country living - PrincetonInfo
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country living - PrincetonInfo
COMPLETELY CLASSIC Pianist Di Wu performs Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2 with the Princeton Symphony on May 15. See Events, page 17. How To Impress Angels, page 5; Senior Theater Moments, 24; Low Carbon Footprint Art, 29; An Architect Strikes Back, 39. Business Meetings 8 Preview 17 Opportunities 32 Singles 37 Contents 11 11, 20 Y A ©M 2 PH: 609-452-7000 FAX: 609-452-0033 WWW.PRINCETONINFO.COM C OUNTRY L IVING RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE ISSUE GREEN ACRES 33 Ancil Davison Road, Cranbury. House, barn, and 7+ acres. $1.1 million. Roberta Marlowe, Henderson Sotheby’s, Cranbury. For Sale: Farms & Barns; Ranches & Colonials Our residential real estate listings begin on page 10. 299 PenningtonTitusville Road, Hopewell. House, potting shed, barn, and 3 acres. $734,900. Sandra Jones, Coldwell Banker Princeton. Jamie Saxon visits Meadowgate Farm, top, which also houses an alpaca farm, one of six properties on the Saturday, May 14, Lawrenceville House Tour. Page 10. The Bank of Princeton The Bank For Small Business 4XLFNGHFLVLRQVIULHQGO\VHUYLFHDQGSURGXFWVWRÀWHYHU\VPDOOEXVLQHVVQHHG6WRSE\ DEUDQFKWRGD\RUFDOOWilliam D. Allan at 609.642.4247. www.thebankofprinceton.com © 2011 The Bank of Princeton Princeton Pennington Hamilton Monroe Montgomery Lambertville (coming) Bank Wisely. 2 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 How do we explain this one? We have not yet even issued the Richard K. Rein Editor and Publisher Jamie Saxon Preview Editor Scott Morgan Business Editor Lynn Miller Events Editor Sara Hastings Special Projects Craig Terry Photography Barbara Figge Fox Senior Correspondent Vaughan Burton Production Bill Sanservino Production Manager Martha Moore Jennifer Schwesinger Account Executives Lawrence L. DuPraz 1919-2006 Founding Production Adviser Stan Kephart – Design 1986-2007 Michele Alperin, Elaine Strauss, Joan Crespi, Simon Saltzman, Euna Kwon Brossman, Bart Jackson, E.E. Whiting, Richard J. Skelly, Doug Dixon, LucyAnn Dunlap, Kevin Carter, Helen Schwartz, Anna Soloway Contributors U.S. 1 is hand delivered by request to all businesses and offices in the greater Princeton area. For advertising or editorial inquiries call 609-452-7000. Fax: 609-452-0033. Or visit www.princetoninfo.com Copyright 2011 by Richard K. Rein and U.S. 1 Publishing Company, 12 Roszel Road, Princeton 08540. ers’ imagination to take flight, not their reporting skills. For an idea of what we have run “call” for contributions to our an- in the past visit our website, and nual Summer Fiction issue and we www.princetoninfo.com, already have a half-dozen pieces search the archives for the issues by date. Look at the last issue in Jusubmitted in the last week. Before we do explain, let us first ly for any year and you will find issue the official call: The U.S. 1 many examples. E-mail submissions to ficSummer Fiction issue will be pubmail lished Wednesday, July 27, and we tion@princetoninfo.com, look forward to printing original them to 12 Roszel Road, Princeton short stories and poetry written by 08540, or fax them to 609-452the readers of U.S. 1 newspaper 0033. Please include your full and people who work or live in name, address, daytime phone number, and a brief biography. Our central New Jersey. As always we need to empha- deadline: Friday, June 17. That’s the call for submissions. size that the Summer Fiction issue is not a contest, a point we have Now the explanation for how some made almost as often as Barack of those people may have jumped Obama has claimed he was born in the gun. The fact is that the call has the U.S.A. We make our selections been on our homepage — based not only on readability and www.princetoninfo.com — for the literary value but also in part on last week or so. Visitors to the homepage got a summasynergy with other subof what appears above missions, the number Between ry and a convenient link to of times the author has The the archived version of been printed before last year’s issue. (newcomers are enLines Sometimes circumcouraged), and availstances give princetonable space. We are partial to stories or po- info a leg up. Last week, just as we ems that resonate with our reader- were delivering our print edition, ship — the people who toil at of- Princeton University announced fices all around us — or our central an intriguing panel on U.S. foreign New Jersey roots. What we don’t policy considerations, post Osama like: Poems that are really prose Bin Laden. It was scheduled for just broken arbitrarily into lines. Monday, May 9, so announcing it Submissions from school children, in our May 11 edition would do no who often have other outlets for good. We posted it on the home their creative writing. Stories that page, along with links to the biogare really non-fiction articles. This raphies of the panelists. On page 28 of this issue, you can is the time when we urge the writread Simon Saltzman’s review of the new play at McCarter, “SleepU.S. 1 WELCOMES leting Beauty Wakes.” By the time ters to the editor, corrections, this print edition reaches you, our second thoughts, and critihomepage will include a “Critics’ cisms of our stories and Corner,” with links to Saltzman’s columns. E-mail your review, as well as to the reviews of thoughts directly to our editor: rein@princetoninfo.com. Continued on page 4 INSIDE Interchange 4 Helping the Homeless, with Your Help 4 Survival Guide 5 QuickBooks for the Angel Seeker Sunday Spirit for Monday Business The Selling of ‘You, Inc.’ Business Meetings Preview 17-38 Day by Day, May 11 to 18 Gathering Real Stories for the Stage Theater Review: ‘Little Women’ Theater Review: ‘Samuel J. and K.’ Theater Review: ‘Sleeping Beauty Wakes’ Predating the Low Carbon Footprint with Collage Opportunities At the Movies U.S. 1 Singles Exchange American Voices: 16th Century to Bernstein Fast Lane Classifieds Jobs 5 6 7 8 17 24 26 27 28 29 32 35 37 38 39 46 49 For advertising or editorial inquiries, call 609-452-7000. Fax: 609-452-0033. Mail: 12 Roszel Road, Princeton 08540. E-Mail: info@princetoninfo.com. Home page: www.princetoninfo.com © 2011 by Richard K. Rein. For articles previously published in U.S. 1, for listings of scheduled events far into the future, consult our website: www.princetoninfo.com. The U.S. 1 Sneak Preview edition is E-mailed weekly. It contains highlights of the next issue, and links to key websites. For a free subscription email info@princetoninfo.com. Copyright 2011 Richard K. Rein and the U.S. 1 Publishing Company. Company Index Archer & Greiner, 40; Bartolomei Pucciarelli, 5; Clemens Family Corporation, 6; Educational Testing Service, 40; Global Statistics Group, 40; HomeFront, 4; Ice Cap Inc., 40. Johnson & Johnson, 6; Knight Associates, 39; Leadership Strategies, 6; Meadowgate Farms Alpacas, 10; Ocean Spray Inc., 39; RF Management, 40; Sophion Bioscience Inc., 40; Tekmark Global Solutions, 8; Verivue, 40. MAY 11, 2011 U.S. 1 COMPLETE ARCHITECTURE, INTERIOR AND DESIGN SERVICES 2 0 N ASSAU ST R E E T, S U I T E 2 5 , P R I N C E TO N , N E W J E R S E Y T: 6 0 9 . 9 2 4 . 5 0 0 4 F : 6 0 9 . 9 2 4 . 5 0 0 8 J O S H U A Z I N D E R .C O M Obsessive Compulsive Disorder Typical OCD obsessions revolve around: Fear of contamination or dirt Repeated doubts Having things orderly and symmetrical Unwanted thoughts and images Washing and cleaning Counting Checking Repeating actions over and over Arranging and making items appear orderly Are you wondering what new research is being done for the treatment of OCD? You may be interested to know that Princeton Medical Institute is conducting a research study of an investigational medication for the treatment of OCD. If you are 18 years old or older you may qualify for this study. Qualified participants may be eligible for reimbursement for time and travel Study Participants will receive at no cost: Study Medication for Study Related: Physical Examinations Psychiatric Evaluation by a board certified Psychiatrist Laboratory Tests Call or log on more information. 609-921-6050 www.gminstitutes.com Where Today’s Research Brings Tomorrow’s Solutions 3 4 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 INSIGHTS & ARGUMENTS Between the Lines Continued from page 2 other publications. And, of course, you can add your own thoughts about the play by posting a comment at the bottom of Saltzman’s U.S. 1 review. Letter to the Editor: WW Arts Success I INTERCHANGE Homeless, But Not Alone A by Connie Mercer n a very short time the West Windsor Arts Center has emerged as a thriving cultural destination. Here’s proof: 1,000 celebrants at the Art Center’s opening; a standing-room audience of 200 at the premiere of the Glen Acres documentary, calling for a second showing; more than 250 people at a recent art opening, then 80 people at a related gallery talk; and 175 young adults engaged in an “open mic” evening. These are just a few of the events that brought out enthusiastic attendees. The success of the West Windsor Arts Council’s mission is due to the support of the community and the hard work of our many volunteers and dedicated staff members. However, the commitment for continued success is never over. For this reason, the West Windsor Arts Council announces the start of the Annual Fund 2011 campaign. Your support will allow us to continue to present an appealing menu of cultural experiences. Please visit www.westwindsorarts.org for more information, or call 609-716-1931. Your donation will make a difference. Eduardo Garcia Executive Director Ruth Kusner Potts Trustee ESSAYS & SOLILOQUIES quarter of a century working with homeless and vulnerable families in Central New Jersey gives Liz Murray’s message in her inspirational book, “Breaking Night: My Journey from Homeless to Harvard,” a special meaning to me and to the other people of HomeFront. We started out as a group of volunteers collecting and delivering food to families living in the “welfare motels” on the Route 1 corridor. We moved to providing shelter—and, eventually, affordable housing. We developed a network of programs that help both adults and children from vulnerable families complete their education, develop employment skills and get jobs. In short, we moved from providing food and shelter to helping people change their lives, as Murray changed hers (U.S. 1, April 6). Murray will speak to the members of HomeFront’s Women’s Initiative on Sunday, May 15, at 12:30 p.m. at the Nassau Inn. Cost: $25. Call 609-989-9417. The Women’s Initiative is a group of more than 500 women who support our homeless families in their path to self-sufficiency. In some cases, their entire family is involved. It is an energetic, positive group of women, young and old, committed to helping others. I have learned a series of lessons from the thousands of people who have passed through our front door. Everyone has potential. It is never entirely too late to turn your life around. And, finally, nobody makes it alone. We all need a strong, supportive community to realize our dreams. We have worked hard, for many years, to provide that community. Not that everyone can graduate from Harvard, write a bestselling book and have a movie made about their life. We are not all Liz Murray. HomeFront has thousands of stories of ordinary people who have emerged from the same desolation Murray experienced to build healthy, positive, productive lives for themselves and their families. HomeFront found Angel Bey in one of the welfare motels. She had missed three years of school following her mentally ill mother around the country. HomeFront arranged treatment for her mother. Supported by a volunteer tutor form Mathematica Policy Research who stuck with her for 10 years, she earned her high school degree and, eventually, an MA in nursing from Walden University. She is currently working at Lincoln Technical Institute training the next generation of nurses — and planning to continue her education and get her PhD. She will also be honored at the Women’s Initiative meeting. Please Join Dr. Roderick Kaufmann & Princeton Dermatology Associates in Welcoming Dr. Smeeta Sinha Dr. Sinha will be at our Monroe office, 8 a.m. - 6 p.m., Tuesday through Thursday. Her specialties are Adult, Pediatric and Cosmetic Dermatology and Dermatalogic Surgery. Please Call Today to Make Your Appointment with Dr. Sinha. 5 Center Drive, Suite 1A Monroe Center Forsgate Monroe Township, NJ 609-655-4544 ‘Homeless to Harvard’ author Liz Murray helps HomeFront celebrate its successes May 15 at the Nassau Inn. Emily Lewis, another former client, came to us when she was 20 years old. She had not graduated from high school. She was in rehabilitation for drugs and alcohol. She was on welfare and in an abusive relationship. She had a baby. The death of a friend from a drug overdose and the encouragement of her mother motivated her to change her life. She got her GED through HomeFront’s WorkFirst program. Her participation in the ArtSpace program revealed her natural artistic talent. She eventually became a Bonner volunteer at ArtSpace. Emily took her SAT in 2009 and is currently on full scholarship at Parsons School of Design at the New School, one of the most prestigious art programs in the country. HomeFront stays in touch with her and her daughter, offering continuing support. Last week she delighted us with news that she had aced her first year. We have so many of these stories—young people completing their education successfully, getting jobs, excelling at sports, building careers. I would ask you to take a moment to consider what a tragedy it would be if they had failed to achieve their potential. We see potential in each individual who passes through our door. Efforts such as our Women’s Initiative, with strong leadership from Lisa Smukler, Amy Vogel, and other WI Advisory Board members, help us nurture talent, push for higher education, and improve job skills. The WI efforts, those of other committed HomeFront volunteers, and the hard work of our staff come together to create these powerful stories of success. It is, I think, what motivates all of us. Nobody does it alone. If you would like to join hands with us, visit www.homefrontnj.org. Connie Mercer is the founder and executive director of HomeFront, a Trenton-based nonprofit that has assisted homeless families and children since 1989. MAY 11, 2011 SURVIVAL GUIDE EDITOR: SCOTT MORGAN morgan@princetoninfo.com Thursday, May 12 A Quick(Books) Way To Impress Angels N ew Jersey is a magnet for high-tech entrepreneurs and startup companies, and many of these entrepreneurs are experts in computer programming and software development. But when it comes to raising money from venture capitalists and angel investors, the best way to impress may come from two much more humble pieces of software: Quickbooks and Microsoft Excel. “The standard reports that can be developed using these two pieces of software are a potent tool to use when talking to potential investors,” says Jaime Campbell, a CPA and certified expert in Quickbooks and a number of other software programs. “Understanding how to use these tools will help an entrepreneur show investors that he understands his product and has a grasp of the business financials needed to run a successful company.” Campbell and Douglas C. Smith, both of Bartolomei Pucciarelli in Lawrenceville, will present “Essential Capital-Raising Tools: Quickbooks and Excel” at the next meeting of the New Jersey Entreprenuer’s Forum on Thursday, May 12, at 5 p.m. at the Commer- cialization Center for Innovative Technologies in North Brunswick. Cost: $40. For reservations, E-mail entreuniv@gmail.com. Smith, a partner at Bartolomei Pucciarelli, joined the accounting firm in 1994 after two years in industry accounting with an international company. He graduated from Bentley College in 1992 with a bachelor’s in accounting and became a CPA in 1995. Teaching others how to better use programs such as Quickbooks and Excel is right up Campbell’s alley. In fact, teaching is her first passion. “I was born to teach,” she says. Accounting is her second career; her first was as an elementary music teacher. A Florida native, she earned a bachelor’s degree in music education from Florida State University in 1997 and taught for 10 years. She began her study of accounting “to exercise the left side of my brain,” she says, but in fact, both For all the financial software out there, QuickBooks and Excel are still ideal for tracking money. music and numbers have always been her two passions. “I began taking piano lessons when I was five and I was in the accelerated math program since fifth grade,” she says. Her parents were both surprised, however, when she switched careers mid-stream. “My father was an accountant,” Campbell says. “He was surprised when I left teaching for accounting, but he was pleased. My mother was also surprised, but she wasn’t as pleased. She had seen me teach and knew that I am a gifted teacher. But, no matter what my career, I will always be teaching.” After moving to New Jersey she went back to school and received an MBA in accounting from Rut- gers in 2003. She obtained her CPA accreditation in 2005. At Bartolomei Pucciarelli she assists with team training and coaching clients through QuickBooks issues. She is a Certified QuickBooks Professional Advisor as well as a Microsoft Certified Master. Validate your statements. “The elegance and simplicity of using the tools available through Quickbooks and Excel really excites investors,” says Campbell. The software allows business owners and entrepreneurs the ability to easily set up balance sheets, cash flow and income statements, and reports, such as sales summaries and payroll charts. They also show the relationships between the various aspects of a business. Together the two software programs can give a complete picture of a company. “Quickbooks is historical,” Campbell says. “It shows what the company has done in the past. It is particularly good for an existing company that is looking for investors to help with expansion.” Excel, on the other hand, is the tool to use when illustrating future predictions for business growth. Set up assumptions, then change them. The “assumptions” that can be made are the heart and soul of the two tools, Campbell says. “You can use these programs to set up assumptions about your business, then link everything so that your investors can easily change those assumptions and instantly see the new results.” For example, a start-up company might be predicting a sales growth rate of 25 percent per year over five years in its presentation to a group of venture capitalists. All of the company’s financial forecasts will then be based on that assumption. “Obviously, if your business is growing that quickly you will need additional employees, additional supplies, and additional marketing to sustain that growth,” says Campbell. With the Continued on following page U.S. 1 5 6 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 A U.S. 1 ADVERTISING FEATURE High Risk for Home Improvement Without Permit Approval B Landscape Designer ◆ Landscaping: • Full landscape designs & installations • Brick walls & paver patios • Timber walls • Waterfalls & ponds ◆ Maintenance: • Full lawn care • Bed maintenance • Mulching • Chemicals • Seasonal flower planting ◆ Shrub & Tree Maintenance: • Pruning • Spraying • Tree removal ◆ Snow Removal: • Plowing • Salting • Sidewalk clearing Since 1975 ◆ Corporate, commercial and residential property management ◆ Competitive bids ◆ Referral credits Call NOW for MULCHING (609) 448-0229 West Windsor stevennharhighinc@gmail.com We Will Match Our Competitors’ Prices! R O B I N N A L LY A D V E R T I S I N G & D E S I G N ADVERTISEMENTS • ANNUAL REPORTS • BROCHURES CATALOGUES • CORPORATE IDENTITY • DIRECT MAIL INTERACTIVE MULTIMEDIA • PACKAGE DESIGN uilding permits are generally required for any project that will involve construction or substantial electrical, plumbing, or mechanical work in New Jersey.The building permit approval process protects you, your family and your property from safety hazards, personal injuries and property damages. Building permits are issued to licensed contractors for proposed work to your home that the town has deemed to require a formal permit approval process. If any contractor performs any home improvement work without having first received permit approval, then such contractor has violated not only local law but also the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act (the "Act") N.J.A.C. 13:45A16.2(a), 10. Many home improvement contractors violate the Act because they begin work on homes (1) prior to receiving permit approval, (2) after being denied a permit, or (3) without having applied for the permit whatsoever. Also, working without a required permit can subject you, the homeowner, to fines and penalties from local government and may leave the project incomplete. If your home is damaged by a contractor or the work needs to be redone and that contractor did not receive permit approval for the work prior to beginning such work, then you may be entitled to triple damages (3 times the amount of cost to repair or redo the work), plus attorneys' fees for the lawsuit against the contractor. If your by Darren M. Baldo, Esq., CPA, LLM home has been damaged, then you just have to prove that the contractor's failure to obtain permits caused the damage. In Cox v. Sears Roebuck & Co., 138 N.J. 2 (1994), the court found that a contractor who agreed to perform home improvement work on a consumer's residence violated the Act by failing to obtain necessary permits, with the result that the contractor was allowed to perform in a substandard manner with no government supervision or inspection. As stated by the New Jersey Supreme Court in Cox v. Sears Roebuck & Co., "by beginning work without checking for permits, [Sears] disregarded the regulation and therefore violated the Act. Moreover, once a permit is obtained, a code inspector will inspect the residence periodically and issue a Certificate of Continued Occupancy to conform to the municipality's inspection process. Because no permit was ever issued for the home, no inspections took place and no certificate was issued… Had all applicable permits been obtained before Sears began work, the issued permits would have triggered periodic inspections of the renovations. An inspector would have detected any substandard electrical wiring or cabinet work and would not have permitted the work to progress or have issued the required certificates until Sears corrected the deficiencies. Because the inspections did not occur, the wiring remained unsafe, the cabinets remained unattractive and both resulted in a loss measured by the cost of repairing those conditions." Permits are required for (1) new homes, (2) additions to homes, (3) remodeling homes, (4) decks, (5) sheds, (6) tree houses, and (7) detached garages. Permits may be required for: (1) new dishwasher, (2) hot water heaters, (3) fireplace, (4) siding, (5) roofing, and (6) fences. Permits are generally not required for (1) painting, (2) carpeting, (3) tiling, or (4) wood flooring, unless the subflooring or other structure is modified. Whether a permit is required for any of the foregoing items depends upon the regulations of each township and the size of the project. Darren M. Baldo, Esq., CPA, LLM is an attorney who focuses on litigation, contracts, collections, bankruptcy, wills, trusts, estates, employment law and tax law. Visit www.dbaldolaw.com for more information or call 609-7990090. You may be entitled to triple damages plus attorney fees against the contractor for the contractor’s failure to obtain required permits prior to starting work on your home. PHOTO SHOOTS • P.O.P. DISPLAYS PROMOTIONAL MATERIAL • WEB DESIGN Continued from preceding page to learn more and to view our portfolio, come visit us at www.robinnallydesign.com 12 Andrew Drive • Lawrenceville, New Jersey 08648 • Phone: 609.844.0011 Terri Klass Consulting and The Lindenberger Group The Risk of Ignoring Millennials One of the biggest challenges for businesses today is integrating the Millennial twentysomething's into a Baby Boomer culture. In this two-hour, interactive, breakfast seminar you will walk away with strategies to leverage the talents of this extraordinary generation and create high-performing workplaces. Thursday, May 12 8:00 am to 10:00 am Main Street Bistro Princeton, NJ $75 per person group discounts offered Limited space available so sign up soon! To learn more and to register, contact: Terri Klass Consulting @ 908.654.1554 or terri@terriklassconsulting.com The Lindenberger Group @ 609.730.1049 or info@lindenbergergroup.com tools in these two software programs, charts, statistics and graphs can be set up to interconnect and show the additional revenue and the additional expenses needed each year as the company grows. While this 25 percent growth rate may look great in a PowerPoint presentation, what if the potential investors question the company’s numbers? What if they think a 15 or 10 percent growth rate is more realistic? “That’s where the beauty of the programs comes in,” says Campbell. “Everything can be set up to interconnect. You change one assumption in the program and your statistics instantly change.” Obviously, if you have slower sales, you will need a smaller staff. The change in payroll from additional staff will instantly change on your computer screen so that your investors can see the new predictions. “The ability to make these changes on the fly and instantly come up with new statistics is what will wow your investors,” says Campbell. “Financial people love the ability to make new assumptions, change the models, and see the new numbers.” There are even more “bells and whistles” in both of the software programs that can take a financial presentation from boring to wow. “You can express things visually in charts and graphs. You can have arrows and dropdown boxes. You can connect to websites. Not everyone can quickly and easily comprehend statistics from just a spreadsheet,” she says. Campbell continues: “When I do this type of presentation I call people up to the computer and let them make the changes themselves. They show up on the big screen for everyone to see.” She says this gives entrepreneurs a feel for how this type of presentation can impress their investors and makes them comfortable using the tools themselves. “You can’t launch into the future without knowing the past,” Campbell says. “These two tools let businesses do just that.” — Karen Hodges Miller Sunday, May 15 Sunday Meets Monday to Friday D oes your business day feel confused? Everything always swirling in change and laden with stress? “Well, send your boss to me,” says Stephen Payne, founder of A New Equilibrium. An international business leadership consultant, Payne knows that leadership rolls downhill, and that the executive is useless who cannot first lead himself from within. To guide professionals down the path between inner, personal growth, and workplace executive success, the Princeton Theological Seminary’s School of Christian Vocation and Mission has invited A New Equilibrium’s training team to present “The Leadership and Spirituality Summit,” a two-day retreat that runs from Sunday, May 15, at 4:30 p.m. until the afternoon of Monday, May 16, at the Seminary’s Erdman Center for Continuing Education, 20 Library Place. Cost: $85. Visit www.anewequilibrium.org. Speakers will include Payne; Sharon D’Agostino, vice president of Johnson & Johnson’s Worldwide Corporate Contributions and Community Relations division; and James Wood, senior vice president of corporate strategy for the Clemens Family Corporation. Payne calls himself an ex-CEO on a mission. He wants every executive to achieve the very best results from the leadership journey. And to do that, he is delving into the very inner core of his clients. Payne grew up in a family of gun makers and engineers in Birmingham, England. His great-grandfather sailed from Britain hoping to make guns for America’s Civil War. Taking himself out of the family trade, Payne entered Aston University, earning a bachelor’s in 1969, and later a Ph.D. in chemical engineering. Payne began consulting work for London-based PA Consulting. After providing managerial guidance to firms in Paris he was sent to Huntington, West Virginia, to help guide that region’s CSS Railroad. Undaunted by the culture sock, Payne rose to be CEO of PA Consulting. In l994, after descending into his own valley of despair, Payne emerged with an epiphany and founded the firm Leadership Strategies, 140 Hunt Drive, to MAY 11, 2011 guide the managing heads of Fortune 100 corporations. Seeing the need to bring spirituality into the workplace, Payne recently founded A New Equilibrium and has written three books (U.S. 1, April 7, 2010). “The real problem with so much of today’s leadership guides, books, and seminars,” says Payne, “is that they are not grounded in any human, spiritual center.” The advice for leaders becomes a chore list of best practices and fix-it steps. However, leaders are not likely to follow somebody’s success checklist without defined core principles that rationally involve them as individuals. That is, they need to have their own spirit mentoring them from within. “The walls are crumbling,” says Payne. “Businesses are no longer banishing one’s inner, spiritual self out of the office, onto one’s own time.” The reason is simple: business is a pragmatic gobbler of any tool that works. If setting their executives on a journey of spiritual growth will boost production, draw top talent, set a more energized atmosphere, and increase sales, companies will grab at it gleefully. However, applied spirituality is, at best, amorphous, and leaders are more than a little puzzled as to exactly what trip their firms are urging them to take. A leap into self. The spiritual journey on which Payne’s leaders embark is lifelong. It launches with a giant leap of pondering some very personal, seemingly very non-business questions. Is there a higher power to which all people are naturally drawn? Is there a higher purpose for me as an individual? For all humans, including my fellow team members? How can I connect with that spirit and share it with my fellows? Like any good business person, Payne is U.S. 1 Inner Workings: Stephen Payne shows executives how to be more spiritually fulfilled. seeking tools here, and direction. Such queries about higher powers and life purposes feel akin to those present in every major religion and house of faith. And certainly, notes Payne, one’s religion can help greatly in understanding the distribution and flow of a spiritual power throughout the world around us. Yet A New Equilibrium espouses no religion’s specific tenets. Each leader’s journey and realizations must be his own. His faith may provide a walking stick, but in the end, he can only lead from his personally divined core principles. With more questions and more searching individual discovery dawns. The executive can move forward from a basic sense of self, connected to a power he seeks increasingly to tap into. He burgeons into what Payne terms “a spiritually intentional leader.” The old tasks take on meaning and hold fulfillment. The old laundry list of best practices becomes an array of suggestions that he may judge and select. It is natural that the newly aligned leader brings his new spiritual power to that realm where he commits so much of his time and emotion. Calm challenges. After your spiritual awakening the paperwork still smothers your desk. No matter how transcendent you soared at the seminar, your team still arrives late, disinterested, and laying anvils of frustration in your lap. The good news is that A New Equilibrium has not been a retreat, but hopefully an armory that has equipped you to better face the daily stresses of all aspects of life. “One of the sweetest parts of this growth,” says Payne, “is that it is measurable within the business.” Seven out of ten leaders who have followed the course claim enormous drops in job and life stress. They feel more confident in all relationships. And most quantifiable of all — both sales and production go up. — Bart Jackson Tuesday, May 17 The Art of Selling ‘You Incorporated’ PERSONAL PAPERWORK SOLUTIONS ...And More, Inc. 609-371-1466 C hances are you or someone you know is or has been out of work. Joe Himelfarb understands. In the past seven years Himelfarb has been laid off four times. And while attending networking events, he noticed his fellow attendees always seemed so defeated. Continued on following page Insured • Notary Public • www.ppsmore.com Are you drowning in paperwork? Your own? Your parents’? Your small business? Get help with: • Paying bills and maintaining checking accounts • Complicated medical insurance reimbursements • Quicken or organizing and filing Linda Richter Specialized Services for Seniors and their families, and Busy Professionals. ARE YOU OR A LOVED ONE AFFECTED BY MEMORY ISSUES? CLINICAL RESEARCH STUDY Now enrolling adults (ages 45 to 90) with memory loss or mild cognitive impairment. A study partner is required to participate. Volunteers may receive investigational medication, study-related medical care and cognitive testing. John Heath, M.D. Robert Wood Johnson Medical School 1 Robert Wood Johnson Place New Brunswick, N.J. 732-418-8468 Cl-DD6163 06/09 7 8 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Continued from preceding page Wills & Estate Planning Mary Ann Pidgeon Pidgeon & Pidgeon, PC Attorney, LLM in Taxation 600 Alexander Road Princeton 609-520-1010 www.pidgeonlaw.com “When it comes to the job search, you’ve got to be positive and upbeat,” he says. This observation switched on the light bulb over Himelfarb’s head. He put together a workshop on selling yourself to get the job you want. His next presentation of “Selling You Inc.” will be on Tuesday, May 17, at 8:30 a.m. at the Princeton Public Library. This event is free. Visit www.sellingyou.eventbrite.com to register. Himelfarb grew up in Yonkers, where his father is a diamond setter and his mother worked for the Yonkers Board of Education. After high school, he attended college in Buffalo because “the schools there were as far from home as possible but still in New York, so I could take advantage of in-state tuition.” In 1985 he received both a bachelor’s in physics from Buffalo State College and a bachelor’s in mechanical engineering from the SUNY Buffalo. In 2010 he received a mini-MBA in digital marketing from Rutgers. Himelfarb says he was determined to change the world working as an engineer. He soon realized engineering wasn’t his forte. While working for AT&T Submarine Systems, where he assisted with the manufacturing and installation of several trans-oceanic fiber optic telecommunications projects, the sales department asked him to conduct presentations. He then moved on to the sales account team at Hewlett Packard that was responsible for supporting AT&T. Being hired at Hewlett Packard didn’t come easy. After a series of interviews, Himelfarb learned that Hewlett Packard was on a hiring freeze and that he would have to wait for the much-coveted sales position. He Personal Product: Joe Himelfarb says that selling yourself is the same as selling anything. Only better. eventually landed the job because of persistence. He called the company on the 15th of every month to ask if the freeze was lifted. After a year of this Himelfarb got the job. “I didn’t let them forget about me because I was politely persistent,” he says. “They could have told me to stop calling.” If the word “sales” makes you think of the smarmy salesman who sold you your first used car, stop. Selling isn’t evil. “People tell me they never thought of selling when it comes to the job search,” he says. “It’s not hard to make it approachable.” Whether it’s multi-million dollar computing systems to companies around the world, or consumer products in a homeowner’s backyard, he enjoys helping his clients get from where they are to where they want to be. After working in freelance sales where “if you aren’t selling, you aren’t getting paid,” Himelfarb says he had to find something else. That’s when he began selling swimming pools for Anthony & Sylvan Pools in Green Brook. He did this for two years before going back to tech sales in a position at Ocean Computer Group. He worked there for three years before being laid off in August. Tired of hearing the same excuses each time he has been laid off, Himelfarb decided in August to attend one networking event per day. His goal: Meet two to four people per event. While he wanted to meet as many people as possible, Himel- farb knew it was unrealistic to have meaningful conversations with more than four people. And he wanted each person he met to remember him when anyone says the word “sales.” This, he says, is the key to good networking. “You want to be the first person someone recommends when they hear of an opening in your profession,” he says. “Being in the forefront is the key to branding yourself.” Himelfarb’s plan worked well enough to get him his current position as a senior account executive for Tekmark Global Solutions in Edison. He sells IT professional services and staffing. A main thing to remember when selling yourself or anything else, Himelfarb says, is that the customer always comes first. “Customers care only about themselves,” he says. “You have to know what they want to hear. An employer doesn’t care that you’ve been out of work for a year. It’s never about you. It’s always about them.” Himelfarb says that when selling yourself, apply the theories and techniques of selling you would Clear Skin! Student Special! We W ill PURCHASE Your GOLD and JEWELRY ON THE SPOT! Gold • Silver • Platinum Sterling Silver • Coins 3 Treatments for $235 (plus tax) (40% Savings) You Can Trade In Your Metals for Store Merchandise at a Discount Price! Offer good through 5/31/11. (Valid for one time only.) A COMPLETE APPROACH TO SKIN CARE Let our medically trained staff help to not only treat Monday - Saturday 10-5:30 pm Sunday 12-5pm current skin conditions, but educate you on how to prevent future breakouts. The Aesthetics Center at Princeton Dermatology Associates Monroe Center Forsgate 5 Center Drive • Suite A Monroe Township, NJ 609-655-4544 2 Tree Farm Rd. Suite A-110 Pennington, NJ 609-737-4491 104 Nassau Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08542 (609) 924-1 1363 • www.ForestJewelers.com MAY 11, 2011 use when selling a product or service. “This isn’t rocket science as some might lead themselves to believe,” he says. “You have to prove you have something to offer. The job search revolves around selling you talents.” In this social media age, you can still use old job search techniques to focus your attention to the job at hand. Don’t be afraid of LinkedIn or Facebook, Himelfarb says. It’s important to mine your connections. Also, put a different spin on the activities you currently perform so you can distinguish yourself from the other applicants. Make the interviewer feel glad they met you and wonder how they ever got along without you. Himelfarb says that if you’re not used to selling, this all is a huge challenge. He tries to quell this feeling when he’s teaching. Above all, you must keep an open mind. “You can’t go in there like a knight in shining armor,” he says. “I can’t reiterate enough that it’s not about you. It’s always about the customer.” — Sonja Hegman horse-Hamilton Square Road, melissa.morici@reliableoffice.co m. 609-454-4659. 