p.m. Outdoor Concerts performer Jennifer Zetlan and her pianist husband, David Shimoni, present “A Life Cycle in American Song.” The concert features music by Leonard Bernstein, Stephen Sondheim, Stephen Foster, Kurt Weill, and others. Friday, July 15 : Russian pianist Ilya Itin returns to perform selections from Debussy’s “Preludes”; Beethoven’s “Andante favori in F”; and Brahms’ “Variations on a Theme by Handel.” Saturday, July 16 : Grammy award winning jazz pianist Bill Charlap performs an evening of jazz standards — with the pro- Glasgold Glasgold Group Group 31 31River RiverRoad, Road, Highland Park, NJ Highland Park, NJ08904 08904 31 River Road, Highland Park, NJ 08904 Aging Aging Aging Gracefully Gracefully Gracefully SURGICAL & NON-SURGICAL NON-SURGICAL NON-SURGICAL SOLUTIONS NON-SURGICAL SOLUTIONS SOLUTIONS SOLUTIONS ® RM ®,, JJUUVVEEDDEERM T®® LLIF ® IF ,T EM TYLLAANNE R RREES JSUTVYEDEMA®® T® MEALIF UN VVOOLLU A RESTYLTOXX®® &®& OMA ® BBO TU OL VO T&® ®T P S POORR DDYY BOSTOX ® RT DYSPO To To receive receive aa complementary complementary To receive receive aa To consultation, consultation, complementary complimentary just this just mention mentionconsultation, this ad! ad! consultation, just mention this ad! 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The Plainsboro L ibrary Gallery hosts an installation by Jesse V incent composed of multiple dark wood panels set with nails and intertwining lengths of wire. A reception takes place Sunday, July 10. July 13 Continued from preceding page Live Music 99 The Blessing of This Curse, Championship Sports Bar, 931 Chambers Street, Trenton, 609394-7437. Also Machinist, Reborn Divided, Nights of Malice, A Raven Among Doves. $10. 4 p.m. Purvi Desai, DDS o e 1 • ill 1 o i io 0 l . On Stage www.insmile.com • 609-683-5651 US1_Jul6_2016_Ad.qxp_Layout 1 6/29/16 11:13 PM Page 1 The Trenton City Museum at Ellarslie Against All Odds: A Collaborative Exhibit of Art and History Inspired by the Life of Paul Robeson Sponsored by: The Trenton Museum Society The Paul Robeson House of Princeton and The African-American Cultural Collaborative of Mercer County July 9 — September 11, 2016 Opening Reception: Saturday, July 9, 7-9 pm Ellarslie Mansion in Cadwalader Park Museum Hours: Tuesday-Saturday 11 am - 3 pm Sunday 1 pm - 4pm Closed Mondays and Major Holidays www.ellarslie.org or call 609-989-1191 or 609-989-3632 BACK TO SCHOOL 2016 Call Now to Reserve Space The Buddy Holly Story, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-8622121. www.bcptheater.org. Musical features more than 20 of Holly’s greatest hits. 2 and 7:30 p.m. Broadway Meets Mason Gross: A Journey of Musical Theater, Mason Gross Performing Arts Center, 85 George Street, New Brunswick, 848-932-7511. www. masongross.rutgers.edu. Selections from the 1947 musical “ High Button Shoes.” Free. 7 p.m. Sister Act, Plays-in-the-Park, Capestro Amphitheater, Roosevelt Park, 1 Pine Drive, Edison, 732-548-2884. www.playsinthepark.com. Musical. Bring a chair. $7. 8:30 p.m. Film The Met: Live in HD Summer Encores, AMC Hamilton 24, 325 Sloan Avenue, Hamilton, 609890-4900. www.fathomevents. com. Screening of Puccini’s opera “ La Bohè me.” 7 p.m. Steve Jobs, Hamilton Public Library, 1 Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. Way, Hamilton, 609-581-4060. www.hamiltonnjpl.org. Free. 7 p.m. Hollywood Summer Nights, Princeton Garden Theater, 160 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609279-1999. www.princetongardentheatre.org. Screening of “ The Searchers.” 7 p.m. Dancing Ballroom Newcomers Dance, American Ballroom, 1523 Parkway Avenue, Ewing, 609-9310149. www.americanballroomco. com. Group class included. $10. 7 to 9 p.m. Contra Dance, Princeton Country Dancers, Suzanne Patterson Center, 1 Monument Drive, Princeton, 908-359-4837. Instruction followed by dance. $8. 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Literati Advertising with U.S. 1 is as easy as A, B, C... The essential parent resource for getting kids ready for a successful school year! U.S. 1 Editions August 10 & 17 Call Jacqueline at (609) 396-1511 ext. 112 Library Book Club, Plainsboro Library, 9 Van Doren Street, Plainsboro, 609-275-2897. “ Dandelion Wine” by Ray Bradbury. 7 p.m. Food & Dining Slavic Dinner, St. Mary Byza ntine Catholic Church, 1900 Brooks Boulevard, Hillsborough, 908-725-0615. Stuffed cabbage, kielbasa, and more. To go orders available. $14. 4 to 7 p.m. Cornerstone Community K itchen, Princeton United Methodist Church, Nassau at Vandeventer Street, Princeton, 609-924-2613. www.princetonumc.org. Hot meals served, prepared by TASK. Free. 5 to 6:30 p.m. Farm Markets Preserving and Serving Foods, Cherry Grove Farm, 3200 Lawrenceville Road, Lawrenceville, 609-219-0053. www.cherrygrove- farm.com. Kim Rizk, Jammin’ Crepes co-founder and Cornell University cooperative extension master food preserver, will teach a class on making, using, and storing condiments. $70. Register. 6 p.m. Wellness True Freedom Insight Session, Hightstown Library, 114 Franklin Street, Hightstown, 609-4481474. www.mcl.org. Leena, 8-year practitioner of Rajyoga meditation. 6:30 p.m. Kids Stuff Mr. Malcolm presents The Wizard of Oz , Robbinsville Library, 42 Robbinsville-Allentown Road, Robbinsville, 609-259-2150. www.mcl.org/branches/robbr.html. For children ages 6 and up. Register. 7 p.m. For Families Paws on Wheels, Bordentown Library, 18 East Union Street, Bordentown, 609-298-0622. PAWs on Wheels will bring animals to the library for families to learn about. 6:30 p.m. Lectures Volunteer Information Session, Court Appointed Special Advocates of Mercer County, 1450 Parkside Avenue, Suite 22, Ewing, 609-434-0050. www.casamercer.org. One-hour session about the non-profit organization that recruits, trains, and supervises community volunteers who speak in Family Court for children who have been removed from their families due to abuse and/or neglect. 5:30 p.m. Outdoor Action Exploring the Night: Bat Watch, Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed Association, 31 Titus Mill Road, Pennington, 609-7377592. www.thewatershed.org. Naturalist Jeff Hoagland. $8. Registration requested. 8 p.m. Socials Weekly Meeting, Rotary Club of Hamilton, Stone Terrace by John Henry, 2275 Kuser Road, Hamilton. Networking and luncheon. $20. 12:15 to 1:30 p.m. Origami Club for all Ages, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-9249529. 6:30 p.m. Thursday July 14 Bastille Day Classical Music SoSI at Small World Coffee, , 14 Witherspoon Street, Princeton. www.sopercussion.com. SoSI concert series featuring works by SoSI student composers. Free. 7:30 p.m. Soprano Jennifer Zetlan and Pianist David Shimoni, The Golandsky Institute International Piano Festival, Taplin Auditorium, Fine Hall, Princeton University, 609-258-9220. www.golandskyinstitute.org/symposium. Husband-wife duo perform “ A Life Cycle in American Song.” $10 to $30. 8 p.m. Jazz & Blues Dimitry Baevsky Q uartet, New Brunswick Jazz Proj ect, Hyatt Regency, 2 Albany Street, New Brunswick. www.nbjp.org. No cover charge. 8 to 11 p.m. Live Music Thursday Evening Jazz , Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-7374465. www.hopewellvalleyvineyards.com. Jeff Fadden Trio. Free. 6 to 9 p.m. Al Oliver (Gentle Jazz) , Enzo ’s Restaurant, 1906 Princeton Avenue, Lawrenceville, 609-3969868. BYOB. Reservations suggested. 7 to 9 p.m. Open Mic Night, Grover’s Mill Coffee House, 335 Princeton Hightstown Road, West Windsor, 609-716-8771. www.groversmillcoffee.com. 7 p.m. The Original Dick Gratton Jazz Group, Alchemist & Barrister Restaurant and Pub, 28 Witherspoon Street, Princeton. www. thejazzman.tripod.com. Dick Gratton on guitar, Paul Austin on bass, and Rich Gerster on percussion. 10 to midnight. Outdoor Concerts Courtyard Concert Series, Princeton Shopping Center, 301 North Harrison Street, Princeton. www.princetonshoppingcenter. com. AJOYO with world fusion music. Free. 6 to 8 p.m. Music in the Park, , Weeden Park, Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609219-9300. www.lawrenceville- JULY 6, 2016 U.S. 1 19 Brothers Seek a Better Sound – On and Off Stage ‘B by Ez ra Austin ig studios are done,” says Geoff Hazelrigg, sitting in his apartment with his brother, George, in Doylestown, Pennsylvania. Beside them is a large metal box, a recording preamplifier prototype they created for their new electronics business, Hazelrigg Industries. “We’re designing this for people like us, who are having to deliver recordings that sound as good as major label recordings without that kind of budget,” Geoff says. For those not familiar with the world of audio engineering, a preamplifier, preamp for short, is an essential part of the recording process. It takes a microphone or instrument and makes it louder, amplifying it to the appropriate recording level. The two brothers, both in their early 40s, are music industry professionals and have spent much of their careers working with artists in top recording studios. Now, however, advancement in technology, particularly in terms of portability, has made the studio system obsolete, the brothers say. “If Alicia Keys wants to record a vocal, she does that in her house,” says George. “Why use a studio when you have a $5,000 microphone and our preamps, and a laptop? A producer can come over, and the artist can work on their own time. They don’t have to worry about the clock. It changes the whole workflow.” In addition to recording with big name indie artists such as Autre Ne Veut and Shy Girls, the brothers also perform their own music, blending classical, rock, and jazz to create unique compositions (see below for upcoming performances). The brothers are trying to close a gap they see in the music industry; their hope is that Hazelrigg Industries will provide people with affordable recording equipment without a loss of quality. George and Geoff Hazelrigg currently live in Pennsylvania — George in Doylestown and Geoff in neighboring Chalfont with his wife and two kids. They grew up in Princeton and attended Princeton High School, where they both played in rock bands (Class of 1990 and 1994, respectively). Their father, George Sr., received a Ph.D. in aerospace engineering from Princeton University and later started an aerospace engineering consulting company. Their mother, mainstreet.com/events/musicpark.htm. Ed Goldberg and Odessa Klezmer Band, traditional klezmer, polka and international melodies. Free. 6:30 p.m. Ed Goldberg & the Odessa K lezm er Band, Weeden Park, One Craven Lane, Lawrenceville, 609-219-9301. “ Music in the Parks” with Lawrenceville Main Street. Free. 7 to 8:30 p.m. The Buddy Holly Story, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-8622121. www.bcptheater.org. Musical features more than 20 of Holly’s greatest hits. 2 and 7:30 p.m. On An Average Day, Chimera Productions, Paul Robeson Center, 102 Witherspoon Street, Princeton. A psychological drama and black comedy about two brothers as they deal with the mystery of the past. $25. 7:30 p.m. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, Princeton University, 732997-0205. www.princetonsummertheater.org. Tom Stoppard’s dramatic look behind the scenes of Shakespeare’s Hamlet. $29.50. 8 p.m. Sister Act, Plays-in-the-Park, Capestro Amphitheater, Roosevelt Park, 1 Pine Drive, Edison, 732-548-2884. www.playsinthepark.com. Musical. Bring a chair. $7. 8:30 p.m. Pop Music Summer Music Festival, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, 215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org. “ Love Will Keep Us Together.” $32 and up. 7:30 p.m. Art Trenton Youth Fest Film Festival, Ellarslie, Trenton City Museum, Cadwalader Park, Trenton, 609-989-1191. www.ellarslie.org. Films produced with the Trentonbased company Both Hands; The Artlet , presented in collaboration with the Paul Robeson House of Princeton and the African American Cultural Collaboration of Mercer County. Free. Exhibition on view through September 11. 7 p.m. On Stage The Owl and the Pussycat, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, Princeton University, 732-997-0205. www.princetonsummertheater. org. Adaptation of an Edward Lear poem for children. $12. 11 a.m. ‘Why use a studio when you have a $ 5,000 microphone and our preamps, and a laptop? A producer can come over, and the artist can work on their own time. It changes the whole workflow.’ Lauretta, was a nurse in the Princeton hospital system, primarily at Merwick and Princeton House. The two say they can trace their new business endeavor, and their involvement in the music world in general, back to their childhoods in Princeton. “It wouldn’t have happened anywhere else. I mean, it couldn’t have happened anywhere else,” said George, discussing the musical opportunities granted to him growing up. “The things that we were doing in Princeton didn’t happen anywhere else as far as I know, at least not in this country.” In addition to playing in bands, the two sang in the Trinity Church choir from ages 7 to 18, and both were classically trained at the Westminster Choir College, George playing harpsichord and Geoff playing violin. “There were several people in town with whom I could study [ harpsichord] ,” says George. “I don’t know where else you could have gone to get that. I mean maybe New York City, but then you’re dealing with a whole other set of circumstances.” George says the brothers’ musi- Film Thursday Evening at the Movies, Ewing Library, 61 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-882-3130. www.mcl. org. “ Remember.” For ages 18 and up. Registration required. 6:30 p.m. Family Movie: The Good Dinosaur, Pennington Public Library, 30 North Main Street, Pennington, 609-737-0404. www. penningtonlibrary.org. Bring a blanket or towel. 6:30 p.m. cal educations were unconventional at the time. “I think the difference nowadays is it’s a more level playing field with YouTube and the internet and everything else. Everyone has access to everything,” he says. “I mean, if you want to see a double manual harpsichord in 1980 where do you go? Princeton.” The Hazelriggs made the transition to contemporary music in the early 1980s, when MTV took over popular culture. “A lot of it also started when we got our first synthesizer,” says Geoff. After college the two moved to Washington, D.C., where they composed music for several early 2000s television shows such as “The Real Gilligan’s Island.” They also recorded and performed with local artists, sometimes touring across the country to support them on stage. Currently the two brothers perform in venues throughout the tristate area. They are also part of an electronica group called Collective Acoustics whose music has been featured on a number of TV and radio programs including NPR’s “Freakonomics.” T he brothers recounted how much musical equipment has changed since they first began playing in bands in the ’80s. “That [ synthesizer] cost around $800 back then, which is a tremendous amount of money. Now you can get enough software for free and you can produce a whole record,” says Geoff. “Back then getting any piece of gear at all was cost prohibitive,” he says. “You could get a gig with somebody because you owned a piece of gear. That’s just how it was, because they were so hard to come by.” Despite improvements made in terms of the portability of music technology and recording equipment, the Hazelriggs say the overall quality of these technologies has been less than impressive. “When you think about how far Music Men: George, left, and Geoff Hazelrigg grew up in Princeton and are now Bucks-based. your smartphone has come in the last few years, it’s amazing. But we’re still recording worse versions of audio than what we had 30 years ago,” says Geoff. “Our goal [ with Hazelrigg Industries] is to help people make better sounding records,” says George. Much of the process of starting Hazelrigg industries has been second nature to the brothers. “We’ve had so many years of hands-on experience working in the trenches that we know what guys like us need, and we understand the economics of it all, and we can speak that language,” Geoff says. Still, starting a business has not been easy. “So far the hardest part has been dealing with suppliers and getting the things that we need,” says Geoff. “And getting the word out.” The brothers build the preamps from scratch, using parts from various suppliers. “We do all the parts acquisitions and do the assembly in our kitchen,” says George. “Because we have to wait on people for parts, it’s done in stages.” The Hazelrigg Industries preamp is currently being sold for $2,249. In addition to performing music and running Hazelrigg Industries, George teaches private harpsichord lessons, while Geoff works for Pennsylvania-based audio company D.W. Fearn, the owner of which, Doug Fearn, designed the preamp the Hazelriggs sell. Though the company is still in its infancy, the Hazelriggs say they have received positive feedback for their product. “Everyone who has heard [ our preamps] goes nuts, and most people who do buy them. But in the grand scheme of things it’s not that many people,” says Geoff. “For us this is much more personal; we have a personal mission to have a positive impact on the industry,” he added. “Maybe it’ll work out. We’ll see.” Hazelrigg B rothers, B owman’ s Tavern, 1600 River Road, New Hope. Saturdays, July 9 and 30, 7:30 to 11:30 p.m. 215-8622972. www.bowmanstavernrestaurant.com. Plumsteadville Inn, 5902 Easton Road, Pipersville. Saturday, July 16, 7 to 11 p.m. 215-7667500. www.plumsteadvilleinn. com. Prallsville Mills, 33 Risler Street, Stockton. Labor Day celebration. Saturday, September 3, 6 to 9 p.m. 609-397-3586. www. prallsvillemills.org. For more performance dates, go to www.hazelriggbrothers.com. For company information visit www.hazelriggindustries.com. JUNCTION BARBER SHOP Hollywood Summer Nights, Princeton Garden Theater, 160 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609279-1999. www.princetongardentheatre.org. Screening of “ Dr. Strangelove.” 7 p.m. 33 Princeton-Hightstown Rd Princeton Jct NJ 08550 Traditional Barber Shop Serving Our Neighbors Since 1992 Dancing Argentine Tango, Viva Tango, Suzanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609948-4448. vivatango.org. No partner necessary. $15. 