8 a.m.: The Lindenberger Group, “The Risk of Ignoring Millennials,” Terri Klass, $75. Main Street Euro-American Bistro, Princeton Shopping Center, info@lindenbergergroup.com. 609-730-1049. 2 p.m.: Princeton Senior Resource Center, “Navigating Retirement ,” Carol King, free. RWJ Health & Wellness Center, info@princetonsenior.org. 609-924-7108. 6 p.m.: Montgomery Business Association, “Meet and Greet” networking, $15. Princeton Elks Club, Route 518, Skillman. 917459-3755. 6:45 p.m.: Princeton SCORE, “Access to Capital,” Onica Browne, SBA, free. Hamilton Library. 609393-0505. Business Meetings 9 a.m.: College Arts Association, “Achieving Success as a Visual Artist,” professional development workshop, Judith Brodsky, others, $25. Mill Hill Playhouse, Trenton. 973-482-1000. Wednesday, May 11 1 p.m.: Team Nimbus, “Small Business Insight,” monthly lunch talk, every second Wednesday, free. Camillo’s Cafe, Princeton Shopping Center, lpruden@teamnimbus.com. 908-359-4787. Thursday, May 12 7 a.m.: Central Jersey Business Association, weekly networking breakfast, free. Americana Diner, East Windsor. 800-985-1121. 8 a.m.: Round Table Referral Network, weekly morning networking, free. Klatzkin & Co., White- Friday. May 13 10:30 a.m.: Professional Service Group, weekly career meeting, support, and networking for unemployed professionals, free. Mercer County One-Stop Career Center, Yard Avenue, Trenton. 609-292-7535. Saturday, May 14 Tuesday, May 17 7 a.m.: Capital Networking Group, weekly networking, free. David Lerner Assoc., Forrestal Village. 609-434-1144. 7 a.m.: LeTip Networking Group, Tuesday Morning Networking, free breakfast. MCCC Conference Center. 609-243-7860. 8:30 a.m.: NJ Unemployed, “Selling You Inc.,” Joe Himelfarb, free. Princeton Library. www.sellingyou.eventbrite.com U.S. 1 8:30 a.m.: Council On State Public Affairs, “New Jersey: State of Health,” conference, $45. Trenton Marriott Downtown. 908-5800946. Noon.: Team Nimbus, “Small Business Insight,” weekly lunch talk, free. Valdebenito’s, 18 West Main Street, Belle Meade, lpruden@teamnimbus.com. 908-3594787. 6:45 p.m.: Princeton SCORE, “Franchising as a Small Business Option,” Jack Armstrong, free. South Brunswick Library. 609393-0505. 7 p.m.: Princeton Senior Resource Center, “Introduction to Your Lifestyle in Retirement ,” Carol King, free. Princeton Public Library, info@princetonsenior.org. 609-924-7108. 7:30 p.m.: JobSeekers, networking and job support, free. Trinity Church, 33 Mercer Street. 609924-2277. Wednesday, May 18 7 a.m.: BNI West Windsor chapter, weekly networking, free. BMS Building, Pelletieri Rabstein & Altman, Nassau Park. 609-4623875. 8 a.m.: Edison Chamber, “Manage and Grow in A Flat Economy,” Congressman Leonard Lance, $45. Pines Manor, barbcroos@edisonchamber.com. 732-738-9482. 10 a.m.: Princeton Packet, “Technology Employment Connection Job Fair,” free. NJHA, 760 Alexander Road, jcarr@centraljersey.com. 609-874-2149. 6 p.m.: The Bank, “First Time Home Buying Seminar,” free. Hamilton branch,2460 Whitehorse-Hamilton Square Road, vbaldwin@thebankonline.com. 609-584-5840. 7 p.m.: Princeton Senior Resource Center, “Encore Careers: Doing Good While Doing Well,” Carol King, free. West Windsor Library. 609-924-7108. DENTAL INSURANCE?? Are you looking for the personal touch in a private office that accepts your dental plan? We are now accepting most dental insurance plans Call our office and we will optimize your coverage. 1941 S. Broad St. Hamilton NJ Corner of S. 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In spite of how can one be afraid of an animal their differences, all the homes on that looks like it could talk and the tour are set on beautiful acres of have its own TV show? current or former farmland. The The alpacas’ soft mouths nuzzle only sign that Meadowgate Farm, my hands and pant legs with benign situated at the end of a long drivecuriosity as I pet their baby-soft way at 3071 Route 206, even exists fleece. The is a life-size sound they black metal make is an alcutout of an al‘All my life I’d always most inaudible paca, set next to wanted to live on a hum, like a rathe mailbox. farm,’ says Diane dio stuck in beIt is hard to tween stations. believe Diane Rosenberg, but her The baby alRosenberg, dream took about pacas — one who owns four decades to just a day old, Meadowgate others a week with her huscome true. old — wiggle in band, Leon, aland out amongst ways wanted to their mothers’ legs looking for a be a farmer. Born in Washington, morning snack. The view is coun- DC, the daughter of a homemaker try-perfect — rolling fields; majes- and a lieutenant colonel who told tic tall trees that have stood, sentry- his daughter he “was the youngest like, more than a century, maybe man in World War I and the oldest two; and a graceful pond certainly man in World War II,” Rosenberg steeped in frogs and peepers, no and her older brother were raised in doubt descendents of a direct line Evanston, IL, a suburb of Chicago, dating back many frog-generations. where her father had a small oil This is Meadowgate Farm in company and remained in the Lawrenceville, one of six resi- Army reserves. dences that retain their traditional “All my life I’d always wanted ties to the land and will be open for to live on a farm but my brother had the sixth biennial Lawrenceville allergies, and we never could have Main Street House Tour, Saturday, a cat or dog or horse. All I could May 14, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. This have was an unfriendly parakeet,” year’s theme, “Country Living,” says Rosenberg, whose parents infeatures homes that span more than dulged her love of animals by givListings below are based on information provided by real estate brokers — prices and availability are subject to change. For listings of houses for rent please turn to page 51. Over $1.5 million Hamilton 183 Old York Road. Lot size: 52 acres. Taxes: $14,752. Listed, Barbara J. Dressler, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908-874-0000. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. One of few non-preserved farms retaining development rights. $2,000,000. Hopewell 72 Bayberry Road. Lot size: 12 acres. Taxes: $48,900. Listed, Peggy Henderson, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. hendersonsir.com. 6 bedrooms; 5 full, 2 half baths; full basement; 4-car garage. 8,400 SF architect-designed Georgian; 16 zones with radiant heat; 10-zone air conditioning; four dishwashers, sub-zero appliances; three ovens; 30-zone lawn sprinkler system; three-camera surveillance. $2,450,000. 2 Benson Lane. Lot size: 2.74 acres. Taxes: $31,071. Listed, Jane Henderson Kenyon, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. hendersonsir.com/1137931. 5 bedrooms; 5 full, 2 half baths; full finished basement; 3-car garage. Colonial with library, rec room. $1,649,000. Princeton Borough 129 Hodge Road. Lot size: 1.27 acres. Taxes: $78,270. Listed, Jane Henderson Kenyon, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. hendersonsir.com/1220299. 6 bedrooms; 6 full, 2 half baths; full basement; 3-car garage. Colonial. $4,995,000. 140 Hodge Road. Lot size: 1.64 acres. Taxes: $53,588. Listed, Jane Henderson Kenyon, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. hendersonsir.com/990282. 6 bedrooms; 5.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Colonial with in-ground pool, library, sun room. $2,950,000. 51 Cleveland Land. Lot size: .45 acres. Taxes: $33,116. Listed, Susan Gordon & Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker, 609-921-1411. princetonrealestate.net; princetonhome.com. ing her horseback riding lessons. It would be about four decades before her dream of farm life came true at age 50. S he attended Wellesley because her brother, who went to Yale, told her that’s where the sanest women he knew had gone to school. (Hillary Clinton was a freshman in her dormitory when Rosenberg was a senior.) After graduating in 1963 with a B.S. in biology, Rosenberg entered the Ph.D. program at the University of Pennsylvania, intending to go into research but two years in, the thought of spending the rest of her life in a lab with flies and worms didn’t cut it. “I knew research wasn’t going to be my cup of tea — so little human interaction,” says Rosenberg. Instead she got a job as an editing supervisor at McGraw-Hill in New York, where she developed journals in biology and medicine. As part of her job, she traveled regularly to universities and institutions where she “went to see people and tried to convince them to write books like medical textbooks.” She went to Yale, where she met her future husband, then the chair of human genetics. She wanted him to write a book on human genetics. (The book never got written, but now, after 32 years of marriage, the HOUSING FOR SALE 6 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; basement; 2-car garage. Colonial showcase home in Western section with updated kitchen and baths. $2,150,000. Princeton Township 49 Random Road. Lot size: 1 acre. Taxes: $37,059. Listed, Jane Weber, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. hendersonsir.com/5856767. 5 bedrooms; 6 baths; finished basement; 3car garage. Custom Colonial built by Palomar; bluestone terrace and fenced yard; designer kitchen; master suite has room-sized closet. $2,089,000. 124 Edgerstoune Road. Lot size: .9 acres. Taxes: $36,569. Listed, Peggy Henderson, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. hendersonsir.com. 7 bedrooms; 5.5 baths; basement; 2-car garage. 4,000 SF Gothic; architect-designed in 1931; has conservatory. $2,450,000. 55 Littlebrook Road. Lot size: 1.03 acres. Listed, Martha Stockton, Stockton Real Estate, 609-924-1416. stocktonrealtor.com. 5 bedrooms; 4.5 baths; full basement; 3-car garage. 4,500 SF new construction Colonial with hardwood floors throughout, state-of-theart kitchen, first-floor master suite. $1,695,000. $950,000-$1,500,000 Cranbury 33 Ancil Davison Road. Lot size: 7.08 acres. Taxes: $14,720. Listed, Roberta Marlowe, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-395-0444. hendersonsir.com/1218006. 5 bedrooms; 4.5 baths; partial basement; 2car garage. Historic brick “John Barclay House” plus renovated 200-year-old barn; house has vaulted ceiling in family room; barn has full kitchen, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths; both structures have solar panels. $1,100,000. Hopewell 1246 River Road. Lot size: 9.74 acres. Taxes: $30,754. Listed, Susan Gordon & Sandy Jones, Coldwell Banker, 609-921-1411. princetonrealestate.net. 6 bedrooms; 4 full, 2 half baths; finished basement; 4-car garage. $1,095,000. two are finally working on the book. With a working title of “Human Genetics and Genomics: Science, Health, and Society,” the book reflects the content of a course Dr. Rosenberg, now 78, is teaching at Princeton, where he is a professor in the department of molecular biology.) Once married, the Rosenbergs settled in Guilford, CT, a short commute to Yale. They were drawn to Princeton about 19 years ago, after Leon, who had by that time served for several years as dean of Yale Medical School, was approached by the CEO of BristolMyers Squibb to become chief scientific officer. Their daughter, $850,000-$950,000 Princeton Borough Hopewell 16 Lafayette Road West. Lot size: .81 acres. Taxes: $20,673. Listed, Jane Henderson Kenyon, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-9241000. hendersonsir.com/1229895. 5 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Colonial. $950,000. 153 Harbourton Woodsville Road. Lot size: 10.76 acres. Taxes: $19,217. Listed, Andrea D’Angelo, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. glorianilson.com. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. 4,394 SF Colonial with in-ground pool and enclosed sun porch. $890,000. 317 Pennington-Titusville Road. Lot size: 9.59 acres. Taxes: $14,345. Listed, Emily Schwab, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. glorianilson.com/pennington. 5 bedrooms; 3 baths; full basement; garage. Colonial farmhouse with outbuildings, barn, guest house. $899,000. Princeton Township 15 Journeys End Lane. Lot size: 1.5 acres. Taxes: $17,848. Listed, Susan Gordon & Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker, 609-9211411. princetonrealestate.net; princetonhome.com. 5 bedrooms; 3 baths; 2-car garage. Contemporary. $1,100,000. 175 Arreton Road. Lot size: 1 acre. Taxes: $24,201. Listed, Jane Henderson Kenyon, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. hendersonsir.com/1230062. 4 bedrooms; 4.5 baths; full finished basement; 3-car garage. Colonial with sunroom, private deck. $1,299,000. 531 Lake Drive. Lot size: .82 acres. Taxes: $33,438. Listed, Susan Gordon & Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker, 609-921-1411. princetonrealestate.net; princetonhome.com. 4 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; finished basement; 2-car garage. Lake-front ranch with built-in pool. $1,499,000. 179 Riverside Drive. Lot size: .89 acres. Taxes: $17,323. Listed, Susan Gordon & Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker, 609-9211411. princetonrealestate.net; princetonhome.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 full, 3 half baths; finished basement; 2-car garage. Ranch with in-ground pool. $1,050,000. 640 Prospect Avenue. Lot size: .49 acres. Taxes: $15,816. Listed, Susan Gordon & Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker, 609-9211411. princetonrealestate.net; princetonhome.com. 5 bedrooms; 3 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Expanded Cape with built-in pool, gardens, and in-law suite. $999,000. 62 Cherry Hill Road. Lot size: 2.2 acres. Taxes: $13,652. Listed, Elisabeth Crowley, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full unfinished basement; 1-car garage. Historic farmhouse close to town. $975,000. Lawrence 29 Manning Lane. Lot size: .97 acres. Taxes: $15,894. Listed, Jane Henderson Kenyon, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. hendersonsir.com/1232317. 4 bedrooms; 3 full, 2 half baths; full basement. Colonial with gourmet kitchen. $949,000. Montgomery 67 Buckingham Drive. Lot size: 1.03 acres. Taxes: $20,213. Listed, Teresa Bookman, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908-874-0000. hendersonsir.com. 4 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; full walkout basement; 3-car garage. 4,700 SF Colonial backing to trees with sunroom, conservatory, subzero refrigerator, granite counters. $931,500. Princeton Township 50 Randall Road. Lot size: .75 acres. Taxes: $17,948. Listed, Sarah Strong Drake, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. 5 bedrooms; 5 baths; finished walkout basement; 3-car garage. Ranch with 2004 additions including sunroom and two-story master bedroom study; rec room, exercise room, and bath in basement. $874,900. 77 Olden Lane. Lot size: .44 acres. Taxes: $17,388. Listed, Susan Gordon & Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker, 609-921-1411. princetonrealestate.net; princetonhome.com. 4 bedrooms; 4.5 baths; basement; 2-car garage. Colonial in Institute area. $895,000. Continued on page 14 MAY 11, 2011 U.S. 1 11 Warm and Fuzzy: Leon and Diane Rosenberg, left, in front of their farmhouse at Meadowgate Farm, a featured home on the Lawrenceville Main Street House Tour, Saturday, May 14. Diane, at right, with some of her fuzzy charges. Alexa, was nine, and they bought a house on two acres on Cherry Hill Road, primarily because it was close to Princeton Day School. Diane Rosenberg continued to work in medical publishing, but to be able to spend more time with her daughter she and an associate started their own company. “We consulted with medical societies with journals they wanted to get published. We were like an agent,” says Rosenberg. “I didn’t need to be in New York anymore.” One of the first things she did when she moved to Princeton was get a horse. She also started working at Heads Up Special Riders, a horseback riding program for handicapped children at Hasty Acres in Kingston, started by Anne Banse. Rosenberg, discouraged after a three-year search for a farm — there was always something wrong with each one she looked at — learned that Banse was about to list her farm in Lawrenceville, because her husband, who was chief counsel at Merck, had just died, and she planned to move. Rosenberg called her and begged her to wait, to let her see it first. “I came in, and I said, ‘OK, we’ll buy it.’I just knew it was perfect.” It took her two days to convince her husband, and the house really wasn’t perfect at all. It just had perfect bones and fields — and two barns (though one was falling apart.) Before they closed on the sale, Rosenberg brought in Janet Lasley of Lasley Brahaney Design and Construction, 860 State Road, whom she had met when Lasley was working on a house across the street on Cherry Hill Road. According to Rosenberg, the farmhouse had been moved farther back from the road from its original location. (Today, as you drive up the driveway, you first pass the home of David Crane, CEO of NRG Energy, and his wife, Isabella de la Houssaye, which shares the same address as Meadowgate. If you go on the tour, keep driving all the way to the back.) R osenberg says the house was very chopped up, with lots of walls, small windows, and no porches. “Janet walked into the living room, and said, ‘It would be great if we could raise the ceiling. Then she took a car jack or something and went — boom — and shoved the jack right into the ceiling.” Then Lasley deadpanned in her signature no-nonsense way, “OK, I don’t think we can raise it.” Though they did bring in other architects to bid on the project, the Rosenbergs ultimately stayed with Lasley Brahaney. Marc Brahaney, Lasley’s husband and the architect of the firm, was the only one, says Rosenberg, who had the brilliant idea to remove one of the two staircases, thus opening up the plan of the first floor significantly. The six months of renovations commenced in January, 1996, during which time the Rosenbergs lived in a modular home attached to the house by a wooden plank walkway. As part of the extensive renovations, Lasley Brahaney installed French doors from the dining room to the deck and did the same for the living room, creating a seamless view of the farmland from both rooms. Signs of the Rosenbergs’ love of eclectic art, antiques, and world travel abound. The living room features a collection of Kenneth Southworth Davies trompe l’oeil still lifes on the wall. A set of Honore Daumier classic satiric lithographs, gifts to Dr. Rosenberg, depicting an unscrupulous, flattering swindler and profiteer in a medical setting, sits on the fireplace mantel. Of note are a grand piano and a French cupboard dating to 1680. Katie Eastridge of Eastridge Design, 6 Highland Road, Princeton, was the interior decorator. In the front entry hall, where Winston, the Rosenberg’s Australian shepherd dog, likes to greet visitors, a contemporary, handcarved ceramic vessel by sculptor Gretchen Ewert depicting African leopards riding antelopes sits atop an antique American table, circa 1775. In the den, the fireplace mantel is a slab of limestone on which sits a collection of early 20th century Navajo clay pots and an antique weathervane in the shape of a horse. Navajo saddle blankets hang here and throughout the house, a collection started when the Rosenbergs bought a third home in New Mexico (they kept the Guilford, CT, house as a summer home). Displayed in the Continued on following page 12 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Continued from preceding page den is an old stone gargoyle head from an English cathedral built in the early Middle Ages. Off the kitchen are a mudroom and Rosenberg’s office (a room that was added to the house in the late 1800s). The walls of the mudroom and downstairs bath are peacock blue created with encaustic painting, also known as hot wax painting, which involves using heated beeswax to which colored pigments are added. In the office are several Navajo rugs and a small oil painting by the Pueblo Indian Albert Looking Elk Martinez dated about 1915. A 1790 French dining table serves as Rosenberg’s desk, on which is perched a framed photo of a red-footed boobie (yes, that’s a bird) that Rosenberg took on a recent trip to the Galapagos. The master bedroom upstairs has vaulted ceilings and overlooks the fields. The room has an antique physician’s cabinet and a customcrafted four-poster bed. The bed and chest are made of tiger maple. Nineteenth-century Japanese Hiroshige wood block prints and an old, Russian icon adorn the bedroom walls. The master bathroom was once a bedroom. It now has a large, walk-in shower and tub. On the subway tile walls are displayed a large wall hanging from Botswana and little animals from the Galapagos, Turkey, India, and Africa. Meadowgate’s 120 alpacas are housed in the property’s two barns. In 1997 the Rosenbergs replaced one deteriorating barn with an early 19th century structure that once stood on the Kirkbride Farm in Newtown, PA. The Rosenbergs bought the hand-hewn beams and internal pieces from the New Jersey Barn Company and hired Lasley Brahaney to reassemble the skeleton while designing space for female alpacas, the farm’s office, and an apartment. The barn now has solar panels on its roof. Lasley Brahaney also put on an addition to the barn to serve as Meadowgate’s main office. Literally undreds of red and blue ribbons the Rosenbergs’ alpacas have won adorn the walls. S o, what about those alpacas? “I wanted to raise something: we had two barns and fields. The previous owner had kept horses. And we had a farmland assessment that we didn’t want to lose,” says Rosenberg. “Someone at BristolMyers Squibb told me about alpacas and an alpaca farm in Stockton, and said they were easy to take care of. They aren’t huge and don’t have all sort of ailments like horses do, and they come when they are called, unlike cows.” Rosenberg visited the Stockton farm and bought two females (one pregnant) and two geldings. “They were so easy to take care of. I took care of them myself,” says Rosenberg. “I thought, I could have more, so every time my husband would go out of town, I would get a couple of new ones, and I’d wait to see how long it took him to notice. It was textbook simple to deliver a baby. So we got herd sires (kept in a separate pen), and started going to alpaca shows. First we sold one or two, and it went from there. The money is in raising and selling the animals, not the fleece. It just started rolling along.” As Meadowgate’s alpaca population started to grow, it became clear Rosenberg would need help. She hired Rich Maurer, who had worked as construction manager for Lasley Brahaney and wanted to move on from construction. When the Rosenbergs purchased another farm, a 20-acre property in West SALES ASSOCIATE 609 688-4813 PrincetonRealEstate.net Raising the Barn: In 1997 the Rosenbergs replaced an aging barn with an early 19th century barn purchased through the New Jersey Barn Company and reconstructed by Lasley Brahaney. Amwell, Maurer became the facilities manager, and his wife, Tammi, became Rosenberg’s personal assistant and helper on the farms. The Maurers then built a house on the West Amwell farm. The connections between the Lasley-Brahaneys and the Rosenbergs are indeed deep-seated. While working on the Rosenberg project, in November, 1997, just after the birth of her second child, Lasley was diagnosed with leiomyosarcoma, an extremely rare form of cancer. “When Leon heard about it,” says Rosenberg, “he realized how serious it was right away and helped her plan initially what kind of treatment she would have and where she would go.” Lasley, who was profiled in the February SALES ASSOCIATE 609 902-5302 PrincetonHome.com Offered at: $2,150,000 PrincetonRealEstate www. .net 10 Nassau Street • Princeton, NJ 08542 • 609 921-1411 13, 2008, issue of U.S. 1, lived a remarkable 12 more years (she died on May 13, 2010), while those with her type of cancer typically die within a year or two. “They were practically family by this time,” says Rosenberg. “The irony was that when my daughter was 16, she got Hodgkin’s lymphoma. One day she said, ‘dad, I have this knot in my neck,’ and the next day we were at CHOP (Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia). Years ago that would have been a death sentence, but she was very early stage. Through her junior year in high school, she had chemotherapy and radiation. We knew she was going to get better. Continued on page 41 MAY 11, 2011 U.S. 1 Meet Our Agents at www.MercerTPA.com Whether you need help finding your dream home or getting the highest price for your present home, members of Mercer County Top Producers Association are the best agents to have working with you. Wen Bash Keller Williams 609-987-8889 Deborah Benedetti Keller Williams 609-987-8889 Harveen Bhatla Keller Williams 609-987-8889 Barbara Blackwell NT Callaway 609-921-1050 Beatrice Bloom Weichert 609-921-1900 Dennis Breza Gloria Nilson Real Living 609-890-0007 Ellen Calman Gloria Nilson Real Living 609-750-2020 Mike Carney Keller Williams 609-987-8889 Radha Cheerath Coldwell Banker 609-799-8181 Susan DeHaven Weidel 609-737-1500 Diane DeLorenzo Re/Max Tri County 609-587-9300 Joseph DeLorenzo Re/Max in Town 609-895-0500 Joan Eisenberg Re/Max Greater Princeton 609-951-8600 Karma Estaphanous Re/Max of Princeton 609-452-1887 Barbara Facompre Gloria Nilson Real Living 609-737-9100 Lisa Folmer Weidel 609-896-1000 Robin Froehlich NT Callaway 609-921-1050 Joan George Re/Max Tri County 609-587-9300 George Scott Glenfield Pinnacle Realtors 609-924-6550 Phyllis Hemler Prudential Fox & Roach 609-203-0110 Harriet Hudson Weichert 609-921-1900 Lori Janick Weichert Princeton Junction 609-799-3500 Beth Kerr Weidel Pennington 609-737-1500 Saundra Lafferty NT Callaway 609-921-1050 Debbie Lang Prudential Fox and Roach 609-924-1600 Ellen Lefkowitz Gloria Nilson Real Living 609-921-2600 Wendy Merkovitz, Prudential Fox & Roach 609-203-1144 Maura Mills NT Callaway 609-947-5757 Donna Moskowitz Century 21 Abrams Hutchinson 609-683-5000 Kathleen Murphy Weichert Princeton 609-921-1900 Donna Murray Prudential Fox and Roach 609-924-1600 Linda S. November Re/Max Greater Princeton 609-951-8600 Roberta Parker Prudential Fox & Roach 609-924-1600 Blanche Paul Prudential Fox and Roach 609-924-1600 Eva Petruzziello Prudential Fox & Roach 609-683-8549 Dawn Petrozzini Re/Max Greater Princeton 609-951-8600 Mary Reiling Coldwell Banker 609-921-1411 Fred Sarstedt Re/Max of Princeton 609-452-1887 Smita Shah Re/Max Greater Princeton 609-951-8600 Betsy Silverman Coldwell Banker 609-799-8181 Bernard Smolowitz Keller Williams 609-987-8889 Proud Sponsor of the Mercer County Top Producers Association Dave Moore • 609-890-9300 John Terebey ERA Properties 609-750-0372 Robin L. Wallack Prudential Fox & Roach 609-924-1600 Carole Tosches Prudential Fox & Roach 609-915-1971 Ivy Wen Prudential Fox & Roach 609-924-1600 Diane Urbanek Gloria Nilson Real Living 609-921-2600 Amy G. Worthington NT Callaway 609-921-1050 William Usab Keller Williams 609-987-8889 Denise Shaughnessy Henderson 609-924-1000 Kenneth Verbeyst Prudential Fox and Roach 609-924-1600 Proud Sponsor of the Mercer County Top Producers Association Frank J. Mancino • 609-586-0020 13 14 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Housing For Sale Continued from page 10 34 Heather Lane. Lot size: 1.76 acres. Taxes: $17,547. Listed, Jane Weber & Cecil Marshall, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. hendersonsir.com/5848789. 5 bedrooms; 5.5 baths; unfinished basement. Mid-century modern designed by William Short; vaulted ceilings; lots of glass; space for studio or in-law suite. $899,000. 381 Mercer Street. Lot size: 1.14 acres. Taxes: $16,668. Listed, John Terebey, ERA Properties, 609-750-0372. sellingnj.com. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Cape with in-ground pool. $949,888. $750,000-$850,000 Cranbury 52 South Main Street. Lot size: .54 acres. Taxes: $10,647. Listed, Carole Tosches, Prudential Fox & Roach, 609-924-1600. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; full finished basement; 2-car garage. 1915 Craftsman style with covered mahogany front porch and finished walkup attic, move-in condition. $825,000. Hamilton 2 Long Way. Lot size: 4 acres. Listed, Ray Disch, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-466-4666. hendersonsir.com. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; garage. 3,496 SF Colonial with breakfast room, formal dining room. $839,000. Montgomery 12 Hidden Hollow Drive. Lot size: 7.26 acres. Listed, Sue Fowler, Re/Max Premiere Properties, 609-737-7474. suefowler.com/5722355. 5 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; full finished walkout basement; 4-car garage. Colonial on cul-desac with inground pool, EP Henry patio, several outbuildings, conservatory with panoramic views. $769,900. Hopewell 14 Long Way. Lot size: 1.92 acres. Taxes: $14,793. Listed, Susan Norman, Henderson, 609-395-0444. hendersonsir.com/818480. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 3-car garage. Colonial with hardwood floors, oversized windows, custom millwork. Breakfast room with Palladian windows. $789,000. 125 West Prospect Street. Lot size: .52 acres. Listed, Ray Disch, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-466-4666. hendersonsir.com. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; finished basement; garage. 4,009 SF traditional overlooking fields and farmland; three fireplaces, remodeled kitchen and baths. $799,500. 118 Bridgepoint Road. Lot size: 2.94 acres. Taxes: $20,487. Listed, Carolyn Spohn, Henderson, 908-874-0000. hendersonsir.com. 4 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; full basement; 3-car garage. 3,900 SF custom home. $799,000. 2184 Van Horne Road. Lot size: 3.81 acres. Taxes: $22,355. Listed, Carolyn Spohn, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908-874-0000. hendersonsir.com. 5 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; finished basement; 2-car garage. Five-year-old Colonial on private road with pool. $806,000. 52 Van Doren Way. Lot size: 2.01 acres. Taxes: $16,247. Listed, Barbara J. Dressler, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908-874-0000. 5 bedrooms; 3 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Colonial on private cul-de-sac with sun room, deck, greenhouse. $809,000. 12 Badger Drive. Lot size: 1.35 acres. Taxes: $19,298. Listed, Cynthia Weshnak, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908-874-0000. 4 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; 3-car garage. Colonial with peaked roofs, circle-top windows, library with custom built-ins, two-story family room. $799,000. Top Producers Association of Mercer County T he 52-member Mercer County “Top Producers Association” represents 21 real estate companies and consists of full-time, full service, experienced agents. The group was founded in 1987 to promote professionalism, exchange marketing/listing information, and keep abreast of the latest real estate trends. Frank Mancino of Gateway Funding keeps the members up-to-date on the economic and mortgage market. Pillar To Post is proud to sponsor the Top Producers of Mercer County. “We have been serving this prestigious group of professionals for over 15 years and look forward to serving all their home inspection needs well into the future.” Meet the agents at MercerTPA.com. Princeton Township Lawrence 548 Stockton Street. Lot size: 1.03 acres. Taxes: $15,265. Listed, Martha Stockton, 609924-1416. stocktonrealtor.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 full, 2 half baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Colonial with screened porch, sauna, and bomb shelter. $780,000. 686 Prospect Avenue. Lot size: .43 acres. Taxes: $14,801. Listed, Susan Gordon & Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker, 609-9211411. princetonrealestate.net; princetonhome.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; basement; 1-car garage. Colonial. $849,000. 7 Registry Road. Lot size: .59 acres. Taxes: $17,935. Listed, Eleanor Hughes Fulmer, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. 5 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; finished basement; garage. Tudor with private bed and bath on first floor, fireplace, built-in bookcases. $719,000. 647 Rosedale Road. Lot size: 2.08 acres. Taxes: $15,028. Listed, Eleanor Hughes Fulmer, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; basement; 3-car garage. Stucco exterior, leaded windows, terraces, sunroom; Princeton address. $699,000. West Windsor 1-800-763-1416 609-924-1416 36 Ginnie Lane. Lot size: .76 acres. Taxes: $17,992. Listed, John Terebey, ERA Properties Unlimited, 609-750-0372. sellingnj.com. 4 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; full finished basement; 3-car garage. Colonial with in-ground pool and full bath in basement. $839,888. 5 Woodland Court. Lot size: .89 acres. Taxes: $16,508. Listed, Phyllis Hemler, Prudential Fox & Roach, 609-924-1600. princetonmercerhomes.com. 5 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; finished basement; 2-car garage. 3,497 SF; cherry cabinets, quartz counters, stainless appliances; hardwood floors; fenced-in backyard. $849,900. www.stockton-realtor.com $650,000-$750,000 3 2 CHAMBERS STREET * PRINCETON, N J 32 Chambers Street 1-800 -763-1416 * 609-924-1416 Princeton, NJ Belle Mead Walk or Bike ... Everywhere 130 Monroe Avenue. Lot size: 1.09 acres. Taxes: $14,417. Listed, Cheryl Stites, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908-963-3561. 4 bedrooms; 3 baths; full unfinished basement; 3-car garage. 3,400 SF Colonial on private lot with possible in-law suite. $660,000. Cranbury 15 North Main Street. Lot size: .22 acres. Listed, Roberta Marlowe, Henderson, 609395-0444. hendersonsir.com/554889. 3 bedrooms; 1.5 baths. 1847 Colonial being converted from office to residence; commercial uses permitted. $650,000. Hopewell In a most convenient Princeton Township neighborhood, only a block from the Shopping Center, this attractive ranch is a very good buy. Two bedrooms, two full baths, living room, dining room, brand new kitchen, basement and lovely back yard. Note: in-town Hillside Road. $465,000. 299 Pennington-Titusville Road. Lot size: 3 acres. Taxes: $14,713. Listed, Sandra Jones, Coldwell Banker, 609-921-1411. sandrajones.net. 4 bedrooms; 4 baths; partial basement; 2car garage. 3,620 SF antique Colonial with two fireplaces, Max Hayden-designed renovation; barn and potting shed; screened porch. $734,900. 127 Van Dyke Road. Lot size: 17.56 acres. Taxes: $16,157. Listed, Sue Shellenbarger, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. glorianilson.com/pennington. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement; 3-car garage. 3,297 SF contemporary ranch down a long lane with a pond; needs major updating. $699,000. 12 Timkak Lane. Lot size: 1.85 acres. Listed, Sue Fowler, Re/Max Premiere Properties, 609-737-7474. suefowler.com/5808816. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; finished basement; 3-car garage. Colonial with in-ground pool, cabana, multi-tiered deck, 3 fireplaces, center island kitchen with double wall ovens. $729,900. Monroe 11 Mulberry Court. Lot size: 1.1 acres. Taxes: $10,606. Listed, Ya Yuan Lien, Prudential Fox & Roach, 732-297-5000. 4 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; full finished walkout basement; 2-car garage. 3,571 SF center hall Colonial with stucco imitation white brick front, granite floors and counters, underground sprinkler, spa, deck, new 2-zone AC. $729,900. Montgomery 63 Adams Drive. Lot size: 1.17 acres. Taxes: $12,901. Listed, Joseph Rozman, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908-874-0000. 5 bedrooms; 2 full, 2 half baths; full finished basement; 2-car garage. Colonial with hardwood floors, granite counters and new appliances, renovated master bath. $690,000. Plainsboro 12 Hancock Court. Lot size: .35 acres. Taxes: $13,105. Listed, Susan Norman & Janice Wilson, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-395-0444. hendersonsir.com/1220250. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 2-car garage. 2,902 SF Colonial on cul-de-sac; $60,000 in upgrades; golf course views, 815 SF of living space in basement. $689,900. Princeton Township 65 Castle Howard Court. Lot size: .5 acres. Taxes: $15,008. Listed, Susan Gordon & Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker, 609-9211411. princetonrealestate.net; princetonhome.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; basement; 2-car garage. Cape. $679,000. Skillman 30 Brandywine Road. Lot size: 1.25 acres. Taxes: $15,209. Listed, Carolyn Spohn, Henderson, 908-874-0000. hendersonsir.com. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Colonial with first-floor office, updated kitchen, and hardwood floors. $699,000. West Windsor 3 Compton Lane. Lot size: 1.04 acres. Taxes: $15,000. Listed, Kathryn Baxter, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-395-0444. hendersonsir.com/563990. 4 bedrooms; 3 baths; full basement. 1890 converted farmhouse zoned multi-family. $675,000. 5 Huntington Drive. Lot size: .84 acres. Taxes: $17,527. Listed, John Terebey, ERA Properties, 609-750-0372. sellingnj.com. 4 bedrooms; 3 baths; 3-car garage. Colonial in Princeton Oaks. $734,888. MAY 11, 2011 $550,000-$650,000 Cranbury 50 Maplewood Avenue. Lot size: .15 acres. Listed, Susan Norman & Deborah Hornstra, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-395-0444. hendersonsir.com/1266830. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full finished basement. 1820 Colonial with hardwood flooring; completely updated. $575,000. Ewing 22 Pardee Place. Lot size: 110 x 282. Taxes: $11,156. Listed, Lisa M. Case, DiDonato Realty, 609-5862344. didonatorealtors.com. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full finished basement; 2-car garage. Center hall Colonial with stone fireplace, security system, two-zone heat. $575,000. Hamilton 45 Old York Road. Taxes: $15,498. Listed, Joseph DeLorenzo, Re/Max In Town, 609-895-0500. www.calljoed.com/5774012. 4 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; full basement; 3-car garage. Colonial. $635,000. Hillsborough 5 Cornell Trail. Lot size: .7 acres. Taxes: $11,713. Listed, Cheryl Stites, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908-9633561. 5 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; finished basement; 4-car garage. 3,116 SF Colonial with new master bath, zebra wood flooring in family room, sunroom opening to deck, in-ground pool and spa. $630,000. Hopewell 20 West Spring Hollow Drive. Lot size: 1.92 acres. Taxes: $12,864. Listed, Tone Thompson, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. 6 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 3-car garage. Stick style Victorian built in 1850s and refurbished in 1990s. $649,700. 8 Honeybrook Drive. Lot size: 1.38 acres. Taxes: $14,053. Listed, Peggy Henderson, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. hendersonsir.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. 2,500+ SF architect-designed contemporary on wooded lot; glass all around house; in-ground pool; deck. $625,000. Lawrence 18 Paddock Drive. Lot size: .42 acres. Listed, Kathryn Baxter, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-395-0444. hendersonsir.com/1297229. 5 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full finished basement; 2-car garage. Colonial in the Ridings; kitchen has cherry cabinets, Corian counters, stainless steel appliances, Italian ceramic tile; family and sunrooms have Brazilian cherry hardwood floors and two fireplaces. $575,000. Montgomery 627 Route 518. Lot size: 2.11 acres. Taxes: $16,093. Listed, Carolynn Kirch, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. hendersonsir.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 full, 3 half baths; partially finished basement; 3-car garage. Dutch Colonial with sunroom, library, and separate handicap entrance; may be used for homebased business. $589,900. 11 Pin Oak Road. Lot size: 1.38 acres. Taxes: $13,760. Listed, Deborah Wierzbicki & Bob Fass, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908-874-0000. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Updated Colonial on wooded lot; oversized windows and hardwood flooring throughout; great room with vaulted ceiling, gas fireplace, and skylights; wrap-around deck. $599,900. Plainsboro 10 Sherman Court. Lot size: .33 acres. Taxes: $13,044. Listed, Rebecca Rogers, Re/Max of Princeton, 609-452-1887. rebeccarogers.com. 5 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. 3,053 SF Colonial with wood floors and guest suite. $629,000. Princeton Borough 78 Linden Lane. Lot size: .12 acres. Listed, Ray Disch, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-466-4666. hendersonsir.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. Multi-family currently rented with new kitchens and bathrooms. $639,000. Princeton Township 424 North Harrison Street. Lot size: .39 acres. Taxes: $9,625. Listed, Susan Gordon & Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker, 609-9211411. princetonrealestate.net; princetonhome.com. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 2-car garage. $610,000. Skillman 20 Hampton Court. Lot size: 1.12 acres. Taxes: $13,847. Listed, Carolyn Spohn, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908-874-0000. hendersonsir.com. 4 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Colonial on culde-sac with updated kitchen and hardwood floors. $550,000. South Brunswick 78 Monica Way. Listed, Mary Dowdell-Jeffries, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-395-0444. hendersonsir.com/1230066. 5 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Renaissance model Colonial; two-story family room with woodburning stove and hardwood floors. $589,000. 247 New Road. Lot size: 75 x 800. Taxes: $14,152. Listed, Sabiha Malik, Prudential Fox & Roach, 732297-5000. malik-nj-realtor.com. 5 bedrooms; 4.5 baths; 2-car garage. 3,600 SF Colonial with 2story entry, stainless steel appliances; loft over garage. $575,000. $450,000-$550,000 Belle Mead 6 Boice Lane. Lot size: .12 acres. Taxes: $10,562. Listed, Carolyn Spohn, Henderson, 908-874-0000. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. 2,433 SF Colonial in community with pool, tennis, gym, recreation center. $506,500. 94 Willow Road. Lot size: 1.59 acres. Taxes: $10,462. Listed, Carolyn Spohn, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908-874-0000. hendersonsir.com. 4 bedrooms; 3 baths; 2-car garage. Multilevel with first-floor office near golf course. $499,900. 22 Fox Chase Lane. Lot size: 1 acre. Taxes: $11,765. Listed, Cheryl Stites, Henderson, 908-963-3561. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; basement; 2-car garage. Split level with new septic, furnace, and air conditioner, hardwood floors, freshly painted. $468,000. East Windsor 3 Aristotle Way. Lot size: .12 acres. Taxes: $11,276. Listed, Susan Hughes, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609213-5556. 3 bedrooms; 3 baths; full basement; garage. Hardwood floors, fireplace, in Riviera 55+ community. $450,000. 36 Bradford Road. Lot size: 2.63 acres. Taxes: $15,962. Listed, Marian Conte, DiDonato Realty, 609-5862344. didonatorealtors.com. 5 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; full basement; 3-car garage. Center hall Colonial on treed lot. $525,000. Franklin 1069 Canal Road. Lot size: 2.1 acres. Taxes: $10,012. Listed, Jane Weber, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609924-1000. hendersonsir.com/5833513. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 1-car garage. Cape/Colonial circa 1760; restored to showcase original details; walk to tow path. $539,000. Hillsborough 635 Hillsborough Road. Lot size: 2.03 acres. Taxes: $8,996. Listed, Kevin Smith, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908-874-0000. 5 bedrooms; 4 baths; 2-car garage. Mid-century modern in countryside in style of Frank Lloyd Wright; radiant floor heating. $549,000. U.S. 1 15 A U.S. 1 ADVERTISING FEATURE 50 Years of Success: Weidel Associate Mary Louise McCabe W eidel Broker-Associate Mary Louise McCabe recently celebrated 50 years in real estate; the last 30 of which have been with Weidel Realtors. At a recent Q&A session, she shared the following information about her life as a Realtor and her experiences with the industry. Please tell us about yourself. My name is Mary Louise McCabe but I'm "Mary Lou" to everybody. I am a licensed Appraiser and hold a Real Estate Broker's License in New Jersey. I serve clients throughout Mercer, Hunterdon and Burlington Counties and recently celebrated 50 years in Real Estate. What was your first job and how did you get started in real estate? My first job was as a waitress at "The Dog House" restaurant on River Road in Ewing Township, which unfortunately is no longer open. I started in real estate in 1961 to help my husband who had been licensed since 1958. We worked at Lombardo Real Estate on US Route 1 under the guidance of Broker-Owner Mario Lombardo. How did you come to join Weidel? I knew Weidel to be a progressive company with a good reputation from my time in the industry but it was Earl Sneddon, General Manager, who convinced me to join. He was a friend of the family and knew I was licensed in real estate so the recruiting began early on. How has the business changed over the years? Certainly the prices have changed. Homes that sold for $6,000 in the 1960's would sell for $300,000 today, even in this market correction we've been experiencing the last few years. And there weren't rules or laws about inspections so deals seemed to happen a lot faster. The overall sale was a lot simpler and personal involvement by both Buyers and Sellers was important — it wasn't viewed so much as an 'investment' as it was a 'home' where they could live and raise a family. With the market constantly changing, how have you stayed successful over the years? Most of my business comes from referrals. Former clients and their children contact me when they are looking to buy or sell based on our past relationships. So much of it is word-ofmouth too. I make sure all my friends, family, neighbors and association members know that I'm in real estate and can help with any needs. Its something I've done consistently over the years and it really helps. What 'tools' are critical to success for a Real Estate Associate? Personality has a lot to do with the level of success. If you are honest and hard working, you will succeed. This is a relationship business and always has been. It takes a particular Hopewell out basement; 2-car garage. 2,025 SF Victorian with expanded kitchen, deck, and gardens. $525,000. 195 Pennington-Hopewell Road. Lot size: .88 acres. Listed, Ray Disch, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-466-4666. hendersonsir.com. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; finished basement. Traditional Colonial with hardwood floors in modern kitchen, wall-to-wall carpets in bedrooms. $540,000. 30 Avalon Road. Lot size: .23 acres. Listed, Sue Fowler, Re/Max Premiere Properties, 609-737-7474. suefowler.com/5795133. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full finished basement; 2-car garage. Colonial with nine-foot ceilings on first floor, oak cabinets and marble counters in kitchen. $502,900. 11 Maple Street. Lot size: .11 acres. Taxes: $9,886. Listed, Sandy Brown, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. sandybrown.myglorianilsonagent.co m. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; basement. 2,184 SF converted from bungalow. $529,000. 3 Aunt Molly Road. Lot size: 5 acres. Taxes: $12,948. Listed, Kathie Yates, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; partial basement; 2-car garage. Farmhouse with barn and roof deck. $515,000. 22 Continental Lane. Lot size: .72 acres. Taxes: $10,181. Listed, Jennifer Fuchs, Weichert, 732-6728063. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; unfinished walkout basement; 2-car garage. Colonial with granite kitchen counters, hardwood throughout, deck and covered veranda, views of Washington Crossing Park. $534,900. 103 Lambertville-Hopewell Road. Lot size: 2.72 acres. Listed, Ray Disch, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-466-4666. hendersonsir.com. 4 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; finished basement. 2,784 SF traditional Cape Cod on wooded lot with kitchen and baths remodeled with granite and tile; stone fireplace. $459,000. 102 West Broad Street. Lot size: .3 acres. Taxes: $11,955. Listed, Sandy Brown, Gloria Nilson, 609737-9100. sandybrown.myglorianilsonagent.com. 3 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; full walk- Personality has a lot to do with the level of success. If you are honest and hard working, you will succeed. This is a relationship business and always has been. style to promote yourself while maintaining a professional image and cooperation with other Realtors is very important. What are clients' concerns these days? Most of the concerns are about price, affordability and the ability to secure a loan. The changes in the real estate and mortgage industries have made it more difficult to secure the proper financing and there can be inspection issues that disrupt the deal. Buyers are watching interest rates very carefully and Sellers are researching comparable properties in their area. This is where a licensed Real Estate Associate is key; to help navigate the client Richard A. Weidel congratulates Mary Lou McCabe for 30 years with the company through the obstacles that will occur along the way. What do you see for the future of the real estate industry? Prices and interest rates will eventually rise but not just yet. The market correction is still working towards a balance and as the job market improves more people will be able to afford the home of their dreams. Right now the uncertainty in the job market has led to a reduction in business but this too will improve. What is your favorite thing about real estate? The flexible hours, the people you meet and the friends you make along the way. Plus the income potential is only limited to how hard you want to work. Any advice for those looking to enter real estate as a career? Be honest, ready to work hard and willing to put in the hours. Meet the public and let them know you're in real estate. Hold Open Houses so you can interact directly with prospects. Don't be afraid to ask for help if you need it. It's really about knowing the basics and building on that. For more information about properties for sale or a career in real estate, please call 1-800WEIDEL-1 (800-934-3351) or visit online at www.Weidel.com. 5 Coburn Road. Lot size: .18 acres. Taxes: $10,935. Listed, Lisa LeRay, 609-737-9100. lisaleray.myglorianilsonagent.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; basement; 2-car garage. 2,686 SF brick-front Colonial. $489,500. Lambertville 408 Sergeant Drive. Lot size: .04 acres. Taxes: $9,443. Listed, Rosaria Lawlor, Coldwell Banker, 609-658-5773. rosarialawlor.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 full, 2 half baths; 2car garage. Colonial with first-floor master suite; deck, patio; family room; basement has rec room and office. $525,000. Continued on following page Painting - Repairs, power washing, deck refinishing g Sprin 20% Owner Operated. Licensed & Insured. Working in Your Town for Over 40 Years. “Professional Painting Pays!...in many Ways.” A Princeton business for over 40 years. nt iscou D JULIUS GROSS PAINTING & HOME IMPROVEMENTS 220 Alexander Street • Princeton, New Jersey 08540 www.juliushgrosspainting.com • juliushgross@comcast.net 609-924-1474 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 T he first model home at Windsor Cove received a grand welcome on Saturday, April 14, as East Windsor Mayor Janice Mironov, along with members of the East Windsor Township Council, joined executives from develope r Pulte Homes for a ribbon cutting-ceremony to celebrate the unveiling of the community’s first model home. The opening of the fully furnished Westford model home marks an important milestone, as Pulte Homes, one of the award-winning brands of PulteGroup, Inc., continues to develop Windsor Cove into the premier single-family new home community in Mercer County. Priced from $469,900, the community's spacious homes are situated on one-half acre sites and offer three styles of beautifully crafted homes ranging from 2,606 to 2,934 square feet of open living space that is ideal for entertaining and spending quality time with family. “This ribbon-cutting ceremony helps cement Windsor Cove’s place as an integral part of East Windsor — a fantastic central location with great A U.S. 1 ADVERTISING FEATURE Pulte Homes Unveils Windsor Cove’s First Model Home schools and proximity to the bustling downtown Princeton area and Princeton Junction train station," stated Paul Schneier, president of PulteGroup's Metro NY/NJ Division. "It’s a perfect community for young families who desire a quiet suburban atmosphere, yet don’t want to be too far away from area conveniences.” All three home designs offer four bedrooms and up to three and a half bathrooms, full basement and two-car garage. Each boasts an elegant twostory entry foyer with hardwood flooring, a formal dining room with an optional tray ceiling, and an optional family room fireplace that cascades into the kitchen nook. Kitchen features include a convenient open layout with center islands perfect for prepping gourmet meals. Upstairs are three open and roomy bedrooms, spacious "his" and "hers" walk-in closets (per plan), and a large master suite with a bathroom featuring double bowl sinks and cultured mar- ble tops, soaking tub, separate commode and shower. Homeowners can further personalize their homes with an optional guest suite or game room above the family room, a Florida room off of the kitchen or a Homeowners can personalize their homes with an optional guest suite or game room, a Florida room, or a wood deck. wood deck. Each home comes with a full basement and the option to upgrade to a finished basement, which comes with a full bathroom and a study. Homeowners also have the opportunity to upgrade to a threecar garage for ample storage space. Located in the heart of quaint East Windsor Township, Windsor Cove is approximately onehalf mile from Route 33 and Route 130, less than two miles from the New Jersey Turnpike, and less than five miles from Route 1 and Interstate 195. It is a short car ride from New Jersey's most popular business locations of Princeton, Trenton and New Brunswick, and less than an hour from New York City and Philadelphia. Residents commuting to New York City and Philadelphia can access direct routes to both cities from the Princeton Junction train station. W indsor Cove is near a variety of major shopping destinations including Windsor Heights Shopping Center, Town Center Plaza Shopping Center, Quakerbridge Mall, Jackson Premium Outlets and the Freehold Mall. There are plenty of recreational activities including area parks such as Anker, Mercer County, Allaire State or Etra Lake as well as Six Flags Great Adventure and Jenkinson’s Boardwalkwhich are both just a short drive away. There are a number of golf and country Bhatla-Usab Real Estate Group Why Choose a Single Agent When You Can Have A Whole Team Working For You? REAL ESTATE Harveen Bhatla 609-273-4408 • Dr. William Usab, Jr 609-273-4410 www.Bhatla-Usab.com 24-HR INFO CALL 800-884-8654, Enter ID $829,000 PRINCETON JUNCTION - 1 Guilford Ct. 5Br/3.1 Bath Colonial in Princeton Oaks. Beautifully remodeled, 1st floor BR and full Bath, 3 car gar, 2 zone heat. ID#454 $575,000 HOPEWELL TWP - 167 Pleasant Valley Rd. 5BR/2Ba Colonial. 7.2 ac. Full Fin Bsmt w/brick fireplace. ID #424 PRINCETON JUNCTION - 77 Greylynne Drive. Beautifully update Mt. Vernon model. 4Br/2.5B. Gourmet EIK, deck, 1st floor office, full basement, 2 car garage. ID #354 $725,000 WEST WINDSOR - 4 Horace Court. 4BR 2.5Ba Center hall Colonial on .82 Acre in Kings Point. ID 264 $525,000 $550,000 PRINCETON JUNCTION - 197 South Ln. 4 Br 2.5 bath custom built colonial on .80 acre lot. ID # 344 HOPEWELL TWP. - 20 Old Washington Crossing Rd. 4BR/3Ba Center Hall Colonial. Basement. Updated Kitchen and baths. 2 car garage. ID #364 $300,000 $294,999 $604,900 CRANBURY - 122 N Main St. Charming Center hall colonial in historic Cranbury. 3 BR, New Kitchen, updated baths, fireplace and 2 car garage. ID #384 $460,000 ROBBINSVILLE - 32 Eldridge Dr. 3 BR 2.5Ba colonial in Carriage Walk. Upgrades throughout home and full finished basement. 2 car garage. ID #64 $270,000 NE W PR I $360,000 $750,000 PRINCETON JCT. - 127 Tunicflower Ln. 3BR/3Ba Coventry Model in Active Adult Village Grande. Private yard, deck and 2 car garage. ID #114 $259,999 EAST WINDSOR - 4 Barnsdale Dr. 2 BR 2/2ba in Haymarket Square. Upgraded builders model. 3rd floor loft, 1 car garage, stone patio. ID #284 $250,000 HIGHTSTOWN BORO - 313 2nd Ave. 4BR/2.5Ba, 1 year old Colonial on shaded lot. 1 car garage. ID #374 $200,000 clubs and escapades at. Both the New Brunswick campus of Rutgers University and Princeton University are also close by and provide plenty of cultural offerings and education opportunities. The Windsor Cove Sales Center is located at 67 Airport Road and is open daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. To speak with a sales representative, please call 609-448-0210. For additional information, visit pulte.com/windsor Award-winning Pulte Homes communities are designed to deliver the best quality of life for homeowners. By combining innovative life-enhancing designs, an unwavering commitment to quality and attention to detail, Pulte Homes is the nation's premier home brand for upwardly mobile homebuyers in 26 states and the District of Columbia. As the most awarded homebuilder in customer satisfaction, Pulte Homes has ranked tops in the annual JD Power and Associates® New-Home Builder Customer Satisfaction Study more than 75 times since 2000. For more information about Pulte Homes, visit www.pulte.com. Continued from preceding page 502 Titus Road. Lot size: .04 acres. Taxes: $10,616. Listed, Rosaria Lawlor, Coldwell Banker, 609-658-5773. rosarialawlor.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 full, 2 half baths; finished walkout basement; 2-car garage. Colonial with wide-plank wood floor; granite in kitchen; family room with gas fireplace. $545,000. Lawrence info@Bhatla-Usab.com CE 16 HAMILTON TWP. – 1 Frank Richardson Rd. Charming 3BR Farmhouse on .65 acre. Spacious Rooms, upgraded electric. ID #394 $190,000 86 Lewisville Road. Lot size: 87 x 119. Taxes: $5,568. Listed, Diane Ozarowski, Weidel, 609-799-6200. weidel.com/westwindsor. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; partial basement. 1800s Colonial farmhouse with 320 SF outbuilding. $525,000. 8 Poinsett Drive. Lot size: .34 acres. Taxes: $11,989. Listed, Barbara Facompre, Gloria Nilson, 609737-911. barbarafacompre.com. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Colonial with hardwood floors and gas fireplace. $464,000. Montgomery 338 Grandview Road. Lot size: 1.37 acres. Taxes: $13,359. Listed, Susan Gordon & Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker, 609-921-1411. princetonrealestate.net; princetonhome.com. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; basement; 2-car garage. Colonial. $499,000. 34 Hoagland Drive. Lot size: 1 acre. Taxes: $10,536. Listed, Sarah Strong Drake, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; partial crawlspace; 2-car garage. Ranch for sale or short-term rental; in-ground pool, recently renovated kitchen with granite countertops; 15-zone sprinkler system. $484,999. 200 Harlingen Road. Lot size: 1.01 acres. Taxes: $11,611. Listed, Sarah Strong Drake, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Colonial with geothermal heat and solar hot water heater; across from Montgomery Park. $538,000. North Brunswick LAWRENCE TWP - 16 Jackie Dr. Pristine Townhome in Woodmont. 2Br/2.5Ba, fenced patio, garage, security system. ID #44 WEST WINDSOR - 104 Olympic Ct #4. 2BR 2Ba condo in Colonnade Pointe. First floor Belvedere model, fireplace. ID 94 HAMILTON - 86 Cheverny Ct. 2 Br/2.5 Bath townhome in Society Hill II. Completely remodeled, new windows, new furnace & AC. ID #124 BORDENTOWN - 216 Prince Street. Historic Bordentown. Beautifully Updated. Formal LR and DR. Fenced backyard with patio. Walk to river Line Rail. ID#324 100 Canal Pointe Blvd. • Princeton, NJ • 609-987-8889 830 Hoover Drive. Lot size: 100 x 177. Taxes: $10,813. Listed, Roy Minieri, Prudential Fox & Roach, 732-297-5000. royminierirealtor.com. 5 bedrooms; 3 baths; finished basement; 2-car garage. 2,700 SF Colonial with updated kitchen, Florida room with HVAC. $517,500. Continued on page 41 MAY 11, 2011 ART FILM LITERATURE DANCE DRAMA U.S. 1 17 MUSIC PREVIEW DAY-BY-DAY EVENTS, MAY 11 to 18 For more event listings visit www.princetoninfo.com. For timely updates, follow princetoninfo at Twitter and on Facebook. PREVIEW EDITOR: JAMIE SAXON jsaxon@princetoninfo.com Lectures Wednesday May 11 IN THE SPOTLIGHT: What’s ‘Abbey Road’ Worth? Mary Jacobs Library, 64 Washington Street, Rocky Hill, 609924-7073. “Assessing Your Audio Collection” presented by Jon Lambert, general manager of Princeton Record Exchange, who will tell you why the Beatles album you’ve had for 30 years is worth only $2 while the same title may sell for $100 on eBay. Bring questions, but not items. 7 p.m. Classical Music Master Class, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-8822. www.princetonlibrary.org. Judah Adashi, presents “Songs and Dances of Macondo” for 25 participants. 1 p.m. Princeton Symphony Soundtracks, Princeton Public Library, 609-924-8822. princetonlibrary.org. “What Makes Russian Music Russian (if anything)?” presented by Simon Morrison, professor of music history at Princeton University. Reception follows the talk. Free. The PSO presents a concert, “Russian Night,” featuring the music of Mussorgsky, Rachmaninoff, and Scriabin on Sunday, May 15, 4 p.m., at Richardson Auditorium, with pianist Di Wu as soloist. 4:30 p.m. Jazz & Blues Zen Zadravec Quartet, New Brunswick Jazz Project, Hyatt, 2 Albany Street, New Brunswick, 732-640-0021. www.nbjp.org. No cover. 7:30 p.m. Live Music Jerry Romano, Salt Creek Grille, One Rockingham Row, Forrestal To List An Event Send listings for upcoming events to U.S. 1 Preview ASAP (it is never too early). Deadline for events to appear in any Wednesday edition is 5 p.m. the previous Thursday. Submit press releases to us by E-mail at events@princetoninfo.com; fax at 609-452-0033; or mail to U.S. 1, 12 Roszel Road, Princeton 08540. E-mail photos (300 ppi and four inches wide or larger) to events@princetoninfo.com. We suggest calling before leaving home. Check our website, princetoninfo.com, for up-to-date listings, cancellations, and late listings. Don’t try this at home! Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus comes to the Sun National Bank Center in Trenton, Wednesday through Sunday, May 11 through 15. 800-298-4200. Village, Plainsboro, 609-4194200. www.saltcreekgrille.com. 7 to 11 p.m. Art Atelier Tour, Grounds For Sculpture, 18 Fairgrounds Road, Hamilton, 609-586-0616. www.groundsforsculpture.org. Register. $20. 5:30 p.m. Art Exhibit, Bell’s Tavern, 183 North Union Street, Lambertville, 609-397-2226. Exhibit of paintings by Richard Harrington. On view to June 30. 6 to 9:30 p.m. On Stage Little Women, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, 215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org. Musical based on Louisa May Alcott’s classic novel. $34 to $42. 2 and 7:30 p.m. Sleeping Beauty Wakes, Berlind Theater at the McCarter, 91 University Place, Princeton, 609-2582787. www.mccarter.org. Musical by Rachel Sheinkin, music by Brendan Milburn, and lyrics by Valerie Vigoda. Directed by Rebecca Taichman. 8 p.m. God of Carnage, George Street Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732-246-7717. www.gsponline.org. Comedy by Yasmina Reza. $29.50 to $79.50. 8 p.m. Family Theater Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus, Sun National Bank Center, Hamilton Avenue at Route 129, Trenton, 800-2984200. www.comcasttix.com. “Ful- ly Charged” production. $16 to $80. 7 p.m. Film Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-9248822. www.princetonlibrary.org. Screening of “Gabriel Garcia Marquez: Magic and Reality” followed by discussion led by Michael Wood of Princeton University. 7 p.m. Trenton Film Society, Mill Hill Playhouse, 205 East Front Street, Trenton, 609-396-6966. www.trentonfilmfestival.org. Screening of “Pieces d’Identities (Pieces of Identity),” 1998, Congo and Belgium. In conjunction with “Samuel J & K,” the current main stage presentation. Register. Free. 7:30 p.m. Dancing Newcomers Dance Party, American Ballroom, 1523 Parkway Avenue, Ewing, 609-931-0149. www.americanballroomco.com. $10. 7 to 9 p.m. Contra Dance, Princeton Country Dancers, Suzanne Patterson Center, Monument Drive, 609924-6763. www.princetoncountrydancers.org. Instruction followed by dance. $8. 8 to 10:30 p.m. Loco Latin, HotSalsaHot, Katmandu, 50 Waterfront Park, Trenton, 609-651-6070. www.hotsalsahot.com. Bachata and salsa class followed by three hours of social dancing with the HotSalsaHot team led by Henri Velandia. $8. 8:30 p.m. Literati Author Event, Barnes & Noble, MarketFair, West Windsor, 609716-1570. www.bn.com. Paul Reiser, author of “Familyhood,” the comedian’s memoir on parenting, partnering, and achieving mid-life tranquility. Author of “Couplehood” and “Babyhood,” he appeared in NBC series “Mad About You” and “The Paul Reiser Show.” Line passes for seating and signing line will be distributed beginning at 5 p.m. The purchase of at least one copy of “Familyhood” with receipt is required to receive a line pass. Priority seating given to those purchasing books. 7 p.m. Good Causes Benefit Evening, Reach Out Foundation, La Cena Ristorante, 2233 Galloway Road, Bensalem, PA, 215-428-0404. Dinner followed by “Moon over the Brewery” at Playmasters Theater, dessert reception, and silent auction. Benefit for nonprofit organization that provides a safe and accepting environment for anyone with mental illness and/or addiction disorders. Support group and services are free. Register. $130. 6 p.m. Gardens School Garden Start Up, New Jersey Farm to School Network, Holly House, Rutgers Gardens, 112 Ryders Lane, New Brunswick, 609-683-8309. http://njfarm2schoolpbworks.com. Program about children’s education in the vegetable garden and supplies needed to get started. Register. $25. 4 to 6:30 p.m. New Jersey Youth Development Forum, Princeton University, Dodds Auditorium, 609-2582943. www.princeton.edu. “Fragile Families.” Register. 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Project Re-Employment, Princeton Senior Resource Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609987-8100. Four-session program for displaced workers. Register. $20. 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Call the Doctor! Call the Nurse! Lecture Series, Middlesex County Cultural Commission, East Jersey Olde Towne Village, 1050 River Road, Piscataway, 732-745-4489. www.cultureheritage.org. “A Yardful of Remedies: A Walking Tour of Medicinal Plants” presented by Karen Reeds in conjunction with the exhibit “History of Medicine in New Jersey, 1775-1975,” currently on display in the Indian Queen Tavern. Register. Free. 6 p.m. Mary Jacobs Library, 64 Washington Street, Rocky Hill, 609924-7073. “Assessing Your Audio Collection” presented by Jon Lambert, general manager of Princeton Record Exchange, who will tell you why the Beatles album you’ve had for 30 years is worth only $2 while the same title may sell for $100 on eBay. Bring questions, but not items. 7 p.m. Meeting, Delaware Valley Radion Association, Our Lady of Good Counsel Church, 137 West Upper Ferry Road, West Trenton, 609-585-2001. www.w2zq.com. 7:30 p.m. Meeting, Princeton Photography Club, Johnson Education Center, D&R Greenway Land Trust, 1 Preservation Place, Princeton, 732-422-3676. www.princetonphotoclub.org. “One Photograph Everyday” presented by Woody Campbell focusing on the daily photo blog and communicating in the digital age. Refreshments, networking, and awards to the winners of “Dreamscapes,” the high school student photographic juried show. 7:30 p.m. Difficult Questions Roundtable, Westerly Road Church, Wilson House, 240 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-924-3816. www.westerlyroad.org. “Where is God in the Midst of Calamity and Suffering?” presented by Carine Toussaint, who will share her experiences as a trauma and grief counselor in Haiti following the January, 2010, earthquake. Discussion follows. Register. Free. 7:30 p.m. Politics Talking Politics, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-8822. www.princetonlibrary.org. Joan Goldstein of Mercer County College leads book discussion focusing on “Falling Behind: How Rising Inequality Harms the Middle Class” by Robert H. Frank. Copies are available from the courtesy desk shelves. 7:30 p.m. Continued on following page 18 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Remember ‘Mad About You’? Comedian/actor Paul Reiser appears on Wednesday, May 11, 7 p.m., at Barnes & Noble MarketFair. Line passes for seating/signing starts at 5 p.m.; must purchase at least one copy of book. 609-716-1570. May 11 Continued from preceding page Schools College Fair, New Brunswick Public Library, 60 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732-7455108. www.lmxac.org. Admissions representatives present literature and materials regarding admissions, tuition, financial aid, academics, and campus life. 3 p.m. Sports Trenton Thunder Baseball, Waterfront Park, Route 29, 609394-8326. www.trentonthunder.com. Reading. $10 to $13. 7:05 p.m. Thursday May 12 *MINIMUM ORDER OF SIX LUNCHES. ADVANCE ORDERS APPRECIATED. CANNOT BE COMBINED WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. EXPIRES JUNE 8, 2011. IN THE SPOTLIGHT: WomanSpace Gala Outdoor Dining! Voted one of the best burgers in the state www.rockyhilltavern.com 137 Washington Street (Rt. 518), Rocky Hill • 609.683.8930 Barbara Boggs Sigmund Award, Womanspace, Westin Hotel, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609-394-0136. www.womanspace.org. Faith Ringgold, an artist and writer, will be honored for her lifetime achievements. Best known for her painted story quilts, art that combines painting, quilted fabric, storytelling, and her book, “Tar Beach,” a Caldecott Honor book and winner of the Coretta Scott King Award for illustration. Sister of the late Barbara Sigmund, Cokie Roberts, presents award. Speakers include Judith K. Brodsky and Ferris Olin. All proceeds benefit victims of domestic and sexual violence. Register. $150 to $175. 6:30 to 9 p.m. DoubleTree by Hilton Princeton has experienced a renewal. So will you. Prepare to be wowed! And welcomed with pleasant surprises. To have every detail taken care of, especially you. For conferences, seminars, and inspiring experiences, we invite you to visit now for the first time. Even if you’ve been here before. 4355 US Highway 1, Princeton (609) 514-2663 http://doubletree.hilton.com Classical Music Concert, Princeton University, Chapel, 609-258-3654. www.princeton.edu. Free. 12:30 to 1 p.m. Symposium, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-8822. www.princetonlibrary.org. “Ralph Vaughan Williams’s ‘A Sea Symphony: The American Voice of Walt Whitman in Song’” presented by Princeton Pro Musica. 7 p.m. Jazz & Blues The JT Project, New Brunswick Jazz Project, Makeda, 338 George Street, New Brunswick, 732-640-0021. www.nbjp.org. Jacob Webb and Todd Shefflin. 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Live Music William Hart Strecker, Salt Creek Grille, One Rockingham Row, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609-419-4200. www.saltcreekgrille.com. 7 to 11 p.m. Art Art Opening, Community Connection of Princeton HealthCare, University Medical Center at Princeton, 253 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-497-4069. www.princetonhcs.org. Opening reception of an art show and sale featuring works of Angelo Ferrante set in the diverse and distinct neighborhoods of New York City. A portion of the proceeds from the art sale will benefit UMCP. On view to July 11. 5 to 7 p.m. On Stage Curtains, Paper Mill Playhouse, Brookside Drive, Millburn, 973376-4343. www.papermill.org. Musical mystery comedy by John Kander, Fred Ebb, and Rupert Holmes is a backstage investigation of the rising body count in a Broadway-bound show. $25 to $92. 1:30 and 7:30 p.m. Little Women, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, 215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org. Musical based on Louisa May Alcott’s classic novel. $34 to $42. 7:30 p.m. Sleeping Beauty Wakes, Berlind Theater at the McCarter, 91 University Place, Princeton, 609258-2787. www.mccarter.org. Musical by Rachel Sheinkin, music by Brendan Milburn, and lyrics by Valerie Vigoda. Directed by Rebecca Taichman. 8 p.m. God of Carnage, George Street Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732-246-7717. www.gsponline.org. Comedy by Yasmina Reza. $29.50 to $79.50. 8 p.m. Samuel J. and K., Passage Theater, Mill Hill Playhouse, Front and Montgomery streets, Trenton, 609-392-0766. www.passagetheatre.org. A simple game of pickup basketball leads to brotherly bonds. $25. 8 p.m. Family Theater Fresh Made To Order Sushi Freshness is what matters in Sushi. Comparable in quality & freshness to the finest restaurants in the area. Teriyaki Boy can’ t be beat for its combination of well-prepared food and inexpensive prices. —Princeton Living $ 20 Sushi selections from 2.29 Choose from Teriyaki, Tempura, Udon or Combos & Platters. Over Take-out & Catering Service Available. All food is cooked to order in 100% vegetable oil. MARKETFAIR 609-897-7979 Fax: 609-897-1204 Mon-Thurs. 10am-9pm, Fri-Sat 10am-10pm, Sun 11am-7:30pm Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus, Sun National Bank Center, Hamilton Avenue at Route 129, Trenton, 800-2984200. www.comcasttix.com. “Fully Charged” production. $16 to $80. 7 p.m. Film Foreign Film, Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane and Route 1, Lawrence Township, 609-9896922. www.mcl.org. Screening of “Bomber,” 2009. Register. Free. 6:30 p.m. Dancing Argentine Tango, Black Cat Tango, Suzanne Patterson Center, Monument Drive, Princeton, 609- 273-1378. www.theblackcattango.com. Beginner and intermediate classes followed by guided practice. No partner necessary. $12. 9:15 p.m. Benefit Galas Commercial Real Estate Awards Gala, NAIOP, The Palace, Somerset, 732-729-9900. www.njnaiop.org. Honorees include Leslie E. Smith Jr. of Rockefeller Development Group; J.G. Petrucci Company; KTR Capital Partners; Wolf & Samson PC; and CB Richard Ellis. Black tie. Register. $525. 5:30 p.m. Barbara Boggs Sigmund Award, Womanspace, Westin Hotel, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609-394-0136. www.womanspace.org. See “In the Spotlight.” Health Blood Drive, American Red Cross, Princeton University, Frist Center, Washington Road, 800733-2767. www.redcrossblood.org. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Planning for Incapacity, Mercer County Connection, 957 Route 33, Hamilton, 609-890-9800. www.mercercounty.org. Estate planning seminar presented by Susan Knispel, Esq. and project director for the Mercer County Legal Services Project for the Elderly. Register. Free. 10 to 11:30 a.m. Wellness Women’s Caregiver Retreat, Robert Wood Johnson Hamilton Center for Health and Wellness, 3100 Quakerbridge Road, Mercerville, 732-915-7751. www.rwjhamilton.org. Speakers, renewal and support services, health screenings, yoga, Zumba, nutrition information, and vendors. $20 includes breakfast, lunch, and all activities. Register by E-mail to jacqui-moskowitz@fscnj.org. 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mediumship Gallery, Center for Relaxation and Healing, 666 Plainsboro Road, Suite 635, Plainsboro, 609-750-7432. www.relaxationandhealing.com. Connect with loved ones on the other side. Register. $25. 7 to 9 p.m. Lectures Breakfast Seminar, Terri Klass Consulting, Main Street, 301 North Harrison Street, Princeton, 609-730-1049. www.terriklassconsulting.com. “The Risk of Ignoring Millennials” focuses on the twenty-something generation in the workplace. Register. $75. 8 to 10 a.m. Safety Seminar, Insurance Restoration Specialists, 30 Abeel Road, Monroe, 800-6340261. Awareness training in regards to personal safety for property claims adjusters exposed to the on-site dangers of the insurance claims environment. Register. Free. 9 to 11:30 a.m. Lawyers C.A.R.E., Mercer County Bar, Lawrence Library, Route 1 South, 609-585-6200. www.mercerbar.com. 15-minute consultations with a lawyer about legal issues of family law, real estate, landlord and tenant law, personal injury, criminal and municipal court law, wills and estates, bankruptcy, and immigration. Free. 5:30 to 7 p.m. MAY 11, 2011 U.S. 1 The Sound of Jazz: The Carole Lynne Quartet with Lynne on vocals performs Friday, May 13, 7 p.m., at the Hibernian Club, 2419 Kuser Road, Trenton, 609586-5982. On Saturday, May 14, 6:30 p.m., Lynne appears with Pat Pratico at Villa Rosa Restaurant, 41 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-882-6841. Politics Princeton Middle East Society, Princeton University, McCormick 101, 609-258-2943. www.princeton.edu. “North Africa’s Intifadas” presented by John P. Entelis, professor of political science and director of the Middle East studies program at Fordham University. Author of “Islam, Democracy, and the State in North Africa,” he has studied Arabic in Cairo, Harvard, and Princeton; and conducted research in Lebanon, Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia. 4:30 p.m. Seminar, Fair Tax New Jersey, Hamilton Library, 1 Samuel Alito Way, Hamilton, 732-458-9271. www.fairtax.org. Presented by Stephanie Sharp, founder of Sharp Designs in Hamilton and secretary and community coordinator for Americans for Fair Taxation. Founded by Sharp in 1991, Sharp Designs provides marketing for corporate and brand identity. Bring your pay stub. 7 p.m. Schools Public Meeting, Princeton International Academy Charter School, Princeton Charter School, 575 Ewing Street, Princeton, 732-513-5891. www.piacs.org. Open sessions of the board of trustees. 6:15 p.m. Singles Dinner, Yardley Singles, Cafe Mulino, 938 Bear Tavern Road, Ewing, 215-736-1288. www.yardleysingles.org. Three-course meal for $20. BYOB. Register. 