9 p.m. Continued on following page Tuesday - Friday 10am - 6pm Saturday 8:30am - 4pm No appointment Walk-in service 609-799-8554 • junctionbarbershop.com Prevent Prescription Drug Abuse in Mercer County Use a Mercer County Prescription Medicine Disposal Box Location: Princeton Police Dept. 1 Valley Road, Princeton Mercer County Sheriff’s Office 640 S. Broad St., Trenton Robbinsville Twp. Police Dept. 1117 us 130, Robbinsville West Windsor Police Dept. 20 Municipal Drive, West Windsor Lawrence Township Police Dept. 2211 Lawrenceville Rd., Lawrenceville Hamilton Township Police Dept. 1270 Whitehorse-Mercerville Rd, Hamilton Hopewell Valley Police Dept. 201 Washington Crossing Pennington Rd., Titusville Prevention Coalition of Mercer County 20 U.S. 1 JULY 6, 2016 sanonymous.org. Welcome to those with money problems, overspending, underearning or debt. Free. 7:45 p.m. July 14 Continued from preceding page Kids Stuff Farm Markets Capital City Farmers Market, Mill Hill Park, 165 East Front Street, Trenton. www.destinationtrenton. com. Every Thursday through October. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Princeton Farmers Market, Princeton Public Library, Hinds Plaza, 55 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www. princetonfarmersmarket.com. Live music from 12:30-2:30 p.m. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Health Carotid Artery Disease, RWJ Fitness and Wellness Center, 3100 Q uakerbridge Road, Hamilton, 609-584-5900. Symptoms, risk factors, diagnosis, and treatment discussed with Dr. Biagio Manna. Free. 6 to 8 p.m. Wellness Snakes & Scale, , Community Park, Plainsboro, 609-799-0909, Ext. 1719. www.plainsboronj.com. Reptile show. Free. 6 to 7 p.m. Bingo for Children, Ewing Library, 61 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-882-3130. www.mcl.org. For children ages 5 to 10. Registration required. 7 p.m. Power & Energy with Sciencetellers, Robbinsville Library, 42 Robbinsville-Allentown Road, Robbinsville, 609-259-2150. www.mcl.org/branches/robbr.html. Experience the science of power and energy through handson experiments. For children ages 6 and up. Register. 7 p.m. For Teens Essay Writing Seminar, Lawrence Library, 2751 Brunswick Pike, Lawrenceville, 609-8961912. Get the best out of your college essay. Free. Register. 6 to 8:30 p.m. All Things Blueberry: Terhune O rchards’ annual Blueberry Bash takes place Saturday and Sunday, July 9 and 10. about the non-profit organization that recruits, trains, and supervises community volunteers who speak in Family Court for children who have been removed from their families due to abuse and/or neglect. 5:30 p.m. Free Legal Clinic, Mercer County Connection, 957 Route 33, Hamilton, 609-890-9800. www.mercercounty.org. 15-minute consultations. Register. 5:30 to 7 p.m. Clear the Clutter; Organize Your Life, Hickory Corner Library, 138 Hickory Corner Road, East Windsor, 609-448-1330. Learn easy tips to get organized and stay organized with professional organizer John Odalen. 7 p.m. Time Matters: A Women’s Retirement Outlook Seminar, Lawrence Library, 2751 Brunswick Pike, Lawrenceville, 609-9896920. www.mcl.org. Michael Pine, financial advisor at Edward Jones, on financial concerns facing women who are getting ready for retirement. Free. 7 p.m. mbrace Change with Lace Silhouettes Lingerie Outdoor Action Body Recharge, West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road, Princeton Junction, 609-2758901. www.mcl.org. Methods that improve joint mobility, strength, and flexibility. Bring yoga mat or towel. 7 p.m. Debtors Anonymous, Slackwood Presbyterian Church, 2020 Brunswick Avenue, Lawrenceville, 800-421-2383. www.debtor- Socials Pontoon Boat Nature Tours, Plainsboro American Language types,” whichLectures is why she The v-back design Mercer Lake, Mercer County Social Club, Plainsboro Public Park, West Windsor, 609-448Library, 9 Van Doren Street, Volunteer Information Session, prevents straps from carries a variety of 4004. View great blue herons, Plainsboro, 609-275-2897. www. Court Appointed Special Advopainted turtles, and rose mallow lmxac.org/plainsboro. For adults cates of We Mercer County, 1450 off your in bloom. No children under age 6 who want to improve their English falling brands and styles. 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No cover. 6:30 to 10 p.m. Live Music Sips and Sounds, Terhune Orchards Winery, 330 Cold Soil Road, Princeton, 609-924-2310. www.terhuneorchards.com. Performance by Ocean Country. Rain or shine. Free admission. 4 to 7 p.m. Friday Wine & Music, Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-737-4465. www. hopewellvalleyvineyards.com. Pocketful of Soul playing R& B/ soul. Free. 6 to 9 p.m. Open Mic Jam, Hopewell Valley Bistro, 15 East Broad Street, Hopewell, 609-466-9889. www. hopewellvalleybistro.com. Hosted by Jimmy Mac. 8 p.m. JULY 6, 2016 U.S. 1 21 Opera Summer Program Something to Sing About O Outdoor Concerts Listen Local Series, Hinds Plaza , Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609924-9529. www.princetonlibrary. org. The Lifters Band, playing rock, blues, and swing music. 7 p.m. Upper Princeton Swing Collective, Thomas Sweet, 183 Nassau Street, Princeton. www.thomassweet.com. 7 to 10 p.m. Pop Music Summer Music Festival, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, 215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org. “ Love Will Keep Us Together.” $32 and up. 8 p.m. Art Ebu-Arts Show Opening Reception, Straube Center, Route 31 and West Franklin Avenue, Building I-108, Pennington, 609-7373322. www.straubecenter.com. Work from artists in Straube Center’s Ebu-Arts Contest, including Kevan Lunney, Lauren Curtis, Jennifer Pertrino, and Veronica Winters. On view through Friday, October 7. 7 to 9 p.m. On Stage The Owl and the Pussycat, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, Princeton University, 732-997-0205. www.princetonsummertheater. org. Adaptation of an Edward Lear poem for children. $12. 11 a.m. On An Average Day, Chimera Productions, Paul Robeson Center, 102 Witherspoon Street, Princeton. A psychological drama and black comedy about two brothers as they deal with the mystery of the past. $25. 7:30 p.m. Disney’s The Little Mermaid, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 455 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857. www.dpacatoat. com. In a kingdom beneath the sea, the young mermaid Ariel longs to leave her ocean home and live on land. $15. 7:30 p.m. The Dinner Party, Acting Naturally, 164 North Flowers Mill Road, Langhorne, PA, 267-7989165. www.actingnaturally.com. Play by Neil Simon about six strangers who are invited to dine at a first rate restaurant in Paris. $14 to $18. 8 p.m. Dancing at Lughnasa, Actors’ NET, 635 North Delmorr Avenue, Morrisville, PA, 215-295-3694. www.actorsnetbucks.org. Drama by Brian Friel about five Irish sisters. $20. 8 p.m. The Buddy Holly Story, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-8622121. www.bcptheater.org. Musical features more than 20 of Holly’s greatest hits. 8 p.m. Sherlock’s Veiled Secret, OffBroadstreet Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-2766. Sherlock Holmes comes out of retirement. $27.50 to $31.50. 8 p.m. Continued on following page Art from Allentown: Members of the Allentown Art Guild present an exhibit at the Gourguad Gallery in Cranbury. An opening reception takes place Sunday, July 10. Pictured is Ellen L ucretia McGuff Silverman’s ‘Salt Marsh.’ pera lovers can fill their hearts with song as the Westminster Choir College’s CoOPERAtive moves into a three-week series of free concerts, recitals, and master classes featuring established and emerging opera artists from around the world. Concerts of popular and historic operatic arias will be performed on Wednesdays and Fridays, July 6 through 20, at 7:30 p.m., and on Saturday, July 23, at 2 p.m. at Bristol Chapel on the Westminster Choir College Campus in Princeton. Art song recitals include the German lieder program on Saturday, July 9; French melodie on Saturday, July 16, and the American program on Friday, July 22. Each takes place in Bristol Chapel at 7:30 p.m. Participating singers will also perform in master classes with Craig Rutenberg, consultant and coach at the Atkins Young Artist Program at the Maryinski Opera in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Thursday, July 14; Kathleen Kelly, coach/conductor of opera at University of Michigan, on Monday, July 18, and Tuesday, July 19, with Gina Lapinski, Metropolitan Opera stage director. All master classes begin at 7:30 p.m. in the Robert L. Annis Playhouse and are free and open to the public. In addition to the free events, there will also be “An Evening of Divas, Divos and Dessert” on Monday, July 11, at 7 p.m., in the Robert L. Annis Playhouse. The event features a master class with CoOPERAtive Program director Laura Brooks Rice and light desserts. Tickets are $20 and available At Westminster: O pera coach and conductor K athleen K elly leads a master class with CoO PERAtive program participants on Monday, July 18 . at the door and online at www.rider. edu/arts. Westminster Choir College of Rider University, 101 Walnut Lane, Princeton. www.rider.edu/ arts. 22 U.S. 1 JULY 6, 2016 Saturday, July 9, 2016, 7 pm Kap’n’Friends The TEMPOraries Classic Oldies Pop with Steve Kaplan & friends Contemporary Music Concert Series Sunday, July 10, 2016, 3 pm Ringing for All Seasons Featuring the world reknowned Christine Anderson Solo Handbells with Marianne Lauffer, Piano Sunday, July 10, 2016, 7 pm Ragtime Relics Songs, stories, history and humor, Tin Pan Alley to Ragtime Blues...the Jazz Age to the Swing Era and beyond, a blend of traditions shaping American music in the early 20th Century Folk/Roots Music Concert Series 101 Scotch Road, Ewing, NJ www.1867sanctuary.org Tickets: $20 General Admission $5 Students Wheelchair accessible and Sales Deals For the latest offers, visit palmersquare.com/sales-promotions WHAT IF SOMETHING CHANGES? Events are always subject to last minute changes, sell outs, and even cancellations. We recommend you call or check the venue website before leaving home or work. And double check the latest listings at www.princetoninfo.com. Our easily accessible database is updated daily. Have information for our events editor? Please E-mail events@princetoninfo.com T H E U LT I M AT E MEN SEEK ING WOMEN Are you lonely and a little daring? So am I. Does your life need that special spark every so often? Mine does. Could you use some TLC now and then? Me too. I’m an athletic 50 something in great shape, looking for a partner to share a fun and discrete, no strings attached physical relationship. If you’re interested, respond with your contact information. We can email, talk, exchange photos and go from there. Only attractive, in-shape, non-smokers please. Box 240007 Are you looking to be in a committed relationship with a fun, genuine, intelligent gentleman? If you’re between 35 - 47 years old, please respond with your phone number to this 42 Year Old SWM. Box 239999 Athletic, SWM 50s looks younger, great hygiene, squeaky clean. Seeking a physically fit woman, for hot passion. Love giving a nice slow massage, love lots of foreplay, etc. Clothing optional beaches, dancing, romance, love kissing. You would not be disappointed. Can exchange photos. Ciao. Box 239977 Hi and hello, to you. I’m a SWM age 62. Act much younger and full of energy, but enjoy relaxing with music, DVD, going out for pizza and Japanese food. Can dance, and socialize also. Want women ages 40-60 years old, nice shape, great hair, nice to talk with. Send phone number, with note, or letter. All races apply. Box 240005 In search of a woman with a sense of humor. I am DWM, educated, semi-retired, financially secure, not bad looking, warm hearted and a great dancer (years ago). I enjoy movies, plays, travel, and museums. I don’t do drugs or smoke but I have been known to have a drink. I am a nice guy, easy going, warm and affectionate. Please include a phone number and your response. Box 238434. Italian American male, 70 years old, widower, active and educated. Likes to laugh, have fun and do new things. Are you up for a new adventure? We would travel, go to indie movies, theater, museums, NYC and Philadelphia. We could stay home and have a quiet evening to cook together (I’m an excellent cook) and we can get to know each other. Please send a photo, phone number, and note. We’ll talk-meet for coffee or lunch. Box 239987 SWM Early sixties - sense of humor, nice eyes and in good shape. I am a regular runner and tennis player. I enjoy the small things in life like sunsets and rainbows. I am well educated, with a good job and good investments. Seeking a positive SWF 45-60, non-smoker, kids okay, college degree preferred for summer fun. Let’s meet at the beach, movies, or other summer fun places. All responses will be answered. Provide phone number and/or e-mail. Box 240004 MICHAEL JACKSON EXPERIENCE Sunday, July 31st - 7 p.m. Mercer County Park Festival Grounds July 15 Continued from preceding page TICKETS ON SALE NOW! $22 Reserved Seating $12 Lawn Seating U Y E Y E TY MER S J ER ER COU N C • W E • N Y • E W E E S J ER • N N W C ER COU TY TY • • MER CO N C ER N MER To Purchase Tickets: Visit The Sun National Bank Center Box Office, Call 1-800-298-4200 or Visit www.mercercountyparks.org S J ER FESTIVAL GROUNDS Brian M. Hughes County Executive Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, Princeton University, 732997-0205. Tom Stoppard’s dramatic look behind the scenes of Shakespeare’s Hamlet. $29.50. 8 p.m. Sleeping Beauty, Somerset Valley Players, 689 Amwell Road, Hillsborough, 908-369-7469. www.svptheatre.org. $12. 8 p.m. Sister Act, Plays-in-the-Park, Capestro Amphitheater, Roosevelt Park, 1 Pine Drive, Edison, 732-548-2884. Musical. Bring a chair. $7. 8:30 p.m. Family Theater Disney’s The Aristocats K ids, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, PA, 215785-0100. 30-minute production for kids. $10. 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. SINGLES MEN SEEK ING WOMEN WOMEN SEEK ING MEN Young 60s, 6 ‘ tall, retired, work part time. Lived in NYC and traveled the world for many years. Looking for someone to do some fun things with such as concerts dancing or just plan old antiquing. Movies, read a good book go to the beach or cook. I have numerous hobbies. I swim every day at the YMCA and do not smoke, etc. Still good looking at least that’s what I hear, after all these years and have kept my sense of humor. Looking for someone kind and laid back and hopefully someone who seeks a “ little” excitement now and then. Please send a little about yourself, phone number and recent photo. Box 240010 times eyeglasses. I am respectful and kind to people and expect the same of you. One other item I don’t want to see are huge beer bellies and ugly teeth. I am kind and sweet to most people I meet and I would expect respect from you as well. Send me a note with your real name and if possible a picture of the entire driver’s side of your pickup truck. Let me know how to reach you. Box 240001 WOMEN SEEK ING MEN 63 year old attractive healthy widow. 5’9” tall, blonde, green eyes, Caucasian SWF interested in getting to know a gentleman. A 50 plus Caucasian gentleman who is drug free and a nonsmoker. I live in Mercer County, Hamilton. I’m easy going, honest and would like to know a gentleman who enjoys the simple things in life. Love the outdoors, good music, good movies TCM. Enjoy the shore, AC occasionally. Enjoy being at home. If you live in Mercer County or not too far away I would like to get to know you. If you are retired that’s a plus. Please no one who plays mind games or interested in one night stands. If you are honest please answer. Leave your phone number. I will call you and send you a recent photo. Box 239990 Central NJ tom-boy lady, but straight. I am a lover of awesome detailed Pick-up trucks but I don’t want to buy. Read on. I am a die hard Dallas Cowboys Fan since 1965. Now I’m not talking junky, chipped or work pickup trucks, I am looking for awesome. Kept in shape. If your truck is awesome and it makes me go mmmm! (well close to that) then get in touch. I am not looking to buy, I am also looking to meet the driver/owner of the pickup truck. He must be between 45 - 75. Well groomed, likes fishing, the shore in the winter time, boardwalks at night. Must not drink or smoke. Christian. Race unimportant. Now me, well that’s another story. I am a young 68, but feel 50. My interests are eclectic from the Englishtown top fuel funny cars, North Carolina, action movies, like traveling, short or long trips, all types of music except country and western. I am two levels up from being poor, but it’s not your money I’m looking at, it’s your truck! I am not a lover of water or the sky. I am based on the ground, seeing as how my sign is a Leo. I can be independent if I want to, born in America, so truly an American, looking for same, no foreigners! I am very spontaneous most of the time and you’ll never know what I might say or do. I would prefer in the beginning to meet several truck owners (and you have to be unattached-no lady in your life!), but become my friend, my companion, maybe if we click just right, we can proceed to kissing, hugging and more. I am 5’9” , gravity has set in a bit, wear my hair short and some- Pinocchio, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 455 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857. www.dpacatoat.com. $5. 11 a.m. Film Weiner, ACME Screening Room, 25 South Union Street, Lambertville, 609-397-0275. www.acmescreeningroom.org. Documentary about Anthony Weiner’s sex scandal and political career. $8. 7 p.m. There’s a New World Somewhere, ACME Screening Room, 25 South Union Street, Lambertville, 609-397-0275. www.acmescreeningroom.org. Two strangers go on a road trip through the deep South. $8. 8:50 p.m. Dancing Ballroom Social, American Ballroom, 1523 Parkway Avenue, Ewing, 609-931-0149. www. americanballroomco.com. Group class included. $15. 