6 p.m. Divorced and Separated Support Group, Hopewell Presbyterian Church, 80 West Broad Street, Hopewell, 609-452-8576. www.hopewellpres.org. Register. Free. 7:30 to 9 p.m. Socials Meet and Greet, Montgomery Business Association, Princeton Elks Club, Route 518, Skillman, 917-459-3755. For Montgomery business owners, residents who own a business, and shoppers interested in businesses. Light fare, cash bar, networking. Register. $15. 6 to 8 p.m. Sports Trenton Thunder Baseball, Waterfront Park, Route 29, 609394-8326. www.trentonthunder.com. Binghamton. $10 to $13. 7:05 p.m. Friday May 13 IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Do You Fear the Number 13? Triskaidekaphobia Ghost Tour, Princeton Tour Company, Witherspoon and Nassau streets, 609-902-3637. www.princetontourcompany.com. $20. 8 p.m. Classical Music Annual Children’s Concert, Princeton Symphony Orchestra, Richardson Auditorium, Princeton University, 609-4970020. www.princetonsymphony.org. “Around the World on a Tune” features music from cultures across the globe. Register. Free. 9:30 a.m. Spring Concert, WW-P North and South Orchestras, Trenton War Memorial, Trenton, 609-5322328. www.ww-p.org. The two high schools pool together for the spring concert. Each school boasts three orchestras, including two complete symphony orchestras. The combined string ensembles include more than 100 string musicians. The North Symphonic and South Philharmonia fill the stage with more than 200 musicians. Directed by John Enz from North and Jean Mauro from South. $12. 7:30 p.m. Folk Music David Mallett and Barry Mitterhoff, Folk Project, Morristown Unitarian Fellowship, 21 Normandy Heights Road, Morristown, 973-335-9489. www.folkproject.org. $7. 8 to 11 p.m. Jazz & Blues Vijay Iyer Trio and Eldar Djangirov Trio, Matthews Theater at the McCarter, 91 University Place, Princeton, 609-258-2787. www.mccarter.org. 7:30 p.m. Tom Tallitsch, Arts Council of Princeton, 102 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-8777. www.artscouncilofprinceton.org. Jazz saxophonist, music educator, composer, recording artist, and jazz radio host performs. Musicians joining him include Jared Gold on organ, Victor Baker on guitar, and Mark Ferber on drums. $15. 8 p.m. Live Music Trenton2Nite, Trenton Downtown, South Warren and Lafayette streets, 609-393-8998. trenton-downtown.com. Music, art, games, and activities. Visit website for full list. Most are free. Friends and families of Villa Victoria Academy perform at Classics Books at 6 and will have dinner at Settimo Ciel at 6:30 p.m. 5 p.m. Dick Gratton, Chambers Walk Cafe, 2667 Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609-896-5995. www.allaboutjazz.com. Solo jazz guitar. 6 to 9 p.m. Wine and Music, Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-737-4465. www.hopewellvalleyvineyards.com. Roy and Johnny play music of Johnny Cash and Roy Orbison. Wine by the glass or bottle available. 6 to 9 p.m. Jazz Supper with Doug Miller and Bernhard Geiger, Blue Rooster Cafe, 17 North Main Street, Cranbury, 609-235-7539. www.blueroosterbakery.com. Piano and acoustic bass. 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Dusty Micale, Salt Creek Grille, One Rockingham Row, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609-4194200. www.saltcreekgrille.com. 7 to 11 p.m. The Billy Hector Band, The Record Collector Store, 358 Farnsworth Avenue, Bordentown, 609-324-0880. www.the-recordcollector.com. $20. 7:30 p.m. All That Jazz, Crossing Vineyards and Winery, 1853 Wrightstown Road, Washington Crossing, PA, 215-493-6500. www.crossingvineyards.com. Live music. Wine and cheese available. $20. 8 to 10 p.m. Red Molly, Grounds For Sculpture, 18 Fairgrounds Road, Hamilton, 609-586-0616. www.groundsforsculpture.org. Register. $23. 8 p.m. Bob Orlowski, It’s a Grind Coffee House, 7 Schalks Crossing Road, Plainsboro, 609-275-2919. www.itsagrind.com. Jazz and easy listening. 8 to 10 p.m. Kid is Qual, John & Peter’s, 96 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-862-5981. www.johnandpeters.com. 9:30 p.m. at Attention ★ ★ forStand Onsen for All’s Memorial Day Weekend to honor those who have served All of us for America. Show your military ID for 10% discount on any service. Pop Music Ernie White and Tom Reock, Ellarslie, Trenton City Museum, Cadwalader Park, 609-989-3632. www.ellarslie.org. Rock Register. $20. 7:30 p.m. World Music Ancient Order of Hibernians, 2419 Kuser Road, Hamilton Square, 609-586-5982. Carole Lynne on vocals, Dick Braytenbah on piano, Frank Herrera on bass, and Jack Ross on percussion. Hors d’oeuvres from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. 7 p.m. Honor yourself on Graduation Day Reward yourself for all of the hard work with a soak & massage. Book the Wind Package for value-added savings - 30 minute private soak 60 minute Integrative massage. $115 Enhance your Prom Glow Enjoy a Full Day of Beauty to include a body scrub, facial, eyebrow waxing, eyelash tinting, finished with a relaxing massage. Reserve 609 924 4800 Couples Spa Weekend Retreat May 21-22 Love Package Private Soak for two, side by side one hour Integrative Massage in a couple's suite with a Peppermint Foot Scrub, all with your choice of organic juice or tea. *add on upgrades available. $270.00 per couple, plus tax and gratuity. 609-924-4800 . www.onsenforall.com . info@onsenforall.com Onsen For All . 4451 Route 27 at Raymond Road . Princeton, NJ 08540 Art Art Exhibit, Verde Artists’ Collective, 4492 Route 27, Kingston, 609-865-5456. Opening reception for “Positioning: Digital Collages” with works by Anne Elliott and Madelaine Shellaby. On view to June 8. 5:30 to 5 p.m. Art Exhibit, Alfa Art Gallery, 108 Church Street, New Brunswick, 732-296-7270. www.alfaart.org. Opening reception for “New Brunswick Art Salon, Part II.” Music by New World Order. On view to June 2. 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. Art Exhibit, Straube Center, Route 31 and West Franklin Avenue, Buildings 100 and I-108, Pennington, 609-737-3322. www.straubecenter.com. Opening reception for “The World As We Know It,” a group show featuring depictions of reality through paintings, photography, and poetry. On view to August 19. Free. 7 to 9 p.m. Dance On Pointe Lecture Series, American Repertory Ballet, Princeton Ballet School, 301 North Harrison Street, Princeton, 609-984-8400. www.arballet.org. Guest speakers, roundtable discussions, and demonstrations. Free. 4 p.m. On Stage The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, Off-Broadstreet Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-2766. www.off-broadstreet.com. “The Golden Spy” and “A World at War” written by Marvin Harold Cheiten of Princeton featuring Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson. Actors include Lauren Brader, Steve Decker, Curtis Kaine, and Virginia Barrie. $25 includes dessert. 7 p.m. Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Kelsey Theater, Mercer County Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road, West Windsor, 609570-3333. www.kelseytheatre.net. Musical comedy about con artists. $16. A reception with the cast and crew follows the opening night performance. 7:30 p.m. State Fair, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 355 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857. www.dpacatoat.com. Family musical. $15. Blankets, seat cushions, and insect repellent are recommended. Picnics welcome before show. Food available. 7:30 p.m. The Cripple of Inishmaan, Actors’ NET, 635 North Delmorr Avenue, Morrisville, PA, 215-2953694. www.actorsnetbucks.org. Martin McDonagh’s dark comedy and politically incorrect play set in Ireland. $20. 8 p.m. Continued on following page LEARN TO FLY HERE CELEBRATE 100 YEARS OF AVIATION DRIVE-IN/FLY-IN PANCAKE BREAKFAST SUNDAY, MAY 15, ‘11 8:00 – Noon Adults: $8.00 Kids < 6: $4.00 609-921-3100 Maintenance Hangar 41 Airpark Rd Princeton, NJ www.princetonairport.com 19 20 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Whodunnit? Lauren Brader stars as the Countess Von Furstenberg in ‘The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes,’ two one-act mysteries, opening Friday, May 13, at Off-Broadstreet Theater, Hopewell.609-466-2766. May 13 Continued from preceding page Sleeping Beauty Wakes, Berlind Theater at the McCarter, 91 University Place, Princeton, 609258-2787. www.mccarter.org. Musical by Rachel Sheinkin, music by Brendan Milburn, and lyrics by Valerie Vigoda. Directed by Rebecca Taichman. 8 p.m. Little Women, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, 215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org. Musical based on Louisa May Alcott’s classic novel. $34 to $42. 8 p.m. The Heiress, Center Playhouse, 35 South Street, Freehold, 732462-9093. www.centerplayers.org. Drama set in New York in the 1850s. $24. 8 p.m. Songs for a New World, Edison Valley Playhouse, 2196 Oak Tree Road, Edison, 908-7554654. www.evplayhouse.com. Through May 28. $20. 8 p.m. God of Carnage, George Street Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732-246-7717. www.gsponline.org. Comedy by Yasmina Reza. $29.50 to $79.50. Opening night. 8 p.m. Curtains, Paper Mill Playhouse, Brookside Drive, Millburn, 973376-4343. www.papermill.org. Musical mystery comedy by John Kander, Fred Ebb, and Rupert Holmes is a backstage investigation of the rising body count in a Broadway-bound show. $25 to $92. 8 p.m. Samuel J. and K., Passage Theater, Mill Hill Playhouse, Front and Montgomery streets, Trenton, 609-392-0766. www.passagetheatre.org. A simple game of pickup basketball leads to brotherly bonds. $25. 8 p.m. Jewtopia, Somerset Valley Players, Amwell Road, Hillsborough, 908-369-7469. www.svptheatre.org. Musical comedy. $17. 8 p.m. Family Theater Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus, Sun National Bank Center, Hamilton Avenue at Route 129, Trenton, 800-2984200. www.comcasttix.com. “Fully Charged” production. $16 to $80. 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. Dancing Dance Party, American Ballroom, 1523 Parkway Avenue, Ewing, 609-931-0149. www.- americanballroomco.com. $15. 8 to 11 p.m. Dance Jam, Dance Improv Live, All Saints’ Church, 16 All Saints’ Road, Princeton, 609-924-3767. www.danceimprov.com. Expressive dance improvisation with live music and refreshments. $15. 8 to 10:15 p.m. Good Causes Benefit for Japan’s Earthquake and Tsunami Victims, Princeton Japanese Association, Kingston Presbyterian Church, 4561 Route 27, Kingston, 908806-6444. www.pja-nj.org. “How to Make a Fresh Flower Cake” presented by Shigeko Freyer of Shigeko’s Creative Floral Designs. For ages 15 and up. Register. $35 includes flowers and materials. Bring scissors. 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. A Taste of the Arts, CityArts Trenton, Mountain Lakes House, Princeton, 609-310-1339. www.cityartstrenton.org. Honorees include Alphonso R. Jones II, 12, a student at Trenton’s PJ Hill School who ended his run as Simba in “The Lion King” this month. Benefit for CityArts, a coalition of more than 25 agencies providing artistic opportunities for youth in Trenton. Other honorees are Dan Gardiner, chairman of Princeton ReachOut 56; and Marc Linowitz of the Rose & Louis H. Linowitz Charitable Foundation. Food, wine, artistic performances, and visual art works. Register. $50. 6 p.m. Texas Hold’em Tournament, Bordentown Elks, 11 Amboy Road, Bordentown, 609-2982085. www.bordentownelks.org. Must be 21. Refresher course at 7 p.m. Light buffet. Cash bar. Benefit for Bordentown Blaze, U-11 boys soccer team. $100. 7 p.m. Pour for a Cure, Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy, Hyatt, Carnegie Center, West Windsor. www.parentprojectmd.org. Taste more than 300 wines, beers, and spirits. Dinner and silent auction. Business casual. Register. $89. 7 to 11 p.m. Benefit Galas Gala, Paper Mill Playhouse, Hilton, Short Hills, 908-322-1100. www.papermill.org. Dinner, dancing, and entertainment. “A Broadway Cabaret” featuring students, alumni, and Broadway star Laura Benanti. Eight-time Academy Award winning composer Alan Menken receives the Carrington Award for his contributions to the world of musical theater and the entertainment industry. Register. $500 and up. 6 p.m. Comedy Jeff Pirrami and Jeff DeHart, Catch a Rising Star, Hyatt Regency, 102 Carnegie Center, West Windsor, 609-987-8018. www.catcharisingstar.com. Register. $19.50. 8 p.m. Comedy Night, Grover’s Mill Coffee House, 335 Princeton Hightstown Road, West Windsor, 609-716-8771. www.groversmillcoffee.com. Nick Cobb headlines and Helene Angley of West Windsor hosts. Cobb has been seen on Comedy Central, MTV, AMC, and commercials. He recently filmed an HBO special. 8 p.m. Faith Shabbat Service, Temple Micah, Lawrenceville Presbyterian Church, 2688 Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609-921-1128. www.temple-micah.org. 7:30 p.m. Food & Dining Restaurant Supported Agriculture Dinner Series, Tre Piani, 120 Rockingham Row, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609-4521515. trepiani.com. Complete dinner based on local ingredients may be served as a buffet, plated, or family style. Leftover food will be donated to an area food bank. Register. $35. 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Health Blood Drive, American Red Cross, Princeton University, Frist Center, Washington Road, 800733-2767. www.redcrossblood.org. 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. The Aging Eye, West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road, 609-799-0462. www.mcl.org. Diseases of the eye and technologies for treatment presented by Matossian Eye Associates. 1 p.m. For Families Camp Open House, Jewish Community Center, Rider University, Lawrenceville, 609-2199550. www.jcctoday.org. Information about Abrams Day Camp and teen travel. Also seeking to fill several staff positions. 2 to 5 p.m. For Teens Teen Arts Festival, Mercer County Cultural and Heritage, Mercer College, West Windsor, 609-2782712. www.mercercounty.org. For middle and high school students to meet with artists for master classes and workshops. Register. 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Lectures Princeton University, Dodds Auditorium, 609-258-2943. www.princeton.edu. “Privacy, Access, and Technology and the Future of Litigation in the United States.” Register. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tales of the Silk Road, Princeton Rug Society, Pasha Rugs, 15 Bridge Street, Lambertville, 609883-6116. Participants share stories of buying, selling, and trading textiles along the ancient silk road in Central Asia. 7:30 p.m. Meeting, Successfully Speak Up Toastmasters, United Methodist Church, 9 Church Street, Kingston, 732-631-0114. ssu.freetoasthost.ws. Members deliver and evaluate prepared and impromptu speeches. 7:30 to 9 p.m. MAY 11, 2011 U.S. 1 A U.S. 1 ADVERTISING FEATURE Healthy Woman’s Forum For Princeton-Area Women on June 1 N BC's Today Show anchor, Meredith Vieira, will be the guest moderator at the Healthy Woman's Forum, June 1, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., at the Princeton Westin Hotel. She will join a distinguished group of physicians and mental health experts from throughout the greater Princeton area who will participate in an interactive forum designed to focus on women's health. The event will be featured on an upcoming segment of The Today Show. The theme of the forum is "Changing Your Life for a Healthier Future; It's About Time!" The goal is for women to gain greater awareness and knowledge and learn healthy practices that can enrich their lives during critical transitions from their 30s into their 80s. "It's about taking the time to care for their physical and mental health needs," one of the forum's two organizers, Joyce Hofmann explains. Hofmann is president of the Princeton-based Weight Loss Corp. "We want to bring women together of all ages and have a conversation about our own health-related experiences," says Dr. Sharon Rose Powell, a co-organizer of the event. Powell is a psychologist and founder of Princeton Psychological Partners. Other sponsors for the June 1 forum are the Princeton Regional Chamber of Commerce and Princeton Sports and Family Medicine. One of the main differences between this event and other conferences is that all of the participants will have an opportunity not only to listen and ask questions during the morning workshops, but to engage in a dialogue with each other. "We have designed an interactive event," says Powell. "This Co-sponsors of the Healthy gathering will reWoman’s Forum Joyce Hofmann, spect the personal left, President of Princeton Weight experiences and Loss, and Sharon Rose Powell, knowledge of Ed.D., President of Princeton women in attendance as they acPsychological Partners. tively participate in conversations with and challenges that they have physicians and other health care faced. Panelists include Kathprofessionals." leen Thomsen, M.D., MPH, a Among the issues that the board-certified physician in Intewomen participants will discuss grative Holistic Medicine; Anneare how women can stay on top of their game physically, sexually Marie Slaughter, J.D., D.Phil., former Director of Policy Planand mentally; how to lose weight ning who worked closely with and finally keep it off, how to use Hillary Clinton and who is now a the power of healing to increase Professor of Politics at Princeton mind-body wellness and how University; Amy Robach, a nawomen can raise their children tional correspondent for NBC with less stress. Women will alNightly News and a co-anchor of so have opportunities to learn Today Show's Weekend Edition, about how to balance their horand her husband Andrew Shue, mones, emotions and nutritional an actor and founder of needs; explore matters of the Cafemom; and Stephanie Byerly, breast; and learn how to face M.D., recently named Chief of anxiety and fears head on. Staff at Zale Lipshy Hospital in One of the highlights of the Dallas, Texas. Forum will be the lunchtime panFor more information about el led by Meredith Vieira talking the event, visit the website with a dynamic group of panelists about the critical transitions HealthyWomansForum.com. Enrollment is limited. Photographic A rt Multiplicities: Through the Lens of a Child's Toy, Tasha O'Neill Last Shift, Peter Aldrich Right Angles, Tasha O’Neill April 30 May 29 In the Jay Goodkind Room: From San Juan, with Love, Paola Franqui Last Shift 1, Peter Aldrich dD 14 Mercer Street • Hopewell, NJ Saturday & Sunday, 12 - 5 • 609-333-8511 www.photogallery14.com One of the highlights will be a panel led by Meredith Vieira talking with a dynamic group about the critical transitions and challenges that they have faced. Outdoor Action Triskaidekaphobia Ghost Tour, Princeton Tour Company, Witherspoon and Nassau streets, 609-902-3637. www.princetontourcompany.com. $20. 8 p.m. Politics Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University, Carl Icahn Laboratory, Room 280, 609-2582943. www.princeton.edu. “Review of the National Academies’ Investigation of the FBI’s Investigation of the 2001 Anthrax Letter Attacks” presented by Nancy Connell, professor and vice-chair for research in the department of medicine at UMDNJ. 12:30 p.m. Rummage Sale Slackwood Presbyterian Church, 2020 Brunswick Avenue, Lawrenceville, 609-3923258. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Singles Wine and Dinner, Dinnermates, Princeton Area, 732-759-2174. www.dinnermates.com. For business and professional singles. Age groups differ. Call for reservation and location. $20 plus dinner and drinks. 7:15 p.m. Divorce Recovery Program, Princeton Church of Christ, 33 River Road, Princeton, 609-5813889. www.princetonchurchofchrist.com. Seminar: “Dating Again.” Non-denominational support group for men and women. Free. 7:30 p.m. Drop-In, Yardley Singles, The Runway, Trenton Mercer Airport, Ewing, 215-736-1288. www.yardleysingles.org. Music by Rick and Kenny, dancing, and cash bar. 9 p.m. Socials Luncheon, Rotary Club of the Princeton Corridor, Hyatt Re- gency, Carnegie Center, 609799-0525. www.princetoncorridorrotary.org. Register. Guests, $25. 12:15 p.m. For Seniors Brown Bag Discussion, Princeton Senior Resource Center, Suzanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, 609-924-7108. www.princetonsenior.org. “What Does My Thyroid Do For Me? Dymystifying One of the Body’s Most Important Glands” presented by Dr. Gabriel B. Smolarz. Bring your own lunch. Beverages and dessert provided. Register. Free. Noon to 1 p.m. Sports Trenton Thunder Baseball, Waterfront Park, Route 29, 609394-8326. www.trentonthunder.com. Binghamton. $10 to $13. 7:05 p.m. Sports for Causes Golf Outing and Auction, Ryan’s Quest, Mercer Oaks, Village Road, West Windsor, 609-9473611. www.ryansquest.org. Benefit on behalf of Ryan Schultz of Hamilton, diagnosed with Duchenne muscular dystrophy at the age of two, with all proceeds directed to DMD research. Texas scramble, $165. Dinner, $75. 11 a.m. Saturday May 14 IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Sweet Harmony Spring Concert, Brothers in Harmony, Robbinsville High School, 155 Robbinsville Edinburg Road, Robbinsville, 732-940-0224. www.brothersinharmony.org. “Musical Masterpiece XVII” presented by the 60-voice barbershop chorus and Old School Quartet. $15. 7:30 p.m. Classical Music Borealis Wind Quintet, Raritan River Music Festival, Old Greenwich Presbyterian Church, Bloomsbury, 908-213-1100. www.RaritanRiverMusic.org. Chamber ensemble features the New Jersey premiere of “Dance Episodes for Wind Quintet” by Brian DuFord. $25. 7:30 p.m. Concert, Sinfonietta Nova, Prince of Peace Church, 177 Princeton-Hightstown Road, West Windsor, 609-462-4984. www.sinfoniettanova.org. “Flowers & Music” features works by Tchaikovsky, Bellini, and Gounod. A free clivia plant to the first 75 audience members. The West Windsor-based orchestra is conducted by Gail H. Lee. Reception follows. $15. Additional parking is available at Community Park, adjacent to the church. 7:30 p.m. Choir Concert, Philomusica Chorale, Our Lady of Peace Church, 277 Washington Place, North Brunswick, 888-744-5668. www.philomusica.org. “Shakespeare, Brahms, and All That Jazz” featuring Eli Yamin on jazz piano. $18. 8 p.m. West Windsor Arts Center (Historic Princeton Junction Firehouse) 952 Alexander Road West Windsor, New Jersey 08550 Buy tickets NOW. Mastercard & Visa accepted. 609.716.1931 Wed-Sat 12 noon-6pm www.westwindsorarts.org • • • • • Performances Classes & Workshops Exhibitions Literary Arts Camp Painless, Quick, Non-Surgical Hemorrhoid Treatment ✔ Dr. Dhar is a highly trained Interventional Gastroenterologist Practicing in East Windsor, NJ ✔ Assistant Professor of Medicine at Nationally Recognized Columbia University ✔ All procedures performed in East Windsor, NJ in a luxurious office setting ✔ Painless, Quick (Approx10 minutes), Non-Surgical ✔ Remarkably free of complications ✔ Reimbursed by most Medical Insurance Plans* Jazz & Blues Lee Hogand and Pursuance, New Brunswick Jazz Project, Makeda, 338 George Street, New Brunswick, 732-640-0021. www.nbjp.org. 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Live Music The Tone Rangers, Halo Pub, 5 Hulfish Street, Princeton, 609921-1710. Rock and blues. 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Continued on following page Call me Today to learn how Infrared Coagulation Treatment can relieve you of hemorrhoids in minutes! 609.918.1222 *excludes co-pays, co-insurance and deductibles Dr. Vasudha Dhar, M.D. 300B Princeton Hightstown Road Suite 206 • East Windsor, NJ 08520 21 22 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 May 14 Continued from preceding page JUNCTION BARBER SHOP 33 Hightstown Rd., Princeton Jct. ELLSWORTH’S CENTER (Near Train Station) Hrs: Tues - Fri: 10am - 6pm Sat: 8:30am - 3:30pm 609-799-8554 Carole Lynne and Pat Pratico, Villa Rosa Restaurant, 41 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-8826841. www.villarosa.com. Italian cuisine. BYOB. Register. 6:30 p.m. Wayne R and Take-1, Hopewell Valley Bistro & Inn, 15 East Broad Street, Hopewell, 609-4669889. www.hopewellvalleybistro.com. Country, ballads, and soft rock from the 1950s to present. Dinner and dancing. 7 to 9:30 p.m. Louis Watson, Salt Creek Grille, One Rockingham Row, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609-4194200. www.saltcreekgrille.com. 7 to 11 p.m. Bob Dylan Tribute Concert, Grover’s Mill Coffee House, 335 Princeton Hightstown Road, West Windsor, 609-716-8771. www.groversmillcoffee.com. 7:30 p.m. Chris Harford & the Band of Changes, The Record Collector Store, 358 Farnsworth Avenue, Bordentown, 609-324-0880. www.the-record-collector.com. $15. 7:30 p.m. Jim Baxter, It’s a Grind Coffee House, 7 Schalks Crossing Road, Plainsboro, 609-275-2919. www.itsagrind.com. Acoustic originals. 8 to 10 p.m. Skip’s Museum, John & Peter’s, 96 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-862-5981. www.johnandpeters.com. 9:30 p.m. Pop Music Spring Concert, Brothers in Harmony, Robbinsville High School, 155 Robbinsville Edinburg Road, Robbinsville, 732-940-0224. www.brothersinharmony.org. “Musical Masterpiece XVII” presented by the 60-voice barbershop chorus and Old School Quartet. $15. 7:30 p.m. Art Public Art Tours, Trenton Artists Workshop Association, Garden Theater, Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-392-0766. www.tawanj.org. Highlights include the MacMonnies battle monument; the Norman Rockwell mural; statues by Henry Moore, Richard Serra, Louise Nevelson, and others; and architecture by Frank Gehry and Michael Graves. Pay what you will donation. Rain or shine. Teens at 10 a.m. General public at 1 p.m. 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Flower and Garden Photography Workshop, Grounds For Sculpture, 18 Fairgrounds Road, Hamilton, 609-586-0616. www.groundsforsculpture.org. Rain or shine. Register. $55. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Art Exhibit, Michener Art Museum, 138 South Pine Street, Doylestown, 215-340-9800. www.michenerartmuseum.org. First day for “Making it Better: Folk Arts in Pennsylvania.” On view to August 28. 1 p.m. Artists Network, Lawrenceville Main Street, 2683 Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609-512-1359. www.lmsartistsnetwork.com. Art gallery reception for “Spring at Last” with extended hours in conjunction with Lawrenceville Main Street’s house tour. The artists have an exhibit in the Alpaca Farm Barn featuring plein air paintings. 2 to 7 p.m. See cover story page 10. Highlights Tour, Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton campus, 609-258-3788. artmuseum.princeton.edu. Free. 2 p.m. Art Exhibit, Artists’ Gallery, 18 Bridge Street, Lambertville, 609397-4588. www.lambertvillearts.com. Opening reception for “Meditations on Nature,” a shared exhibit featuring works of Michael Schweigart and Norine Kevolic. On view to June 5. 5 to 8 p.m. Jazz at McCarter: Vijay Iyer, above, appears with his trio on Friday, May 13, at McCarter Theater. Also appearing, the Eldar Trio. 609-2582787. Dance New Jersey Indian Association, Dutch Neck Church, 154 South Mill Road, West Windsor, 609799-0712. Dancers, singers, and musical groups perform. 4 p.m. On Stage Curtains, Paper Mill Playhouse, Brookside Drive, Millburn, 973376-4343. www.papermill.org. Musical mystery comedy by John Kander, Fred Ebb, and Rupert Holmes is a backstage investigation of the rising body count in a Broadway-bound show. $25 to $92. 1:30 and 8 p.m. Little Women, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, 215-785-0100. www.brt- MAY 11, 2011 stage.org. Musical based on Louisa May Alcott’s classic novel. $34 to $42. 2 and 8 p.m. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, Off-Broadstreet Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-2766. www.off-broadstreet.com. “The Golden Spy” and “A World at War” written by Marvin Harold Cheiten of Princeton featuring Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson. Actors include Lauren Brader, Steve Decker, Curtis Kaine, and Virginia Barrie. $25 includes dessert. 7 p.m. Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Kelsey Theater, Mercer County Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road, West Windsor, 609570-3333. www.kelseytheatre.net. Musical. $16. 7:30 p.m. State Fair, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 355 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857. www.dpacatoat.com. Family musical. $15. Blankets, seat cushions, and insect repellent are recommended. Picnics welcome before show. Food available. 7:30 p.m. Bill Bowers, West Windsor Arts Council, 952 Alexander Road, West Windsor, 609-919-1982. westwindsorarts.org. “It Goes Without Saying” is an autobiographical production written and performed by Bowers featuring stories about growing up in Montana, his studies with Marcel Marceau, and his performances. Register. $20. 8 p.m. The Cripple of Inishmaan, Actors’ NET, 635 North Delmorr Avenue, Morrisville, PA, 215-2953694. www.actorsnetbucks.org. Martin McDonagh’s dark comedy and politically incorrect play set in Ireland. $20. 8 p.m. Sleeping Beauty Wakes, Berlind Theater at the McCarter, 91 University Place, Princeton, 609258-2787. www.mccarter.org. Musical by Rachel Sheinkin, music by Brendan Milburn, and lyrics by Valerie Vigoda. Directed by Rebecca Taichman. 8 p.m. The Heiress, Center Playhouse, 35 South Street, Freehold, 732462-9093. www.centerplayers.org. Drama set in New York in the 1850s. $24. 8 p.m. God of Carnage, George Street Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732-246-7717. gsponline.org. Comedy. $29.50 to $79.50. 8 p.m. Samuel J. and K., Passage Theater, Mill Hill Playhouse, Front and Montgomery streets, Trenton, 609-392-0766. www.passagetheatre.org. A simple game of pickup basketball leads to brotherly bonds. $25. 8 p.m. Jewtopia, Somerset Valley Players, Amwell Road, Hillsborough, 908-369-7469. www.svptheatre.org. Musical comedy. $17. 8 p.m. Sunday, May 15th at 2 p.m.: English Country Dance, Princeton Country Dancers, Suzanne Patterson Center, Monument Drive, 609-924-6763. www.princetoncountrydancers.org. Instruction and dance. $10. 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Literati Garden State Horror Writers, East Brunswick Public Library, Two Jean Walling Civic Center, 732-276-7531. www.gshw.net. “Increase Sales Writing Diverse Fiction” presented by C.J. Henderson, author of the Teddy London series of supernatural mysteries. His latest novel is “Central Park Knight.” Membership is $35 per year. 11 a.m. Author Event, Panoply Bookstore, 46 North Union Street, Lambertville, 609-397-1145. Gerard Stern, author of “Early Collected Poems: 1965-1992;” and Anne Marie Macari, author of “She Heads Into the Wildnerness.” Raindate is May 15, 3 p.m. 3 p.m. Good Causes Dancing Benefit Gala Dance Party, American Ballroom, 1523 Parkway Avenue, Ewing, 609-931-0149. www.americanballroomco.com. $15. 7 to 10 p.m. Enable, Greenacres Country Club, Lawrenceville, 609-9875003. www.enablenj.org. “An Evening in New Orleans” includes a cocktail reception, auction, live Film “Below Stairs, Kitchen Necessities at the Trent House” Raritan River Music Festival: The Borealis Wind Quintet appears on Saturday, May 14, at the Old Greenwich Presbyterian Church, Bloomsbury. 908-213-1100. Acme Screening Room, Lambertville Public Library, 25 South Union Street, Lambertville, 609-397-0275. www.acmescreeningroom.ticketleap.com. Screening of “M for Mississippi.” $5. 7 and 8:40 p.m. Duck for President, Fancy Nancy, and Other Story Books, Paper Mill Playhouse, Brookside Drive, Millburn, 973-376-4343. www.papermill.org. Revue features mini musicals based on children’s books. For ages five and up. $12 to $15. 10 a.m. Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus, Sun National Bank Center, Hamilton Avenue at Route 129, Trenton, 800-2984200. www.comcasttix.com. “Fully Charged” production. $16 to $80. 11 a.m., 3 and 7 p.m. Zerbini Family Circus, South Brunswick Lion’s Club, Crossroads Middle School, Kingston Lane and Major Road, 732-2971107. Benefit for community projects. $9 to $11. 5 and 7 p.m. 23 Open Daily 12:30 to 4pm House Tour, Lawrenceville Main Street, 609-219-9300. www.LawrencevilleMainStreet.com. Register. $25 day of, available in Weeden Park; $20 in advance. Call or visit website to find venues that are selling tickets in advance.The theme, “Country Living,” celebrates the rural and agricultural heritage of today’s suburban community. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. See cover story page 10. A.I.R. Awareness Car Wash, Attitudes in Reverse, Plainsboro Rescue Squad, 621 Plainsboro Road, Plainsboro. www.attitudesinreverse.org. Raise awareness about mental health issues and suicide prevention. E-mail tricia@attitudesinreverse.org for information. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Designer Clothing and Accessories, Mobile Meals of Trenton and Ewing, 308 Columbia Avenue, Trenton (on the island), 609-393-3102. Sale of slightly used high fashion clothing and accessories. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Trenton Books at Home Program, Classics Used and Rare Books, 117 South Warren Street, Trenton, 609-394-8400. Trenton Dance Project at 12:30 p.m. Working Class Hussys, a rock group, at 1 p.m. Jermaine Fredericks, a spoken word artist, at 3 p.m. Def Poet Narubi Selah at 3:30 p.m. Donations benefit the organization to make books available for all Trenton children. Classics will provide an equivalent dollar around of books to match each donation. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Food and Wine Tasting, Hunterdon Art Museum, 7 Lower Center Street, Clinton, 908-735-8415. www.hunterdonartmuseum.org. “Champagne and Sparkling Wines” seminar followed by wine and food tasting. Register. Seminar and tasting, $110; tasting, $60. 2:30 to 6 p.m. Family Theater U.S. 1 entertainment, and dinner. Enable serves close to 450 individuals with disabilities through inhome services, group homes, day programs, and respite care. Register. $150. 7 p.m. Comedy Featuring noted scholar, Martha Katz-Hymen, Newport News, Virginia 15 Market Street ★ Trenton, New Jersey ★ (609) 989-3027 www.williamtrenthouse.org The 1719 William Trent House Museum is owned, maintained and operated by the City of Trenton with assistance from the Trent House Association and General Jeff Birrami and Jeff DeHart, Catch a Rising Star, Hyatt Regency, 102 Carnegie Center, West Windsor, 609-987-8018. www.catcharisingstar.com. Register. $22. 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Fairs & Festivals Antiques and Collectibles Fair, Horse Park of New Jersey, 626 Route 524, Allentown, 609-4752725. www.antiquesatthe horsepark.com. Equestrian dressage, cross country, and jumping. Food. Rain or shine. Free admission. Dining with the Stars includes music with Jet Weston and His Atomic Ranch Hands, buffet dinner, and more, at 5:30 p.m. $30. 9 a.m. Spring Wine Festival, Unionville Vineyards, 9 Rocktown Road, Ringoes, 908-788-0400. Wine tasting, food by Vitella & Sons, music by Paul Plumeri Blues Band, crafters, a flower market, a wine pairing seminar. Bring a kite to fly, lawn chairs, and a picnic basket. Noon to 5 p.m. Food & Dining Wines of Italy Course, Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-737-4465. www.hopewellvalleyvineyards.com. Taste 10 wine samples with light food pairing. Register. $50. 6 to 8 p.m. Continued on page 25 Operating Support Grants from the NJ Historical Commission, Department of State. PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Program in Hellenic Studies and Program in Jazz Studies Concert Chromatisms Nicholas Bouloukos and the GrecoNubian Quintet dD Supported and co-sponsored by: Lewis Center for the Arts Department of Music Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies http://www.princeton.edu/~hellenic/greconubianquintet.html Sunday, May 15, 2011 • 3:00 p.m. Taplin Auditorium, Fine Hall 24 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Gathering Real Stories for the Stage by David McDonough A PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY offered by Princeton Dental Associates Dr. Andrea Mann, Specialty License # 5174 Treating current dental problems is just one part of Dr. Mann's approach to dentistry for children. In her practice, Dr. Mann also emphasizes the importance of getting children started on the road to a lifelong pattern of maintaining healthy dental habits. Whether or not your children are new to the dentist, or already have an established program, Dr. Mann will make sure that your children receive the highest standard of care, now and long into the future. • Board Certified Diplomate of the American Board of Pediatric Dentistry • New Jersey Oral Conscious Sedation Permit • Standard Proficiency Laser Certification by the Academy of Laser Dentistry • Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) Certified • Member: American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry, Association, New Jersey Academy of Pediatric Dentistry, New Jersey Dental Association and Tri-County Dental Society MONTH OF MAY $149 Exam, Cleaning and Fluoride! 609-924-1862 214 N. Harrison Street, Princeton, NJ 08540 princetonpediatricdentist.com dam Immerwahr has directed Shakespearean theater. He has worked with the Public Theater in New York, currently serves as the associate producer at McCarter Theater, and as the resident director of Passage Theater in Trenton. But nothing, he says, has given him more satisfaction than working with the 13 men and women aged from 60 to close to 90 who make up the troupe of CWW On Stage, a Princeton-based ensemble of senior community players whose monologues and skits stem from material based on local lives and oral histories. The CWW part refers to the group’s sponsor, Community Without Walls, a Princetonbased association of individuals and couples that seeks ways to “enhance the ability of its members to age well, to assist its members in acquiring the knowledge that will enable them to make the choices that they will need as they age.” Support has also come from Secure @Home, an arm of Jewish Family and Children’s Service of Greater Mercer County, which provides services for seniors who wish to remain in their own homes for as long as possible. “To watch a bunch of retired people creating work, learning lines, learning new theater skills, learning how to use their bodies and voices and imaginations in new ways — that is healthy aging,” says Immerwahr. Fran Benson, a Princeton resident, is one of the founders of the group. She got the idea after taking some classes at Stage Bridge in Berkeley, CA, now in its 30th year as a senior theater company. “When I came back here in January, 2008,” she says, “I got in touch with Rob Hutter, who was running a theater group out of Temple University. He came up and did a workshop and an eight-week class in the spring of 2008. That was an expensive proposition, paying Rob’s travel expenses, and having him schlep all the way up here. So we looked around, and our second director, Susan Garrett, worked with us for a year, during which we really began to find our form, which was collecting stories.” The group’s first presentation was titled, appropriately, “First Jobs.” The members interviewed each other and outsiders to come up with material that was at times funny, sad, and moving, and that audiences easily related to. After all, who hasn’t had the first job jitters or that memorable first job boss? CWW On Stage felt like they were on to something. When Garrett moved to Maine, and they needed a new director Benson. called Lisa Patterson at McCarter. “She said she would ask Adam if he knew anyone,” says benson, “and he said, ‘I am.’ That was a wonderful moment.” Says Immerwahr: “We had a series of meetings to find out if it was a good fit. I came in, and we started immediately developing our next piece ‘Thriving, Not Just Surviving,’ which is a piece about healthy aging. We don’t perform exclusively for seniors, but they make up a large part of our audience. This is a version of aging that perhaps you haven’t seen. There are so many set ideas we have about how we look at seniors in our culture. I think our mission is to collect and perform stories of our community. There’s something important about what do we do that’s different than other theaters. There’s something very Our Second Act: CWW On Stage members Helga Deaton, left, Janet Wolinetz, Laura Goldfeld, Cecelia Hodges, Ruth Schulman (standing up), Sue Stember, Mimi Schwartz, George Cody, Shirley Meeker, Francesca Benson, and Anna Rosa Kohn. In front: Adam Immerwahr, director. beautiful about watching people performing, word for word, stories that were gathered. “We divide our year into three segments. One segment is training, where we spend all of our rehearsal time working on acting techniques and tools that an actor might need. Another third of our year is spent on the creation of our new piece. We do a series of exercises to elicit stories from within the group, we go outside and conduct interviews, and we brainstorm and improv and try to create text for the piece. And then about a third of our year is spent in rehearsal — we have our piece, and now we’re trying to put it together. So while none of these people are professional actors, they are going through an extensive training process. “This year we gathered a piece, ‘About Family,’ which we are re- ‘There’s something important about what do we do that’s different than other theaters,’ says director Adam Immerwahr. hearsing now and are going to perform shortly. We are looking at the family through a multi-faceted prism, through the lens of someone who has adopted a child, through a same-sex couple, through someone who lives in a neighborhood that a lot of people think of as a family — but she doesn’t. We have a story from someone who is part of a group and is taking care of an invalid who has in some ways become a family. ‘T he show has 13 monologues, six scenes, incorporating every actor. At any given performance we might not be doing all monologues or all six scenes. It’s a very wide range of ways of looking at this concept of family and what it means. It’s very humorous, and meaningful, and impactful.” Right now, the group includes 11 women and a couple of guys. “We would love to have more men in the group,” says Benson. “I want to invite the men of central New Jersey to take the risk. My husband is a physicist, and he loves the group. It’s so different from what he usually does.” CWW On Stage will perform on Tuesday, May 17, at the Princeton Senior Resource Center in the Suzanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, and on Tuesday, May 24, at the Robert Wood Johnson Center for Health and Wellness, 3100 Quakerbridge Road, Mercerville. The group is holding a workshop, “Seniors on Stage” on Saturday, June 11, at the Friends Center in Princeton. The ensemble is also working on a piece with high school and middle school students, using their same interview techniques. As much as the members of the group are enjoying themselves and learning from Immerwahr and each other, it could be that their director is taking away much more than he is giving. “I have been incredibly stimulated and challenged and engaged by the way this group of artists has entered into the concept. They’re so dedicated and so honest and so engaged in the work, and committed to reflecting their community, and to making work that’s honest. And to getting it right. For me, the greatest experience has been watching them form a true ensemble. It’s very exciting,” says Immerwahr. Lifelong Creativity Fest, Tuesday, May 17, 1 p.m., Suzanne Patterson Center, Monument Drive, 609-924-7108. CWW On Stage will perform a selection from its performance “About Family.” The Lifelong Creativity Fest is an afternoon celebration of the visual and performing arts, including music, drama, and poetry, as well as a wine and cheese reception and a community art show. Also, Senior Health and Fitness Day, Tuesday, May 24, 1 p.m., RWJ Hamilton Center for Health and Wellness, Quakerbridge Road, Hamilton, 609-6316819. CWW On Stage will perform selections from “Not Just Surviving. . . But Thriving,” which aims to answer the question “What is healthy aging?” Also, Seniors on Stage Workshop, Saturday, June 11, 9:30 to noon, Friends Center Convocation Room, corner of Olden and Williams streets. Workshop run by Adam Immerwahr, director of CWW On Stage. No experience needed. Learn acting techniques that work in life as well as on stage. Pre-registration required. $30. Call or E-mail Janet Wolinetz at 609921-1818 or janetwolinetz@verison.net. Limited to 20. MAY 11, 2011 U.S. 1 A U.S. 1 ADVERTISING FEATURE Five Forms of Parenting QUESTION: Are there basic types of parenting that are good or bad? I mean, what is healthy parenting? ANSWER: Over the years I have been able to distinguish five forms of parenting; the first four are bad, the last good. 1. NEGLECTFUL/ABUSIVE PARENTING: Some parents, having difficulty being loved by adults, see children as a safe way to receive all the love that they want. When such unrealistic expectations collide with cries around the clock for feedings and diaper changes, this overly insecure person could allow anger to escalate from neglect to abuse. 2. OVERPROTECTIVE PARENTING: The anxious parent who runs out the back door to settle every childish squabble or who daily walks their eighth grader to school unwittingly communicates a sense of weakness in the child, who gradually becomes more scared of doing things independently. 3. OVERCRITICAL PARENTING: Wanting a child to succeed may lead to pushing the May 14 Continued from page 23 Farmers’ Market West Windsor Community Farmers’ Market, Vaughn Drive Parking Lot, Princeton Junction Train Station, 609-933-4452. www.westwindsorfarmersmarket.org. Music by 18 Months Interest. Massage by the Touch that Heals. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Gardens Early Morning Guided Walk, Greening of West Windsor, Zaitz Preserve Trail, Southfield Road, 609-989-5662. www.greeningwestwindsor.com. Friends of West Windsor Open Space lead walk. 7:30 a.m. Gardening Seminar, Middlesex County Agricultural Extension, Earth Center in Davidson’s Mill Pond Park, 42 Riva Avenue, South Brunswick, 732-398-5262. “Native Plant Landscaping.” Register. $20. 10 a.m. to noon. School Garden Start Up, New Jersey Farm to School Network, Riverside School, 58 Riverside Drive, Princeton, 609-6838309. http://njfarm2schoolpbworks.com. Tour more than a dozen outdoor classroom. Harvest your garden luncheon of soup and salad. Register. $25. 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Health Workshop Series, Infertility and Adoption Counseling Center, 2 Tree Farm Road, Pennington, 609-737-8750. www.iaccenter.com. “Frontload Your Child Now to Meet the Challenges of Adolescence” presented by Sasha Martone for adoptive parents with children of all ages, adoptive parents to be, and professionals. Register. $100; $150 for a couple. 1 to 4:30 p.m. Singing for Our Souls Sing Along with David Brahinsky, Princeton Center for Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite 506, Skillman, 609-924-7294. www.princetonyoga.com. Folk music, songs by contemporary musicians, and songs Brahinsky wrote based on the words of Lao Tsu and Whitman. A philosophy professor at Bucks County College, he teaches music and singing in his Roosevelt studio. Add your voice to song sheets provided. $15. 8 to 10:30 p.m. by the Rev. Peter K. Stimpson child too hard, conveying the message that love is conditional upon getting an A, hitting a home run, or making varsity cheerleading. 4. OVERPERMISSIVE PARENTING: Not wanting to hamper the creativity of the child, or perhaps fearing that firm rules may cause the child to reject the parent, some parents give children an alarming sense of power. Not having to suffer normal consequences, the child may feel entitled to favors, exploit friends, or become a discipline problem. 5. HEALTHY PARENTING: This is essentially the opposite of the first four. Parents should be caring instead of neglectful, promote autonomy instead of dependence, provide unconditional instead of conditional love, and set realistic limits and guidelines. Finally, we need to mix in a pinch of common sense to my ingredients. What makes 1-4 unhealthy is that they are patterns, namely, that the mistakes are Wellness Yoga Fusion, Web of Compassion, Princeton Care Center, 728 Bunn Drive, Princeton, 609-2035854. www.webofcompassion.org. “Flourishing Your Body, Mind, and Spirit” presented by Grace Asagra Stanley, certified holistic health coach and registered nurse. Bring a yoga mat. Register. $40 to $55. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Silent Retreat, Integral Yoga of Princeton, 613 Ridge Road, Monmouth Junction, 732-2742410. www.integralyogaprinceton.org. Led by Ron Cohen, Sanela Solak, and Aaron Craelius. Sitting meditation, yoga, Tai chi movement, walk the Vision Quest meditation labyrinth, a vegetarian meal and snacks, and a closing kirtan. Register. $40. 9:45 a.m. to 8 p.m. T’ai Chi Ch’uan, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609-275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Meditation in motion presented by Todd Tieger for all levels. Free. 10 a.m. Nutrition Seminar, Princeton Dance and Theater Studio, 116 Rockingham Row, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609-514-1600. www.princetondance.com. “Healthy for Life,” a nutrition seminar for the young athlete presented by Christina Johnson, a certified wellness coach and a former dancer. Register. Free. 2 to 3 p.m. History Guided Tours, Kuser Farm Mansion, 390 Newkirk Avenue, Hamilton, 609-890-3630. Tour the first two floors of Fred and Teresa Kuser’s Victorian summer home, built in the early 1890s. Also Sundays. Free. 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Luncheon Meeting, Daughters of the American Revolution, consistently repeated. We all make the occasional blunder, but as long as we generally hit the mark, all should be well. Rev. Stimpson is executive director of the Trinity Counseling Service. TCS Comprehensive, Compassionate Care Insurances Accepted; Sliding Scale 22 Stockton Street, Princeton 609-924-0060 Nassau Club, 6 Mercer Street, Princeton, 609-279-2489. “The History of Quilting in America” presented by Dana Balsamo, owner of Material Pleasures. Register. $23. 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Open House and Twilight Reception, Historic Fallsington, 4 Yardley Avenue, Fallsington, PA, 215-295-6565. Museum buildings present demonstrations of Colonial domestic skills and children’s games from noon to 4 p.m. “Twilight in Fallsington” features entertainment, food, and a behindthe-scenes look at the Stagecoach Tavern from 5 to 8 p.m. Register. $25. Noon and 5 p.m. Children’s Day, Rockingham Association, Historic Rockingham, Route 603, Kingston, 609-6837132. www.rockingham.net. Activities and demonstrations of 18th century life presented by Montgomery High School Live Historians Club, Rockingham Association, and the Stony Brook Garden Club. Historic games, replica 18th century clothing to try on, quill and ink to write with, and paper tri-corn hats. Tour the kitchen garden and historic house museum. Country dance demonstrations and lessons, fiddle music, and more. Light refreshments available. Rain or shine. Donations invited. Noon to 5 p.m. Civil War and Native American Museum, Camp Olden, 2202 Kuser Road, Hamilton, 609-5858900. www.campolden.org. Exhibits featuring Civil War soldiers from New Jersey including their original uniforms, weapons, and medical equipment. Diorama of the Swamp Angel artillery piece and Native American artifacts. Free. 1 to 4 p.m. Continued on page 30 The Montgomery NewsPaperA Hometown Serving Montgomery Township and Rocky Hill Get your message into every home in Montgomery and Rocky Hill on our new website, www.montynews.com Call Us to find out how! Circulation: 20,400 email: editor@montynews.com 908-874-0020 2106 Rte. 206 Belle Mead, NJ 08502 The for Become Certified to Teach Archangel Michael’s Manifestation Acceleration Technique Taught by Rev. Meryl James ! SAVE THE DATE ! Saturday, May 21st, 10am - 5pm at the Griggs Farm Clubhouse 205 Griggs Drive, Princeton, NJ 08540 Personal Investment: $150 Reserve Your Space by Wed., May 18th Rev. Meryl James & Receive a $25 Discount. Walk-ins Welcome. dD Call 609-454-0102 or email revmerylj@gmail.com Go to our website for FREE course description www.arielcenterforwellbeing.org 25 26 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Review: ‘Little Women’ L iterature’s usually a finds her fortune and her place as great place to find source material the centerpiece of both the book for solid musicals. From “My Fair and the show. Lady” to “Camelot,” on through to For the most part, the production “Cats” and “Wicked” and beyond, acquits itself well of touching on there’s no shortage of beloved the expected moments of this evershows sourced in books. The trick popular coming-of-age novel. Jencomes in the adaptation’s ability to nie Eisenhower’s Jo is charismatic, capture the magic of the original strong-voiced, and well-suited to material in a form that feels both strike the delicate balance between special and of the essence of the adventure-seeking and empowered original piece; you can tell when it without trundling over into tomboy works, and when it falls short. territory. Her considerable charm Bristol Riverside Theater’s un- is the glue that holds the evening dertaking of “Little Women,” together. And this cast, as a whole, based on Louisa May Alcott’s novis lovely and el, is a little bit talented. Amy of both. You (Kara Domcan’t deny that browski) is full Go in with a deep love the charm of of vindictive of the book and the the cast and Alpluck. Meg characters, and I’m cott’s book (Elisa Mattshines through hews) has a certain you’ll leave in what is ultiwonderful happy. mately an ensense of threejoyable evendimensional being, if some of lievability in the structural problems inherent in what could raise an eyebrow in this the adaptation are taken with a enlightened age — her characterigrain of salt. zation is so clear that her devotion For those unfamiliar with this to the family she wants to raise is American classic, “Little Women” given a sense of life that keeps it centers on the adventures of the from feeling outdated. And of four March sisters — Amy, Jo, course, there’s poor Beth (Kim Beth, and Meg — in Concord, Carson), whose fate is foreshadMassachusetts, during the Civil owed from the first scene, and, as War. With their father at war, the written in the original novel, seems four sisters are raised by their like a bit of a plot device as opmother, lovingly called Marmee posed to a real characer. Carson’s (Leslie Becker), with ample assis- portrayal, however, gives Beth a tance from their Aunt Josephine. very real strength, particularly in a Each sister has her own particular wonderful duet with James Van dreams and wants, and Jo’s desire Treuren’s Mr. Laurence. It actually to find her fortune as a writer takes hurts when her exit comes, which is her to New York City, where she no small feat. Assisted Living The titular Little Women of this production shine best, in fact, when they are paired up with the men of the cast; Stephen Schellhardt’s Laurie and Steven Nicholas’ John Brooke are a perfect pair of foils, equal parts awkward and adorable, for our ladies. And Professor Bhaer (Michael Sharon), Jo’s German (and germane) housemate, adds considerably to Jo’s development as the most unlikely and perfect of suitors. In the moments when we’re allowed to let Alcott’s book really do the heavy lifting, “Little Women” is enchanting. The moments of flirtation, growth, laughter, and connection are an awful lot of fun to watch. I ’m also pretty sure that Cathy Newman’s Aunt March is worth the price of admission alone; she steals the show, word-by-word, every scene she is in, with equal parts steel, magic, and sharptongued wit. While there are some wonderful performances — and it’s hard to go wrong with the book this team chose to adapt — the problems of this show come in that it is a musical. But here’s the thing: while the voices of the cast are strong and fine and their interpretations excellent, you won’t be leaving the theater humming a single tune. There are beautiful musical moments, to be sure — at the top of each act, the entire cast doubles as characters from Jo’s racy stories in a bit of over-the-top musical theater adventure, which is well-played and fun to watch — but as a whole, it’s ...a friendly and vibrant atmosphere, where your loved one will feel comfortable and cared for each day. OPEN HOUSE Saturday, May 14 • 10am - 2pm Sisterhood: Elisa Matthews as Meg, left, Leslie Becker as Marmee; Kim Carson (standing) as Beth; Jennie Eisenhower as Jo; and Kara Dombrowski as Amy. not clear to me why this needed to be a musical. The songs don’t come out of the action naturally, and often feel shoehorned into moments that would have done wonderfully without a song. It feels very much like someone had the brilliant idea that “Little Women” as a musical would make some serious money, and that’s what happened, without much thought as to how the music would be integrated. In its brief 2005 Broadway run, that was a major criticism levied at the score, and it unfortunately holds true here, as well. With all of that said, it’s a lovely way to spend a girls’ night out or with members of your family (I’m sure that scheduling opening weekend around Mother’s Day was no accident). Go in with a deep love of the book and the characters, and I’m certain you’ll leave happy. — Jonathan Elliott “Little Women,” Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol. Through Sunday, May 22. Musical based on Louisa May Alcott’s classic novel. $34 to $42. 215-785-0100 or www.brtstage.org. The Franklin Carr Memorial an d Iris Festival Garden Show Please Join Us On Saturday, May 14, 10 am - 4 pm Iris Growers Competition - Friends Meeting House 302 Farnsworth Avenue FLOWER DROP OFF - 9 am - noon FLOWER SHOW OPENS -1 pm after judging Merchant Sidewalk Sale & Al Fresco Dining Stroll the Business District to Shop and Dine Local Farm products and Water Garden display by All Aquatics. www.downtownbordentown.com Learn more about our “Try It Out First’ program, where you can experience assisted living from one week to two months on a trial basis. The Bordentown Historical Society’s “History in Bloom Garden Tour” 2pm - 6pm One monthly fee includes Three meals, all utilities, housekeeping, linens, laundry, cable TV service, furniture, activities , trips, hair salon and more. ❖ Studio, one and two bedroom apartments ❖ Short term Respite stays or long term. ❖ Physical, Occupational and Speech Therapy on site, Geriatric Physicians and Podiatry Tickets for this Annual Tour - $ 10.00 Sold At: Shoppe 202, Artful Deposit Gallery, or call Patti • 609-298-9181 or Suzanne - 609-298-3481 Call Ellen Reid or Hilary Murray for more information today. bordentownhistoricalsociety.com ❖ ❖ 155 Raymond Rd. Princeton, NJ 08540 • 732-329-8888 • www.buckinghamplace.net MAY 11, 2011 U.S. 1 27 Review: ‘Samuel J. and K.’ T renton’s Passage Theater is ending behind an almost subconscious need for him its 2010-’11 season on a high with Mat to take this trip with the otherwise indifferent Smart’s play “Samuel J. and K.” about two and even resistant K. His only memory of young African-American men raised as Cameroon as a child of three is limited to the brothers but who are not blood brothers. Al- sound of rain on a tin roof. A scholar graduatthough the two are African-American, the ing with honors and secured of a fine life and play is not as much about race as it is more career in America, K. doesn’t grasp the urprecisely about the different aspects of their gency of his brother’s generosity. difficult, competitive, and testy relationship The complexity of their relationship is over a period of seven years. The protago- acutely dramatized during their African adnists are Samuel K., an adopted son brought venture. This unsettling sojourn allows for over from Africa when he was three, and some revelatory and disturbing disclosures, Samuel J., who is eight years older and one, in particular regarding K.’s relationship whose mother has raised them both without with the woman that his brother is presumthe support of a father who had long ago ably going to marry. A rift between the two is abandoned the family. as inevitable as is the direction of their lives. The excellence of Smart’s emotionally The play’s action occurs before and after a honest and dramatically compacted script is seven-year span, the former serving as the evident from its opening seeds for the emotional moments in an outdoor growth and visceral neighborhood basketball changes that we see in court where Samuel J. The complexity of them later. (Paul Notice) and the two brothers’ Samuel K. (J. Malloryrelationship is acuteMcCree) are having a hat most imfraternal face-off in a ly dramatized during pressed me is how trenone-on-one game of chantly the play deals an unsettling sojourn “Make it. Take it.” It’s with the difficulty that to Africa. graduation day from colbrothers have in commulege for K., but that doesnicating their feelings, n’t stop the 30-year-old the emotional pain J., a college drop-out in a low-paying job, caused by a parent who favors one child over from playing a little rough with the 22-year- the other, and the obligation of children to old K. I’m not about to give away how they care for an elderly parent who needs special got their names, as that comes out amusingly care. These as well as racial/cultural issues soon enough. are addressed quite often humorously and There is a lot of dribbling going on, but without any melodramatic enhancement. more to point is the graduation gift that J. has Best of all, Smart has also accomplished for K. — a pair of tickets to Cameroon. what many playwrights fail to do: make offThough K. has never expressed any desire to stage characters as vital and alive as the ones return to Cameroon and either seek out his we see on stage. birth parents or re-connect with the land of This is a very moving and perceptive play, his birth, it is pretty apparent that J.’s stag- one that excels in part because of the care nant relationship with his girlfriend (unseen) that has gone into its production. Add to this and his unfulfilled life in Naperville may be the excellence of the acting by Paul Notice as W Samuel J. and by J. Mallory-McCree as Samuel K., also the energizing direction by Jade King Carroll, and the strikingly clever and adaptable set by Matthew Campbell that allows for some impressive transitions from the U.S. to locations in Africa. As is true of every live performance of a play, our satisfaction comes when we believe what we are seeing as we are seeing it. Notice, who is currently finishing his MFA in Dramatic Writing at NYU, is incredibly moving as J., who goes to incredible lengths to nurture and sustain his tenuous bond with K. The performance by Mallory-McCree, a graduate of Rutgers University BFA Theater Conservatory and a member of the Negro Ensemble Company, is also memorable as K., who matures viscerally and emotionally before our eyes as he begins to understand ‘Emotionally Honest’: J. Mallory-McCree and Paul Notice. Photo: Larry Hilton himself as well as he begins to appreciate and understand his brother’s need to find a place for himself in the world. While Samuel J. and K. was recently produced at Steppenwolf for Young Adults in Chicago, it would be nice to see it done in New York. — Simon Saltzman “Samuel J. and K,” through Sunday, May 22, Passage Theater, Mill Hill Playhouse, 205 Front Street, Trenton. $20 to $30), 609-392-0766 or www.passagetheatre.org TWO ASTONISHING NEW ONE-ACT MYSTERIES FEATURING: The Off-Broadstreet Theatre Presents THE GOLDEN SPY ✶ A WORLD AT WAR Written by Marvin Harold Cheiten Directed by Bob Thick Starring: Lauren Brader, Steve Decker, Curtis Kaine And Featuring: Virginia Barrie, Steve Lobis, Brady Niederer The Off-Broadstreet Theatre South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, NJ 08525 May 13, 14, 20, 21, 27, 28 & June 3 & 4: 8:00 PM May 15, 22, 29 & June 5: 2:30 PM Scrumptious desserts one hour before all performances. Please call: (609) 466-2766 Or visit: off-broadstreet.com 28 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Review: ‘Sleeping Beauty Wakes’ M ost of us are acquainted with the fabled fairy tale about the princess who, along with everyone else in that particular kingdom long ago and far away, is put to sleep at age 16 for a very long time because of a spell cast by a vengeful fairy who wasn’t invited to the princess’s christening. There is a clause, however, that states the spell can be broken if the princess is kissed by a prince. In contemporary musical and narrative terms by Rachel Sheinkin (book), Brendan Milburn (music), Valerie Vigoda (lyrics), and Rebecca Taichman (direction), the fairy tale resurfaces with naturalistic whimsy in a present-day sleep disorders clinic. Under an aura of psychoneurotic disenchantment, “Sleeping Beauty Wakes,” but without enough get-up-and-go. Those who have seen and can recall the beguiling 2006 production of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” as co-produced by the McCarter Theater and Paper Mill Playhouse, may recognize the fancifully articulated style of rock that defines the music of Milburn and Vigoda, members of the band Groovelily, the ensemble that was delightfully integrated into “Midsummer” (as directed by Tina Landau.) Taichman has not yet gotten to the place in “Sleeping Beauty Wakes” where this musical’s flights of fantasy are either gainfully or excitingly entwined with the show’s contrasting digressions into reality. The sense of the unexpected is missing in the staging as is an element of surprise in Sheinkin’s book. I kept wishing that Taichman could take every aspect and element of the production just one step further into the surreal. There seems to be a directorial initiative to keep the performances low-key to the extreme, a decision that keeps the essentially one-dimensional characters rooted in abstraction. Decidedly an allegory, the story is simple and clever enough. King (Bob Stillman), although distraught and weary, has not given up hope that his daughter Rose, also called Beauty (Aspen Vincent), may some day awake. King admits to the dismayingly disinterested Doctor in charge of the clinic (Kecia Lewis-Evans) that Rose has been asleep for 900 years. The Doctor is skeptical: “I analyze sleep disorders.” When King insists that she has one, the Doctor, who is inclined to have them Awake and Sing: Bryce Ryness and Aspen Vincent. Photo:T. Charles Erickson thrown out, insists “Not if you can’t wake her.” When the Doctor is persuaded by King (“I pay cash”) to monitor Rose’s dreams, Rose is placed in a ward with four patients: Murray (Steve Judkins) who snores, Hadara (Adinah Alexander) who has twitching leg syndrome, Leon (Jimmy Ray Bennett) who can’t fall sleep except at work; and Cheryl (Donna Vivino) who fears not being able to wake up. Their problems are amusingly revealed in a pithy little ditty “Can You Cure Me.” They are deployed throughout the action as participants in Rose’s dreams, also harmonizing on one occasion with a refreshing tune, “Still Small Hour,” sung in the nostalgic style of the Mills Brothers. Rose is undoubtedly a beauty, as she reclines comatose in a lovely party dress of rose petals (as prettily fabricated by costume designer Miranda Hoffman). Rose’s dreams This is a musical of many small delights, collaboratively revisited, recycled, and rejuvenated with naturalistic whimsy in a present-day sleep disorders clinic. take her back to her search for the spindle on which, true to the story, she pricked her finger. M ore importantly, the clinic’s apparently only Orderly (a wonderfully eccentric and disarming performance by Bryce Ryness) is seriously narcoleptic among his other neurological challenges. Of course, he is smitten by the lovely but unresponsive Rose with whom he nevertheless can cavort with in dreamtime. Is he destined to become her prince in reality? Are we surprised that Rose’s over-protective dad King is at the root of her problems and appears to be the cause of Rose’s rebelliousness, unhappiness, and her subconscious decision to escape from life in sleep? It’s fortunate that a characterdefining song such as “Good for Me,” in which Rose unleashes her rage at her father, comes along to shake up a mild building up of insouciance. In another instance, Kecia Lewis-Evans, who throws away almost all her spoken lines, miraculously reinvests herself in the show when she sings. She is also spectacularly re-invented as the Bad Fairy in a disturbing dream with Rose. Sheinkin, lauded for her book for the Tony Award-winning musical “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee,” has been an essential collaborator on “Sleeping Beauty Wakes” since it was originally awakened in a much different version for the Deaf West/Center Theater Group in Los Angeles in 2007. Although this musical has evidently gone through many changes over the past four years, I suspect that some more might be in order to achieve a more engaging and more entertaining contrast between what the characters dream and what they and we see as reality. Doug Verone’s fluid choreography, in particular a dream sequence in which a hospital bed becomes a conspiring participant, is a highlight but also underlines the need for more theatrical invention. It’s hard to understand why the options for more fantastical dreaming have not been explored. This is a musical of many small delights, including some pithy declarations (“I don’t know how I’ll fall asleep without my phone. Usually I surf online for hours before I can let go of the day”) and just as many missed opportunities. The ultra cool white and clinical setting, as evoked by set designer Riccardo Hernandez, allows opportunities for the abstracted projections designed by Peter Nigrini. One almost longs to see the unseen band, perhaps as an integral part of the dream sequences. Taichman, who dazzled us with her rose-bedecked staging of Twelfth Night at McCarter in 2009, and for her direction of “Orlando” and “The Scene” Off Broadway will undoubtedly have time to dream some more with the company as it continues to its next stop at the La Jolla Playhouse. — Simon Saltzman “Sleeping Beauty Wakes,” Through Sunday, June 5, Berlind Theater at the McCarter Theater Center, 91 University Place. $20 to $70. 609-258-2787 or www.mccarter.org. MAY 11, 2011 U.S. 1 29 Predating the Low Carbon Footprint with Collage T by Ilene Dube Every Scrap Counts: ‘Kortingbild (The Korting Picture),’ right, 1932, oil, wood, bark, tinplate, and seaweed nailed to canvas; and ‘Cicero,’ 1926, paint on wood nailed on wood, both by Kurt Schwitters. ry this at home: Go out for a walk, gather up a few objects of detritus — say, a discarded key, unidentifiable metal disks, feathers, a paint can lid — and bring them home to combine with scraps of old paper, bits of lace, and other material from the patch drawer. Add some corrugated cardboard and arrange into a magnificent design. Don’t forget color. “Painting informs almost all of his Collage is not easy. Creating work, as witnessed by the passages something out of scrap that be- of gouache, chalk, oils, paste, and comes an object of beauty takes an watercolor in his collages and asartist’s eye, and Kurt Schwitters semblages, additions that trans(1887-1948) was a master at put- form the materials they cover,” ting disparate objects together with reads the exhibition materials. brilliant design and color to create Schwitters suffered from epilepa meaningful image. sy and was declared unfit for servGeorges Braque and Pablo Pi- ice by the German army. While casso are credited with establish- studying art, he was also writing ing collage as a modern art form, poetry. Ironically, the Berlin but Schwitters took it in his own di- Dadaists rejected his application rection. Robert Rauschenberg, because they felt he was too conJasper Johns, and Ellsworth Kelly servative. “They thought he was were all influenced by him. too middle class and bourgeois, “Kurt Schwitters: Color and even though he presented himself Collage,” on view at the Princeton as a Dadaist,” says Baum. University Art Museum through A month later Schwitters (the Sunday, June 26, is the first major “w” is pronounced like a “v”) pubSchwitters retrospective in the lished an essay explaining the conU.S. since the Museum of Modern cept of Merz and a Dadaist love poArt held one 26 years ago. This will em, “An Anna Blume.” The poem be the only east coast stop for the was translated into several lanexhibition that originated in Hous- guages and brought him internaton, Texas, curated by Isabel tional notoriety. In 1920 the InterSchultz. national Dada Fair burned Anna Born in Hanover, Germany, Blume in effigy because they Schwitters was affiliated with the scoffed at Schwitters. Dadaists and Constructivists. In In true Dada spirit, Schwitters their determination to be opposi- responded to his critics in often hitional, the Dadaists rejected all that larious texts. art and traditional aesthetics had Whereas the Cubist collagists stood for. It was a criticism of the worked monochromatically, by the times. Otto Dix, Jean Arp, Max 1920s, Schwitters’ three-dimenErnst, and George Grosz were sional assemblages, influenced by among those who practiced at the Russian relief sculptures, became edges of Germany’s revolutionary brighter in more primary colors. art and intellectual movements in “It’s hard to find an artist who wasthe wake of the First World War. n’t influenced by Schwitters,” says Hitler viewed the Dadaists as Baum. “Even when his collage did“Degenerate Artists” and persecut- n’t contain paint, he still works as a ed them. They painter, comwere dismissed posing and arfrom teaching ranging with Kurt Schwitters positions, forpaper.” coined the term bidden to exhibUsing the it or sell their ‘Merz’ to describe his paper as his work and, in paint, he went art, which included some cases, forfrom torn edges collage and painting, bidden to proto neatly cut duce. It is parasculpture, typograedges, incorpodoxical that rating newspaphy, poems, and Hitler, himself a per, chocolate performance pieces. frustrated artist, and cigarette dictated his own wrappers, cofpersonal taste in fee wrappers, esthetics. maps, tickets, invitations, leaves, Schwitters coined the term seaweed, fabric, postage stamps, “Merz” to describe his art, which scissors, and even the paper he used included collage and painting, to clean his paint brushes. “It was a sculpture, typography, poems, and sneaky way to get paint into the colperformance pieces. The syllable lage,” says Baum. Merz, from the German Kommerz (commerce), represented Schwitters’ total vision of the world, apverything he used was scavplied to his entire oeuvre. enged. He was a low-carbon-footWith 78 works of art, this retro- print kind of guy, recycling materispective concentrates on Schwit- als way before there even was a ters’ painting and collage, says Kel- green art movement. In the 1920s ly Baum, the art museum’s Haskell there was an explosion of the printCurator of Modern and Contempo- ed word and an influx of magarary Art. “He was a pioneering orig- zines; advertising materials; film; inal artist and very sensitive to the photo mechanical reproduction; creative ferment around him in his and photomontage, the early 20thworld. His collage and assemblages century equivalent of Photoshop synthesized different strands of in- pioneered by Hannah Hoch and fluence — Cubism, Expressionism, Raoul Hausmann. “He just hoardFuturism, and Dada — and were al- ed it,” says Baum. “It became the tered through the use of found ob- database he drew from.” jects. He was at the center of this In 1937 Schwitters was driven brew, registering the shifting winds out of Germany by the Nazis and of the art world.” fled to Norway. When the Nazis inThe son of owners of a prosper- vaded Norway in the 1940s, ous clothing store in Hanover, Schwitters went to England. InSchwitters was trained as a painter terned, he made sculpture out of his at the Dresden Academy from 1909 porridge, according to Baum. Evento 1914. He never stopped painting tually he settled in the rural countryand supported himself painting tra- side and made hundreds of collages. ditional landscapes and portraits. E The 1920s was the most productive period of his career, when he was part of an international avant-garde group of artists, musicians, designers, and architects. He worked in every medium, published four volumes of poetry and prose, founded the magazine Merz, opened a successful advertising business, created theater sets, wrote plays and children’s books, composed librettos, and would perform publicly. He was a ravenous collector of found objects but judicious in his selection of materials. The clippings serve as a snapshot of life in Germany in the late 1910s and 1920s and bear witness to the urban, bureaucratic, media-saturated environment in which he worked, according to exhibition materials. The Merzbau (Merz Construction) in Hanover was Schwitters’ magnum opus on which he worked for a decade and a half. A massive walk-in sculptural environment in which the artist worked and lived with his family, it was a precursor to installation art and incorporates architecture, assemblage, collage and painting. Sadly, what he considered his life’s achievement was destroyed by Allied bombing in 1943, but happily it has been recreated at the center of the Princeton University Art Museum. Visitors can enter it and walk around and imagine what it might have been like in the 1930s. “It crystallized and exemplified his most important stands of work,” says Baum. Schwitters invited friends to participate in its creation. While walking through the Merzbau, visitors will hear absurd sounds coursing through the gallery. It is a 1940s recording of Schwitters reciting his Ursonate, a phonetic poem described as “a sonata in primordial sounds.” “He wanted to devise a way to make sound that was not attached to meaning,” says Baum. “Like the Merzbau, it was worked on for more than a decade and considered one of his life’s achievements.” Listening to the recording, and looking at the photo of an obviously amused Schwitters as he was producing these sounds, a visitor can’t help thinking, the Dadaists had all the fun. “Kurt Schwitters: Color and Collage,” Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton University campus, on view through June 26. Admission is free. Hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursday, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.; and Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m. 609-258-3788 or http://artmuseum.princeton.edu. 30 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 May 14 Continued from page 25 Kids Stuff Central Jersey Chess Tournament, New Jersey Chess, Wyndham Conference Center, 800 Scudders Mill Road, Plainsboro. www.njchess.com. Open to kindergarten to eighth graders of all levels. All players receive a medal or trophy. Register online, $30; on site, $40. 