7:30 to 10 p.m. DWF-Young 60s from Croatia (UScitizen) very educated, financially secure and new to the area. I don’t smoke or do drugs, not a drinker (social drinks ok) and I play no games. Very honest, hard working, active, enjoy travel, music, outdoors, golf, plays and more. I value family life, like to cook and I enjoy a sense of humor. Would like to meet a man with similar interests and values for friendship. Warm, affectionate, caring would be a big plus. Send a photo, phone and note about yourself. (No photo-no response.) Box 239961. Love to live life. Would love to share it with a fun loving guy in his late 50’s or 60’s. I am an Italian single woman looking for real love, but want to enjoy life with a friend. I am known to have quite a sense of humor always on the go and I do work. Love the sun, sea and outdoors. I do not smoke or drink. I love my family and love to laugh. I have old fashion values and am a hopeless romantic. Looking for that honest loving guy who will enjoy each day to the fullest. Want to be my all year valentine? Box 240000 MEN SEEK ING MEN Sometimes love is not in the area where you live, it may be just one hour away at the Jersey Shore where I live. I am a retired professional man living the good life, but I am alone. I am looking for a partner or a sincere man to enjoy our golden years together before they tarnish! I am Italian, 6’, 188lbs and in good health. A hopeless romantic, enjoy cooking, gardening, puppy dogs, walks on the beach, and a great sense of humor. Looking for someone with old fashion values, sensitive and creative, and like myself, needs a special hug! I will respond to all serious replies. Happy holidays are in the future. Please send photo and phone number-Thank you! Box 239989 HOW TO RESPOND How to Respond: Place your note in an envelope, write the box number on the envelope, and mail it with $ 1 cash to U.S. 1 at the address below. HOW TO ORDER Singles By Mail: To place your free ad in this section mail it to U.S. 1, 15 Princess Road, Suite K, Lawrenceville 08648, fax it to 609-844-0180, or E-mail it to class@princetoninfo.com. Be sure to include a physical address to which we can send responses. Folk Dance, Princeton Folk Dance, Suzanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609-912-1272. www.princetonfolkdance.org. Beginners welcome. Lesson followed by dance. No partner needed. $5. 8 to 11 p.m. Miscellany Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory Tour, , 100 Stellarator Road, Princeton. www.pppl.gov/ about/tours. Get a behind-thescenes look at the national laboratory where scientists are creating a “ a star on Earth” as a future energy source. Free. Register. 10 a.m. Faith Shabbat Under the Stars, The Jewish Center Princeton, 435 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609921-0100. www.thejewishcenter. org. Dairy Potluck Dinner following services. Bring a vegetarian or dairy dish/dessert. Weather permitting. 6:30 p.m. Wellness Meditation, Fellowship in Prayer, 291 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 732-642-8895. Led by Acharya Girish Jha. No experience needed. Register. Free will donation for first class. 7 p.m. Kids Stuff Playground Shabbat, The Jewish Center Princeton, 435 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-9210100. www.thejewishcenter.org. Singing, dancing, and Ruach for children 6 and under and their families. Dinner on the playground begins at 6:15 p.m. Free. Register. 5:30 p.m. Lectures Job Seeker Sessions, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. For professionals who are seeking new employment. 9:45 a.m. Outdoor Action Native Plant Sale, D&R Greenway Land Trust, Johnson Education Center, 1 Preservation Place, Princeton, 609-924-4646. www. drgreenway.org. Plants are available in quart and gallon-sized pots. 3 to 5 p.m. Politics Summer Fundraiser, Hamilton Township Democratic Club, 244 Lander Drive, Hamilton, 609-8510022. “ A Toast To Mercer County Freeholder Anthony Carabelli.” Entertainment by Ryche Chlanda. $30. Register. 5:30 to 8 p.m. Singles Dinner at Crow’s Nest at K nights of Columbus, Yardley Singles, 1492 Woodbourne Road, Levittown, PA, 215-736-1288. www. yardleysingles.org. Registration required. 6 p.m. Space/CopyDeadline SPACE©DEADLINES Friday,July13 JULY 6, 2016 U.S. 1 23 R ev iew: ‘ G od of Carnage’ F by Stu Duncan or years conflict has been recognized as a major ingredient of drama. How else to explain why Edward Albee and David Mamet have become pillars of the American stage? But Yasmina Reza tops them all, and “God of Carnage” — which has just opened as part of the Princeton Summer Theater’s impressive lineup — is a prime example. The work has variously been described as “87 minutes of complete chaos” and “a train wreck of an afternoon.” In truth, it is a drawingroom comedy with new and exciting heights of humor, barbed-wire dialogue, and, yes, some venom. Well, a lot of venom. It has been translated from playwright Reza’s natural language — French — by British playwright Christopher Hampton, and the pair brilliantly skewer the Brooklynite upper-middle class. The plot revolves around two 11-year-old boys (not in the play) who have had a disagreement at school. One of them has taken a stick and knocked out the other boy’s two front teeth. The parents are meeting to discuss the situation — presumably in a civil manner. It turns out to be a difficult project. Alan and Annette, parents of the more aggressive lad (played stunningly by Billy Cohen and Maddie Meyers) are apparently trying to express just the right degree of contrition. It really isn’t easy — he is a high-powered lawyer and has a constantly ringing cell phone to prove it. She describes her work as “wealth management.” She leaves the impression — that should be enough. FARM TO From Our Table to Yours As U.S. 1’s July 20 issue will attest, New Jersey really is “The Garden State.” Ecologically concerned farmers are producing organic fruits and vegetables along with freerange, chemical-free livestock. Farmers’ markets are making this bounty available to residents and restaurants alike. Meet the Central NJ players in this dynamic new industry Meet players in issue. this dynamic new industry in U.S.the 1’sCentral annual NJ Farm to Fork in U.S. 1’s annual Farm to Fork issue. AREFASTAP ROACHING! . 1 e e • i ceo o io P u b l i s h e d RES RVEYOURSPACENOW! Wednsday,July18 12oelo iceo040•60942 . i ceo i o.c SPACE & COPY DEADLINES ARE FAST APPROACHING! RESERVE YOUR SPACE NOW! For her part, the victim’s mom, Veronica, is played with wonderfully shaded nuances by Olivia Nice, who graduated two years ago from Princeton and is currently acting in New York. Not all of her passion is real, however, for example she “doesn’t see the point of existence without some kind of moral conception of the world.” But let things start to go a little against her wishes, and just watch the snarls of a wild beast come into her conversation. Her husband, Michael, is played by Jake McCready (a native Texan, now studying for an MFA in New York at the New School for Drama) with his tongue firmly planted in humorous one-liners. Playwright Reza clearly seeks to shock and occasionally to offend. For example, a stage direction asks Annette to deliver “a brutal and catastrophic spray of vomit.” She does and the scene is not only embarrassing, but one of the funniest you are apt to see in years. Now you can’t just turn this kind of material over to any director or any set of actors and expect results. Annika Bennett has been working both at the Goodman Theater in Chicago and Seattle Rep since she graduated from the university two years ago. She has paced the show at break-neck speed (a must) and has moved her characters with great skill. Note how she pairs the men together at times; the ladies at other times, and how it fits the dialogue. And watch as the four actors subtly develop small character traits that give distinct hints as to God of Carnage: Maddie Meyers, left, Billy Cohen, Jake McCready, and O livia Nice. why each acts the way they do. A very funny play about the very worst in people. Don’t miss it. God of Carnage, Princeton Summer Theater, Murray-Dodge Hall, Princeton University through Sunday, July 10, with performances Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m., and Saturday and Sundays at 2 p.m. $24.50 to $29.50. 6092587062 or www.princetonsummertheater.org. Share Your Story* With Our Discerning Readers • • • Rt 1 & Alexander Rd in Princeton • • • • For more Call Jennifer information 609-452-7000 call Samantha ext. 307x114 609-396-1511, Space/Copy Deadline Published Friday, July 13 Wednesday, Published July 20 Wednesday, July 18 .. ..1 1 ee e e • • 1i ce oi ce o o io ioe ce 12 o el o i ce o 0 40 • 609 4 2 000 e ce ille 0 64 .. ii ce ce oo ii o.co o.co 24 U.S. 1 JULY 6, 2016 ART FILM LITERATURE DANCE DRAMA MUSIC PREVIEW Reporter K atz Talks Christie, Democracy, and a Bridge Saga ‘I t is about public officials on sixfigure salaries using their powers to affect the life of one person and then affecting the lives of thousands of people,” says reporter Matt Katz, the Peabody Award-winning journalist, explaining why New Jerseyans should care about Bridgegate — the September, 2013, closing of lanes on the George Washington Bridge by employees or appointees of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie. The alleged aim was to punish Fort Lee mayor Mark Sokolich after he declined to endorse the governor for re-election. The closing created days of traffic jams that jeopardized the wellbeing of thousands of New Jersey citizens trying to get their children to school and get to their jobs. It also impeded passage for thousands of American citizens attempting to cross the nation’s busiest bridge. Katz’s response is as quick as it is informed. In addition to following Christie for the Philadelphia Inquirer, the 38-year-old writer is the eyes, ears, and voice of WNYC’s Christie Tracker. He is also the author of “American Governor: Chris Christie’s Bridge to Redemption,” a 452-page book that chronicles Christie from his birth in Newark to his fast lane rise to political celebrity to his own current political lane closing. With the federal government trials of the three known players — Port Authority of New York and New Jersey officials David Wildstein (who pleaded guilty) and Bill Baroni (pleading innocent) and ex-Christie chief of staff Bridget Anne Kelly (pleading not guilty) — set to start in September, Katz’s detailed and fast-paced book is the perfect pre-trial primer to put the action and players in context. Think of it as a real life “Who Done It” that will be solved live in real time beginning in September. “(Bridgegate) goes to the way the system has elements that allow corruption,” says Katz on a speakerphone as he drives to a New Jersey book appearance. There is something right about Katz being interviewed over a soundtrack of tires humming over a state highway. His work has taken him all places New Jersey as he followed the governor and searched for information — with Trenton and Princeton being prominent backdrops. There is also some poetic justice in Katz becoming the go-to guy on Bridgegate. He is the one who asked Christie during bridgerelated press conference, “Governor, did you have anything to do with these lane closures in September outside the GW Bridge?” The governor — so famous for his sarcasm the Star-Ledger newspaper dubbed him “Governor Rickles,” after the caustic comedian Don Rickles — responded with the now famous, “I worked the cones, Matt. Unbeknownst to everybody I was actually the guy out there. I was in overalls and a hat.” Katz says while the trial will answer basic questions of who knew what and when, it also promises to be a bridge into other questionable activities related to Christie’s office and the governor’s Port Authority appointees. One such activity involves the governor’s staff getting local endorsements for Christie’s re-election “They were doing that on taxpayers’ time and presenting gifts to (other elected) officials,” Katz says, mentioning steel salvaged from the wreckage after the attacks on the World Trade Center in 2001 and American flags flown over what became to be called Ground Zero. It was, he says, “the politicalization of 9/11.” Another was “the way the Port Authority — which has a bigger budget than most states — is the plaything of the wealthy and power- by Dan Aubrey ful. And now an allegation that the chairman of the Port Authority (which owns Newark Airport) was using his position to get United Airlines to create a route to South Carolina, ‘The Chairman’s Flight,’ would never have come to light without the investigation.” While the closing of the George Washington Bridge is now the stuff of national news and New Jersey history, the caper had the potential of being missed — even by the press. “I didn’t see it as plausible or reach into the governor’s office,” admits Katz about his first thought about the bridge closings. “I thought it was local shenanigans. I didn’t know how difficult it was for the drivers (in Fort Lee). I didn’t know it was happening intentionally on the first day of school. I didn’t realize it went on for five mornings in a row.” Looking back to the governor’s cone comments in December, 2013, Katz says, “We don’t know for sure if at the time (of the press conference) if he did know. We don’t have evidence.” Yet, he adds, “It is such a ridiculous thing that (his response that he didn’t know) seems a plausible answer; it also seems a good way to throw people off the scent.” That leads to a central problem with the current administration. “Transparency has been a major problem. He promised to be transparent. It was in the second sentence in his inaugural address. And you look at the court costs related to secret documents and attempts to open them up to the public.” The sentence from the inaugural address to which Katz refers is, “Today a new era of accountability and transparency is here.” A nother problem with transparency, says Katz, is that formerly public documents are no longer treated as such. That includes records of the governor leaving the state, the amount the state government spent on Christie’s failed presidential bid, and other budgetary information. “We’re in court right now to see his G100 list — where the governor’s office listed its favorite towns.” That includes municipalities and “swing towns” that would receive special attention, like town hall meetings, to get endorsements. “It has been very difficult to know what is going on in (Christie’s) government unless he chooses to tell us,” says Katz. And after the revelation of Bridgegate, the governor cut back on press conferences, making it more difficult to get information, he adds. And there has been controlled information coming from the governor’s office, which doubled his communications staff and, as Katz notes in the book, reached “a payroll of about $1.4 million a year — so staffers could be dispatched to every public event armed with video cameras, boom mic, and laptops, cutting and clipping Christie’s appearances into mini-movies.” With the help of a digital director who, Katz writes, choreographed the governor, the team created videos edited from town hall meetings where the governor bounded into the room, threw off his jacket, told stories about his mother and friends, and sparred with anyone who challenged him. “The YouTube videos were creating his own news channel,” says Katz, adding the governor’s staff sent tapes to a press list of 3,000 sympathetic and conservative talk shows. The videos attracted news show producers, who invited the governor to appear — with those appearances edited by the governor’s staff to create more “YouTube moments,” says Katz. The result, says Katz, was Christie became more than “a governor. He was ‘the Governor,’” and “the aura from New Jersey was beginning to seep into America” — and into the biography’s title. Those YouTube moments are just part of many New Jersey moments for Katz, who started covering the state in 2000, reporting for the Daily Record Morris County, followed by covering southern New Jersey and Camden for the Courier Post, and then a fiveyear stint with the Philadelphia Inquirer’s Christie Chronicles. It is work he set out for himself years ago. “As a kid I wanted to be a reporter. I read the paper as a kid,” he says. “In college (George Washington University) I thought about going into politics, but I changed my view on that.” Katz — despite his current connection with the Garden State — was born in the Bronx. His father, Richard, worked for the Food and Drug Administration. His mother, Roberta, was an elementary school teacher with a specialty in reading. He grew up in Queens and Long Island. Yet New Jersey is very close to his heart. He dedicates his book to his wife, Deborah, writing, “The best thing that ever happened to me was falling in love with a Jersey girl” — Randolph, New Jersey, to be exact. An online trail shows Katz courting his fellow George Washington University attendee through articles and blogs — with a New Jersey Monthly profile on Katz concluding with his proposal. They married in 2008, have two children, and live in Philadelphia, where she a vice president/creative director at Evoke Health. Katz says his reporting and writing work can make home life difficult, but things are easier now that the book and related tour are finished. Assessing Christie’s early years, Katz says “he was successful in the first term working with Democrats with pension and benefit reform. You can agree and disagree M att K atz ’ s book ch ronicles Ch ristie from h is birth in N ewark to h is fast lane rise to political celebrity to h is own current political lane closing. W ith th e B ridgegate trials approach ing in September, th e book is th e perfect primer to put th e action and players in contex t. Christie Chronicler: Reporter Matt K atz, left, and his book, ‘American Governor: Chris Christie’s Bridge to Redemption.’ with it, but it was bipartisan success. The psychological effect he had on the state after (Super Storm) Sandy was important those first few days after Sandy hit, and I think he was good at it. “There’s no question he did a lot less as governor in the second term than he did the first term. In regards to the pension he would have made more cuts, but the Democrats and unions wouldn’t go along. He couldn’t go any further. He didn’t make any deals or compromises.” On Christie’s changes on issues such as gun laws and Planned Parenthood, Katz says,” I can’t look into his heart. He changed his position on many things. It’s hard to know what was real and what wasn’t.” Katz took a break from New Jersey politics in 2010 and traveled to the Middle East to report for the Philadelphia Inquirer, receiving a Livingston Award for International Reporting for his series “Mired in Afghanistan.” Asked if that assignment affects his thinking about covering problems with transparency and corruption at home, Katz says, “I was reporting on a broken (military) bureaucracy. What I was seeing back in New Jersey wasn’t too much different.” Then, he adds, just as his car gets to its destination, “What gets me hot under the collar is when the law is broken, and we can’t get documents we need to get.” He is also concerned about the public’s right to know what elected officials are doing and being held accountable and the current state of journalism.”The press core at the Statehouse has gotten smaller. It’s bad for democracy and bad for New Jersey for sure.” So what should the public look for during the upcoming trials? Katz’s response is simple and cuts to the core of what political reporting is all about: “The public should be watching for clues about all of the otherwise unknown things — legal and illegal alike — that their public servants were doing on the public dime.” Summing it all up he says, “We’ll get a unique look at how the administration works. Fascinating!” American Governor: Chris Christie’ s B ridge to Redemption, by Matt Katz, Simon & Shuster, $28. JULY 6, 2016 U.S. 1 25 For Summer Guests, History Beyond the Headlines No Talent for Subordination A by Pia de Jong nnis Boudinot Stockton was the wife of Richard Stockton, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. She lived in Morven, the historic estate that is just a stone’s throw from my house in Princeton. In her time, she was a rara avis, an outspoken and independent woman with an intense passion for the written word and poetry. She corresponded and flirted with George Washington and other heroes of the American Revolution. Her modern ideas about gender and politics were ahead of their time in a period when expressing strong opinions was a privilege reserved mostly for men, as well as the writing of literature. Her beautiful home later became the Governor’s Mansion of New Jersey and is now Morven, the museum. I receive a tour given by a nice older lady who mostly talks about the important men who lived here. As I walk through the halls, filled with the atmospherics of the 18th century, my thoughts turn to Annis. It is not difficult to imagine her here, walking to the slave quarters in the backyard. When one of the black women died in childbirth, she nursed the motherless baby herself. I can see her going upstairs to the bedrooms of their children to kiss them goodnight. But mostly I see her sitting by the fireplace lined with Delft Blue tiles of mythical beasts while she writes her poems. Annis’ life was no bed of roses. Her husband was arrested in the Revolution by the British and forced to renounce the patriots’ cause. Their home was ransacked, her carefully landscaped garden destroyed, and her library burned. She Illustration by Eliane Gerrits lived there alone as Richard Stockton’s widow but continued to write and rebuild Morven. In the museum hangs a portrait of Annis as an older woman. Her face shows the traces of her struggles. Only some of her writings were published during her lifetime. Most of her poems were written out by hand, distributed in literary salons, and that was it. It was long believed that she had only written 40 poems. After her death 120 more poems were discovered, including many personal letters. Annis is a mirror-image of another bold writer I have admired for years. She is the aristocratic Dutchborn free spirit Belle van Zuylen. Annis and Belle led parallel lives on opposite sides of the ocean, two early feminist women of letters. Belle was born in 1740; Annis in 1736. Both survived revolutions. Both carried on flirtatious correspondences with many men, married and unmarried. Both struggled with a misogynistic zeitgeist, but courageously followed their own literary paths. When the British A nnis Boudinot Stockton is well known as the stalwart wife who kept Morven together while her husband, Richard Stockton, the first signer of the Declaration of Independence, languished in a British prison. She was known in her lifetime as a poet, with “modern ideas about gender and politics,” as Pia de Jong notes above. One of her poems, written in 1783 following the announcement of peace, drew an acknowledgment from General Washingtonm to whom it was addressed: With all thy country’s blessings on thy head, And all the glory that encircles man, Thy deathless fame to distant nations spread, And realms unblest by Freedom’s genial plan; Addressed by statesmen, legislators, kings, Revered by thousands as you pass along, While every muse with ardour spreads her wings To our hero in immortal song; Say, can a woman’s voice an audience gain; And stop a moment thy triumphal car? And wilt thou listen to a peaceful strain, Unskilled to paint the horrid wrack of war? For what is glory — what are martial deeds — Unpurified at Virtue’s awful shrine? Full oft remorse a glorious day succeeds, The motive only stamps the deed divine. But thy last legacy, renowned chief, Hath decked thy brow with honours more sublime, writer James Boswell proposed marriage to Belle but required her not to see other men or correspond with them, she replied, “I have little talent for subordination.” If they could have actually met, what would they have spoken of? About the many interesting men in their lives whom they admired and who admired them in turn? About their romantic relationships, always on the basis of equality, and their affairs that defied the limits of decency? Or would they focus primarily on how women could work and write as equals to men? Belle would have told Annis about how she wrote her first satirical novel, Le Noble, when she was 21, only to have her father withdraw the book from the market. Annis would tell Belle about the dismissive reactions of men in her life. In one of her poems, Annis suggests her plight by asking a seemingly simple question: “Is it possible for a woman to find an audience?” Pia de Jong is a Dutch writer who lives in Princeton. She can be contacted at piadejong.com. Twined in thy wreath the Christian’s firm belief, And nobly owned thy faith to future time. Stockton’s letter to Washington, sent along with the poem, has been lost. But Washington’s reply, written from Rocky Hill on September 24, 1783, remains: You apply to me, my dear madam, for absolution, as though you had committed a crime, great in itself yet of the venial class. You have reasoned good, for I find myself strongly disposed to be a very indulgent ghostly adviser on this occasion, and notwithstanding you are the most offending soul alive (that is if it is a crime to write elegant poetry), yet if you will come and dine with me on Thursday, and go through the proper course of penitence which shall be prescribed, I will strive hard to assist you in expiating these poetical trespasses on this side of purgatory. Nay, more, if it rests with me to direct your future lucubrations, I shall certainly urge you to a repetition of the same conduct — on purpose to show what an admirable knack you have at confession and reformation; and so without more hesitation I shall venture to recommend the muse not to be restrained by illgrounded timidity, but to go on and prosper. You see, madam, when once the woman has tempted us and we have tasted the forbidden fruit, there is no such thing as checking our appetite, whatever the consequences may be. You will, I dare say, recognise our being genuine descendants of those who are reputed to be our progenitors. Literary Lights: Scott Fitzgerald T Washington, by Charles Willson Peale: The portrait in the Princeton Art Museum shows the classic view of the American general. Pia de Jong’s research, left, suggests he might have enjoyed some flirtatious exchanges with Annis Boudinot Stockton of Princeton’s Morven. hat F. Scott Fitzgerald went to Princeton and that he used his college experience as fodder for his first novel, “This Side of Paradise,” is hardly hidden history in Princeton. But some people may be surprised to discover that the very spot where Fitzgerald began writing that novel is still intact, largely unchanged from 1915, when Fitzgerald began his draft. That place is the library in Cottage Club, shown at left, the undergraduate eating club on Prospect Avenue, where Fitzgerald was a member. While Cottage Club was once open several days a year for public tours, that is no longer the case. But a polite visitor might drop in, express an interest in Fitzgerald, and ask if one could take a quick glimpse into the library on the second floor, modeled on the 14th century library in Merton College, Oxford University. A visitor in 2010 described the Fitzgerald memorabilia in the library as “just a waist-high glass case,” containing “two Princeton fight songs, and three Continued on page 28 Before I come to a more serious conclusion of my letter I must beg leave to say a word or two about these fine things you have been telling in such harmonious and beautiful numbers. Fiction is to be sure the very life and soul of poetry. All poets and poetesses have been indulged in the free and indisputable use of it — time out of mind, and to oblige you to make such an excellent poem on such a subject without any materials but those of simple reality would be as cruel as the edicts of Pharaoh, which compelled the Children of Israel to manufacture bricks without the necessary ingredients. Thus are you sheltered under the authority of prescription, and I will not dare to charge you with an intentional breach of the rules of the decalogue in giving so bright a colouring to the service I have been enabled to render my country, though I am not conscious of deserving more at your hands than what the poorest and most disinterested friendship has a right to claim: actuated by which you will permit me to thank you in a most affectionate manner for the kind wishes you have so happily expressed for me and the partner of all my domestic enjoyments. Be assured we can never forget our friend at Morven and that I am, my dear madam, your most obedient and obliged servant, GO. WASHINGTON. Source: Wives of the Signers: The Women Behind the Declaration of Independence, by Harry Clinton Green and Mary Wolcott Green. Originally Published in 1912 as volume 3 of The Pioneer Mothers of America. 26 U.S. 1 JULY 6, 2016 Princeton Tours W hen it comes to “hidden history” in Princeton, one significant source is a woman who is a relative newcomer to town. Mimi Omiecinski, founder and operator of the Princeton Tour Company, moved to Princeton a decade ago as a “trailing spouse” — her husband had taken a job at Johnson & Johnson headquarters. Omiecinski immediately fell in love with the town and its sometimes quirky past, and created a tour company that takes visitors to all the established historic sites as well as many that are not part of any guidebook (at least not yet). Omiecinski soon created the now annual event known as Pi Day, commemorating Albert Einstein’s March 14 birthday and the value of the mathematical constant known as pi — 3.14. And now she is adding another town-wide celebration to her calendar — a day to remember or learn about for the first time. The event will commemorate the fact that Princeton was home to the first capitol of the United States. Omiecinski’s Princeton Tour Company will guide visitors to the historically significant spots on the anniversary of the Treaty of Paris — Satur- day, September 3, from 4 to 5:30 p.m. She anticipates that the event will be held the first Saturday of every September. Her website, www.firstcapitalprinceton.com, explains some of the history in a series of eye-opening questions and answers: “Did you know Princeton is home to the first White House? You read that right. The first president wasn’t George Washington. Mimi will break it down on the tour. “Did you know Princeton was home to the first capitol? True. In 1783 the Continental Congress fled to Princeton. Simply put, we didn’t have taxation yet and hadn’t paid our soldiers. Rumors spread in Philadelphia that an angry mob might attack congressmen in Independence Hall. The Continental Congress convened in secret inside Nassau Hall from June until November. “Did you know Princeton was the first legitimate capital of the United States? True again. The first week of September of 1783, George Washington rode to Nassau Hall to receive news that the Treaty of Paris had been signed, which officially recognized America’s independence. Princeton, thereby, became the first capital of the new nation.” The First Capital Princeton web- site notes that “Princeton had its own celebrations during the repeal of the Stamp Act, Boston Tea Party, and, of course, pivotal revolutionary battles. We’ll show you the Stamp Act trees on campus that were planted to celebrate the repeal of the Stamp Act and the spot on campus where the students burned all their tea and burned the ‘King’ to the stake after the Boston Tea Party.” “Ever wonder if the rumor about the cannon ball and Nassau Hall is true? The proof of what really happened surrounds this famous painting by Charles Willson Peale at the Princeton University Art Museum. We’ll break it down on the tour. “Ever wonder why the Norman Rockwell painting inside the Yankee Doodle Tap Room at the Nassau Inn has a Paul Revere theme? We did too and we will tell you on the day of the tour when we end at the Yankee Doodle Tap Room and toast the revolution.” Registration is free but mandatory. To register E-mail Omiecinski at firstcapitalprinceton@gmail. com. You will receive an E-mail confirmation with more information about the September 3 event, which is being sponsored by Morven Museum & Gardens, the Yankee Doodle Tap Room, the Princeton University Art Museum, the ‘Colored’ School T Historic Homes: Top, the former Witherspoon School of Colored Children on Quarry Street. Above, Paul Robeson’s home on Witherspoon Street. he Colonial Revivalstyle apartment building at 35 Quarry Street, shown at left, houses a surprising amount of Princeton history. It was, from 1909 until 1966, the Witherspoon Street School for Colored Children — so-named for the school’s original location at 184 Witherspoon Street. The school, whose Quarry Street location was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005, had its origins in a small wooden house adjacent to the Witherspoon Street building. It was there in the 1830s that Betsey Stockton (no relation to Annis Boudinot and Richard) began teaching Princeton’s African American children. Stockton, born into slavery in Princeton in the 1790s, grew up to become a servant for Ashbel Green, then the president of Princeton University. Through Green she met Charles Stewart, a student at Princeton Theological Seminary who arranged for her to come on a mission trip to the Sandwich Islands (now Ha- ‘Yankee Doodle:’ In 1937 the owners of the redeveloped Palmer Square commissioned Norman Rockwell, the renowned magazine illustrator, to create a mural for the new Nassau Inn. The commission was $2,500. Word is that the resulting 13-foot mural is now insured for $6 million. National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution — Princeton Chapter, as well as the Princeton Tour Company. Princeton Tour Company, 1-855-743-1415. www.princetontourcompany.com. 185 Nassau Street I sabel (Izzy) Kasdin, executive director of the Historical Society of Princeton, puts the former elementary school at 185 Nassau Street, now home of the university’s Lewis Center for the Arts, on her short list of off-the-beaten-path places that represent important times in Princeton’s history. “My attachment to this historic place in Princeton is multifaceted,” Kasdin writes in an e-mail. “On the surface, I spent a good deal of waii), where she taught at the first mission school open to the common people there. She started teaching in Princeton in 1835 and continued until her death in 1865. “The school has been well conducted by a female teacher (colored) and is thought to exert a healthful influence among the colored population,” wrote Princeton superintendent H.M. Blodgett in 1860. “Average daily attendance thirty-five.” In 1872 the school board paid for the construction of the facility at 184 Witherspoon Street, and continued to monitor and maintain the school. This included the hiring and firing of teachers, among them the Rev. William Robeson — Paul’s father. By 1907 the school had outgrown its Witherspoon Street location, and architect Walter B. Harris, a member of the university’s engineering faculty for 50 years, was selected to design the school’s new home on Quarry Street. The two buildings on Witherspoon Street were sold for a total of $10,410, and construction of the new Continued on page 28 time at the Lewis Center during my undergraduate years as a result of my deep involvement in the theater scene at Princeton. Broader than that, I think the Lewis Center represents such a creative adaptive reuse of a space (the gymnasium-turnedblack box theater as a prime example). “School buildings are particularly difficult to reuse (Detroit as an extreme case) and I love the way this one has been so nicely repurposed. “On top of that, the Nassau Street School, or Princeton Elementary School, represents a period in Princeton’s past that residents need to recognize, that of segregation. Princeton was a deeply segre- Two Sided: The Civil War memorial in Nassau Hall include Union and Confederate casualties. JULY 6, 2016 gated place into the mid-20th century, and Princeton’s segregated elementary schools — both still standing — provide a physical reminder of this story, and its continuing impact on our present. Cause for reflection indeed. Plus I just have such a soft spot in my heart for the history of schools!” U.S. 1 Office Opportunities Pennington - Office/Retail R t. 3 1 So u th @ T r ee Far m R o ad. Retail Available - 1265-2377 SF. Of ce Only 1400 S F Civil War Memorial A nother little-known historic site on Izzy Kasdin’s list is the Princeton University Civil War Memorial, located inside the main entrance to Nassau Hall. Kasdin calls it “not only an aesthetically beautiful place, with its floor-to-ceiling marble and its gilt inscriptions, but it is also the home to a remarkably advanced piece of public memorialization. “The years following the Civil War were fraught with debates about memory and memorialization — as a result, some scholars credit the late 19th and early 20th century with the birth of American public memory. As we have seen with the flying of the Confederate flag into the 21st century, Civil War wounds are deeply cut into the American conscience. “However, not long after Appomattox Courthouse, Princeton added the list of alumni who perished in the war — the bloodiest in American history — to Nassau Hall’s memorialscape and, unlike any other Civil War memorial across the country, included both Union and Confederate dead, listed alphabetically, not even identified by sides. It would take decades for other memorials to achieve the same level of reconciliation.” Cleveland Tower G rover Cleveland was a big man in stature and size. The former U.S. president, Princeton resident, and Princeton University trustee was nearly six feet tall and weighed 260 pounds. So it isn’t a surprise that one of Princeton University’s biggest towers is named in his honor. But what may surprise some Al T o to to to cp n @ ao l. co m Princeton First Class Office For Lease C o r n er o f R o u te 2 0 6 & H er r o n to w n R o ad. 2 4 3 0 SF s ec o n d f lo o r w ith r ec ep tio n , 7 o f f ic es , c o n f er en c e, k itc h en , s to r ag e, o p en ar ea f o r 3 - 5 p eo p le. Fu r n is h ed w ith p h o n e s ys tem, c o p ier , f ax etc . 