1 to 4 p.m. For Families Pleasant Valley House Tours, Howell Living History Farm, 70 Wooden’s Lane, Lambertville, 609-737-3299. howellfarm.org. 90-minute walking tour hosted by historian Larry Kidder focuses on houses that form the core of the Pleasant Valley Rural historic district including the houses of grist miller John Phillips, his farmerson Henry, Henry’s blacksmithson Lewis, and the schoolhouse. Free admission and parking. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Family Fun Day, PrincetonKids, Quaker Bridge Mall, Center Court, lower level, 609-799-8177. www.princetonkids.com. Interactive circus performance by Stone Soup Circus, a family magic show by Dough Billingsly, a concert by Miss Amy, family friendly vendors, face painting, balloon twisting, and mascot appearances. Free. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. May Fair, Waldorf School, 1062 Cherry Hill Road, Princeton, 609466-1970. www.princetonwaldorf.org. Festival with live music, children’s activities, food, craft vendors, and an open house. Dance around the May pole, activities in a fairy tea house, alpacas and clothing from Swallow Hill Farm, Sandeeep Agarwal with Pure Indian Foods from Princeton Junction, and Dar Hosta’s paintings, print, and children’s books. Free admission. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Family Fun Day, Dorothea Dix Unitarian Universalist Church, 39 Park Street, Bordentown. Face painting, sand art, caricatures, bake sale, three-legged races, and water balloon toss. Concert by Jon and Joe DeMasi featuring Chris Burke at 2 p.m. $10; $20 per family. Noon to 4 p.m. Lectures Workshop for Artists, Artworks and College Arts Association, Mill Hill Playhouse, Trenton, 973482-1000. www.collegeart.org. “Achieving Success as a Visual Artist: Your Art Practice Made Real,” a professional development workshop for artists, presented by Judith Brodsky, printmaker and founder of the Brodsky Center for Innovative Editions, as keynote speaker. “Artists: Maximize Your Marketing through Social Media, Websites, Print Materials, and Networking” presented by Michelle Hinebrook. The afternoon panel is “Linking Artists to Opportunities: Galleries, Grants, Residences, and Public Spaces.” Register. $25. Lunch available for $8 or bring your own. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Seminar and Open House, Knight Classic Homes, Updike Farmstead, 354 Quaker Road, Princeton, 609-252-0474. “Building Your Custom Modular Home” focuses on green building, prefabricated foundation systems, geothermal heat, and more. Register. Free. 10 a.m. Outdoor Action Stream Stomp, Washington Crossing State Park, Visitor Center, Titusville, 609-737-0609. Wet hike in search of crayfish, salamanders, frogs, minnows, and other stream inhabitants. Register. 1 to 2:30 p.m. Family Nature Programs, Plainsboro Preserve, 80 Scotts Corner Road, Plainsboro, 609-897-9400. www.njaudubon.org. “Little Tyke Birding Hike.” $5. 3:30 to 5 p.m. Politics Marc’s Place Coffee House, Central Jersey Coalition Against Endless War, Reformed Church, 19-21 South 2nd Avenue, Highland Park, 732-235-1444. www.againstendlesswar.org. “An Analysis of the Current Labor Struggles from a Working Class Perspective” with Nagesh Rao, professor of English at the College of New Jersey a member of the International Socialist Organization; Bob Miller, member of United Transportation Union; and Dan Cummings, member of NJEA and CJCAEW. Poetry by Sharleen Leahey, singer and songwriter. Donations invited. 8 p.m. Schools Open House, The Lewis School, 53 Bayard Lane, Princeton, 609924-8120. www.lewisschool.org. Open house for alternative education program for learning different students with language-based learning difficulties related to dyslexia, attention deficit, and auditory processing. Pre-K to college preparatory levels. Summer study available. 10 a.m. Open House, Princeton Learning Cooperative, Paul Robeson Center for the Arts, 102 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-8512522. www.princetonlearningcooperative.org. Presentation about a new education option in Princeton when traditional school is not working for your teenager. 10:30 a.m. to noon. Performance, Pennington Dance, Main Street and Curlis Avenue, Pennington, 609-737-7596. penningtondance.com. More than 50 dancers ranging in age from 4 to 16 perform in conjunction with Pennington Day. Noon. Rummage Sales Slackwood Presbyterian Church, 2020 Brunswick Avenue, Lawrenceville, 609-392-3258. $3 per bag. 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Documentary Screening: ‘Coal’s Kingdom’ by Lambertville documentary filmmaker Marc Reed, which examines remnants of the once thriving Pennsylvania anthracite coal industry, screens on Wednesday, May 18, 7 p.m., at the Gallery and Academy of Robert Beck, 204 North Union Street, Lambertville. www.robertbeckcademy.net. Flea Market, Princeton First Aid and Rescue Squad, 237 North Harrison Street, Princeton, 609921-8972. Register for a space, $15. Rain or shine. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Rummage Sale, Trinity Episcopal Church, Crescent and Park avenues, Rocky Hill, 908-4286667. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Spring Sale, Unitarian Universalist Congregation, 50 Cherry Hill Road, Princeton, 609-9241604. www.uuprinceton.org. Antiques, furniture, lamps, books, jewelry, art, electronics, clothing, appliances, toys and games, sporting goods, plants, gardening tools. Food available. Across the Street performs vintage rock, country, blues, folk, and gospel. Rain or shine. 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Singles Dance and Social, Professional and Business Singles Network, Yardley Country Club, 1010 Reading Avenue, Yardley, 610348-5544. www.PBSNinfo.com. Cash bar. $15. 8 p.m. MAY 11, 2011 Sports Trenton Thunder Baseball, Waterfront Park, Route 29, 609394-8326. www.trentonthunder.com. Binghamton. $10 to $13. 7:05 p.m. Sports for Causes 3K Walk Run, American Cancer Fund, Powerhouse Gym, 129 Stryker Lane, Hillsborough, 609235-7414. www.americancancerfund.org. Open house at the gym with vendors, crafts, activities, and food. $25 for 3K walk. Fair is free. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Paws Walk, Hightstown Animal Welfare Committee, Association Park, Park and Grant streets, Hightstown, 609-647-2681. One mile dog walk with post walk activities including a pet idol contest, vendors, rescue groups, snacks, and games. Benefit for committee to address feral cats with an ongoing TNR (trap, neuter, release) program; adoption services; help with injured animals, educational outreach programs; and education to area scouting groups and classrooms on the value of caring for animals and the TNR program. Rain or shine. 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday May 15 IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Spring Clean Your Chakras Chakra Cleansing Workshop, Susan Sprecher Studio, 23 Orchard Road, lower level, Skillman, 609-306-6682. www.yogasusan.com. Chakra cleansing meditation and yoga practice with essential oils. Explore your seven power centers and see how they reflect what’s happening in your body and your life. Learn to unplug from negative thoughts and perceptions, and live as a healthier, more empowered person. No previous yoga experience needed. To register, see details under “Wellness,” page 33. $35. 3 to 5 p.m. Classical Music Concert, Princeton Girlchoir, Princeton Presbyterian Church, 545 Meadow Road, West Windsor, 609-258-5343. www.princetongirlchoir.org. The Grace Notes, Quarter Notes, and SemiTones. 4:30 p.m. Princeton Brass Band, Rider University, Yvonne Theater, Lawrenceville, 609-921-2663. www.rider.edu/arts. Summer concert. Free. 2 p.m. Concert, Saint Andrew’s Church, 50 York Street, Lambertville, 609-397-2425. “A Corelli Celebration” presented by Nancy Brown on violin and Michael Kevane on organ. Free-will donations. 2 p.m. Classical Harp Concert, Unitarian Universalist Congregation, 50 Cherry Hill Road, Princeton, 609-924-1604. www.uuprince- Part Murder Mystery, Part Broadway Musical: ‘Curtains’ runs through Sunday, May 22, at Paper Mill Playhouse, Millburn. 973-376-4343. ton.org. Solo classical harp concert presented by Catrin Finch. In conjunction with three-day conference, Le Festival de la Harpe, at the Wyndham Hotel in Plainsboro. $10. 4 p.m. Spring Concert, Hopewell Valley Chorus, Unitarian Universalist Church at Washington Crossing, 268 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, 609-7373177. www.hopewellvalleychorus.org. Songs of peace from Mozart, Mendelssohn, Rutter, Seeger, and Lennon. Register. $15. 4 p.m. Choir Concert, Philomusica Chorale, Our Lady of Peace Church, 277 Washington Place, North Brunswick, 888-744-5668. www.philomusica.org. “Shakespeare, Brahms, and All That Jazz” featuring Eli Yamin on jazz piano. $18. 4 p.m. Russian Night, Princeton Symphony Orchestra, Richardson Auditorium, Princeton University, 609-497-0020. www.princetonsymphony.org. Guest pianist Di Wu performs Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2. The program also includes Mussorgsky’s “Dawn on the Moskva River” and Scriabin’s Symphony No. 2 in C Minor. Pre-concert lecture by Simon Morrison at 3 p.m. $16 to $64. 4 p.m. The Quintet of the Americas, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-9248822. www.princetonlibrary.org. Woodwind ensemble with a repertoire of works by Latin American composers. 7 p.m. Jazz & Blues The Dan Silverstein Quartet, New Brunswick Jazz Project, Mike’s Courtside, 1 Elm Row, New Brunswick, 732-640-0021. www.nbjp.org. 7:30 p.m. Live Music are inspired by mythology, nature, and everyday life. On view to September 10. $5. 2 to 5 p.m. Highlights Tour, Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton campus, 609-258-3788. artmuseum.princeton.edu. Free. 2 p.m. Art Exhibit, Michener Art Museum, 138 South Pine Street, Doylestown, 215-340-9800. www.michenerartmuseum.org. “Elvis Rocks,” a music presentation in conjunction with “Elvis at 21,” an exhibit featuring 40 photographs by Alfred Wertheimer taken in 1956. $20. 3 p.m. On Stage The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, Off-Broadstreet Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-2766. www.off-broadstreet.com. “The Golden Spy” and “A World at War” written by Marvin Harold Cheiten of Princeton. Actors include Lauren Brader, Steve Decker, Curtis Kaine, and Virginia Barrie. $25 includes dessert. 1:30 p.m. Curtains, Paper Mill Playhouse, Brookside Drive, Millburn, 973376-4343. www.papermill.org. Musical mystery comedy by John Kander, Fred Ebb, and Rupert Holmes is a backstage investigation of the rising body count in a Broadway-bound show. $25 to $92. 1:30 and 7 p.m. The Cripple of Inishmaan, Actors’ NET, 635 North Delmorr Avenue, Morrisville, PA, 215-2953694. www.actorsnetbucks.org. Martin McDonagh’s dark comedy and politically incorrect play set in Ireland. $20. 2 p.m. The Heiress, Center Playhouse, 35 South Street, Freehold, 732462-9093. www.centerplayers.org. Drama set in New York in the 1850s. $24. 2 p.m. Continued on following page Larry Tritel and Guy DeRosa, Thomas Sweet Cafe, 1330 Route 206, Skillman, 609-4302828. www.thomassweet.com. Guitar, harmonica, and vocals. 1 to 3 p.m. THE HUN SCHOOL OF PRINCETON World Music Chorale Concert, Happy Singers Choir, WW-P High School North, 90 Grovers Mill Road, Plainsboro, 609-275-8972. Joint concert with the Chinese Musical Voices features Chinese songs and American folk tunes. Wennie Nai-Yueh Niu conducts. Christina Xie accompanies on piano. $10. 7:30 p.m. Art Art Exhibit, American Hungarian Foundation, 300 Somerset Street, New Brunswick, 732-8465777.ahfoundation.org. Opening reception for “Idaherma: Joy in Watercolor and Woodblock Prints,” an exhibit by Princeton artis t Idaherma Williams of Eastern and WEstern traditions to explore the beauty of the color spectrum in her vividly patterned watercolors. The 80 works in the exhibition Join Our Community This Summer June 27th to August 12th Academic Session Sports Camp • New Academic courses • Full Credit classes in math and chemistry • Enrichment classes • Half credit courses • Baseball Camp: August 1 - 5 • Basketball Camp: August 1 - 5 and August 8 - 12 Day Camp American Culture & Language Institute • Ages 5 - 13 • Sports, games, and swimming • Adult counselors; lunch provided • Campers choose their own activities www.hunschool.org • English instruction by Hun School faculty. • Variety of trips • Ages 11 - 17 U.S. 1 31 32 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Opportunities On the Waterfront Donate Please Mercer County Park Commission opened the docks on the Delaware River for boating, fishing, or enjoying a day by the rivers. Free parking is available outside Waterfront Park. The docks are not staffed and patrons are urged to practice water safety precautions. Call 609-989-4947 for information. Verizon Wireless recognizes Sexual Assault Awareness month with HopeLine, a program to provide wireless phones and airtime to victims of domestic violence. It also provides cash grants to shelters and non-profit organizations that focus on domestic violence prevention, awareness, and advocacy, such as WomanSpace in Mercer County. All makes and models of wireless devices and accessories will be accepted regardless of carrier or the age of the phone. Bring to 7 Centre Drive, Suite 2, Monroe; 2239 Whitehorse Mercerville Avenue, Suite E, Hamilton Township; or 3691 A Nottingham Way, Hamilton Square. Visit www.verizonwireless.com/hopeline or call Womanspace at 609-394-9000 for information. Trips 55-Plus offers a trip to the Poconos on Thursday, May 26. The bus will leave Princeton Jewish Center at 9 a.m. with time to view the Delaware Water Gap before a buffet lunch. A naturalist presents a talk about the history and features of the mountain retreat followed by a guided tours of the gardens. Return to Princeton at 6:30 p.m. $50 to $55 includes all. Call 609-9242008 for information. Van Harlingen Historical Society of Montgomery visits Atlock Farm Nursery on Thursday, May 19. Meet at the nursery at 1 p.m. for a private tour of the gardens. Atlock is located at 545 Weston Canal Road, Somerset. Free admission. E-mail info@vanharlingen.org or call 908-874-4820 for information. May 15 Continued from preceding page Country Setting ~ Close to Everything • Office Spaces Available • Lots of Free Parking • UPS, Fed-Ex Daily • Post Office on Grounds SIZES • 1,200 SF - 1 Building • 2,200 SF - 2 Buildings • Can Be Divided Rte. 519, Rosemont, NJ (1.5 mi. N. of Stockton) • 609-397-0606 God of Carnage, George Street Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732-246-7717. www.gsponline.org. Comedy by Yasmina Reza. $29.50 to $79.50. 2 and 7 p.m. Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Kelsey Theater, Mercer County Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road, West Windsor, 609570-3333. www.kelseytheatre.net. Musical. $16. 2 p.m. Beastly Friends, Bimah Players, Monroe Township Jewish Center, 11 Cornell Avenue, 732-2511119. www.bimahplayers.org. Dramatization with music of humorous and moving works by James Thurber, Rudyard Kipling, Oscar Wilde, Saki, and more. Register. $12. 3 and 7:30 p.m. Bill Bowers, West Windsor Arts Council, 952 Alexander Road, West Windsor, 609-919-1982. westwindsorarts.org. “It Goes Without Saying” is an autobiographical production written and performed by Bowers featuring stories about growing up in Montana, his studies with Marcel Marceau, and his performances. Register. $15. 3 p.m. Little Women, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Project ReEmployment Jewish Family & Children’s Service of Greater Mercer County offers “Project ReEmployment” through Princeton Senior Resource Center. The four-week program for displaced workers focuses on improving job search skills, building Bristol, 215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org. Musical based on Louisa May Alcott’s classic novel. $34 to $42. 3 p.m. Samuel J. and K., Passage Theater, Mill Hill Playhouse, Front and Montgomery streets, Trenton, 609-392-0766. www.passagetheatre.org. A simple game of pickup basketball leads to brotherly bonds. $25. 3 p.m. State Fair, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 355 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857. www.dpacatoat.com. Family musical. $15. Blankets, seat cushions, and insect repellent are recommended. Picnics welcome before show. Food available. 7:30 p.m. Sleeping Beauty Wakes, Berlind Theater at the McCarter, 91 University Place, Princeton, 609258-2787. www.mccarter.org. Musical by Rachel Sheinkin, music by Brendan Milburn, and lyrics by Valerie Vigoda. Directed by Rebecca Taichman. 8 p.m. Jewtopia, Somerset Valley Players, Amwell Road, Hillsborough, 908-369-7469. www.svptheatre.org. Musical comedy. $17. 8 p.m. Literati Author Event, Cranbury Bookworm, 54 North Main Street, Cranbury, 609-655-1063. Book launch and signing by Henry Henkel, author of “Bald Spots & Blue Suits: Modern Fables.” Henkel, a West Windsor resident, presents 10 stories about man’s search for truth and love. E-mail otherislandspress@msn.com for more information. 3 p.m. Good Causes Designer Clothing and Accessories, Mobile Meals of Trenton and Ewing, 308 Columbia Avenue, Trenton (on the island), 609-393-3102. Sale of slightly used high fashion clothing and accessories. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Humanitarian Award, Princeton Jewish Center, 435 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-921-2782. Rabbi Adam Feldman receives the American Friends of Magen David Adom’s Life Line Humanitarian awards for his commitment to MDA, a team of trained volunteer and professional medical responders in Israel. When Rabbi Feldman leads congregational trips to Israel, he takes the group to MDA to donate blood and learn more about the organization. He recently volunteered to spend the night on patrol with first respon- confidence, managing stress, and returning to the work force as efficiently and as quickly as possible. Wednesdays, May 11, 18, 19, and 26, 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Suzanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton. Register at 609-9878100. Audition PinnWorth Productions has open auditions for “Pirates of Penzance” on Saturday to Monday, June 25 to 27. Mercer College, West Windsor. Prepare an art song, operetta, or classical musical number. Dress for movement. Production is in January at Kelsey Theater. Call Melissa Leshchanka at 732-322-1376 or visit Pinnworth Production on Facebook to schedule an appointment. Relay for Life WW-P High School South invites cancer survivors or people undergoing treatment to a free dinner at its Relay for Life celebration at the school on Saturday, June 4, on Clarksville Road, West Windsor. E-mail lawrenceg@studentorganizing.org for information. ders. Register. $60 includes brunch. 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Car Wash, Kids-for-Kids, Valero Gas Station, Southfield and Princeton-Hightstown roads, West Windsor, 609-897-0564. www.kidsnj.moonfruit.com. Fundraiser to raise money for Walk-for-Chalk event on Sunday, May 22 to benefit needy children in New Jersey. West WindsorPlainsboro chapters are at High Schools North and South. The organization has raised close to $160,000 in 15 years. Call for walker’s information packet. No rain date. Noon to 4 p.m. Benefit Concert, Trinity Church, 33 Mercer Street, Princeton, 609924-2277. www.trinityprinceton.org. “One Village One World” concert features Britain’s Cameron McClain, the Anita Harding Band, and The Tone Rangers Band. Latin food, wine, beer, and soda available. $20; $30 per family. Benefit for international aid to El Salvador and Malawi, Africa. Rain or shine. 3 p.m. Fairs & Festivals Antiques and Collectibles Fair, Horse Park of New Jersey, 626 Route 524, Allentown, 609-4752725. www.antiquesatthe horsepark.com. Equestrian dressage, cross country, and jumping. Food. Rain or shine. Free admission. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Faith Barbecue and Baseball Day, Har Sinai Temple, 2421 Pennington Road, Pennington, 609-7308100. www.harsinai.org. Barbecue followed by a trip to Trenton Thunder vs. Binghamton Mets game. Register. $12. 11 a.m. Benefit Concert, Community Christian Choirs, Robbinsville Seventh Day Adventist Church, 2314 Route 33, Robbinsville, 609-587-7076. www.ccchoir.com. “One Nation Under God” concert has a theme of patriotism. Freewill offering benefits Robbinsville Meals on Wheels and the Robbinsville food pantry. 6 p.m. Friendship Circle, Mercer Friends, Princeton area, 609683-7240. www.mercerfriends.com. Cooking circle for Jewish adults with special needs. Register. Free. 6 p.m. Food & Dining Pancake Breakfast, Palestine Lodge Masonic Center, 345 River Road, Montgomery, 732-500- MAY 11, 2011 1393. www.palestine111.org. All you can eat. $7; $4 for children. 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Bucks County Wine Trail Tour, Crossing Vineyards and Winery, 1853 Wrightstown Road, Washington Crossing, PA, 215493-6500. www.crossingvineyards.com. Sample food and wine pairing. $20 and $30. Noon. Pairing Wine and Chocolate, Crossing Vineyards and Winery, 1853 Wrightstown Road, Washington Crossing, PA, 215493-6500. www.crossingvineyards.com. “How Sweet It Is” includes wine tasting and a personal box from Naked Chocolate. Register. $35. 2 p.m. Wine Tasting, WDVR-FM, Balic of Clinton, 49 Main Street, Clinton, 609-397-1620. www.wdvrfm.org. Live remote radio broadcast, silent auction, and wine tasting. $2. 2 to 4 p.m. Grand Opening Celebration, Asian Bistro, 31 Station Drive, West Windsor, 609-378-5412. www.asianbistronj.com. Sample Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Thai, and Vietnamese dishes. Champagne will be served. Free wi-fi. Internet ordering and delivery available. 5 to 8 p.m. Wellness Vinyasa Flow Yoga, Susan Sprecher Studio, 23 Orchard Road, lower level, Skillman, 609306-6682. www.yogasusan.com. $15. All levels welcome. 9:30 to 10:50 a.m. Also, Chakra Cleansing Meditation and Yoga Practice with Essential Oils. There are seven power centers in your body called chakras; each reflects the health of that particular area of your body and your psychological, emotional, and spiritual well-being. Explore your seven power centers and see how they reflect what’s happening in your body and your life. Learn to intuitively diagnose your energy, unplug from negative thoughts and perceptions, and live as a healthier, more empowered person. No previous yoga experience needed. Small blanket required (for the seated portion of the meditation). To register E-mail Susan Sprecher at thirdeyeyoga@gmail.com or mail check payable to Susan Sprecher, 107 Sandpiper Court, Pennington 08534. $35 (includes essential oils). 3 to 5 p.m. History Pancake Breakfast, Princeton Airport, Route 206, 609-9213100. www.princetonairport.com. Celebration 100 years of aviation. Drive in or fly in. $8. 8 a.m. to noon. Civil War and Native American Museum, Camp Olden, 2202 Kuser Road, Hamilton, 609-5858900. www.campolden.org. Exhibits featuring Civil War soldiers from New Jersey including their original uniforms, weapons, and medical equipment. Diorama of the Swamp Angel artillery piece and Native American artifacts. Free. 1 to 4 p.m. William Trent House, 15 Market Street, Trenton, 609-989-0087. www.trenthouseassociation.org. “Below Stairs, Kitchen Necessities at the Trent House” presented by Martha Katz-Hymen, Newport News, Virginia. 2 p.m. For Families Free Airplane Rides, Young Eagles, Trenton Mercer Airport, Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-4622236. www.youngeagles.org. For ages 8 to 17 to introduce young people to flight. FAA certified pilot from the Experimental Aircraft Association. Parents or guardian must sign a permission slip. Flight certificate for each child. Free. Rain date is Sunday, May 15. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Open House, Camp Speers-Eljabar YMCA, 143 Nichecronk Road, Dingmans Ferry, PA, 570838-2329. www.campspeersymca.org. 1 to 4 p.m. For Teens Career Fest, West Windsor and Plainsboro Girl Scouts, Plains- U.S. 1 33 CASH Highest Price Paid GOLD • DIAMONDS • SILVER The Search for Truth and Love: West Windsor resident Henry Henkel discusses his book of short stories, Sunday, May 15, at Cranbury Bookworm, 54 North Main Street, Cranbury. 609-655-1063. boro Municipal center, 641 Plainsboro Road, Plainsboro. www.wwpcareerfest.com. For girls in grades 6 to 12 to meet and mingle with young professional women in a wide variety of careers. Panels of women at various stages of their careers tell how they chose their careers, the requirements for their chosen field, and the ups and downs of each profession. Panelists in- clude a veterinarian, a commercial airline pilot, a newspaper publisher, and others. Refreshments and snacks. Hosted by WWP Troop 71847. Register. $10 includes admission snack buffet, drinks, and prizes. 2 to 5:30 p.m. Continued on following page Gold Jewelry (can be damaged) Sterling Silver Jewelry • Sterling Silver Flatware Tea Sets • Silver Coins • Gold Coins Dental Gold • Diamonds ¼ Carat & Up Rolex Watches With the Precious Metal Market at an All-Time High, Now Is the Time to Turn Broken Jewelry and Unwanted Items to CASH! Trent Jewelers 16 Edinburg Rd. at 5 Points • Mercerville, N.J. 584-8 8800 609-5 34 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 May 15 Continued from preceding page Family Theater Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus, Sun National Bank Center, Hamilton Avenue at Route 129, Trenton, 800-2984200. www.comcasttix.com. “Fully Charged” production. $16 to $80. Noon and 4 p.m. Zerbini Family Circus, South Brunswick Lion’s Club, Crossroads Middle School, Kingston Lane and Major Road, 732-2971107. Benefit for community projects. $9 to $11. 2 and 5 p.m. Outdoor Action Warbling Wonders, Lawrence Nature Center, Route 206, Lawrenceville, 609-844-7067. www.lawrencenaturecenter.net. “Who Is Whistling in the Woods?” presented by naturalist Rick Dutko. Bring binoculars. Boots recommended. Register. Free. 9 a.m. Politics Mayor’s Brunch, Plainsboro Democratic Organization, Marriott Conference Center, College Road, Plainsboro, 609-860-9100. Honorees include the legislative team of State Senator Linda Greenstein and Assemblymen Wayne DeAngelo and Daniel Benson. Register. $60. 11 a.m. Schools Bill Bowers, West Windsor Arts Council, 952 Alexander Road, West Windsor, 609-919-1982. www.westwindsorarts.org. Creative movement and mime workshop open to all abilities and ages incorporates movement and nonverbal communication. Through creative drama games, physical improvisation, sound, and silence, Bowers presents illusory skills including the wall, the rope and the wall. Register. $10. Noon. Colleges Commencement, Rutgers University, Rutgers Stadium (new), New Brunswick, 732-932-9407. Toni Morrison is the keynote speaker at the 245th anniversary commencement. The first AfricanAmerican woman to receive the Nobel prize in literature, Morrison will receive an honorary doctor of letters degree. This is the first time universitywide ceremonies will be held at the new stadium. 10 a.m. Singles Picnic, Yardley Singles, Washington Crossing Park, Titusville, 215-736-1288. www.yardleysingles.org. Register. $20. Rain or shine. No pets. 1 to 4 p.m. Chamber Music: The Tokyo String Quartet presents works of Mozart, Takemitsu, and Beethoven, Thursday, May 19, at Richardson Auditorium. 609-258-9220. Film Visions of Light: Art Through Film, Arts Council of Princeton, 102 Witherspoon Street, 609924-8777. www.artscouncilofprinceton.org. Screening of “The Beaches of Agnes,” a documentary and memoir by Agnes Varda. Free. 7:30 p.m. Literati Off the Page, Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane and Route 1, Lawrence Township, 609-9896920. www.mcl.org. Table reading of a play with Martin Kushner, a theater director with Yale Drama School and a professor of theater at Middlesex County College. Register. 6:30 p.m. Gardens Trenton Thunder Baseball, Waterfront Park, Route 29, 609394-8326. www.trentonthunder.com. Binghamton. $10 to $13. 1:05 p.m. Garden Gate Garden Club of Lawrenceville, Presbyterian Church of Lawrenceville, 2688 Main Street, 609-882-2882. “Vegetable Gardening” presented by Barbara J. Bromely, Mercer County’s horticulturist. Refreshments. Register. 8 p.m. Sports for Causes Health Walk-A-Thon for Education, Bitiya, Mecer County Park, West Windsor, 732-688-7249. www.bitiya.org. Benefit for underprivileged girls in India and the United States presented by Teens for Bitiya, a group of high school students committed to the mission. Food and crafts. $10 to walk. Register. 8:30 a.m. Go Red for Women Movement, American Heart Association, Palace, Somerset, 609-2233727. www.goredforwomen.org. Woman of Distinction honorees. Health-healthy luncheon program with keynote speaker Joy Bauer, the Today Show health expert; motivational breakout sessions, networking opportunities, and a silent auction. Register. $250. 10 a.m. Sports Monday May 16 IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Singles, Start Your Week Right Singles Night, Grover’s Mill Coffee House, 335 Princeton Hightstown Road, West Windsor, 609716-8771. www.groversmillcoffee.com. Drop in for soups, sandwiches, desserts, tea, coffee and conversation. Register at http://ht.ly/3gd9w 6:30 to 8 p.m. Pop Music Rehearsal, Jersey Harmony Chorus, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, Plainsboro, 732-236-6803. www.harmonize.com/jerseyharmony. New members are welcome. 7:15 p.m. Mental Health Recovery Support Program, NAMI Mercer, 3371 Brunswick Pike, Suite 124, Lawrenceville, 609-799-8994. www.namimercer.org. For people with mental illness. E-mail Erika Reading at ereading@namimercer.org for information. Register. Free. 6 to 7:30 p.m. Lectures Job Seekers Toastmasters, Robbinsville Library, 42 AllentownRobbinsville Road, Robbinsville, 732-631-0114. midday-freetoasthost.net. Exchange leads and discuss job seeking ideas. Members deliver and evaluate prepared and impromptu speeches to improve as speakers and leaders. E-mail jsamuel12@comcast.net for information. 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Beth El Synagogue, 50 Maple Stream Road, East Windsor, 609443-4454. www.bethel.net. “A Nation That Dwells Alone: Why Does MAY 11, 2011 At the Movies Confirm titles, dates, and times with theaters. African Cats. True-life adventures of lions and cheetahs. AMC, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal. Bridesmaids. Comedy with Kristen Wiig and Maya Rudolf is Jill Clayburgh’s final film. Opens Thursday, May 12. AMC, Regal. Certified Copy (Cope conforme). Drama in French, Italian, and English about an English writer and a French woman in Tuscany. Montgomery. The Conspirator. Biopic about Lincoln’s assassination with Robin Wright and Tom Wilkinson. Garden, Multiplex. Fast Five. Action sequel with Van Diesel and Paul Walker. AMC, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal. Hoodwinked Too! Hood vs. Evil. Animated sequel with voices of Bill Hader, Glenn Close, and Amy Poehler. AMC, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal. Hop. Family comedy stars E.B., the Easter bunny’s son, who heads to Hollywood for a career in rock. AMC, Multiplex. In a Better World (Haevnen). Drama and action about a father, his family, and dangerous friendships set in Denmark and Africa. Montgomery. Insidious. Haunted house story with Patrick Wilson. AMC. Jane Eyre. Romantic drama with Mia Wasikowska in the title role. Garden, Montgomery, Multiplex. Jumping the Broom. Angela Bassett and Paula Patton in film about two families on Martha’s Vineyard for a wedding. AMC, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal. The Lincoln Lawyer. Drama with Matthew McConaughey portraying a lawyer in California. Multiplex. Of Gods and Men (Des hommes et des dieux). Fundamentalist terrorists and monks in the Whole World Pick on Tiny Israel?” presented by Rabbi Ken Spiro, a senior researcher and lecturer for Aish HaTorah’s Discovery Seminary and a licensed tour guide from the Israel Ministry of Tourism. Register. $10. 7 p.m. Program and Meeting, Washington Crossing Audubon Society, Pennington School, 112 West Delaware Avenue, Pennington, 609-443-3981. www.pennington.org. Refreshments followed by talk. 7:30 p.m. Socials Meeting, Women’s College Club of Princeton, All Saints’ Church, 16 All Saints’ Road, Princeton, 609-737-0912. Annual business meeting, luncheon, and speaker. 1 p.m. Tuesday May 17 IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Real NJ Housewives Cookbook Author Event, Barnes & Noble, MarketFair, West Windsor, 609716-1570. www.bn.com. Teresa Giudice, author of “Fabulicious!: Teresa’s Italian Family Cookbook.” The breakout star of Real Housewives of NJ signs her latest cookbook with purchase. 7 p.m. Classical Music MCCC Choral Concert, Mercer College, Kelsey Theater, West U.S. 1 Rider Furniture No , Gimmicks assle Free H community. Mont! Shopping Fine Quality Home Furnishings at Substantial Savings Free Sheep Twin Set an Algerian With every Full Set gomery. in Perfect Sleeper King Set The Whole Month of May Potiche. Comedy with CatherPurchase ine Deneuve and Gerard Depardieu. Montgomery. Belvedere Firm Addison Set Up Twin Set Twin Set Priest. Paul Bettany plays a Full Set Full Set priest in a vampire film. Opens Removal King Set King Set Thursday, May 12. AMC, Regal. Princess of Montpensier (LaVera Wang Euro Top Promise Vera Wang Pillow Top Crystal Pincesse de Montpensier). RoTwin Set Twin Set Full Set Full Set mantic drama set in the 16th centuKing Set King Set ry. Montgomery. Handcrafted furniture made by American/Amish craftsmen Prom. High school comedy. • Dining Room • Custom Made • Leather Furniture Sofa & Recliner AMC, MarketFair, Multiplex, Re• Bedroom • Antique Furniture Upholstery Sale gal. • Occasional Whole Month Repair & Refinishing • Prints and Accessories Rio. Animated comedy with of JANUARY! voices of Jesse Eisenberg, Anne Where Quality Still Matters! Hathaway, and George Lopez. AMC, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal. Scream 4. Horror sequel. AMC, Where quality still matters. Regal. Inspiration: Anna4621 Route 27, Kingston, NJ Sophia Robb on the Something Borrowed. Romantic comedy with Kate Hudson and set of ‘Soul Surfer,’ Colin Egglesfield. AMC, Marketbased on the true story Monday-Friday 10-6; Saturday 10-5; Sunday 12-5 Fair, Multiplex, Regal. of surfer Bethany Design Services Available. www.riderfurniture.com Soul Surfer. Family film with Hamilton, now playing. AnnaSophia Robb, Dennis Quaid, and Helen Hunt. AMC, Regal. Source Code. Jake Gyllenhaal Wretches & Jabberers. Docuin thriller as a soldier on a mission. mentary by two men with autism MarketFair, Multiplex. There be Dragons. Charlie Cox determined to change attitudes and West Bentley in film about the about disabilities and intelligence. horror and secrets of the Spanish Opens Thursday, May 12. Multiplex. Robotics & Mechatronic civil war. Montgomery. Thor. Action adventures with We offer courses for students Grade 5 and above by giving them the Anthony Hopkins and Natalie working knowledge for design & analysis of robotic and intelligent systems. Portman. AMC, MarketFair, Students will be trained to design and construct their robotic models from AMC Hamilton 24 Theaters, 325 Multiplex, Regal. LEGO building blocks and will be able to control the movement of various Sloan Avenue , I-295 Exit 65-A, 609parts and different sensors through computer controlled programs. Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Big 890-8307. Happy Family. Comedy with Garden Theater, 160 Nassau Tyler Perry and Loretta DeVine. Street, Princeton, 609-683-7595. AMC, Multiplex, Regal. MarketFair-UA, Route 1 South, Visit Saturdays and Sundays. Call for details Water for Elephants. Drama West Windsor, 609-520-8700. Montgomery Center Theater, with Robert Pattinson and Reese aA Witherspoon set during the Great Routes 206 and 518, Rocky Hill, 609-924-7444. Weekly Summer Sessions Depression. AMC, MarketFair, Multiplex Cinemas Town Center Multiplex, Regal. July 11-15 July 18-22 July 25-29 August 1-5 Plaza, 319 Route 130 North, East August 8-12 August 15-19 August 22-26 Win Win. Paul Giamatti as an Windsor, 609-371-8472. attorney and a wrestling coach. Regal Theaters, Route 1 South, Garden, Montgomery, Multiplex. New Brunswick, 732-940-8343. Individual dedicated instructor for each group of students $649 $799 $1199 Made AMERICA Sale $899 $1399 Rider Furniture 609-924-0147 Lab Program Venues 2011 Program: Open House Windsor, 609-570-3735. www.mccc.edu. Diverse program including madrigals, spirituals, and several pieces by Aaron Copland. Free. 7:30 p.m. Composers Ensemble, Princeton University Concerts, Taplin Auditorium, 609-258-5000. www.princeton.edu/utickets. “Attack, Sustain, Release.” New works by graduate students. 8 p.m. Live Music Arturo Romay, Santino’s Ristorante, 1240 Route 130 South, Robbinsville, 609-443-5600. www.santinosristorante.com. BYOB. 6:30 to 8 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. Pop Music Barbershop Chorus, Princeton Garden Statesmen, Plainsboro Library, 9 Van Doren Street, Plainsboro, 609-799-8218. www.princetongardenstatesmen.com. Men of all ages and experience levels are invited to sing in fourpart harmony. The non-profit organization presents at numerous charities. Free. 7:30 to 10 p.m. On Stage Sleeping Beauty Wakes, Berlind Theater at the McCarter, 91 University Place, Princeton, 609258-2787. www.mccarter.org. Musical by Rachel Sheinkin, music by Brendan Milburn, and lyrics by Valerie Vigoda. Directed by Rebecca Taichman. 8 p.m. God of Carnage, George Street Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732-246-7717. www.gsponline.org. Comedy by Yasmina Reza. $29.50 to $79.50. 8 p.m. Film Film Series with Enable, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-8822. www.princetonlibrary.org. Screening of “Emmanuel’s Gift” followed by a discussion. 6:30 p.m. Faith Dinner Meeting, Hadassah Trenton-Lawrence, Runway Restaurant, 1100 Terminal Circle Drive, West Trenton, 609-882-4317. New officers installed. Register. 6 p.m. Health Family and Friends CPR Training, Mercer County Connection, 957 Route 33, Hamilton, 609-890-9800. www.mercercounty.org. Class presented by Capital Health Emergency Medical Services for the general community. (No course completion cards available). Register. Free. 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Author Event, Delaware Valley ObGyn, 2 Princess Road, Suite C, Lawrenceville. Penny Bussell Stansfield, a doula trainer, talks about her book, “Labors of Love: A Doula’s Birth Stories.” A resident of Belle Mead, Stansfield is licensed in maternity massage and is the co-owner of Hillsborough Massage Therapy. Books will be available for purchase. 7 p.m. Continued on following page Flat Rate per Session/Week $300 732-718-1385 or 609-558-1227 501 Forrestal Road Suite 228 Princeton NJ www.intelliscienceacademy.com 35 36 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Think Global: Britain’s Cameron McClain, Princeton Class of 2010, performs at ‘One Village One World,’ a benefit concert and lawn party for international aid, Sunday, May 15, at Trinity Church, 33 Mercer Street. 609-924-2277. May 17 Continued from preceding page Wellness Full Moon Meditation, Shreyas Yoga, Holsome Holistic Center, 27 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 732-642-8895. www.shreyasyoga.com. Free-will donation benefit Trenton Soup Kitchen. 