1 4 5 0 SF 2 n d FL : r ec ep tio n , 5 o f f ic es , o p en w o r k ar ea, k itc h en ette, s to r ag e ar ea. 6 80 SF 1 s t FL : r ec ep tio n , 3 o f f ic es . Presidential History: Princeton University’s Cleveland Tower houses a memorial to Grover Cleveland. about Cleveland Tower is what is inside: a large memorial chamber where a bust of the only president who served two non-consecutive terms — making him the 22nd and 24th president. Designed by Gothic Collegiate architect Ralph Cram and funded by a public subscription, the 173-foot tower reminiscent of Oxford University’s Magdalena tower was dedicated to Cleveland in 1913 for his retirement from public life and service to the university. While it may seem surprising that there was such evident outpouring of good will for Cleveland to create such a large structure, it is not as surprising as an annual event that takes place on April 30 in the memorial chamber. Since 2007 Hawaiian Restoration Day has remembered President Grover Cleveland’s support for the government of the Hawaiian Republic and his advocacy of Queen Lili’uokalani. As Princeton University materials note, “When the Hawaiian queen was overthrown in 1893, President Cleveland denounced the coup d’etat and supported the restoration of the queen as head of state of the Kingdom of Hawaii. Cleveland withdrew his opposition when it became clear that the overthrow was an indigenous affair. Nonetheless, each year in April, a delegation of Hawaiians from the Pacific Justice and Reconciliation Center in Honolulu comes to Princeton to pay tribute to the former president and his support of Hawaiian sovereign rights. They decorate his gravestone and the bust of Grover Cleveland in Cleveland Tower with beads, shells, and coins, as is Hawaiian custom.” It’s a solemn event hidden in one of the most visible structures in — Dan Aubrey Princeton. Al T o to to to c p n @ ao l. c o m West Windsor - Sale or Lease Of ce-Flex-Recreation, 1100-9000 SF, immediate occ pancy. W illiam B ar is h bbar is h @ c p n r eales tate. c o m Office For Lease - Pennington C en ter o f D o w n to w n P en n in g to n . 4 4 9 SF - 1 90 0 SF su ites available. Amp le p ar ik n g . W alki n g dist an ce to sh o p s, r est au r an ts an d lo ca l se r vice s. Ju ts o f f R o u te 3 1 an d cl o se to I- 95 . LABORATORY & RESEARCH CENTER at PRINCETON CORPORATE PLAZA • Ideally situated on “Einstein Alley” Inspiring innovation. between Princeton & Rutgers Universities • Fully equipped, turn-key lab & office space • Custom design by in-house architectural team • Ability to sub-divide: 300 SF-60,000 SF • Immediate occupancy • Flexible lease lengths & rates • Home to over 80 scientific companies • Adjacent hotel Al T o to - to to c p n @ ao l. c o m Pennington Office For Sale or Lease 1 5 0 0 SF - 3 0 0 0 SF o f f ic e available f o r leas e o r s ale. V er y ag g r es s ive r en tal r ates . Al T o to to to c p n @ ao l. c o m RESIDENTIAL BUILDING LOT FOR SALE 254 Pennington Rocky Hill Road • Hopewell Township CONTACT: KENT MANAGEMENT (732) 329-3655 info@princetoncorporateplaza.com PRINCETONCORPORATEPLAZA.COM Pennington, NJ 2.61 Acres - Wooded Building Lot. Asking Price $235,000 Al T o to - to to c p n @ ao l. c o m www.cpnrealestate.com Fo r mo r e in f o r matio n an d o th er o p p o r tu n ities , p leas e c all C o mmer c ial P r o p er ty N etw o r k , 6 0 9- 92 1 - 884 4 27 28 U.S. 1 JULY 6, 2016 28-minute video titled “F. Scott Fitzgerald: One Fine Morning.” Produced by Patrick H. Ryan of Princeton’s Class of 1968, the video features script and commentary by A. Walton Litz, a 1951 Princeton alumnus who earned his Ph.D. at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar and served as an English professor at Princeton from 1956 to 1993, and was chairman of the department from 1974 to 1981. Litz provides a scholarly overview of Fitzgerald’s work, insight into his resentment of Ernest Hemingway and his standing in the pantheon of 20th century American writers. (Interestingly, the English department at Princeton looked down at its literary son for many years. John T. Osander, Class of 1957, recalls hoping to write his senior thesis on Fitzgerald, with information drawn from contemporaries of the author at Princeton. “But the English department ruled, ‘You cannot waste a full year on a minor American author.’” The narration and voice-over readings are by Ethan Hawke, the actor. And the video includes an interview with Eleanor Lanahan, the granddaughter of Scott and his wife, Zelda. The video may be shown to small groups by appointment. Ryan is proprietor of Gallery 353 at 353 Nassau Street, Princeton. Phone: 803-334-8838. twolockhart@hotmail.com. Cottage Club, 51 Prospect Avenue, 609-921-6137. http://cottageclub.net. Fitzgerald Continued from page 25 books, one a softcover study and two 1990s reading copies of Fitzgerald’s first and third novels. But best of all — finally — there it was: the signed letter, from 1929, 12 years after Fitzgerald left the university. Ironically the letter recommended a young acquaintance who hardly needed heavy endorsement: Whitney Darrow Jr., later one of the New Yorker’s best and most enduring cover and cartoon artists.” Fitzgerald, Class of 1917, was a prolific writer for three consecutive years at Triangle, the annual undergraduate theatrical show, and was also immersed in club life. In “Paradise” he characterizes Cottage as “an impressive melange of brilliant adventurers and welldressed philanderers.” He was less immersed in academics, and never did graduate. In 1920, with his first novel finally in print, he and his bride, Zelda, returned to Princeton to chaperone Houseparties weekend at Cottage Club. The chaperones may have needed a chaperone of their own. Afterward club members reportedly suspended Fitzgerald’s membership, though his name eventually reappeared on the club roster. An even more illuminating look into Fitzgerald’s Princeton days and the turbulent literary career that followed can be viewed in a Peacock Inn: Arts & Letters when he moved to nearby Roosevelt in the 1930s. Shahn’s simple black and white style sets up a visual pattern in the dining room and bar that is continued by another important Roosevelt-based artist, Stefan Martin. His images — including a portrait of Shahn and cameo-like sets of famous writers — extend down the stairs and unexpectedly into the restrooms. Peacock manager Scott Sussman says the collection comes from his father, Peacock’s owner Barry Sussman. As part of a longtime area family, the Sussmans have been collecting the works of Roosevelt artists for years. T he Peacock Inn at 20 Bayard Lane has a secret recipe that takes fine art beyond dining and onto the walls. While the historic inn is known in part for the F. Scott Fitzgeralds and the Albert Einsteins who have wined and dined there, its current owners have a subtle feel for art. And the result is something historic — regionally and artistic. One of the first things to notice is that there is a series of prints by prominent American artist Ben Shahn. In addition to advancing social realism and politically charged graphic images, Shahn helped put the arts in New Jersey on the map 95/31 - OFFICE SUBLEASE 3200 SF COMMERCIAL SPACES FOR LEASE EWING - 350-2,500 sq. ft. suites in professional park, near Rt. 31, hospital & TCNJ. HAMILTON - 1,250 to 5,000 sq. ft. offices ideally suited for many uses near Quakerbridge Road. OXFORD VALLEY MALL AREA - 725 - 4,100 sq. ft. suites, ideal for medical or office. FLORENCE - 2,600 - 12,000 sq. ft on Rt. 130 at NJ Turnpike entrance, ideal for office or retail. LAWRENCEVILLE AND HAMILTON STRIP CENTERS Spaces available from 1,000 sq. ft to 10,000 sq. ft. Prime locations in high traffic areas. DOYLESTOWN, (CHALFONT) PA - 1,500 - 2,000 sq. ft. suites. Ideal for office or medical. Near PA Turnpike WILLINGBORO - 2,750 sq. ft. medical space next to Lourdes Medical Center. Expandable to 7,225 sq. ft. BENSALEM - 1,935 to 6,200 sq. ft office space near Neshaminy Mall and PA Turnpike - C af é , g ym, co mmo n co n f er en ce - Fu r n ish ed an d p h o n es - Hi-end nishes - ro nd oor - corner space - Sh o r ter ter m w ith ext en si o n s P lease C o n tact : W illiam B ar ish 609-921-88 • C 609-731-6076 O w n er , B r o ke r • bbar ish @ cp n r ealest ate. co BUILDINGS FOR SALE CHALFONT, PA - 13,000 sq. ft. multitenant office building. Great for Investor or user. Priced at $1,350,000. HEAD LI NE TO G O HERE m Commercial Property Network, Inc. www.HowcoManagement.com We Have a Place For Your Company HEAD LI NE TO G O HERE LI S TI NG T ex t T ex t LI S TI NG LI S TI NG T ex t LI S TI NG T ex t Built T ex ton I ntegrity HI G H V I S I BI LI TY L aw r en ce , N J. A 1 7, 1 6 0 ± SF r etail, co mmer ci al ven u e bu ildin g , w ith a o n e st o r y bu ildin LI g S p luTIs NGa mez za n in e available f o r leas e. E asy o f f er T to ex I-t 95 , I- 2 95 an d R o u te 2 0 6 . G REAT OPPORTU NI TY T r en to n , M er ce r C o u n ty, N ew Je r se y, 0 86LI1 S 8. TIANG6 , 0 2 0 ± SF 3 story of ce b ilding available forT ex lease. t Close proximity to ma or traf c ro tes, its historic charm and view s o f th e r iver , make th is a r elaxi n g , co n ven ien t p lace to co n du ct bu si n ess. LI S TI NG OF F I CE/ RETAI L S PACE T ex t Florence, . A 6,267 SF of ce/retail b ilding available for lease. Ideal for a professional of ce. asy access to Ro tes/Interstates 130, 195 and 295, the ew ersey an d P en n syl van ia T u r n p ike . LI S TI NG M I X ED T ex t U S E S PACE H amilto n , N J. A 3 , 3 88± SF mixe d u se bu ildin g available for sale or lease. asy access to Ro tes/Interstates 295, 95 , 3 3 2 0 6 , 1 3 0 an d th e N ew Je r se y T u r n p ike . EX POS U RE L aw r en ce , N J. E n d u n it o n a main h ig h w ay. V er y bu sy n eig h bo r h o o d sh o p p in LI g ceS TI n terNG in cl o e s p r o xi mity to R ider U n iver si ty. 980 ± SFT available f o r lease . ex t LOCATI ON! LOCATI ON! LOCATI ON! NGsh o p p in g ce n ter w ith o n e B u r lin g to n , N .J A 1 4 , 0 LI6 3 S ± TISF ts o r e to talin g 1 , 875 ± T SF f o r lease . Jo in th e ex available t o th er ten an ts in th is beau tif u l sh o p p in g ce n ter LI S LOCATI TI NG I D EAL ON Hamilton, . A 3,000T exSF t of ce/ wareho se for sale/ lease . Ideal f o r th e sm all dist r ibu to r , co n st r u ct io n w ar eh o u se o r su p p lies st o r e w ith amp le p ar ki n g an d g r eat ac ce s to all maj o r ar ter ies. LI S TI NG T ex t F ORM ER RES TAU RANT Hamilton, . Former pi eria/resta rant. 3, 00 SF f r ee st an din g bu ildin g w ith o f f st r eet p ar ki n g available f o r sa le. HI G H V I S I BI LI TY ordentown, . A Class A 78,500 SF of ce b ilding LI S f TIo r NG available lease . B r an d n ew bu ildin g in a ca mp u s like se ttin Tg ex w itht w ell- ap p o in ted lan dsca p in g r eady to be bu ilt o t to meet yo r exact speci cations. PRI CED RI G HT! LI S TI NG. Professional of ce space, formerly a law Hamilton, of ce,T for ex tsale or for lease. Highly visible Ro te 206 location with off street parking. Ideal for large rm. 11 private of ces, conference room, two b ll pens, r ece p tio n ar ea br eak ar ea an d r est r o o ms. ATTENTI ON HOM E BU I LD ERS ! R esi den tial lo t f o r sa le in W est W in dso r . 0 . 75 ± acr es. Richardson Commercial Realtors, LLC 52 State Highway #33, Hamilton, NJ 08619-2538 609.586.1000 Sussman says the use of the collection has a simple goal: to provide a personal and homey touch for visitors as well as connect the inn to the art of the region. Another artistic layer runs deeper in time and space. Sussman says when his family removed the drywall in the downstairs area that was a 1920s speakeasy called Peacock Alley, they discovered three drawings on the room’s plaster walls. “The artist, we believe, was John Held Jr., a famous artist from the New Yorker” — also famous for visually stylizing the era and created the cover for F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “Tales from the Jazz Age.” The murals — including one of Princeton mathematician John von Neumann driving a car while reading a book — were cut from the wall, moved upstairs, and hung over the fireplaces. “They each weigh 150 pounds,” says Sussman. Their historic presence and artistry were a surprise to the Sussmans. Now combined with the work of the Roosevelt artists, Held’s jazz age works provide a surprise for the observant visitor. Isabel (Izzy) Kasdin, executive director of the Historical Society of Princeton, offers another reason to appreciate the Sussmans’ efforts to preserve the Speakeasy-era murals at the Peacock Inn: “Not only is this such a captivating story about history in Princeton that was, quite literally, hidden from view, but it is also a model for how local businesses can engage with their own past and create a culture of placebased historical reflection in Princ— Dan Aubrey eton.” The ‘Colored” School Continued from page 26 RETAI L, OF F I LICE, F LEX S TI NG LI S TI NG T ex t On the Walls: Images of TS Eliot, left, and Ben Shahn, above, by Stefan Martin, and John Held’s cover for ‘Tales of the Jazz Age,’ all at the Peacock. facility cost $22,996. The building was expanded again in 1939. In 1948 a state constitutional mandate forced Princeton to desegregate its schools, resulting in the “Princeton Plan,” which involved pairing predominantly white schools with predominantly black schools. The Nassau Street School (now the Lewis Center at 185 Nassau Street), which had traditionally served white students, became an integrated K to 5 school for Princeton Borough residents. Black students from the township attended Valley Road. The Witherspoon Street School served grades 6 to 8. With the construction of John Witherspoon Middle School in 1966, the Witherspoon Street School was converted to a nursing home. The J. Robert Hillier-owned apartment building there now is called the Waxwood — named for Howard Waxwood, the school’s principal from 1936 to 1948. — Sara Hastings JULY 6, 2016 U.S. 1 INTRODUCING HIGHTSTOWN BORO Donna Levine $159,000 MLS# 6813273 SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP Lisa Procsia-DePaulis $565,000 MLS# 6802643 NEWLY PRICED NEWLY PRICED HAMILTON TOWNSHIP Donna S Matheis $189,900 MLS# 6799563 HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP Laura A Huntsman $895,000 MLS# 6607016 PRINCETON Susan L DiMeglio $2,150,000 MLS# 6722453 HILLSBOROUGH TOWNSHIP Joel Winer $599,000 ML S# 330 8116 PRINCETON Amy Stackpole Brigham $900,000 MLS# 6689917 Rendering PRINCETON Barbara Blackwell $2,200,000 MLS# 6551126 SOUTH BRUNSWICK TWP Alana Lutkowski $615,000 MLS# 6746907 HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP Timberbrooke Drive $1,200,000 MLS# 6789734 PRINCETON Barbara Blackwell $2,375,000 MLS# 6689449 CRANBURY TOWNSHIP Gail F Eldridge $675,000 MLS# 6743473 PRINCETON Maura Mills $1,250,000 MLS# 6793530 PRINCETON Barbara Blackwell $2,450,000 MLS# 6766417 HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP Brinton H West $399,000 MLS# 6749145 SOUTH BRUNSWICK TWP Gail Ciallella $739,000 MLS# 6546147 PRINCETON Eugene Mydlowski $1,299,999 MLS# 6791634 PRINCETON Maura Mills $2,595,000 MLS# 6745116 HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP Nancy R Willever $469,000 MLS# 6760435 HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP Deborah W Lane $799,000 MLS# 6695786 PRINCETON Christina M Callaway $1,495,000 MLS# 6739670 HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP David M Schure $2,600,000 MLS# 6782189 INTRODUCING TRENTON CITY Madolyn Greve $224,900 MLS# 6817188 INTRODUCING HAMILTON TOWNSHIP Sita A Philion $229,900 MLS# 6818935 NEWLY PRICED CallawayHenderson.com Rendering SOUTH BRUNSWICK TWP Donna Levine $495,000 MLS# 6796969 HILLSBOROUGH TOWNSHIP Sarah Strong Drake $845,000 ML S# 657 5173 PRINCETON Jane Henderson Kenyon $1,859,000 MLS# 6742935 PRINCETON Edgerstoune Road $2,650,000 MLS# 6758090 CRANBURY 609.395.0444 LAMBERTVILLE 609.397.1700 MONTGOMERY 908.874.0000 PENNINGTON PENNINGTON BOROUGH Nancy R Willever $549,000 MLS# 6643744 PENNINGTON BOROUGH $849,000 ML S# 673 3667 HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP $1,975,000 MLS# 6796306 EASTON CITY Alison Stem $2,950,000 MLS# 6466280 Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated. Subject To Errors, Omissions, Prior Sale Or Withdrawal Without Notice. 609.737.7765 PRINCETON 609.921.1050 29 30 U.S. 1 JULY 6, 2016 RETAIL - OFFICE SITE PENNINGTON 3.65 Acres - L ig h ted in ter se ct io n - Highway, b siness, retail, of ce - M an y u se s p o si ble C o n tact : Al T o to , 6 0 9- 92 1 - 884 4 T o to pc n @ ao l. co m Commercial Property Network, Inc. We Have a Place For Your Company liFE in thE FaSt lanE I mbue Creative, an ad agency, has moved from Ludlow Drive in Ewing to Main Street in Lambertville. The agency’s new quarters is the old Lambertville Opera House, an 1860 Italian Revival building that was formerly home to MacDonald Kitchen and Bath Designs but has been vacant for the past three years. Imbue left New Hope, Pennsylvania, for Ewing in 2013. The move to Lambertville increase’s Imbue’s space from 1,000 to 3,100 square feet. Pictured at right are Michael Piperno, executive vice president, near right; Whitney Proud, account manager; Jane Laswell, creative director; Wendy Stasolla, senior designer; Joe Kubiak, managing director; Michael Olson, designer and illustrator; Laura Dickerman, senior account manager; and Ken Maisel, CEO. Imbue Creative, 71 North Main Street, 71, Ewing 08638. Michael Piperno, chief creative officer. www.imbuecreative. com. Edited by Diccon Hyatt Big Salaries for Top Area CEOs S everal Route 1 area leaders are among the best paid CEOs of publicly traded companies in the state, according to a list compiled by the publication NJ Biz. At number 3 overall is Steven V. Abramson, CEO of Universal Display Corporation, a Phillips Boulevard company that makes technol- ogy used in organic LED screens. He makes $12.97 million a year. James R. Craigie, CEO of Church & Dwight in Princeton South Corporate Center, earned $4.98 million and came in 17th place. Peter J. Arduini, CEO of Integra LifeSciences Holdings Corp, a medical device company based on Enterprise Drive in Plainsboro, was in 21st place with $3.94 million. Mauricio Gutierrez, CEO of NRG Energy, a Carnegie Centerbased owner of power plants, was at No. 34 with a compensation of $1.98 million. Eamonn P. Hobbs, CEO of biotech company Antares Pharma, was at No. 38 with $1.64 million. Sotirios J. Vahaviolos, CEO of Mistras Group, an asset protection company on Clarksville Road in Princeton Junction, was at No. 48 with $1.28 million in pay. New Jersey’s Highway Hell N ew Jersey’s interstate highways are among the most congested and deteriorated in the nation according to a report released at the end of June by a Washington-based group that studies transportation. The TRIP report said 73 percent of New Jersey’s urban interstates are congested during peak travel times, the third highest rate in the nation, carrying 14,000 vehicles per lane mile each day, the ninth highest rate of travel in the U.S. The group also rated the highways the eighth most deteriorated in the nation, with 19 percent of pavement in poor or mediocre condition. The report blamed large trucks and lack of funding for repairs and improvements for the poor condition of the roads, and predicted the highway system would soon need costly repairs. “The deteriorated and congested conditions on New Jersey’s Interstates keep businesses from operating efficiently and rob drivers of time and money as they sit in traffic,” said Philip K. Beachem, president of the New Jersey Alliance for Action, a group that advocates for infrastructure improvement. “Without a sustainable, long-term funding source at the state and federal levels, our transportation system will become increasingly congested and deteriorated, businesses will lose their competitive edge and quality of life will suffer.” As of press time, New Jersey lawmakers were debating a 23-cent-per-gallon gas tax increase to fund road repairs. The measure, which was coupled with cuts in the sales tax and the estate tax, and tax cuts for low income earners, passed the assembly and was backed by Gov. Chris Christie, but has not yet been taken up by the senate. Continued on page 32 JULY 6, 2016 Route 31 @ I-95 (Exit 4), Ewing, NJ CLASS A SPACE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY Conference Center • Gym • Cafe • Hotel 6Aubrey 0 9 Haines . 