9:30 to 11 p.m. History Einstein at Home, Historical Society of Princeton, Bainbridge House, 158 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-921-6748. www.princetonhistory.org. Exclusive exhibition featuring family photographs, artwork, memorabilia, and 17 select pieces of Einstein’s furniture. On view to January 16. $4. Noon to 4 p.m. Kids Stuff 448-1330. www.mcl.org. “Eliminated! Now What? Finding Your Way from Job Loss Crisis to Career Resilience” presented by Jean Baur, a career coach. Register. 2 to 3 p.m. Public Speaking, Toastmasters Unleashed, Infragistics Corporation, 2 Commerce Drive, Cranbury, 732-631-0114. tinyurl.com/ti-unleashed. Members meet for prepared and impromptu speeches to overcome fear of public speaking and improve as speakers. Email distinguished@rocketmail.com. 6:15 to 7:15 p.m. Jamie Novak, South Brunswick Library, 110 Kingston Lane, Monmouth Junction, 732-3294000.“Get Organized Today! 3 Simple Steps to Organize Your Home, Office, and Your Life” presented by the humorous speaker and author. Register. Free. Some of her books will be available for purchase and autograph. 7 p.m. Read & Pick Program, Terhune Orchards, 330 Cold Soil Road, 609-924-2310. www.terhuneorchards.com. “Farm Animals” combines hands-on farm activity and a story for ages preschool to eight. Register. $5 includes a craft to take home. 9:30 and 11 a.m. Schools Lectures For Seniors Celebrate a Lifetime of Creativity, Princeton Senior Resource Center, Suzanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, 609-9247108. All day event. Register. Free. 9 a.m. Job Loss Workshop, Hickory Corner Library, 138 Hickory Corner Road, East Windsor, 609- Memoir Writing Workshop, Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane and Route 1, Lawrence Township, 609-989-6920. www.mcl.org. Introductory course for seniors to reflect on a significant life experience and put it on paper. Facilitated by Maria Okros. Register. 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. South Choirs, High School South, Great Auditorium, Ocean Grove, 609-716-5050. www.wwp.org. Performance at the New Jersey Law Enforcement Memorial Service. 8 a.m. Sports for Causes Youth and 5K Run, Princeton Athletic Club, Rosedale Park, 424 Federal City Road, Pennington. www.princetonac.org. Run on the trails with the nonprofit community running club. Register. $12 to $20. E-mail springrace@princetonac.org. 5:45 p.m. Wednesday May 18 IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Improve Your Energy in 10 Minutes Basic Energy Medicine Workshop, Center for Relaxation and Healing, 666 Plainsboro Road, Suite 635, Plainsboro, 609750-7432.relaxationandhealing.com. Eden Energy Medicine’s 10minute-daily routine presented. Register. $45. 7 to 9 p.m. MAY 11, 2011 SINGLES MEN SEEKING WOMEN MEN SEEKING WOMEN WOMEN SEEKING MEN CURIOSITY In search of a humble, drama-free, physically fit ebony queen with a good sense of humor. I am a single, black, physically fit man, rich with personality and style. I live between Trenton and Lawrenceville, NJ. Traditional values still carry the day and chivalry is not a lost art as far as I am concerned. I stand 5’10” and weigh 195 pounds. Clean-cut, brown skin, and medium build. I enjoy the great outdoors during the summer and I find a way to make the best of winter. My favorite pastimes are reading, writing, and arithmetic (smile). I enjoy romantic and sentimental walks in the park, with the damsel of my desire. I am drama-free and drug-free. In fact, I am free to explore new love possibilities. Only that special one will do, however (smile again). If you are curious, 35 to 45 years young, and inspired, let’s have a meeting of the mind and see what transpires. Box 236643 games please, only honest replies. Box 236124 children and I am free to go when and wherever my heart desires. Interested in a gentleman about 50-60 years old who know show to treat a lady and has no problem supporting my accomplishments and achievements in life, and I will do the same for you. I am drama-free and would love to explore new love possibilities. Let’s have a meeting of the mind and see how things work out for the two of us. Race not important, more interested in respect and love. I am 5’7”, 160 lbs, and have been told that I am a very attractive lady. I will let you make that decision. Box 237403 SPRING FEVER - SWM - Young, 58, bedroom eyes. I am a well educated, stable person with a good sense of humor. I enjoy the small things in life like a beautiful sunset. I enjoy movies, plays, a good meal, and museums. I also enjoy many sports including softball, running, skiing, and tennis. Seeking a positive SWF, 40-56, slim or medium build, nonsmoker, with a college degree for dating and a possible long-term commitment. A photo is appreciated. Box 236142 Summer is coming and I would like to meet a single white woman in her ‘50s. Who would like a nice casual, hard-working man for a possible LTR? Please send a phone number and perhaps a recent picture. Hopefully we can enjoy the nice weather together. No Jazz & Blues WOMEN SEEKING MEN Cinderella seeks her prince: 59year-old attractive single lady with a nice smile, warm heart, and attractive. I enjoy many things such as concerts, movies, walks, and rides in the country, and finding interesting places to visit. Enjoy going to coffee houses. I am someone easy to get along with. I would like to meet a compatible partner for a longlasting relationship. My prince should be six feet tall, medium build, and financially secure. White or blue-collar work is ok; social drinker ok. The best way to get to know me is to write! Will return all responses. No e-mails, please. Box 237369 I am a 67-year-old black woman still looking young and have been working as a nursing assistant at a nursing home for 13 years. I am looking for a nice, respectable Christian man, 60-64, who goes to church, is loving and kind, and who loves the lord. I am an Evangelist. That is all for now, bye, have a nice day. Box 237405 Let’s look forward to spring and summer and beyond. SWF, 72, seeks SWM my age to share casual eating out, drives down the shore, local theater, concerts in the park, quiet times, and togetherness. Let’s talk and see where we go. Box 237059 SBF, professional and full of life, enjoys traveling, love of people, and never afraid of taking chances, interested in meeting a gentleman with the same qualities. I do not have any small MCCC Jazz Band, Mercer College, Kelsey Theater, West Windsor, 609-570-3735. www.mccc.edu. Concert featuring improvisations with small groups and the full band. Free. 8 p.m. by Valerie Vigoda. Directed by Rebecca Taichman. 8 p.m. God of Carnage, George Street Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732-246-7717. www.gsponline.org. Comedy by Yasmina Reza. $29.50 to $79.50. 8 p.m. Live Music Film John & Carm, Fedora Cafe, 2633 Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609895-0844. 6 to 9 p.m. Scott Langdon and Lou Davelman, Rocky Hill Inn, 137 Washington Street, Rocky Hill, 609683-8930. www.rockyhilltavern.com. Soft rock and folk music. Reservations suggested. 7 to 9 p.m. Mike Bono, Salt Creek Grille, One Rockingham Row, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609-4194200. www.saltcreekgrille.com. 7 to 11 p.m. International Film festival, South Brunswick Library, 110 Kingston Lane, Monmouth Junction, 732-329-4000. www.sbpl.info. Free. 6:30 p.m. Film Premier, Studio and Gallery of Robert Beck, 104 North Union Street, Lambertville, 609-3975679. www.robertbeck.net. Screening of “Coal’s Kingdom,” Marc Reed’s documentary about the once thriving Pennsylvania anthracite coal industry. His previous films investigated a steel mill, paper mill, asylum, and a scrapyard in a near-silent format that relies on cinematography to unfold the subject to the viewer. 7 p.m. Comedy Open Mic Comedy Night, Grover’s Mill Coffee House, 335 Princeton Hightstown Road, West Windsor, 609-716-8771. www.groversmillcoffee.com. 7 p.m. On Stage Little Women, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, 215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org. Musical based on Louisa May Alcott’s classic novel. $34 to $42. 2 and 7:30 p.m. Curtains, Paper Mill Playhouse, Brookside Drive, Millburn, 973376-4343. www.papermill.org. Musical mystery comedy by John Kander, Fred Ebb, and Rupert Holmes is a backstage investigation of the rising body count in a Broadway-bound show. Actors include Robert Newman and Kim Zimmer, stars of “Guiding Light.” Through May 22. $25 to $92. 7:30 p.m. Sleeping Beauty Wakes, Berlind Theater at the McCarter, 91 University Place, Princeton, 609258-2787. www.mccarter.org. Musical by Rachel Sheinkin, music by Brendan Milburn, and lyrics Dancing Newcomers Dance Party, American Ballroom, 1523 Parkway Avenue, Ewing, 609-931-0149. www.americanballroomco.com. $10. 7 to 9 p.m. Contra Dance, Princeton Country Dancers, Suzanne Patterson Center, Monument Drive, 609924-6763. www.princetoncountrydancers.org. Instruction followed by dance. $8. 8 to 10:30 p.m. Loco Latin, HotSalsaHot, Katmandu, 50 Waterfront Park, Trenton, 609-651-6070. www.hotsalsahot.com. Bachata and salsa class followed by three hours of social dancing with the HotSalsaHot team led by Henri Velandia. $8. 8:30 p.m. Faith Evening Retreat, St. Paul Church, 214 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-524-0507. www.spsprinceton.org. “Blessed Art Thou: A Celebration of Mary in Art and Story” presented by Brother Mickey McGrath, who will use U.S. 1 37 Take Me Out To The Ballgame You choose the team. Intellectual with a passion for baseball seeks like-minded male. I’ve hit my 60s but can still climb those stands! 235930 MEN SEEKING MEN Bi WMM - Looking for guys like me. Clean, discrete, healthy, 35-55. Drop me a line with a phone number. I’ll get back to you. Box 237008 HOW TO RESPOND Chinese Accupressure & Professional Massage 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, 12 Roszel Road, Princeton 08540, fax it to 609-452-0033, or E-mail it to class@princetoninfo.com. Be sure to include an address to send responses. paintings and prayers to offer a fresh look at traditional titles. Free. 7:30 p.m. c Herbal Foot Medicine c Back rub, Foot Rub c Foot Massage, Reflexology c Deep Tissue Technique c Truly Relieves Pain and Fatigue Gift Certificates Available 164 Nassau St., 2nd floor, Princeton, NJ 609-252-9900 • cell 718-813-3827 Open 7 days a week 10am - 10pm - No appointment needed! Food & Dining Wines of South Africa Dinner, Rat’s Restaurant, 126 Sculptor’s Way, Hamilton, 609-586-0616. www.ratsrestaurant.org. Hors d’oeuvres followed by dinner featuring wild game and seafood at 6:45 p.m. Register. 6 p.m. Premiere Matchmaking for Busy Professionals Gardens Call (609) 912 -1700 www.twoofus.com Ask the Gardener, Mercer County Connection, 957 Route 33, Hamilton, 609-890-9800. www.mercercounty.org. “Container Gardening” presented by Barbara Bromley, Mercer County horticulturist. Register. Free. 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Wellness Basic Energy Medicine Workshop, Center for Relaxation and Healing, 666 Plainsboro Road, Suite 635, Plainsboro, 609750-7432. relaxationandhealing.com. Eden Energy Medicine’s 10minute-daily routine presented. Register. $45. 7 to 9 p.m. Socials Meeting, American Legion Post 401, 148 Maple Road, Monmouth Junction. 732-329-9861. 7 p.m. Sports for Causes Bicyclist Awareness, Ride of Silence, West Windsor Municipal Complex and Van Horne Park, Skillman. rideofsilence.org. Worldwide event to honor bicycles who have been injured or killed on roads and to raise awareness among motorists that bicyclists on the road are fragile. Riders are asked to ride no faster than 12 mph and to remain silent during the ride. Bring a bike in good riding condition, helmet, spare tube, and identification. Bright clothing and lights are recommended. Plan to arrive at either location by 6:45 p.m. Free. 7 p.m. $99995 For body only. Three Locations To Serve You 1596 Kings Hwy. North Cherry Hill 856-429-0234 654 Nassau Park Blvd. Princeton 609-799-0081 NEW! 1868 Hwy. 35 (Next To Carrabbas) Middletown 732-796-1900 www.lecameraonline.com Buy • Sell • Trade • Repair 38 U.S. 1 ART MAY 11, 2011 FILM LITERATURE DANCE DRAMA MUSIC PREVIEW American Voices: 16th Century to Bernstein C harles Sundquist appears at Princeton’s All Saints Episcopal Church conducting Cantus Novus, a Yardley-based choral ensemble on Sunday, May 15, at 4 p.m. He is no stranger to Princeton though this is his “debut” appearance with Cantus Novus here. For 16 years, ending in 2008, he appeared Monday through Friday as director of Princeton High School’s choral department. The concert, titled “The American Heritage — A British Legacy,” presents music from the 16th to the 20th century, beginning with motets and ending with Leonard Bernstein. The program is a cappella except for two pieces, one accompanied by organ, one by piano. Mark Dolan, organist of Yardley’s St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, is the keyboard collaborator. Cantus Novus is an auditioned group of 30-some singers ranging from young people to seniors. The demanding ensemble carefully screens potential members for extensive musical experience and top-flight musical skills. Singing in the shower is not enough. The audition calls for singing a short prepared solo; the piece may be an aria, artsong, or folk song. Pop songs, show tunes, and contemporary religious songs are not acceptable. Candidates must demonstrate that they can manage ascending and descending scales within a two-octave range and be able to identify notes sounded in a three-note chord. Sundquist is guest conductor for the trio of concerts in May, taking over for W. Edward McCall, the ensemble’s former artistic director, now director of the St. Michael’s Choir School in Toronto. The Cantus Novus 2010-’11 season was planned by McCall before he left for Canada in December. In a telephone interview from his Bucks County home, guest conductor Sundquist says, “When I was given this concert, I made a few changes and substituted pieces that I felt a connection to.” Briefly, he outlines the upcoming program. “It will be in historical order. We’ll do the British pieces first.” Eric Whitacre’s “Leonardo Dreams of His Flying Machine” ends the first part of the program. “He wrote what he thought Leonardo might have been thinking,” Sundquist says. “The intensity builds as Leonardo is about to leap off the cliff. It’s a great closer piece [for the first half] with interesting text and rhythm. It leaves you wanting more. You are in suspense, thinking, ‘What’s in the second half?’” The American conclusion of the program ends with Leonard Bernstein’s “Make Our Garden Grow.” “There’s not much you could do afterward,” says Sundquist. “It’s a big piece.” Trained as an organist, Sundquist has, nevertheless, spent more than 30 years as a choral director at schools and universities. He began collecting sterling organ credentials in 1979 when he earned a by Elaine Strauss bachelor of music degree in organ performance, magna cum laude, from the University of Minnesota, Duluth. In 1981 he harvested a master of music degree in organ performance and literature from the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York. He won a Prix d’Excellence in organ performance from the Conservatoire de Region Rueil-Malmaison after studying organ performance with Marie-Claire Alain in Paris in 1985 and 1986. Eastman awarded him a doctorate of musical arts in organ performance and literature in 2000. “Being an organist and being a choral director go hand-in-hand,” he says. “There are a few concert organists; but many of us do church jobs or teach. Being an organist is not a profession in high demand.” Sundquist’s career path is a blend of knowledgeable insights and opportunism. Enthusiasm, charm, and charisma lead the way. Flexibility and imagination are among his tools. Given lemons, he makes lemonade. His formula, in his own words, selected from our interview goes, “I wanted to do what I wanted to do. I never pin myself down.” B orn in Duluth, Minnesota, in 1956, Sundquist recognizes that his background is a model of Garrison Keillor fictional Lake Wobegon. “My mother was a pianist and Lutheran Church organist,” Sundquist says. “She taught piano. All four of us children took lessons from mom. Eventually, she sent us to others in Duluth. We were required to study piano until we were in high school. She kept us interested.” When I inquire about how his mother kept up her children’s excitement, Sundquist says matterof-factly, “By being Norwegian. She took us to concerts. We grew up in a rural area. We went down to St. Paul to see Garrison Keillor.” His father, now retired, was in banking. “My piano teacher retired when she was 93. But there was a new organist in town, so I switched to organ,” Sundquist says. Church music has been part of his life since he was a senior in high school. In 1981 when he finished his Eastman master’s degree, Sundquist wrote to French organist Marie-Claire Alain, seeking a place in her class in Paris. Much sought after as a teacher, Alain was famous for her massive recording career and the small size of her studio; she recorded the complete organ works of Johann Sebastian Bach three times. In the absence of Alain’s response, Sundquist devoted himself to class work for his doctorate until 1984. “I didn’t take the written or oral exams,” he says “because Alain accepted me for her class of 1985 to 1986. I had forgotten all about writing her.” In addition to studying with Alain, Sundquist pursued two of his passions. “I landed a job at the American Episcopal Cathedral in Paris, so I had a way to practice. I also did a lot of accompanying.” Accompanying holds a longterm fascination for Sundquist. In two consecutive years he won Eastman’s competition for outstanding accompanist. “I would rather accompany than do solo piano work. It’s the appeal of doing something collectively. It’s the true sense of making music. Working with singers changes every time you play with them.” When he left Paris in 1986 Sundquist went to California, where his sister lived. “I landed a church job and had other music jobs,” he says. From 1988 to 1992 he coordinated the middle school performing arts department at Harvard-Westlake School in Los Angeles. “I didn’t need a doctorate. But Los Angeles got to be too much for this midwesterner,” he says. He left for New Jersey. After a season at Summit’s Kent Place School, he came to Princeton High School in 1993. “Princeton had a well-established choral program run by Bill Trego and Nancianne Parrella [now associate organist of the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola in New York City] for 27 years,” Sundquist says. “They both retired and I was hired to replace Parrillo as the accompanist. When the board cut back to one position they offered me a job as both accompanist and choral conductor. I took it. Otherwise, I would have had no job at all. I got into choral conducting through my church work and through accompanying at Eastman. I had no education background. But I could show them what I could do. Choral directing is common sense. “In 1997, after I was established at Princeton High School, I contacted Eastman about finishing my doctorate. Normally, Eastman gives you seven years to finish a doctoral degree. It had been 14 years since I left the program. I wrote a letter explaining what I had done and wondering if they would let me sit for the oral and written exams. They gave me a two-year window and said that I had to take a doctoral seminar. So I went up to Rochester every Thursday night. Princeton High School gave me a free day on Fridays so I could take a Mozart class. I studied like crazy for my one shot at the written and orals and got my doctorate in 2000.” It was a 19-year gap between master’s and doctoral degrees. At Princeton High School Sundquist’s accomplishments were im- Mostly a Capella: Charles Sundquist, inset, is the interim conductor of Cantus Novus. pressive. The number of students participating in choral groups at the high school exploded. The choir added biennial international tours as a regular activity. Sundquist developed a knack for fundraising. “I didn’t enjoy it at first,” he says. “But once I was established in Princeton, there were people to whom I could turn because they believed in the kids. There are a lot of angels in Princeton who pay for things that the school board doesn’t give money for. My budget in the early ’90s was $2,500; it barely paid for music.” U nstinting in his efforts, Sundquist habitually becomes overextended. He singles out the year 2004, when, in addition to his normal school duties, he was an assistant director and pianist for a run of Lerner and Loewe’s “My Fair Lady” at McCarter Theater. “We did a two-piano version of the show,” he says. “I was one of the pianists. There were 65 performances. It almost did me in. I got up at 5:30 a.m. and was in school by 6:15 a.m. After a full day at school I turned up at McCarter for rehearsals at 3 p.m. and stayed till 7 or 7:30 p.m. Once the show started I was at the theater until 10 p.m. The last day of “My Fair Lady” was the Princeton High School graduation. The next day I was a zombie.” Sundquist’s stay at Princeton overlapped with that of John Kazmark, Princeton High School’s for- The former organist and Princeton High School choral director embraces a new role as interim conductor of the choral ensemble Cantus Novus. mer principal, who became superintendent of schools in Mountain Lakes in 2001. In 2008 Kazmark lured Sundquist to Mountain Lakes to direct the choral department and teach advanced placement music theory. “I was not looking to leave Princeton,” Sundquist says, “but the challenge intrigued me. At Princeton I felt that the program was on roller skates and left me little time for other things. I enjoy performing, playing, and working on organ literature but my personal practice went by the wayside. There were 1,400 students in five choirs at Princeton and I saw 230 kids a day. “The pressure at Mountain Lakes is less. There were 24 people in the choir when I started; now there are 75. I’m excited to see these kids excited about singing. It’s a great change going from a well-established program to one that needed a lot of nurturing.” Searching for a permanent replacement as artistic director in the fall, Cantus Novus invited Sundquist to apply. “I’m very busy in Pompton Lakes,” Sundquist says. “I withdrew my name. Cantus Novus has a wonderful board with good hearted people, and it has good musicians. It fills a void in Bucks County. It’s a good fit for somebody else, but not me.” Spring Concert, Cantus Novus, All Saints Church, All Saints Road, Princeton. Sunday, May 15, 4 p.m. $20. 215-968-3414 or www.cantusnovus.org. MAY 11, 2011 Edited by Scott Morgan he economy since 2008 has been unkind to architecture. Most businesses have suffered from the recession, but between 2008 and 2010 architecture firms in the Princeton region lost about a third of their workforce. Cathy Knight, who has operated her own residential architecture firm at 76 Stetson Way since 1991, felt it too. Whenever the economy takes a sharp turn architects and builders tend to feel the effects later than most. “It started to get slow last summer,” Knight says. “And it’s not like people were looking for smaller jobs, the phone just didn’t ring.” Though things have picked up, last year’s doldrums cemented the need for Knight to expand her services. In April Knight Associates launched a subdivision, Knight Classic Homes (www.knightclassichomes.com), which features a line of pre-designed houses built to suit. Like the parent firm, Knight Classic will concentrate on the Princeton area for its business. Knight has made a comfortable living doing renovations and refurbishment for Princeton-area clients. And though she plans to keep doing that (in a builtout town like Princeton, ad- ditions and renovations are a mainstay, she says), Knight has come to understand the value of dollars spent on home projects. Knight recently completed a 10-month, $700,000 renovation to a Princeton ranch home. “It looks great, but for pretty much the same money we could have given them a new house with new everything,” she says. Most of Knight’s clients are in the $500,000 to $800,000 range, she says. Higher prices come when fancier materials show up — marble and ceramic, for example. Some projects go higher still. Another recent job was a $4 million renovation on a 7,500-square-foot home. The custom modular homes Knight Classic offers come in five sizes, from 1,900 square feet to about 3,800 square feet and cost from $600,000 to a little less than $1 million. The units, named after Princeton streets (Witherspoon, Nassau, Mercer, and Cleveland), are 80-percent built in a factory in New O Factory Built: Architect Cathy Knight responded to slow business with a new line of modular homes. Above, a rendering of her firm’s ‘Mercer’ model: 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, and 2,520 square feet. Price: $780,000. Hampshire, then trucked in. All of them are environmentally built, featuring amenities such as bamboo flooring and low-emission glass, and come with a two or three-car garage (attached or unattached) factored in. Construction takes about three weeks. Once on the lot, the house is hooked up to the utilities systems and set into place over the next eight to twelve weeks. Knight will host a free seminar and open house for the units on Saturday, May 14, at 10 a.m. at the Updike Farm, 354 Quakerbridge Road. Call 609-252-0474. Continued on following page cean Spray Inc., the largest producer of cranberry juice drinks in the world and the largest employer in Bordentown, will close its Burlington County plant in 2013 and move its operations to Lehigh Valley in northeastern Pennsylvania. Speculation that the juicemaker would close its production plant on Park Street in Bordentown City has been swirling since last fall, when the company first told the city that it was looking to move its 250-employee operation. According to the company, the Bordentown plant (one of seven Ocean Spray bottling centers) is the oldest and most expensive in its inventory. Last year the company overall posted $2 billion in revenue; the Bordentown City plant produced more than 30 million bottles of juice. Bordentown’s image has been connected with the company since the plant opened in 1943. The city’s annual Cranberry Festival, held every October since 1979, was developed in honor of Ocean Spray. The company is by far the city’s largest employer (many who work at the plant live in Bordentown) and contributes roughly $400,000 annually in taxes. According to the company, the Bordentown plant is too costly to keep. The company is, however, planning to invest $120 million on its new plant, which will be in a yet-to-be-determined location near Easton. City Mayor James Lynch and state assemblyman Joe Malone (whose 30th District office is in Bordentown City), have publicly stated bitter disappointment that Ocean Spray is leaving. Malone said that the city and state offered Ocean Spray several incentives to stay, including nearly $40 million in state-sponsored loans and as much as $10 million in tax incentives. Officials have not said yet what might become of the plant after Ocean Spray leaves in September, 2013. The land, a 62-acre parcel on the edge of town, near Route 206, is zoned for industrial, but rezoning for mixed use reportedly is under discussion. The subject likely will be part of the Greater Bordentown Area Mayors’ Luncheon, a program sponsored by the Mercer County Chamber of Commerce, on Tuesday, June 9, at 11:30 a.m. at Scottish Rite Hall on Dunns Mill Road. The theme for the luncheon is “Growth In Greater Bordentown: Visions of the Future.” Cost $40. Visit www.mercerchamber.org. – Scott Morgan Laboratories & Research Center Princeton Corporate Plaza Over 80 Scientific Companies Route 1 Frontage Between Princeton & Rutgers Universities Big Pharma Has Moved, Downsized It’s the SCIENTISTS Who Are the FUTURE of Pharma! Princeton Corporate Plaza Has an Affordable Solution! New Laboratory Incubator #4 • • • • • Small, Equipped Labs 300 SF & Up Full Services, Small Offices Short-term Leases – Ask for Help Immediate Occupancy Available Innovative, Flexible Designs Pam Kent, Email: pwkent@kentmgmt.com www.princetoncorporateplaza.com • 732-329-3655 39 After 68 Years Ocean Spray To Close Bordentown Plant Life in the Fast Lane T U.S. 1 Between Robert Wood John and University Medical 40 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Continued from preceding page Knight is aware of the horror stories homeowners tell about renovation jobs. Some just take a long time (remember, the ranch Knight just finished renovating took 10 months), but most revolve around the lack of knowledge homeowners have. This in turn leads to bad decisions and wasted time. It should be no surprise that Knight recommends homeowners hire an architect when considering major work on their houses. Most people don’t, and Knight believes it is because they think it will be just another cost. In truth, Knight says, hiring an architect can save a lot of money (not to mention time) because architects know how to navigate the permits process with municipal governments and which contractors can get their jobs done on time and on budget. Besides, she says, architects know how to draw up plans and how to not get bogged down in the minutiae. Knight still remembers a situation involving the Waldorf School, 1062 Cherry Hill Road, that occurred 15 years ago. The school needed some expansion work and had turned to the parents for help. The parents, Knight says, were so focused on the design that they never stopped to consider the costs, the legalities, and the bid process. She stepped in to help and got three bids ranging from $204,000 to $335,000. The school went with the low bidder, of course, but Knight says she was able to work that contractor down to $180,000 — something a non-architect is unlikely to be able to do. “There’s a lot more to An architect can save a homeowner money because she can get permits a homeowner never could. it than just knowing which side of the room the chalkboard needs to be on,” she says. Permits can be the biggest bear in the process, Knight says. One client originally questioned the need for an architect when he wanted to do an addition. The addition, however, involved a load-bearing wall. Knight says the township would never have given the homeowner permission to do the job. But she got it for him. Knight, who grew up in Massachusetts, studied architecture at Syracuse and first worked in Boston. Her father was a Browneducated electrical engineer and her mother was a business administrator at her own alma mater, Wellesley. Knight’s husband, radiologist Donald Denny of Princeton Radiology, moved the couple around New England (he worked at Harvard, Yale, and Brown) before coming to Princeton Radiology in 1991. When they got here Knight told her husband “That’s it, we’re not moving again.” She set up her own architecture firm over their garage and has been gainfully self-employed ever since. While in New England Knight did mainly commercial work. In Princeton she has overwhelmingly dealt with residential architecture. Her firm partners with 10 contractors (mainly women), from construction companies to decorators, to provide end-to-end service. “We try to limit the unexpected,” Knight says. “But there are always unexpecteds.” — Scott Morgan Knight Associates, 76 Stetson Way, Princeton 08540-7310; 609-252-0474. Catherine Knight, owner. www.knightarch.com. WOODSIDE AT THE OFFICE CENTER Plainsboro, New Jersey New in Town Alexander Rd. Project Begins Verivue, 2 Research Repair work on Alexander Road beWay, First Floor, tween Canal Pointe Boulevard and the Princeton 08540; D&R Canal in West Windsor is expect609-759-0750. Mark ed to begin on Wednesday, May 11. Fiuczynski, vice presDaily work on the S-curve is expected ident. www.verivue.to continue between the hours of 7 a.m. com. and 6 p.m., with partial lane closures occurring between 8:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Verivue, a developer of Total road closure from Glenview content delivery solutions Drive to the canal is expected to begin on for web-based streaming or about Wednesday, June 1, and last for video, has opened an ofapproximately four weeks, to allow deep fice at 2 Research Way. utility work and full road reconstruction. Based in Massachusetts, During this time traffic will be detoured the company develops to Route 1, then to Washington Road, programs that enable webthen to Faculty Road. Delays are expectsite operators to dissemied. nate live and on-demand The entire project is expected to take streaming digital content. 10 weeks. Questions concerning this Verivue also provides digproject can be directed to the West Windital content storage and sor Township Engineering Division at content management. 609-799-9396. Global Statistics Group, 101 Poor Farm Road, Second research space, technical support, Floor, Princeton 08540; 609- and live demonstrations of its 921-1550; fax, 908-837- QPatch technology, which is used 9616. Chae Yong Chang, to test the effects of medicinal president. www.gsg-us.com. compounds on electrical currents Global Statistics Group, a con- in living cells. tract research organization specialSaid Chris Mathes, Sophion’s izing in biostatistics, data manage- vice president and general manager ment, and regulatory affairs for the for North America: “Many small pharmaceutical industry, has biotech companies, like Sophion, opened an office at 101 Poor Farm are chipping away at unemployRoad. The firm’s president, Chae ment and supporting the industry in Yong Chang, is a 10-year pharma order to maintain this state as a veteran who has worked for Proc- world-wide pharma hub.” tor & Gamble, Forest Lab, Abbott Lab, and, most recently, Japanbased Eisai Pharmaceuticals. Management Moves Acquisitions Suites from 700 to 2500 square feet Medical and general business offices in a beautiful landscaped setting 609-799-0220 Archer & Greiner PC, 700 Alexander Park, Suite 102, Princeton 08540; 609-5803700; fax, 609-580-0051. Neal L. Schonhaut, managing attorney. www.archerlaw.com. Archer & Greiner, a Haddonfield-based law firm with an office at 700 Alexander Park, has acquired Herten Burstein Sheridan Cevasco Bottinelli Litt & Harz of Hackensack for an undisclosed amount. The merger, which became effective on May 2, nets 31 new employees for Archer & Greiner, the largest law firm in southern New Jersey and the fourth-largest in the state. According to the firm, the acquisition gives Archer & Greiner a strong foothold in northern New Jersey to complement its presence in New York City. This is the second major acquisition Archer & Greiner has completed since 2009, when the firm acquired Pelino & Lentz, a 32-attorney firm in Philadelphia. The firm specializes in corporate, labor and employment, real estate, land use, environmental, tax, trust and estates, health care, and personal injury law. Expansion Sophion Bioscience Inc. USA, 671 Route 1 South, Technology Center of NJ, North Brunswick 08902; 732745-0221; fax, 732-7450224. Chris Mathes, general manager. www.sophion.com. Sophion Bioscience, a Denmark-based developer of products and services for ion channel drug testing and safety, recently moved from its 800-square-foot space at the Technology Center of New Jersey to a 5,000-square-foot space. The company, founded in 2004 as a subsidiary to Sophion Corp., originally employed a single person. Today it employs seven in North Brunswick. According to the firm, the expanded space allows for increased Educational Testing Service, Rosedale Road, Princeton 08541; 609-921-9000; fax, 609-921-0235. Kurt F. Landgraf, president. www.ets.org. Educational Testing Service has named Jack Hayon its new chief financial officer. Hayon replaces Frank Gatti, who retired on May 1 after 13 years with ETS. Hayon joined ETS in 2003 and is a CPA. He earned a bachelor’s in accounting and an MBA in computer applications from New York University. Before ETS Hayon served as vice president of finance for the Boston Globe and as a financial professional for the New York Times Company. Hayon, a father of four, also is an avid marathon runner, having completed 27 marathons over the past 15 years. He is also fluent in Arabic and conversant in French. Leaving Town RF Management, 214 Carnegie Center, Princeton. RF Management, a private investment firm, appears to have left its offices at 214 Carnegie Center. There is no sign of the business and the company’s phone number is no longer in service. Ice Cap Inc., 9-B South Gold Drive, Hamilton. www.icecapinc.com. Ice Cap, a manufacturer of electronic ballasts used in high power, energy-efficient fluorescent lighting systems, has left its facilities on South Gold Drive in Hamilton. The company’s phone number is no longer in service, though its website remains active. Indicted Tianle Li, 41, on May 5. A former chemist for Bristol-Myers Squibb in New Brunswick, Li was charged on January 28 in the thallium poisoning death of her husband, 39-year-old Xiaoye Wang. A grand jury in New Brunswick indicted her on one count of murder and one count of hindering apprehension (U.S. 1, February 16). MAY 11, 2011 HOUSING Continued from page 16 FOR SALE $350,000-$450,000 Pennington East Windsor 127 West Franklin Avenue. Lot size: .52 acres. Listed, Ray Disch, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-4664666. hendersonsir.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement. Victorian with first-floor home office; second floor has two-bedroom apartment. $499,000. 1 Glen Oak Drive. Lot size: .45 acres. Taxes: $9,995. Listed, Weidel, 609-799-6200. weidel.com/westwindsor. 3 bedrooms; 3 baths; 1-car garage. 1,854 SF ranch. $365,000. Plainsboro 18 Franklin Drive. Lot size: .27 acres. Taxes: $11,443. Listed, Susan Norman & Janice Wilson, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-395-0444. hendersonsir.com/1241724. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; partial basement; 2-car garage. 2,404 SF split Colonial; updated windows, heating, air conditioning, bathroom, and roof. $519,000. Princeton Township 28 Hillside Road. Lot size: .18 acres. Taxes: $7,072. Listed, Martha Stockton, Stockton Real Estate, 609924-1416. stocktonrealtor.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement. Cape with all living quarters are on one floor. $465,000. 7 Campbell Woods Way. Taxes: $8,995. John Terebey, ERA Properties, 609-750-0372. sellingnj.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 1-car garage. 1,940 SF townhouse. $515,888. South Brunswick 73 Liberty Drive. Lot size: .37 acres. Taxes: $9,800. Listed, Dawn Defeir Burger, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-951-8600. picketfencehomes-nj.com. 4 bedrooms; 3.5 baths; full finished basement; 2-car garage. 2,800 SF Colonial with deck, patio, pool. $485,000. Ewing 23 Duffield Drive. Lot size: .46 acres. Listed, Sue Fowler, Re/Max Premiere Properties, 609-737-7474. suefowler.com/5835523. 5 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full unfinished basement; 2-car garage. Colonial with pool, deck. $429,900. 35 Willis Drive. Lot size: .5 acres. Taxes: $10,179. Rosalie LaFramboise, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. 