4 5or2Dawn . 0 2Stillwell 00 w w w. p r i n c e t o n s o u t h . c o m Mercer Oak Realty 200 PrincetonSouth Corporate Center, Suite 100, Ewing, NJ www.merceroak.com U.S. 1 31 32 U.S. 1 JULY 6, 2016 COLLEGE PARK AT PRINCETON FORRESTAL CENTER 4 RESEARCH WAY, PRINCETON, NJ 3RD FLOOR—8,665 SQ. FT NATIONAL BUSINESS PARKS, INC. TOM STANGE LEASING MANAGER (TSTANGE@COLLEGEPK.COM) (MOBILE) 609-865-9020 2 RESEARCH WAY PRINCETON, NJ 08540 WWW.NATIONALBUSINESSPARKS.COM PHONE: 609-452-1300 FAX: 609-452-8364 3RD FLOOR 8,665 SQ. FT. AVAILABLE Continued from page 30 Management Moves Morven Museum & Garden, 55 Stockton Street, Princeton 08540. 609-924-8144. Jill M. Barry, director. www.morven.org. Morven Museum & Garden has appointed Jill M. Barry as executive director. She previously was deputy director of the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts in Alabama. Barry will transition to her new post over the summer and begin work full time in September. “Jill is a strong and seasoned museum administrator whose career development has been focused on audience engagement at all levels,” said Morven board chair Robert N. Wilson. “We are very much looking forward to her leadership of one of New Jersey’s most important cultural and historic treasures.” Search committee chair Julia Garry said Barry’s accomplishments at previous jobs set her apart from a field of applicants. She broke ground on an outdoor sculpture garden at the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, created a 170-acre garden and nature preserve at the Naples Botanical Garden, and built a donor base at the Cincinnati Art Museum robust enough to allow free admission. Beatty House Sells, in Two Pieces T he final tally for the 0.36-acre Beatty House property is one religious nonprofit and one new single family house, each given its own lot in an unusual split of the property. (U.S. 1, October 15, 2015.) The house on the full lot at the corner of Vandeventer Avenue and Park Place in Princeton was once listed for $2.85 million, but Barry will succeed longtime director Clare Smith, who retired earlier this year. The Morven Museum & Garden, a national historic landmark, New 30,000 Sq. Ft. Building Ready for Tenant Fit Out Windsor Industrial Park 92 North Main Street, Windsor/Robbinsville, Mercer County, NJ Directly off Route 130 & 33. Close proximity to exit #8 New Jersey Turnpike and Route 195. WIP Free-Standing Flex Building: 6,000 Sq. Ft. Leased, 24,000 Sq. Ft. Available Build to Suit Spaces • 24’ Ceiling Heights • Drive-In Doors and Loading Docks • Ample Parking • Reasonable Divisions Considered GREAT RENTS & LOW CAM / TAXES / 5% Commissions Paid Available Space Building #19, Units A/B/C/D • 13,640 Sq. Ft. D E S A • Includes 5,000 Sq. Ft. LE of Office Space • 22’ Clear • 3 Loading Docks, 1 Drive-In Door • Available February 2016 Call 732.625.1055 Today! www.everestrealtynj.com Licensed New Jersey Real Estate Broker No warranty or representation, express or implied, is made to the accuracy of the information contained herein and same is submitted subject to errors, comissions, change of price, rental or other conditions, This listing may be withdrawn without notice. seller Robin Resch sold the house separate from the back portion of the property. The house sits on 0.22 acres and was listed for $1.995 million, while the 80 feet by 78 feet lot in the back would sell for $875,000. The evangelical nonprofit Christian Union purchased the Beatty House and plans to use the property as an office and student center, while the vacant lot facing Park Place was purchased by Ilhan Aksay, a professor of chemical and biological engineering at Princeton University. is a museum of cultural heritage and public garden. It was home to Richard Stockton, a signer of the Declaration of Independence and to five New Jersey governors. Soligenix (SNGX), 29 Emmons Drive, Suite C-10, Princeton 08540. 609-538-8200. Christopher J. Schaber, president and CEO. www.soligenix. com. Soligenix, Inc, a biopharmaceutical company based on Emmons Drive, has appointed Karen Krumeich as its senior vice president and CFO, replacing Joseph Warusz, who is retiring. Krumeich, a 25-year veteran in the life science business, most recently worked for Cerecor, Inc. and Mela Sciences, Inc., where she was responsible for equity financings, corporate administrative functions, and investor relations. In addition to these positions, Krumeich was a healthcare consultant partner with Tatum, LLC, a national consulting firm, specializing in their life science practice. She previously worked for Bristol-Myers Squibb and other pharmaceutical companies. Krumeich has a bachelor’s degree in pharmacy from the University of Toledo, and completed her post graduate work in accounting and finance at Cleveland State University while pursuing her career as a pharmacist. “As we continue to execute our growth strategy, we are clearly building momentum and the talent we are attracting is an absolute reflection of our solid progress to date,” stated Christopher J. Schaber, CEO of Soligenix. “Karen’s unique experiences in both science and finance will be instrumental to us as we advance our multiple latestage development programs.” Deaths Jane Feng-Cheng Wung, 70, on May 22. Born in China, she grew up on Taiwan and moved to the U.S. in 1973. She got a job at Educational Testing Services as an administrative assistant and worked her way up to chair of the board of review of the legal division over a 33-year career. Joseph Peter Zawadsky, 86, on June 25. A 1951 graduate of Princeton, Zawadsky earned a medical degree at Columbia and became a pioneering hip replacement surgeon. He founded the UMDNJ Robert Wood Johnson Medical School of Orthopedic Surgery Residency Program. U.S. 1 claSSiFiEdS HOW TO ORDER Fax or E-Mail: Fax your ad to 609844-0180 or E-Mail class@princetoninfo.com. We will confirm your insertion and the price. Our classifieds are just 50 cents a word, with a $7 minimum. Repeats in succeeding issues are 40 cents per word, and if your ad runs for 16 consecutive issues, it’s 30 cents per word. 609-396-1511 ext. 105. OFFICES FOR SALE Princeton Ave., Hopewell. 8 room suite, 1456 SF on second floor in threestory elevator building. Walk to Broad Street in the Borough. Seller financing. $185,000. Also for rent, $16 per SF includes heat and AC. 609-529-6891. OFFICE RENTALS 1 day/month/year or longer. Princeton Route 1. Flexible office space to support your business. Private or virtual offices, conference rooms, high speed internet, friendly staffed reception. Easy access 24/7. Ample parking. Call Danielle 609-514-5100. www.princeton-office.com 190 & 192 Nassau St. 390 SF of office and 5,163 SF of retail. Parking available. Please call 609-921-6060 for details. CRANBURY OFFICE OR RETAIL . W Park Place next to Post Office. 600 square feet. Two or three rooms available July $15.70 /square foot. 609-5296891. East Windsor, Route 130 - Office and retail space for lease in busy shopping center. 800 SF, 2nd floor, includes utilities $2000 per month. Retail available, 1000-1850 SF, call for details. 516-869-1240 x137 or pspagna@milbrookproperties.com. Furnished office with Private Bathroom. 216’. One block I-295 exit Hamilton Township (Nottingham Way). $425 month. Call Howard 609-273-6960. Office space to rent July 1 in the Princeton Professional Park on Ewing Street in Princeton. 580 sq ft suite with ample free parking in clean and well maintained atrium building. Call 609921-6610 for more information. Office sublease space available Princeton Forrestal Village Two furnished offices. Use of conference room and space for assistant(s). Short/Long term sublease available. Please call/ email for more info. (609)452-7333 or ENelson@HinsonSnipes.com. Pennington - Hopewell: Straube Center Office from virtual office, 12 to 300 square feet and office suites, 500 to 2,400 square feet. From $100 per month, short and long term. Storage space, individual signage, conference rooms, copier, Verizon FIOS available, call 609-737-3322 or e-mail mgmt@ straube.com www.straubecenter.com OFFICE RENTALS Princeton Office/Retail for Lease, 220 Alexander Road. Approx. 1,000 SF. High profile location. On-site parking. $2,500 includes all utilities. Weinberg Management. 609-924-8535. Sublet office space in the Princeton Forrestal Village. 116 Village Boulevard, Suite 200, Princeton, NJ 08540. Available immediately 3 to 4 days a week. Call 732-647-6218. F Fabulous NE facing home F i inJULY desirable Princeton 6, 2016 U.S. 1 33Ivy in E Estates. Come see this n E newly renovated, 5 BR, Fabulous NE3Fab facing b n in desirable Prince bath colonial w/two car in db g Estates. Come see garage and country-club g5li newly renovated, Esta Fabulous NE facing home like fenced backyard. bath colonial w/tw S li new inFabulous desirableNE Princeton Ivy garage and country facing home Swim in the beautiful bath h S Estates. Come see this like in desirable Princeton Ivy fenced backyar Fabulous NE facing home heated pool, enjoy b h Estates. Come see this newly renovated, 5 BR, 3Ivy a Swim in the beauti in desirable Princeton gara newly renovated, 5 BR, 3 Estates. Come see this barbeque on car the bluestone heated pool, enjoyb p bath colonial w/two bath colonial w/two car 3 like newly renovated, 5 BR, barbeque on the blg garage and country-club patio, relax in the zen garage and country-club p bath colonial w/two car patio, relax inSwim the z like fenced backyard. like fenced backyard. garage and country-club garden or play horseshoes ga hors Swim inthe thebeautiful beautiful garden or playheat like in fenced backyard. Swim and bocci on the lighted and bocci on the lig heated pool, enjoy a Swimpool, in theenjoy beautiful am heated a barb barbeque on the bluestone manicured lawn. M heated pool, enjoy a manicured lawn. Move in m b barbeque ononin the bluestone patio, relax the zen before school starts barbeque the bluestone patiA garden or play horseshoes before school patio, relax ininthe zen patio, relax the zenstarts. b Asking Price: $675 and bocci on the lighted gard garden play horseshoes garden ororplay horseshoes Asking Price: $675,000 A manicured lawn. Move in 5 BR, and bocci the lighted Fabulous NE facing home in desirable Princeton Ivy Come see this newly renovated, and bocci ononlawn. the lighted and featuring: 28 Estates. VAN WYCK DRIVE, WEST WINDSOR before school starts. he for entertaining manicured Move in pool, featuring: 28backyard. VAN WYCK DRIVE, WEST 3 bathA colonial w/twodesigned car garage and country-club like fenced Swim in the beautiful heated manicured lawn. Move in lighted Asking $675,000 before Price: school starts. he designed for entertaining man enjoy a A barbeque on theVAN bluestoneWYCK patio, relax inDRIVE, the zen gardenWEST or play horseshoes and bocci on the featuring: 28 WINDSOR featuring: 28 VANbefore WYCK DRIVE, WEST Asking Price:starts. $675,000 school manicured lawn. Move in before school starts. Asking Price: $675,000 befo featuring: 28 VAN WYCK DRIVE, WEST WINDSOR Asking Price: $675,000 featuring: 28 VAN WYCK DRIVE, WEST WINDSOR Ask A he designed for entertaining A he designed for entertaining A he designed for designed entertaining A he for entertaining Tired of an office park? Office space available in historic building overlooking Carnegie Lake. Princeton address. Furnished or unfurnished. Newly renovated. Free parking. Conference room, kitchenette, receptionist included. Friendly, professional atmosphere. Contact Liz: 514-0514; ez@zuckfish.com. STORAGE 300 Carnegie Center, Princeton. 16,996 SF (divisible) class A office space. Please call 609-921-6060 for details. 902 Carnegie Center, Princeton: Clean, dry, humidity controlled storage on Route 1 in West Windsor. Spaces start at 878 SF. Please contact Hilton Realty 609-921-6060 or jbrush@hiltonrealtyco.com www.hiltonrealtyco.com. HOUSING FOR SALE 188 Jefferson Road, Princeton, NJ. 3 bed/2 bath plus den, ranch style, very convenient location. $745,000. Heritage Real Estate. 609-731-1630. designed for entertaining AA he he designed for entertaining featuring: 28 VAN WYCK DRIVE, WEST WINDSOR featuring: 28 VAN WYCK DRIVE,Heidi WEST W Joseph Sales Associate, REAL Heidi Joseph ® Office: 609.924.1600 Sales Associate, Heidi Joseph REALTOR Mobile: 609.613.1663 ® Sales Associate, REALTOR Office: 609.924.1600 heidi.joseph@foxroac Heidi Joseph Mobile: 609.613.1663 Office: 609.924.1600 ® heidi.joseph@foxroach.com Mobile: 609.613.1663 PRINCETON OFFICE | 253 Nassau Street | Princeton, NJ 08540Sales Associate, REALTOR heidi.joseph@foxroach.com 609.924.1600 | www.foxroach.com Heidi Joseph Insist о … Heidi J Heidi Joseph PRINCETON OFFICE | 253 Nassau Street | Princeton, NJ 08540 Insist о … Heidi Joseph. Sales Associate, REALTOR Office: 609.924.1600 Sales Associate, REALTOR® Insist о … Heidi Joseph. 609.613.1663 Office: 609.924.1600Office: •Mobile: Mobile: 609.613.1663 609.924.1600 heidi.joseph@foxroach.com Mobile: 609.613.1663 heidi.joseph@foxroach.com ® ©2013 An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeS 609.924.1600 | www.foxroach.com PRINCETON | 253 Nassau Street | Princeton, NJ 08540 Housing Opportunity. lnformation not verified or guaranteed. If your home is currently listed with a Broker, this is not intended as a solicitatio registeredOFFICE service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.© Equal ©2013 An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are 609.924.1600 | www.foxroach.com registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.© Equal Housing Opportunity. lnformation not verified or guaranteed. If your home is currently listed with a Broker, this is not intended as a solicitation. ©2013 An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.© Equal Housing Opportunity. lnformation not verified or guaranteed. If your home is currently listed with a Broker, this is not intended as a solicitation. PRINCETON OFFICE | 253 Nassau Street | Princeton, NJ 08540 heidi.joseph@foxroach.com 609.924.1600 | www.foxroach.com He In Sal PRINCETON OFFICE | 253 Nassau Street | Princeton, NJOFFICE 08540 | 253 Nassau Street | Princeton, NJ 08540 PRINCETON PRINCETON OFFICE 253 Nassau |NJPrinceton, NJ 08540 ©2013 An independently operated subsidiary of Street HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway Home PRINCETON OFFICE || 253 Nassau |Street Princeton, 08540 Buy or rent - Newly constructed home 609.924.1600 | www.foxroach.com Housing Opportunity. lnformation not verified or guaranteed. If your home is currently listed with registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.© Equal 609.924.1600 | www.foxroach.com Offi 609.924.1600 | www.foxroach.com within easy walking distance to all schools 609.924.1600 | www.foxroach.com Insist о … Heidi Joseph.In Insist о … Heidi Joseph. ©2013 An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are ©2013 An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of aAmerica, a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and athefranchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. ©2013of AnAmerica, independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, franchisee ofInc., BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices are Berkshire Hathaway HomeS © Equal Housing Opportunity. lnformation not verified orand guaranteed. If© your home is currently listed with a and Broker, this is not intended assymbol a solicitation. registered service marks of HomeServices Inc. heart of Doylestown Borough! Equal Housing Opportunity. lnformation verified guaranteed. If your home is currently listed with service marks ofHousing HomeServices of America, Inc. Opportunity. lnformation not verified orInc., guaranteed. If your home is currently listed with a Broker, isnot not intended as or a solicitation. registeredAn service marks ofregistered HomeServices of America, Inc.© Equal ©2013 independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and athisfranchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. and to the 2000+ square feet. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 1 car detached garage, 4th room/bonus room, ample off street parking! Construction; Bruce hardwood flooring throughout, 400 Series Anderson windows, 95% gas furnace, PEX plumbing, 200 amp service wired for backup generator, telephone, cable, ceiling fans. Visit our web site at https://reecormgmt.appfolio.com/listings/ listings/7fe5328f-380d-4d4b-9536a022397325a7 for more information, pictures and to set up a walk through. 255 N. West Street. Please call 201-320-3470. Condo for sale 117 Slack Avenue Lawrenceville, NJ 2 bedroom, 1 bath, $69,900. Senior community 55+, open floor plan, convenient location. Keller Williams Realty 609 — 987-8889 or Olga Cadieu 239-564-4663 Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.© Equal Housing Opportunity. lnformation not verified or guaranteed. If your home is currently listed with a Broker, this is not intended as a solicitation. PRINCETON OFFICE | 253 Nassau Street | Princeton, NJ 08540 Mo hei Insis 609.924.1600 | www.foxroach.com ©2013 An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeService registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.© Equal Housing Opportunity. lnformation not verified or guaranteed. If your home is currently listed with a Brok OFFICE & MEDICAL SPACE FOR LEASE ROUTE 206 & APPLEGATE RD. MONTGOMERY SOMERSET COUNTY, NJ PRINCETON OFFICE | 253 Nassau Street | Princeton, NJ 0854 HOME MAINTENANCE AAA robthehandyman- licensed, insured, all work guaranteed. Free Estimates. We do it all - electric, plumbing, paint, wallpaper, powerwashing, tile, see website for more: robthehandyman.vpweb.com robthehandyman@ att.net, 609-269-5919. Immediate Occupancy Brokers Protected 609.924.1600 | www.foxroach.com SUITE SIZES AVAILABLE: 743, 830 & 1660 sf (+/-) ©2013 An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of B service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.© Equal Housing Opportunity. lnformation not verified or g OFFICE SPACEregistered AVAILABLE 15’ 1” Continued on following page 4’ 11” 6’ 11” 13 Roszel Road, Princeton, NJ Several Units Available for Lease Suite C-120 - 4,683 sf Suite C-121 - 8,626 sf Suite C-200 - 4,535 sf Suite C-222 - 2,468 sf Suite C-223 - 2,973 sf 26’ 1” 4’ 7” 31” • Prestigious Princeton mailing address • Verizon FiOS & high-speed internet access available • Nine campus-style buildings • Built-to-suit tenant spaces Immediate Availability FLOORPLANS AVAILABLE AT Competitive Pricing WWW.M-DREALTY.COM Adjacent to Carnegie Center Upgraded Finishes Common Conference Room Area Verizon Fios & Comcast available Close to hotels, restaurants and Princeton Train Station Minutes from downtown Princeton For more information, or to schedule a tour, contact: Peter M. Dodds 609 452-8880 X101 pdodds@m-drealty.com 11’ 10” • Private bathroom, kitchenette & separate utilities for each suite 7’ 5” 7’ 5” • 219 Parking spaces with handicap accessibility • Less than one mile away from the Princeton Airport BLDG. 5, SUITE 521: 830 sf (+/-) CONTACT US FOR MORE INFO: 908.874.8686 LarkenAssociates.com No warranty or representation, express or implied, is made to the accuracy of the information contained herein & same is submitted subject to errors, omissions, change of price, rental or other conditions, withdrawal without notice & to any special listing conditions, imposed by our principals & clients. U.S. 1 JULY 6, 2016 Thompson Management www.thompsonmanagementllc.com 609-921-7655 U.S. 1 EmploymEnt ExchangE HELP WANTED Whitehorse Commercial Park, 127 Route 206, Hamilton Township, NJ require confidentiality, send a check for $4 with your ad and request a U.S. 1 Response Box. Replies will be forwarded to you at no extra charge. Mail or Fax your ad to U.S. 1 Jobs Wanted, 15 Princess Road, Suite K, Lawrenceville, NJ 08648. Fax to 609-844-0180. E-mail to class@princetoninfo.com. You must include your name, address, and phone number (for our records only). Immediate opening for an experienced medical front desk receptionist. We are looking for a mature reliable person. Applicant must have medical office experience with electronic health records and pre-certing insurances. Please fax resume and references to 609-588-0197. Experienced Executive Administrative Assistant looking for a similar role, within a 25 mile radius of the Princeton area. I have recently transitioned from the UK to the USA, where I hold full working papers, and I’m now actively looking for a administrative role, whether permanent or temporary. My background is mainly construction and automotive design, where my last position of 15 years, was held with Jaguar Land Rover Cars Ltd until my relocation. Should you wish to discuss, please email me at Sandraweaver0812@ gmail.com NT W RE Property Inspectors: Part-time $30k, full-time $80k. No experience, will train. Call Ken, 908-420-6193. JOBS WANTED 1450 Parkside Avenue, Ewing, NJ 1,075 SF Office/Medical/Professional Condos Available for Sale/Lease Close Proximity to new Capital Health Hospital Convenient to Rts. 31, 1 and 206 2500 Brunswick Pike (Rte. 1), Lawrence Twp. 789 SF Office/Medical • For Lease Immediately Available Conv. Access to Rt 1 & I-295 JOBS WANTED Client Assistant. Part time position in East Windsor. Start out working 10 hours per week with potential 20 hours after training period. Strong bookkeeping experience, excellent organizational and communication skills and business computer knowledge are all required. Please email resume with salary requirements and references to: lar@ ppsmore.com. ! 619 - 3,883 SF • For Lease • Office/Flex • Ample Parking • Conv. Access to I-195/295 LO Job Hunters: If you are looking for a full-time position, we will run a reasonably worded classified ad for you at no charge. The U.S. 1 Jobs Wanted section has helped people like you find challenging opportunities for years now. We know this because we often hear from the people we have helped. We reserve the right to edit the ads and to limit the number of times they run. If you CLASSIFIED BY FAX 609-844-0180 CLASSIFIED BY E-MAIL class@princetoninfo.com Continued from preceding page CLEANING SERVICES Monica’s Cleaning Service. Highest quality, reasonable prices, free estimates. 609-577-2126. TRANSPORTATION A Personal Driver seeking to transport commuters, shopping trips, etc. Modern, attractive car. References provided. Less than commercial taxi services. E-mail to gvprinter@gmail.com or call 609-331-3370. HEALTH Massage and Reflexology: Immeasurable benefits include deep relaxation, enhanced health, pain relief. Holistic practitioner offers Swedish, shiatsu, reflexology, on-site chair massage. Gift certificates, accommodating hours. Call Marilyn: 609-403-8403. INSTRUCTION All Music -- Lessons in Your Home: Music lessons in your home. Piano, clarinet, saxophone, flute and guitar. Call Jim 609-737-9259 or 609-273-5135. Math and Chemistry Tutoring: AP, Honors, Regular. 22 years full-time highschool teaching experience. Thousands of hours tutoring. Call Matt 609-9191280. Math preparation for the new SAT at the campus of the Lawrenceville School. One-week sessions in June and August. For more information 609-558-0722. New Price! Open House Sunday 1-4. Lawrenceville. 11 Dorothea Terrace. $369,000. 3BRs w/ GR addition, chef’s kit, new BAs, hdwd flrs, fplce & cathedral ceilings. Dir: Fed City-Bunker Hill-Karena-Dorothea. (ID#6805482). 609-921-2700 Open House Sunday 1-4. Robbinsville. 36 Pickering Dr. $669,999. Upgrades galore! Washington Green this Cornell model features 4 BR, 2.5 Baths situated on a “park like setting”. Tranquil Setting: $870,000 – Princeton Great home entertain your Tranquil Setting:to $870,000 – Princeton List of amenities and upgrades will be listed in this section. List of upgrades in this Tranquil Setting: $870,000 –to Princeton family and friends. Close Rt. ListList of of amenities and upgrades will be listed inbe this section. Listsection. of upgrades in upgrades thisin this space. List of amenities and upgrades will in this List of amenities and upgrades will be listed inlisted this section. List of upgrades 130, 195, 295 & Turnpike. Dir: upgrades in this space. List of amenities will beList listed in this section. . space. List of amenities and upgrades will will beand listed inHouse this ofList upgrades Open Sunday 1-4. Lawrenceville. space. List of amenities and upgrades be upgrades listed in section. this section. of upgrades Spring Garden to Mary Smith: (ID#6222704) 20 upgrades Winthrop Dr. $505,000. Expanded upgrades in this space. ListCanterbury, of 609-555-0000 amenities andand upgrades will be in this section. .Ver- . upgrades in this space. List of amenities willlisted be listed in this section. non Colonial, 5 bedrooms, Great Rm & FamL(ID#6222704) to Pickering. (ID#6807165). Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 ily Rm w/gas stone FP, 2 rm skylit kit, SS appl (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 609-921-2700 PROPERTY &SHOWCASE granite counters, freshly painted, 2+car gar newer HVAC, window & doors. Dir: FedPROPERTY SHOWCASE eral City—Adams--Winthrop. (ID#6650764). SHOWCASE PROPERTY PROPERTY SHOWCASE 609-921-2700 CO UCN UC U NT ODNENODN ND RA TRR ETR ER CTAC AC T T 34 Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington New Ewing. $209,900. NEW NEW List ofListing! amenities and upgrades will be NEWListed: - you don’t want to miss this home! Just $300,000 – Pennington listed this section. Recently remodeled BR,of2upgrades BAwill Colonial List of in amenities and 3List upgrades bein with all electrical, plumbing, insulation, listed in new this section. section. List List of upgrades upgrades in listed in this of in siding, windows, stainless steel kitchen apthis space. will appear. listed in thisList section. List of (ID#6222704) upgrades in pliances and $300,000 new flooring! (ID#6810652). Just Listed: – Pennington Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 609-586-1400 this space. List willand appear. (ID#6222704) List of amenities upgrades will be Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 listed in this section. List of upgrades in listed in this section. List of upgrades in this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 New Price! West Windsor. – $460,000. Totally Just Listed: $300,000 Pennington renovated 3 bedroom 2 bath, 2 car garage List of amenities and upgrades will be with workshop, finished basement & parklike Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington listed this of upgrades backyard in section. JeffersonList Park. (ID#6745658). List of in amenities and upgrades will bein 609-921-2700 listed in in this this section. section. List List of of upgrades upgrades in in listed this space. will appear. listed in thisList section. List of (ID#6222704) upgrades in Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington List of amenities and upgrades will be listed in this section. List of upgrades in listed in this section. List of upgrades in this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 Bordentown Twp. $214,900. Great updated, vinyl-sided 2 BR, 1 BA Ranch Home in Bordentown has a formal DR w/built in break front, 1st laundry and more. (ID#6794788). Justfloor Listed: $300,000 – Pennington 609-586-1400 Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington List of amenities and upgrades will be Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington listed in thisEwing. section. List of upgrades New Listing! $193,000. Absolutely List of amenities and upgrades will bein charming, light filled cape cod home with thein listed in in this this section. section. List List of of upgrades upgrades listed in most adorable front porch. Recent upgrades this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) listed in this section. List of upgrades in include, new electric, new– plumbing, water Just Listed: $300,000 Pennington Mary Smith: &this gasspace. lines. (ID# 6822003). 609-586-1400 List609-555-0000 will appear. (ID#6222704) List of amenities and upgrades will be Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 listed in this section. List of upgrades in listed in this section. List of upgrades in this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 JustPrice! Listed: $300,000 – Pennington New Rocky Hill $439,900. Rocky Hill List of amenities and- upgrades will be – Just Commercial building Village Residential Listed: $300,000 – Pennington Zoning. Truss construction with open floorin listed in this section. List of upgrades List (ID# of amenities and upgrades will be plan. 6768074). 609-921-2700 listed in this section. List of upgrades in listed in this section. List of upgrades in this space. will appear. listed in thisList section. List of (ID#6222704) upgrades in Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington List of amenities and upgrades will be listed in this section. List of upgrades in listed in this section. List of upgrades in this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 Franklin Twp. $644,999. Impeccably maintained, this 3300+ sq. ft. 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath Emerald model with tons of upgrades located in Princeton Highlands is ready for Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington its new owners! (ID#6727338). 609-921-2700 List of amenities and upgrades will be List of amenities and upgrades will be Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington listed this section. of upgrades listed this section. of upgrades List of in amenities and List upgrades will bein List of in amenities and List upgrades will bein listed in in this this section. section. List List of upgrades upgrades in listed in this this section. section. List List of of upgrades upgrades in in OUR TRUSTED PARTNERS: listed of in listed in this space. will appear. this space. will appear. NMLS# 113856 listed in thisList section. List of (ID#6222704) upgrades in listed in thisList section. List of (ID#6222704) upgrades in Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 this space. List will appear. 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Yardville. $389,900. ExcelList of amenities andHall upgrades be lentJust 4 BR, 2.5 BA$300,000 Center Tudorwill Style Listed: ––Pennington listed in this section. List of upgrades home inofWashington Square neighborhood. List amenities and upgrades will bein (ID#6807428). 609-586-1400 listed in this section. List of upgrades in listed in this section. List of upgrades in this space. will appear. listed in thisList section. List of (ID#6222704) upgrades in Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington List of amenities and upgrades will be listed in this section. List of upgrades in listed in this section. List of upgrades in this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Hopewell Twp.609-555-0000 $299,999. Custom 3BR, 2 ½ Mary Smith: BA brick ranch home on 1.6 ac features LR & DR w/wood flooring throughout, EIK off of the dining room and includes ample counter top,Just dishwasher tile flooring as well. Listed: and $300,000 – Pennington (ID#6791582). 609-586-1400 List of amenities and upgrades will be Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington listed this section. of upgrades List of in amenities and List upgrades will bein listed in in this this section. section. List List of of upgrades upgrades in in listed this space. will appear. listed in thisList section. List of (ID#6222704) upgrades in Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington List of amenities and upgrades will NewJust Listing! Monroe Twp. $623,000. This be Listed: $300,000 – Pennington listed this section. of GREAT investment opportunity hasupgrades over 6 in of in amenities and List upgrades willorbe acresList of sub-dividable land for a builder listed in in this this section. section. List List of of upgrades upgrades in in listed investor expand in the much sought after thisto space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Monroe Township. A MUST SEE!ofCall today in listed in this section. List upgrades Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 for details. (ID#6790627). this space. List will609-921-2700 appear. (ID#6222704) List of amenities and upgrades will be Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 listed in this section. List of upgrades in listed in this section. List of upgrades in this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 NorthJust Hanover Twp. $269,000. Near McListed: $300,000 – Pennington Guire Air Force Base, renovated, expanded List of amenities and upgrades will be homeJust features hardwood floors in main level, Listed: $300,000 – Pennington lg. LR, hugein FR ceiling & fin. in listed thisw/cathedral section. List of upgrades List of(ID#6792940). amenities and upgrades will be Basement. 609-921-2700 listed in this section. List of upgrades in listed in this section. List of upgrades in this space. will appear. listed in thisList section. List of (ID#6222704) upgrades in Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington List of amenities and upgrades will be listed in this section. List of upgrades in listed in this section. List of upgrades in this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 Millington. $499,999. 4 BR, 2 ½ BA colonial with fireplace in the great room, breakfast bar in the kitchen, unfinished walkout basement Just and Listed: detached$300,000 garage. (ID#3304849). – Pennington 609-586-1400 List of amenities and upgrades will be Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington listed this section. of upgrades List of in amenities and List upgrades will bein listed in in this this section. section. List List of of upgrades upgrades in in listed this space. will appear. listed in thisList section. List of (ID#6222704) upgrades in Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 OUR TRUSTED PARTNERS: OUR TRUSTED PARTNERS: MLS# 113856 Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington List of amenities and upgrades will be listed in this section. List of upgrades in listed in this section. List of upgrades in this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington List of amenities and upgrades will be listed in this section. List of upgrades in listed in this section. List of upgrades in this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington List of amenities and upgrades will be listed in this section. List of upgrades in listed in this section. List of upgrades in this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 Just Listed: $300,000 – Pennington MORTGAGE INSURANCE TITLE List of amenities and upgrades will be listed in this section. List of upgrades in WWW.WEIDEL.COM listed in this section. List of upgrades in this space. List will appear. (ID#6222704) PROPERTY PROPERTY MORTGAGE INSURANCE Mary Smith: 609-555-0000 PROPERTY OUR TRUSTED PARTNERS: MLS# 113856 MORTGAGE INSURANCE TITLE TITLE WWW.WEIDEL.COM TOLL FREE: (800) 288-SOLD WWW.WEIDEL.COM TOLL FREE: (800) 288-SOLD Music Lessons: Piano, guitar, drum, sax, clarinet, F. horn, oboe, t-bone, voice, flute, trumpet, violin, cello, banjo, mandolin, harmonica, uke, and more. Fun music club. Summer Camp. Call today! Montgomery 609-924-8282. West Windsor 609-897-0032. www.farringtonsmusic.com. Writing Expert. Highly experienced writer, tutor, and editor for students, authors, and professionals. 908-420-1070. richardtrenner@gmail.com MERCHANDISE MART Piano for sale. White Yamaha baby grand piano in very good condition. Purchased in 1982 for $7600. No longer using and need to sell to make space. Asking $3500 and ready for pickup. Edeboer99@comcast.net Piano for sale: Young Chang model # G 115863 Original owner - like new condition ready for pickup. Purchased in 1998 for $9,000. No longer using and need to sell to make space. Asking $5,000 or best offer. Email: joro811@ aol.com Princeton Memorial Park: Two double depth lawn crypts including ground space. Value is $4200. Will consider any reasonable offer. Please call 609-5822413. Ruud Zephyr high efficiency 13 aja condensing unit. 13.0 seer nominal 1.5 to 5.0 ton cooling capacities. Used 1 season. Please call 609-466-0732. GARAGE SALES Neighborhood Yard Sale Saturday July 9, 8 a.m. sponsored by Berrien City Neighborhood Association. Multi-house yard sale in Berrien City, Princeton Junction just east of NJTransit train station and tracks on Alexander, Berrien, Lillie, Wallace, Scott, Harris and Springwood Streets. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS I Buy Guitars and All Musical Instruments in Any Condition: Call Rob at 609457-5501. WANTED TO BUY Antique Military Items: And war relics wanted from all wars and countries. Top prices paid. ‘Armies of the Past LTD’. 2038 Greenwood Ave., Hamilton Twp., 609-890-0142. Our retail outlet is open Saturdays 10 to 4, or by appt. Buying Selmer saxophones and other models. 609-581-8290 or e-mail lenny3619@optonline.net. Cash paid for World War II military items. 609-581-8290 or e-mail lenny3619@optonline.net. L JULY 6, 2016 etter from the Lake: Another summer at Wrighter Lake in northeastern Pennsylvania, somewhere between Scranton, PA, and Binghamton, NY. We got an early start this year, opening up the cottage in late April, and had the good fortune to add another aviary friend to our informal list of birds sighted on the lakefront property: Our new addition is a woodcock, strutting around the front of the cottage with his elongated beak. Welcome. Oddly enough, one species I had never seen before at the lake is the common turtle. Yet just a few weeks ago, on the lakefront side of the cottage not far from where we saw that woodcock, we spotted a ruffling of grass. There was a turtle, probably six inches in diameter, laboriously digging into the waterlogged soil with her hind legs. What could else could it be other than a mother turtle, preparing a place to lay her eggs? A Google search confirmed that, and also prepared us for the reality that the next day there would not be a trace of where the turtle had been digging so energetically. According to the experts, the eggs may take up to two months to hatch. Then the baby turtles have to reverse the work of the now-absent mother. It may take them three to seven days to scratch their way to the surface. Of course, the turtle god has a plan for that: the hatchlings are born with embryonic egg sacs that provide all the food they need for those long days and nights of digging. Google also shed light on the debate over the term “turtle.” We used it to describe the hard-shelled, slow moving, but determined digger we saw in the yard. But others insist that the “turtle” is really a “tortoise,” one who lives on and in RichaRd K. REin the land, as opposed to one who lives in the water — that would be a turtle. Turtles, tortoises, and terrapins are closely related reptiles of the order Testudines. But technically turtles dwell both in water (either saltwater or freshwater, depending on the species) and on land, terrapins dwell both in freshwater and on land, and tortoises are landdwellers. But some experts seem to have given up on the distinction and refer to water-based turtles, as opposed to land-dwelling turtles. A few days later I got to appreciate the difference. Floating across the lake on a paddle board, enjoying the view from standing above the water and looking down, I spotted the unmistakable markings of a turtle shell shuffling about on the floor of the lake. It looked to me that it was close to two feet in diameter. And neighbors later said they had heard of sightings of large turtles elsewhere in the lake. At that size it had to be a snapping turtle. T ortoise or turtle, in a few days I found myself in the same league with the creature we saw digging in the front yard. I was in the back yard, attempting to dig through the Pennsylvania clay to create a drywell under a downspout on the back of the new cottage. The new cottage did not originally come with any downspouts. In fact it had no gutters. I am not sure exactly why the architect, Gene Beautz of Binghamton, planned it this way. But I do know that he had seen the old cottage, in obvious disrepair, with gutters filled with years’ worth of leaves and sediment — so much so that wild flowers were cheerfully rein@princetoninfo.com blooming along the edge of the roof. “Hanging gardens of Babylon,” I would tell people paddling past in kayaks. So the new cottage was completed — more or less — two years ago, with steeply sloped roofs and no gutters to become clogged with autumn leaves. That worked well except in one spot, where two dormers created a V-shaped trough that funneled water into a single stream that raced against the middle of a kitchen window. That was annoying in the summer. In the winter it turned into a maintenance failure. In the ice age winter of 2014-’15, the water in the V froze, ultimately forming an ice dam two feet thick and about ten feet up the V. The pressure of the dam forced water — as it melted — to flow uphill, over the ice shields under the roof shingles, and drip by drip back down through the interior insulation, the sheet rock, and onto the new oak kitchen counter. But Beautz had a solution: A three-foot-long copper scupper that would rest like a gutter immediately beneath the V in the roof, collect the water, and drop it through the downspout to the lawn below. It was installed at the end of this winter, and it works well. To be even safer in the winter, we had electric heat tape installed on the V in the roof, and then continue down through the gutter and the downspout. For a few dollars a month in electricity charges we could keep the water flowing off the roof and down to the ground. Sounds great. But for me, operating like the turtle on some instinctive wariness of winters, especially in northeastern Pennsylvania, great didn’t sound good enough. I thought back to the winter before last, when a neighbor’s septic tank froze, when another neighbor’s underground water line froze for the first time that anyone could remember, when the antifreeze in the toilet at my place froze. What if — during a similarly harsh winter — the ground around the downspout all froze? What if the water, once it flowed several inches from In the yard at the lake a clutch of baby turtles are trying to dig out of the hard clay. Will they succeed where I have failed? the heat tape at the bottom of the downspout, formed an ice dam on the ground, causing the water coming down from the roof to back up into the scupper, and then onto the roof? At some point the pervasive cold would overwhelm the heat tape, and we would have another ice dam and similar damages. So I decided to give the water a place to go, down into a drywell, deep enough so that it wouldn’t freeze. My plan was to dig a pit three feet by three feet by four feet deep, centered under the downspout. I would create some hollow spaces using upside down spackle buckets, drilled with holes to let water flow in and out easily, and have a hollow space directly under the downspout leading to the deepest part of the pit. During the winter the water melted by the heat tape U.S. 1 would drop below the frost line — and from there seep into the ground. I’d fill the remaining cavity with three and four-inch rocks, creating plenty of crevices for water to go. About six inches below the surface I would cover the stone with soil fabric and then put dirt over that. I would plant that with grass seed. In the end, the only visible portion would be a drain cover directly under the down spout and that four-foot deep hole. That was the plan. I dug for a few hours here, and a few hours there. At the end of the first threeday weekend, I had a pit that was no more than three feet by two feet and barely two feet deep. The hardpan clay soil was hard as rock. Rocks were thick as thieves. On the Fourth of July weekend I got smarter. I borrowed a Bosch electric jackhammer. While neighbors entertained me with lawn mowers, motorboats, ATVs, and fireworks, I returned the favor with some joyous jackhammer riffs. The joy was short-lived. After a weekend of jackhammering away, I had managed only to get to the three-feet level of depth. I figured the drywell would still work if I could at least get to four feet in the very center, directly under the downspout. I attacked that spot with the jackhammer and hit another layer of stone. I gave up for the day. That night it rained, and the water in that spot just sat there, not draining an inch in the first day. After another day I tried again. Even with the jackhammer I only made a few inches of progress. It rained again, and again it didn’t drain. OK: I’ve hit rock bottom and I give up. Maybe the baby turtles in the front yard, preparing to dig out of a mass of soil that must be 10 times or more their body height, can show me a better way. Solutions for Your Construction Project Needs Our Services Include: MRF/Transfer Station • 10-40 cu. yd. Rolloff Containers 2-10 yd. Front-End Service • Compactors 100 yd. Walking Floors • Concrete Washout Containers We Buy Cardboard & Scrap Metal Call 609.341.9100 to place an order. BELOW MARKET RATES 455 - 25,000 RSF CUSTOMIZABLE & UNIQUE OFFICE / WH / DIST / FLEX CALL: 609-731-0378 · info@modernrecycledspaces.com www.ModernRecycledSpaces.com We Buy Scrap Metal 1519 Calhoun St. • Trenton, NJ 08638 • MercerGroup.com 35 U.S. 1 JULY 6, 2016 Addison Wolfe Real Estate "There are seven days in the week and someday isn’t one of them." A BOUTIQUE REAL ESTATE FIRM WITH GLOBAL CONNECTIONS - Unknown ES R 7 .9 12 AC RIVERWOODS: How wonderful to find a home that checks off all the boxes of your needs and wants checklist! One of the largest custom built homes in the Riverwoods community, this 5 bedroom, 3 bath home is chock full of features and amenities.Hardwood flooring along with ninefoot or cathedral ceilings, stone chimney gas fireplace and crown moldings create a relaxed yet elegant ambiance the moment you walk in. $719,000 Contact Jonathan Rapp at 215.300.6960 STONEY HILL FARM: Not seen from the road, this ultimate property exudes rustic elegance at first glance. Two story formal living room flanked by a dramatic stone fireplace. Well equipped kitchen with multiple Viking appliances. Spacious Main floor Master Suite. Upstairs features 2 bedrooms,an office and 1.5 baths.Other features include guest cottage and expansive finished lower level with a catering kitchen. $2,190,000 Bert Reczenske at 609.462.8338 or Daniela DeLuca MIDCENTURY MODERN: On a quiet Cul-De-Sac, one mile from the Doylestown Cultural District, this updated mid-century modern ranch with three bedrooms and one and a half baths is perfectly situated on a landscaped half acre lot in a park like setting.Enter the great room with floor to ceiling windows revealing fantastic woodland views. Energy efficient central heating and air. $439,900 Contact Kim Condo at 267.446.2589 or EvanWalton WINDSONG:In the heart of desirable Upper Makefield, sits Windsong on 5 plus acres. Enter a long drive, cross over the bridge and hear the trickling waters below,as you approach this Country home.The eat-in kitchen also offers a woodburning fireplace, granite counters and newer appliances. The 4 season room looks out at a large patio and pool area.The bonus of this home is the attached 1 bedroom apartment with its own terrace and a 1 bedroom guest cottage. $985,000 MAJESTIC COTTAGE: This is one of those great surprises in today's real estate market.This home has the clean minimalistic lines of a classic ranch style home.,It has evolved into the feel and aesthetics of a mid-century charmer.Throughout the home you will be pleased with the large windows, glass doors, solid wood interior doors and sophisticated hardware. Must be seen to appreciate. $649,000 Contact Robert Reynolds at 609.635.2003 WARRINGTON FARMHOUSE: Charming late 1700s Farmhouse situated on a corner lot containing over one acre, with updated kitchen and baths. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths and first floor laundry.Three car garage with plenty of additional parking. Public water and sewer. All on 0.62 acres. $375,000 Stephanie Garomon at 215.595.7402 or Donneta Crane WOODS EDGE: Come and check out this beautiful home.Awesome living room and dining room.Great open kitchen space.WatchTV and converse with your family and guests while cooking.Very nice deck overlooking the yard. Very nice master with walk in closet. There is an office/bedroom on first floor and the basement is roomy and finished. $290,000 Contact Dominic DiAntonio at 267.981.4855 MODERN RANCHER: Beautiful renovation of rare Ranch style home near the edge of Doylestown Borough! New,designer inspired kitchen and baths in a clean,modern aesthetic.The bluestone pathway, Zen-like garden, cedar planked sitting porch and painted brick greet your approach. Enter to an expansive open floor plan. Freshly installed hardwood floors extend throughout the house. Home is exemplary! $579,000 Contact Kevin McPheeters at 215.740.8331 HIGHLAND OAKS: Resting high on a hill,this spacious home has over 10 wooded acres with walking trails,spring fed pond and long distant views of Carversville and Solebury Valley. Custom built home with extensive millwork, open concept design and space for in-law suite or studio.Private and picturesque ...Owner is a licensed PA realtor. $749,900 Contact Ali McMenamin at 215.622.7126 FERRY COTTAGE: The home's floor plan allows for flexible usage.There is a large living room with fireplace that can be both a living room/dining space or all living room.The eat-in kitchen is bright and inviting for any gourmet.The kitchen leads out to a large deck, perfect for entertaining or al fresco dining.The house is divided between the large, en suite bedroom and the guest bedrooms/baths.The lower level,with powder is ideal for a home theatre/family room. There is also an in-ground pool. $759,000 HILLCREST MANOR: Located in a very desirable area of Solebury.The foyer opens to both a Living room and a Dining Room. The Great Room opens to a Solarium.The spacious Kitchen features granite counters, Stainless Steel appliances and a wet bar. Upstairs are 3 guest bedrooms and a large Master Suite with sauna. The finished lower level has a full bath. A large deck overlooks the spectacular pool with spa and waterfall. $949,900 Contact NormTroxel at 215.801.6100 or Art Mazzei NORTH POINTE: A New Hope Colonial with an Inground Pool! Stylish décor, traditional floor plan, finished walk out basement, 4 bedrooms with 3 full baths and a powder room. The finished walk out basement adds additional 1,600 sq. ft. to an already spacious house. The new deck with awning and oversized patio are perfect for summer entertaining. Walkability Score is a 10! New Hope-Solebury Schools. $624,900 Contact Kathy Sberna at 215.262.9765 STARVIEW: It is refreshing to find a contemporary home that offers the amenities desired by today's buyer and still maintain its architectural allure. The home, set on a large open lot,allows for a pool or tennis court or just open space for family functions. The interior boasts the open floor plan and vaulted ceilings. A large stone fireplace is the anchor of the Great Room that flows seamlessly into the wellequipped modern kitchen. The finished basement is ideal for large scale entertainment or a home theater. $879,000 THOMPSON HOUSE: Exclusive Jericho Mountain area of Upper Makefield on private 3+ acres. Open floor plan with grand two story great room, gourmet kitchen, First floor master suite, In-law suite, finished walk-out basement, 4 bedrooms and 4 baths. This spacious home was custom built. This is a must see. $995,000 Contact Jane Colletti at 216.669.7720 STONE COURT FARM: Not the ordinary Bucks County Stone Estate!The history of Stone Court Farm is as alluring and significant as the beauty, serenity, and uniqueness of the land. Dating back to William Penns's stewardship,deeded in 1681 by SirWilliam Penn to his heir, the main house, cottage, and apartment were later built in 1795.Exquisite gardens and terraces set on 11 spectacular acres.Tasteful and respectful renovations. $1,995,000 Call Scott Solazzo at 610.730.8159 or Janice Haveson PAXSON MANOR:This 8,600 sq.ft.home is sited on 12 plus acres on Paxson Road. To the right of the foyer, is a magnificent Great Room with a massive stone fireplace,walls of glass and is completely open to the State-of-the-Art kitchen. There is a paneled library and a total of 4 bedrooms/5.2 baths. The master suite offers a sumptuous master bath retreat, fireplace and plenty of light. The lower level has been converted into a home theater,full bath and solarium room. There is a pool,spa and pool house. $2,195,000 FA R E R AC FUBINE FARM: This 13+ acre farm assessed property is beautifully sited on a lovely country road in Hunterdon County, NJ and is being offered for sale for the first time since 1936 when the family first settled in Delaware Twp. Starting out with humble beginnings,the original farmhouse remains and shines today along with an impressive upscale addition to the original space. Long distance views. $999,000 Contact DonnaTyson for information M O SE TI LL VAT ER E S D SIMONS RUN:This lovely home is situated on 8.3 acres and backs up to preserved land inWest RockhillTownship. Original hardwood floors, deep set window sills, exposed beams, formal living room large formal dining room, three generous sized bedrooms. Full finished walkout basement. Detached garage and Barn. $935,000 Contact Paul DiCicco at 215.651.1435 or Art Mazzei M PAXSON RIDGE: One of a kind 5 bedroom home on Paxson Road in Solebury sits on a 7 acre plus lot.The home is the 2003 Winner of the Pinnacle Award for custom homes over $2 million.Features many architectural details including arched doorways, a two story coffered ceiling, stone walls, wainscoting in the dining room and a series of covered porches. Decks and balconies take advantage of the spectacular views. $2,795,000 Contact Margo Busund at 215.801.2977 13 + 36 IRONTON FARM: An opportunity to own a piece of history located in Solebury Township. Potential abounds with this well maintained stone farm house dating back to 1826. High ceilings,exposed stone walls,and deep window wells that cannot be recreated in today’s construction. Sited on a 2.5 acre lot just minutes to downtown New Hope. $475,000 Call Alison Kingsley at 215.595.8907 or Kathy Sberna For additional information or a private tour contact us Addison Wolfe Real Estate, 550 Union Square, New Hope, PA 18938 (215) 862-5500 • www.AddisonWolfe.com
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