5 bedrooms; 5.5 baths; finished basement; 2-car garage. Colonial; yard with brook, multi-level deck with retractable awning. $425,000. Franklin 106 Linden Avenue. Lot size: .23 acres. Taxes: $6,331. Susan Gordon & Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker, 609-921-1411. princetonrealestate.net; princetonhome.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; basement. Expanded Cape. $379,000. 16 Topaz Drive. Taxes: $6,347. Listed, Ritu Mathur, Coldwell Banker, 732-309-8166. ritumathur.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 1-car garage. Freshly painted end-unit Colonial in Beacon Hill. $350,000. Hopewell 101 West Broad Street. Lot size: .17 acres. Listed, Sandy Brown, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. sandybrown.myglorianilsonagent.com. 4 bedrooms; 3 baths; basement. 2,612 SF Victorian with new floors and refurbished bath. $449,500. U.S. 1 the fence in the side yard at the small but elegant heated lap pool, where Rosenberg swims an hour a Continued from page 12 day year-round. It is surrounded by “Before Alexa even started a handsome flagstone terrace and a chemotherapy, Janet came into the pergola with climbing flowering house and said, ‘OK, Alexa, I’m go- vines. I can just picture Lasley, an ing to show you what cancer looks avid swimmer (her mother owned like,’and she pulled off the wig, and Princeton Aqua Sport and Lasley she was totally bald. I’m not quite was SCUBA-certified), doing the sure if this was a good thing or not backstroke, her wet blonde head but Alexa took it quite well. She poking out of the water, and calling never missed a day of school, which out, “Come on in, the water’s fine.” we did so she could have a sense of House Tour, Lawrenceville normalcy. She took it all in stride.” Main Street, Saturday, May 14, 11 Alexa went on to Brown and earned a.m. to 4 p.m. This year’s theme is a master’s in international urban “Country Living,” featuring six studies at MIT. Her husband is from homes that span more than 250 Senegal, and years of history. they have one Whether hisson. They live in From an ancient toric or modern, the Washington, all the homes cathedral gargoyle to DC, area, where are set on acres Alexa works for 19th-century Japanof current or HUD. (Their ese wood block prints, former farmwedding was land. $25; $20 art from around the featured in a in advance (call cover story in world graces the for locations U.S. 1, March Rosenbergs’ home. where tickets 17, 2010.) are being sold One of the or visit webRosenbergs’ three cats, Mathilda, site). On the day of the tour tickets is a kitten from a litter of one of Las- will be available at Weeden Park on ley’s cats. And on the half wall of the Main Street (Route 206) between open kitchen sits a framed photo- Craven Lane and Titus Avenue. graph of two of the Rosenbergs’ al- Many village restaurants will offer pacas, taken by Lasley. Rosenberg discounts on lunch, and the Artists picks up the frame, looks at it for a Network Gallery will be open (see moment, and says, “Janet used to below). 609-219-9300 or www.come over and swim. After she got LawrencevilleMainStreet.com. sick I felt like, if she ever died, she’d Also, Artists Network, 2683 still be right here in the house with Main Street, Lawrenceville. Saturme — and she is.” As I walk back to my car, the day, May 14, 2 to 7 p.m. Gallery refirst big slow drops of a spring ception for “Spring at Last” with exshower moisten the ground. I look tended hours for the Lawrenceville over my shoulder at the broad Main Street House Tour, where the green fields, which are now com- artists also have an exhibit in the pletely empty, affording an unin- Meadowgate Farm barn, 3071 terrupted view of the pond. The al- Route 206 South, featuring plein air pacas have ambled up to the barns paintings. 609-512-1359 or www.to get out of the rain. I peek over lmsartistsnetwork.com. House Tour 205 Colt Street. Taxes: $7,588. Listed, Jill Benvignati, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. tour.circlepix.com/home2/z3kmkg. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full finished basement; garage. Designer 2,068 SF townhome with Brazilian cherry floors, upgraded appliances; theater system. $375,000. 85 Columbia Avenue. Lot size: .18 acres. Listed, Ray Disch, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-466-4666. hendersonsir.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; garage. 1,556 SF Energy Star home to be built with custom finishes to be arranged. $449,500. 85 Marshalls CornerWoodsville Road. Lot size: 1.77 acres. Taxes: $8,550. Listed, Richele Lieboff, Gloria Nilson, 609-7379100. richelelieboff.myglorianilsonagent.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; full, partially finished basement. 2,232 SF Colonial surrounded by preserved land; price includes new septic. $399,000. 62 Lafayette Street. Lot size: 80 x 185. Taxes: $10,094. Listed, Douglas Robbins, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-466-4666. hendersonsir.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; basement; garage. 2,095 SF ranch. $369,000. Lawrence 9 Jill Lane. Lot size: 75 x 135. Taxes: $5,997. Listed, Timmy Chiu, DiDonato Realty, 609-586-2344. didonatorealtors.com. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 1-car garage. Split; granite countertops, oversized lot with patio. $379,000. 107 Fountayne Lane. Lot size: .15 acres. Taxes: $7,550. Listed, Kathryn Baxter, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-395-0444. hendersonsir.com/1251241. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Brick-front colonial; cherry cabinets, granite counters, stainless steel appliances, ceramic tile floor. $439,000. Continued on following page 41 Warehouse Space North Brunswick Warehouse • 200 North Center Drive, North Brunswick • 2,226 SF • Loading dock Ewing Warehouse • 800 Silvia Street, Ewing • 5,072 SF with 641 SF of office • Tailgate door Ewing Warehouse • 370 Sullivan Way, Ewing • 20,000 SF warehouse • Drive-in door • 9,000 SF low bay storage • Loading dock Hamilton Warehouse • 1080 Kuser Road, Hamilton • 6,333 SF and 1,077 SF • Drive-in door Storage Space Lower level, humidity controlled storage space available at 902 Carnegie Center, Princeton; 196 Princeton-Hightstown Rd., West Windsor and 194 Nassau St., Princeton For additional information, contact Matt Malatich, Mark Hill or Jon Brush at 609-9 921-6 6060 42 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Get a Wall Street Address... Without the Commute! • Rentals - Executive Offices and Suites, Desk Space, Virtual Offices • Video Conferencing • Secretarial Support Services Reports, Studies, Letters, Transcriptions Microsoft Word, Excel and Powerpoint D/J Business Solutions/The Office Complex 475 Wall Street • Princeton, NJ 08540 • 609-924-0905 complex3@475wallst.com • www.theofficecomplex.com OFFICE FOR LEASE Ewing Township - 1900 SF Reception • 3 Large Offices • Conference Room Kitchen • Storage • Bull Pen Area • First Floor Location Rent Includes All Utilities • Free Rent Available Contact: Al Toto, Senior Vice President 609-921-8844 • Fax: 609-924-9739 totocpn@aol.com • Exclusive Broker Commercial Property Network, Inc. We Have a Place For Your Company A U.S. 1 ADVERTISING FEATURE Roma Bank: Financing the American Dream R oma Bank has always provided loan services for its customers, but starting in 2009 it brought in its own home mortgage consultants (HMCs) to provide personalized, expert service directly to its customers at its branches. "Since then, we've expanded to seven HMCs, and expect to hire eight more by the end of the year," said Residential Loan Production Manager Joseph Barnaba. "These are experienced loan officers who walk our customers through the entire process." The HMC answers questions from the borrower or borrowers about processing, underwriting, appraisals, credit reports and everything related to the loan process. In addition, the HMC coordinates with attorneys and/or title companies to schedule closings, helps clear loan conditions prior to closing and accompanies the borrower to closing. Barnaba says it's important for customers interested in a mortgage to sit down and talk with a mortgage professional. HMCs are uniquely qualified to review a customer's finances, credit and employment history and to suggest a reasonable mortgage amount that for which the borrower may qualify. "One of the most important functions an HMC handles is prequalifying customers for mortgages," Barnaba explained. "When a customer is pre-qualified, it lets the realtor know that person is serious about and capable of buying a house." HMCs also assist customers with refinancing which, according to Barnaba, is alive and well at Roma Bank. With fixed rates still below 5 percent, adjustable rates are starting to come back into play. "Refinancing is not dead," Barnaba noted. "And some of our adjustables are hovering just around 4 percent, with no points." Customers interested in speaking to a Roma Bank HMC may call the Mortgage Department at 609-223-8200. Roma Bank currently is hiring HMCs. Loan professional with one to two years of experience may email a resume to employment@romabank.com. Roma has served the banking needs of its neighbors and friends since 1920, and recently celebrated its 90th Anniversary. Roma Bank operates 24 offices in Mercer, Burlington, Ocean and Camden counties. Products and services offered by Roma Bank can be found by visiting its website www.romabank.com. Roma Bank is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Roma Financial Corporation (NASDAQ: ROMA) with assets of $1.45 billion as of June 30, 2010. Roma Bank. 2300 Route 33, Robbinsville. Mortgage Department: 609-223-8200. www.romabank.com, joseph.barnaba@romabank.com In 2009 Roma brought in its own home mortgage consultants to provide personalized, expert service directly to its customers at its branches. COMMERCIAL Continued from preceding page DIVISION Montgomery PREMIER PROPERTY 460 Route 518. Lot size: 100 x 200. Taxes: $9,614. Listed, Lisa Jordan, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609466-4666. hendersonsir.com. 4 bedrooms; 4 baths; garage. Cape with rear deck, in-law suite, workshop in basement. $359,000. North Brunswick 1668 Arthur Avenue. Lot size: 100 x 150. Taxes: $7,277. Listed, Angel Martinez, Prudential Fox & Roach, 732-297-5000. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; garage. Colonial with hardwood floors, stainless steel appliances. $395,900. Pennington Plainsboro 2 Park Avenue. Lot size: .39 acres. Taxes: $10,527. Listed, Emily Schwab, Gloria Nilson, 609-7379100. glorianilson.com/pennington. 3 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; full finished basement; 1-car garage. Updated ranch with open floor plan, deck, front porch. $429,000. 152 East Delaware Avenue. Lot size: .46 acres. Taxes: $9,090. Listed, Richele Lieboff, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. richelelieboff.myglorianilsonagent.com. 5 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. 2,047 SF Cape walking distance to town and schools. $435,000. 6 Wayne Court. Taxes: $7,134. Listed, Carole Tosches, Prudential Fox & Roach, 609-924-1600. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 1-car garage. 1,646 SF townhouse in Princeton Crossing with eat-in kitchen, upgraded carpeting, fencedin paver patio. $378,880. Princeton Borough 12 Park Place. Lot size: .09 acres. Taxes: $8,724. Susan Gordon & Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker, 609-921-1411. princetonrealestate.net; princetonhome.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths. Second and third-floor unit. $430,000. Princeton Junction - 9000 +/- SF, 2 story office building available FOR SALE within walking distance to Amtrak/ NJ Transit station. Easy access to Princeton, Route US 1, I-95, NJ Tpk and NEW UMCP at Plainsboro. OFFICE SPACE Ewing - 500 SF available for lease close to new Capital Health facility. Ewing - Premium finished 1300 SF office space, partially furnished, having 3 private offices and large clerical staff area, kitchenette and storage. Favorable lease rates. Ewing - Office - Attractive 4 office suites. 620 SF to 1,368 SF. Close to I-95, U.S. 1 & Princeton. LOW GROSS RENT. Montgomery Twp. - Economical office suites, 550 SF, 204 +/- SF & 211 +/- SF, which can be combined for 1,335 +/- SF. Lease. On 206. Pennington - New construction. Suites available from 1,000 SF to 4,660 SF. Still time to provide your input for interior finish. Pennington - Two (2) suites available for lease. 1,584 +/- SF. Rt. 31 near I-95. Princeton Junction - Three (3) suites available FOR LEASE. 400 +/- SF, 600 +/- SF & 1286 +/- SF. Walking distance to train station. NEAR HOSPITAL. A big business presence without the big business price tag. That’s the new way to work. Get two months free on a full-time office or a virtual office!* RETAIL SPACE Ewing - 2400 SF end cap retail. Located in a neighborhood shopping center on the corner of N. Olden and Parkside. Available for lease. Ewing Twp. - 1,000 SF and 500 SF available for lease located in neighborhood shopping center. Montgomery Twp. - Just outside of Princeton on Route 206, 1200 SF for lease. Montgomery Twp - 2080 +/- sf retail space avail for lease on Route 206, space is suitable for many retail including restaurant/food use. Regus provides innovative solutions designed to transform the way you work. COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS Ewing - 6,000 +/- SF, masonry single-story bldg., ideal for medical, 10 exam/treatment rooms plus large offices. One mile south of Capital Health’s new hospital – FOR SALE. LAND Ewing Twp. - 2.07 acres FOR SALE in professional, research, office zone, one mile south of I-95, Merrill Lynch facility and Capital Health’s new $400 million hospital. Ideal for medical group. REDUCED! Lawrence Twp. - 2.28 +/- acres in zoned office. Also good for day care or church. West Amwell Twp. - 5.4 +/- acres zoned highway commercial, conceptual plan with some permits for 15,592 +/- SF bldg. Weidel Realtors Commercial Division 2 Route 31 South • Pennington, N.J. 08534 609-737-2077 CCIM Individual Member Certified Commercial Investment Member We offer: U Fully furnished offices U No long-term leases U Professional receptionist U Meeting rooms and videoconferencing U Business lounge access worldwide Visit regus.com/US1 or call 1-800-OFFICES. Visit our 3 Princeton locations: Overlook Center 100 Overlook Center 2nd Floor Carnegie Center 103 Carnegie Center Suite 300 Princeton Forrestal Village 116 Village Blvd Suite 200 *Offer not valid in all Regus locations. Free rent is applied to the final months of the term. Twelve-month term required. Offer applies to initial term of agreement and may not be combined with other offers. Promotion available to new customers only. Offer expires 8/31/11. MAY 11, 2011 Robbinsville East Windsor 103 Church Street. Lot size: 1.06 acres. Taxes: $11,093. Listed, Roberta Marlowe, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-395-0444. hendersonsir.com/654053. 4 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; full basement; 4-car garage. American Foursquare bungalow circa 1910, across from and backing preserved farmland; pocket doors. $365,000. 26 Tindall Road. Lot size: 2.29 acres. Taxes: $11,336. Listed, Vincent DiDonato, 609-586-2344. didonatorealtors.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Ranch with fireplace, hardwood floors. $389,000. 16 Allison Road. Lot size: 47 x 82. Taxes: $6,864. Listed, Smita Shah, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-951-8600. smitashah.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; basement; 1-car garage. Colonial with fireplace, deck, loft. $279,900. Skillman 406 Sunset Road. Lot size: 1 acre. Taxes: $8,105. Listed, Carolyn Spohn, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908874-0000. hendersonsir.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; 2-car garage. Ranch with updated granite and tile kitchen, fireplace. $365,000. South Brunswick 7 Matthew Avenue. Lot size: 82 x 139. Taxes: $8,830. Listed, George Anand, ERA Properties Unlimited, 609-750-0372. sellingnj.com. 5 bedrooms; 3 baths; 2-car garage. Colonial in Brunswick Aeres community. $445,900. Trenton 15 Belmont Circle. Lot size: .45 acres. Taxes: $15,673. Listed, Susan Hughes, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-213-5556. 4 bedrooms; 4.5 baths; garage. Tudor with central air in Cadwalader Heights; stainless steel appliances. $356,250. West Windsor 151 Washington Road. Lot size: 75 x 285. Taxes: $7,904. Listed, Diane Ozarowski, Weidel, 609-7996200. weidel.com/westwindsor. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; finished basement; 1-car garage. Bungalow with in-ground pool. $389,898. 150 Hightstown Road. Lot size: .46 acres. Taxes: $11,024. George Scott Glenfield, Pinnacle Realtors, 609-924-6550. njpinnacle.com. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 2-car garage. Colonial. $419,888. $250,000-$350,000 Belle Mead 406 Rhoads Drive. Taxes: $6,364. Listed, Cheryl Stites, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908-963-3561. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 1-car garage. Multi-level townhouse backing to woods; community has clubhouse, pool, tennis, playground, walking paths. $275,000. Ewing 560 Grand Avenue. Lot size: .57 acres. Taxes: $6,671. Emily Schwab, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. 3 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; 3-car garage. Colonial; zoned professional with residential use. $329,000. 109 Honeysuckle Drive. Lot size: 75 x 100. Taxes: $7,628. Listed, Diane Detuelo, Coldwell Banker, 609-203-0833. coldwellbankermoves.com/dianedetuelo. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Colonial, Game room on lower level. $334,900. 3 Stoneham Road. Lot size: 87 x 205. Taxes: $6,286. Bartholomew DiNola, DiDonato Realty, 609-5862344. didonatorealtors.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; garage. Inlaw suite; new siding, windows, and deck; breezeway. $289,000. Franklin 17 Veros Lane. Taxes: $4,805. Ritu Mathur, Coldwell Banker, 732309-8166. ritumathur.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths. End-unit townhouse in Society Hill. $250,000. 21 Rolling Road. Lot size: 90 x 170. Taxes: $5,604. Listed, Shirley Messinger, Prudential Fox & Roach, 732-828-5077. shirleym.msx.mlxchange.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; 2-car garage. Ranch. $334,000. 170 Carson Court. Taxes: $5,332. Listed, Shirley Messinger, Prudential Fox & Roach, 732-8285077. shirleym.msx.mlxchange.com. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; end-unit townhouse. $269,900. 220 Blake Avenue. Lot size: 80 x 110. Taxes: $6,449. Listed, Shirley Messinger, Prudential Fox & Roach, 732-828-5077. shirleym.msx.mlxchange.com. 4 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; garage. Colonial. $274,900. 37 DeLeon Circle. Taxes: $5,527. Janet Hawk, Weidel, 609799-6200. weidel.com/westwindsor. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths. End unit townhouse backing to open field; Pergo flooring, new carpet, family room, patio. $289,900. Hamilton 2450 Sylvan Avenue. Lot size: 100 x 146. Taxes: $5,499. Listed, Marian Conte, DiDonato Realty, 609-586-2344. didonatorealtors.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; full finished basement; 2-car garage. Colonial/Cape on cul-desac. $274,900. 541 Flock Road. Lot size: 98 x 150. Taxes: $7,063. Listed, Joseph DeLorenzo, Re/Max In Town, 609-895-0500. www.calljoed.com/5841159. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Ranch with sunroom. $299,900. 182 Whitehorse Avenue. Lot size: 50 x 213. Taxes: $4,808. Listed, Marian Conte, DiDonato Realty, 609-586-2344. didonatorealtors.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; full finished basement; 3-car garage. Colonial with sunporch. $255,000. 810 Edinburg Road. Lot size: 107 x 140. Taxes: $6,487. Listed, Marian Conte, DiDonato Realty, 609-586-2344. didonatorealtors.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 2car garage. Ranch on corner lot. $299,900. 125 Whitehorse Avenue. Lot size: 50 x 169. Taxes: $4,504. Listed, Barbara Landolfi, DiDonato Realty, 609-586-2344. didonatorealtors.com. 5 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement. Twoapartment home on corner lot close to major roads and shopping. $298,999. 33 Chickadee Way. Lot size: 65 x 86. Taxes: $7,417. Listed, Joseph DeLorenzo, Re/Max In Town, 609-895-0500. www.calljoed.com/5765176. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 2-car garage. Has loft. $275,000. U.S. 1 A U.S. 1 ADVERTISING FEATURE Do You Know the Answer? W hat Princeton Borough home was moved from University Place to Cleveland Lane In order to provide a better view of Blair Arch? (The answer can be found on page 12 in our real estate advertisement.) Asking the right questions and providing the best answers is what we do for our real estate clients. In our ever changing economy, there can be vast, short term market fluctuations, making it difficult for buyers or sellers to accurately establish a realistic value for their property. Pricing trends, local market conditions, the national economy and overall business environment all play a role in determining value. By analyzing alternative properties, pending, very recent, expired, and failed contract sales, we work together to establish the best strategy for your sales position and situation. Marketing property requires an expert with discretion, a myriad of contacts, and extensive experience in your real estate community. Susan Gordon and Ingela Kostenbader are your best choice. Come to us with all of your questions. We want to help with the answers. Susan Gordon and Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. 10 Nassau Street, Princeton. 609-9211411. www.cbmoves.com Marketing property requires an expert with discretion, a myriad of contacts, and extensive experience. Continued on following page SUMMER IS HERE…… WILL YOU BE AT THE BEACH ? VISIT OCEANSIDE COURT 47 Joni Avenue. Lot size: 72 x 106. Taxes: $6,428. Listed, Diane Detuelo, Coldwell Banker, 609-2030833. coldwellbankermoves.com/dianedetuelo. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full finished basement; 1-car garage. Colonial bordered by Veterans Park; fenced yard. $324,444. New Townhome Construction Located In • 811 OCEAN AVENUE IN BRADLEY BEACH, NEW JERSEY THIS IS YOUR NEW BEACH HOUSE…....THIS IS THE VIEW OFFICE/MEDICAL SPACE AVAILABLE Located Midway Between Two New Hospitals The Atrium at Lawrence 133 Franklin Corner Road • Lawrenceville, N.J. Great access! Adjacent to highways U.S. 1, I-95, I-295, Princeton Pike and U.S. 206 Prime Central New Jersey location 6,500 SF – Will divide to 2,100 SF 4,800 SF – Will divide to 2,100 SF Covered central atrium • Custom-tailored suites All areas with a view of the ATRIUM Individual climate controls Abundant covered parking spaces • Four new magnificent oceanfront townhomes (2 oceanfront and 2 ocean view) • Each home finished perfectly in every detail: Hardwood floors - Granite tops Crown moldings - 9' ceilings - Two zone heating and cooling - GE appliances Oceanfront decks and rear porches - Two car garages Completely maintenance free construction • Each townhome features 3 bedrooms - 3 1/2 baths with ceramic tile Generous storage space - Maple cabinets - Spacious kitchen with granite-top island THE VIEWS ARE SPECTACULAR, THE HOMES ARE PRICED TO SELL. We can close in time for your family to enjoy a summer at the Jersey Shore. CALL OR EMAIL US TODAY! 609-219-6000 john@mercercommercialconstruction.com Lawrenceville, N.J. 08648 • Fax: 609-219-1330 43 JOHN SIMONE SIMONE REALTY, INC. JSIMONE@SIMONEREALTY.COM (609) 882-1105 44 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Continued from preceding page Available for Lease Pennsylvania - Bucks County - Retail/Office/Prof • The Gatherings - 800 to 2,495 SF - $1,200 to $3,350/mo. • Woodbourne Professional - 100 to 1,925 SF - $110 to $2,000 • Hyde Park - 2,695 to 3,275 SF - $12.50/SF/NNN • Lenape Hall - 385 to 1,405 SF - $500 to $2,000/mo. Thompson Management • 609-921-7655 www.thompsonmangementllc.com 141 Coron Avenue. Lot size: .27 acres. Taxes: $6,704. Listed, Susan Norman, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609395-0444. hendersonsir.com/564002. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 2-car garage. Split contemporary with private paver patio. $295,000. 276 Whitehorse Avenue. Lot size: 60 x 120. Taxes: $6,264. Listed, Barbara Landolfi, DiDonato Realty, 609-586-2344. didonatorealtors.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Two-apartment Cape with parking area for both apartments. $298,999. 411 Sandalwood Avenue. Lot size: 125 x 138. Taxes: $5,879. Listed, John Terebey, ERA Properties Unlimited, 609-750-0372. sellingnj.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement; 1-car garage. 1,806 SF ranch on corner lot. $269,500. 10 Fallview Court. Taxes: $7,332. Listed, Helene Fazio, Coldwell Banker, 609-658-3277. newjerseyprincetonhomes.com. 3 bedrooms; 3 baths; garage. Two-story Colonial in 55+ community. $279,000. Hightstown 187 East Ward Street. Lot size: 75 x 390. Taxes: $9,885. Listed, Joseph DeLorenzo, Re/Max In Town, 609-895-0500. www.calljoed.com/5874093. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement; 1-car garage. Sears Ardara bungalow. $250,000. Hopewell 9 Orchard Avenue. Lot size: 1.26 acres. Listed, Sue Fowler, Re/Max Premiere Properties, 609-737-7474. suefowler.com/5852700. 5 bedrooms; 2 baths; walkout basement. Two-family Colonial with separate heat, hot water, and electric for each unit. $282,900. 101 Van Dyke Road. Lot size: .83 acres. Listed, Sue Fowler, Re/Max Premiere Properties, 609-737-7474. suefowler.com/5854324. 2 bedrooms; 1 bath; full unfinished basement; 1-car garage. Cape with deck, unfinished walkup attic, remodeled kitchen with 40” biscuit toned cabinets, granite counters, and recessed lights. $299,900. 498 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road. Lot size: .52 acres. Taxes: $6,482. Listed, Lorraine McCormick, Re/Max In Town, 609-8950500. remax-nj.com/5824548. 3 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; 1,772 SF split level with woodburning fireplace, gardens. $280,000. 160 Pennington-Hopewell Road. Lot size: 1 acre. Listed, Ray Disch, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609466-4666. hendersonsir.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; garage. 1,575 SF Cape Cod with stone fireplace. $289,000. 214 Hopewell-Wertsville Road. Lot size: 1.46 acres. Listed, Ray Disch, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609466-4666. hendersonsir.com. 5 bedrooms; 2 baths. Cape Cod in Sourlands with stone and clapboard facade; fireplace. $289,000. 13 Model Avenue. Lot size: 57 x 120. Taxes: $7,638. Listed, Ray Disch, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609466-4666. hendersonsir.com. 2 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; unfinished basement; garage. 1,228 SF stonefront Cape with fireplace. $315,000. 260 Pennington-Titusville Road. Lot size: .88 acres. Taxes: $8,229. Listed, Ryan Schwab, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. glorianilson.com/pennington. 3 bedrooms; 1 bath; full basement; 3-car garage. Cape Cod walking distance to downtown and schools. $260,000. 202 Amberleigh Drive. Listed, Sue Fowler, Re/Max Premiere, 609737-7474. suefowler.com/5839307. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 1-car garage. Brandon Farms 1900 model townhouse with two-story family room with gas fireplace. $349,900. 53 Temple Court. Lot size: .17 acres. Listed, Sue Fowler, Re/Max Premiere Properties, 609-737-7474. suefowler.com/5804390. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths; 2-car garage. Ranch in Four Seasons 55+ community. $259,900. 2 Woolsey Court. Taxes: $7,447. Listed, Joseph DeLorenzo, Re/Max In Town, 609-895-0500. www.calljoed.com/5840963. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 2-car garage. 1,468 SF townhome in 55plus community. $279,000. 330 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road. Taxes: $8,409. Listed, Joseph DeLorenzo, Re/Max In Town, 609-895-0500. www.calljoed.com/5769308. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; basement; garage. 1,843 SF Cape. $287,500. AVAILABLE FOR LEASE 168 Franklin Corner Road - Condos for SALE from $150/SF 600 to 6,000 SF - $900 to $8,000/mo. Princeton Twp. - Office/Retail • 812 State Road (Rt. 206) - 675 to 850 SF - $950 to $1,200/mo. Princeton Borough - Office/Retail • 195 Nassau Street - $600 to $700/mo. - Individual Offices Princeton Junction - Office/Med/Prof • 50 Princeton Hightstown Road - 275 to 1,875 SF - $400 to $2,800/mo. Lawrence Twp. - Office/Med/Prof - Lease or Office Condo Sale • 2500 Brunswick Pike (Bus. Rt. 1) - 422 to 1,200 SF - $465 to $1,300/mo. Hopewell Township - Warehouse/Flex • Pennington Business Park - 55 Rt. 31 North - 11,500 SF - $5,500/mo. Ewing Township - Office Condo • 1450 Parkside - 1,075 to 2,900 SF - $1,195 to $3,175/mo. Robbinsville Township - Office/Med/Prof • 300-350 Corporate Blvd. - 435 to 3,600 SF - $500 to $4,200/mo. Hamilton Township - Office/Flex • Whitehorse Commercial Park - 400 to 3,800 SF - $450 to $4,300/mo. Bordentown - Retail/Office/Prof. • 101 Farnsworth - 360 to 1,125 SF - $360 to $1,150/mo. • 102 Farnsworth - 775 to 1,500 SF - $800 to $1,600/mo. • 3 Third Street - 1,000 to 2,375 SF - $1,100 to $2,500/mo. Monroe Township - Forsgate Exit 8A • One Rossmoor Drive - 1,700 to 2,100 SF - $2,500 to $3,000/mo. Thompson Management 609-921-7655 • www.thompsonmangementllc.com MAY 11, 2011 206 Colt Street. Listed, Sue Fowler, Re/Max Premiere Properties, 609-737-7474. suefowler.com/5872646. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full finished basement; 2-car garage. Townhouse with wall-towall carpet, gas fireplace, master bedroom with vaulted ceiling and French door to balcony. $339,900. 309 Pebble Creek Court. Lot size: .03 acres. Taxes: $5,975. Listed, Lisa Leray, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. lisaleray.myglorianilsonagent.com. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; garage. 1,463 SF townhouse; seller is offering $5,000 toward closing; backs to wooded lot. $288,000. Lawrence 83 Hughes Avenue. Lot size: 75 x 100. Taxes: $6,672. Listed, Linda Feldstein, Weidel, 609-921-2700. weidel.com/linda.feldstein. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; finished basement. Brick Colonial Cape with three-zone heating, near schools and transportation. $275,000. 119 Review Avenue. Lot size: .15 acres. Taxes: $5,148. Listed, Susan Hughes, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. 4 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; Cape with fenced yard, central air, wood fireplace. $279,000. 1410 Lawrence Road. Lot size: .24 acres. Taxes: $7,338. Listed, David Thomas, Re/Max In Town, 609-895-0500. mercercountyhouses.com. 5 bedrooms; 3 baths; crawlspace basement. 2,118 SF custom Cape Cod suitable for in-home business. $319,000. 160 Fountayne Lane. Lot size: 3,843 SF. Taxes: $8,929. Cy Gaydos, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-951-8600. cygaydos.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths; 1-car garage. 1,508 SF end unit townhome with two-story living room, upgraded appliances, rear patio, whirlpool tub, walk-in closet. $300,000. 13 Oleander Court. Listed, Sue Fowler, Re/Max Premiere Properties, 609-737-7474. suefowler.com/5878774. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths. Townhouse with covered deck with double storage closets, sunken living room, fireplace. $279,900. 38 Danielle Court. Taxes: $6,442. Listed, David Thomas, Re/Max In Town, 609-8950500. mercercountyhouses.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 1-car garage. End unit 1,930 SF townhouse in the Manors. $319,900. 20 Rossa Avenue. Lot size: .26 acres. Taxes: $5,050. Listed, Andrea D’Angelo, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. glorianilson.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; full unfinished base- ment. Cape with fenced-in backyard. $264,000. 25 Ontario Way. Lot size: 88 x 125. Taxes: $7,010. Helene Fazio, Coldwell Banker, 609658-3277. newjerseyprincetonhomes.com. 5 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; garage. 2,049 SF Colonial; bedroom can be office. $324,000. 270 Glenn Avenue. Lot size: 95 x 120. Taxes: $6,761. Listed, Helene Fazio, Coldwell Banker, 609-658-3277. newjerseyprincetonhomes.com. 4 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; garage. Colonial. $296,000. New Brunswick 27 Newell Avenue. Lot size: 60 x 200. Taxes: $5,000. Listed, Rachna Luthra, ERA Properties Unlimited, 609-750-0372. sellingnj.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement. Newly built Colonial. $289,888. North Brunswick 1286 Omaha Road. Lot size: 100 x 100. Taxes: $8,628. Listed, William Sheehy, Coldwell Banker, 732-297-7171. cbmoves.com/williamsheehy. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; full unfinished basement. Neatly landscaped ranch. $339,900. 81 Aspen Drive. Taxes: $5,316. Listed, Ritu Mathur, Coldwell Banker, 732-309-8166. ritumathur.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 1-car garage. 1,800 SF Colonial townhouse. $275,000. Pennington 21 Woolsey Court. Taxes: $6,162. Listed, Joseph DeLorenzo, Re/Max In Town, 609895-0500. www.calljoed.com/5789729. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths; 1-car garage. Contemporary townhome in 55-plus community. $272,000. Plainsboro 4 Pond View Drive. Taxes: $5,663. Listed, Jennifer Fuchs, Weichert, 732-672-8063. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. Townhome with views of pond; walk to schools & village. $288,000. 5 Somerset Street. Taxes: $8,592. Listed, John Terebey, ERA Properties Unlimited, 609750-0372. sellingnj.com. 3 bedrooms; 3 baths; 2-car garage. 2,316 SF Colonial in adult community. $339,888. Continued on page 50 U.S. 1 45 46 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Office Opportunities For Sale - Titusville, NJ 4 Bldgs. on 1.42 acres. C-1 commercial/retail. 410 ft. frontage on Rt. 29. All serious offers considered. U.S. 1 Classifieds HOW TO ORDER Call 609-452-7000, or fax your ad to 609-452-0033, or use our E-Mail address: class@princetoninfo.com. We will confirm your insertion and the price. It won’t be much: Our classifieds are just 50 cents a word, with a $7 minimum. Repeats in succeeding issues are just 40 cents per word, and if your ad runs for 16 consecutive issues, it’s only 30 cents per word. (There is a $3 service charge if we send out a bill.) OFFICE RENTALS Al Toto - totocpn@aol.com Office - Pennington Point 450 - 4,400 SF Office FREE RENT and FLEXIBLE LEASE TERMS. Immediate occupancy. 186-196 Princeton-Hightstown Rd. Windsor Business Park. Suites of 868, 1190 and 1689 SF available immediately; please call 609-921-6060 for details. 192 Nassau St. Single office of approx. 400 SF. Available immediately. Please call 609-921-6060 for details. 194 Nassau Street, 1044 sq. ft. office for lease. Reception area, three offices, kitchen, storage, private restroom. Please call 609-921-6060 for details. 1st Month FREE on select offices: Princeton Route 1. Single Offices, Office Suites, Virtual Offices, 50MB High Speed Internet, Great Reception Team, Instant Activation, Flexible Terms. Call 609-514-5100 or visit www.princeton-office.com Al Toto totocpn@aol.com Visit www.penningtonpointoffice.com Hopewell Boro, Office/Professional/Records 500-30,000/SF Office & low priced storage, warehouse William Barish bbarish@cpnrealestate.com Tree Farm Village - 23,000 SF 1,500-4,500 SF Retail Available Immediately, Liquor License Available, New Building, Great Location, Flexible Terms Al Toto totocpn@aol.com Pennington Office For Lease Howe Commons, 65 S. Main St., Downtown Pennington. 310 SF - 1315 SF. 1 to 5-Year Term. Close to restaurants, banks and shopping. Ample parking on site. Al Toto totocpn@aol.com www.cpnrealestate.com For more information and other opportunities, please call Commercial Property Network, 609-921-8844 OFFICE RENTALS OFFICE RENTALS AREA OFFICE RENTALS Princeton, Trenton, Hamilton, Hopewell, Montgomery, For All Your Commercial Real Estate Needs Ewing,in Hightstown, Lawrenceville and other Mercer, Mercer and Surrounding Area. Somerset & Middlesex Communities. Class A, B and Sale orAvailable. Lease • Office • Warehouse C Space Retail and Business Opportunities For For details ondetails space on space and rates, and rates, contact contact: Weidel Commercial 609-737-2077 www.WeidelCommercial.com 213 Nassau Street, Princeton, New Jersey Excellent, High Profile Location, First Floor Office in Lovely Victorian Building. Central A/C, Ample Parking. Approximately 1,100 SF. Lease Term Negotiable. Weinberg Management 609-924-8535 wmc@collegetown.com 2nd Floor Office Condo in Montgomery Knoll: 500 sq. ft. 2 offices with reception area. Call 609-924-9214. CRANBURY OFFICE SPACE two or three room first floor on Park Place just off Main St next to the Post Office. Available May 1 $950 per month. 609-5296891. East Windsor Route 130: 2 adjoining offices in professional building 169SF $295 and 262SF $395 or both for $650 monthly. Call 609-930-0575. Main Street Kingston. Entire first floor (3 rooms) in totally renovated building. All New: high efficiency heat, central air, hardwood floors, energy efficient windows. Ample on-site parking. Available June 1st. 609-575-3684 Office space for rent. Location on the main street, Princeton-Kingston Road, 600-800 SF. Available immediately. Sabrina Kober (Coldwell Banker) Business: 732-297-7171 ext 115; cell: 732-236-7876. MAY 11, 2011 OFFICE RENTALS HOUSING FOR SALE CLEANING SERVICES 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 609-7373322 or e-mail mgmt@straube.com www.straubecenter.com One-bedroom condominium for sale in Plainsboro. 750 sq. ft. Call 215275-6043 or e-mail stayler007@yahoo.com. Offered at $149,500. Maryam’s Cleaning: Homes, apartments, condos. Serving Bucks County, Pa. and New Jersey areas. Free estimates. 215-779-1371. HOUSING FOR RENT Window Washing and Power Washing. Free estimates. Next day service. Fully insured. Gutter cleaning available. 609-271-8860. References available upon request. 30 years experience. Plainsboro - 700 SF to 3,000 SF Office Suites: in single story building in well maintained office park off Plainsboro Road. Immediately available. Individual entrance and signage, separate AC/Heat and electricity. Call 609-7992466 or E-mail tqmpropmgm@aol.com Princeton - Location, Location: Jefferson Plaza, Princeton. 600/1200 sq. ft., 1 block off Route 1, private entrance, private bathroom and parking. $960/$1800 plus utilities. 609-5772793; hesaenviro@hesaenviro.com. Princeton Junction: Prof. Office space in highly visible spot near trains, Princeton Hospital, highways. Reasonable rents. Units from $450 to $6000 per month. Call Ali at Re/Max of Princeton 609-921-9202 or cell 609-902-0709. Princeton Professional Office: One to three offices for rent. Private garden setting. Shared conference/waiting rooms, parking, utilities. Secretarial space available. Will sublet. North Harrison Street. 609-924-2809. ROUTE 1 MONMOUTH JUNCTION office suite 1440 sq. ft. at intersection Wynwood Dr. immediately south of Home Depot Shopping Center. 16 suite professional building. Flexible lease terms, good signage, good parking. Available June 1. 609-529-6891. Two separate Nassau St. spaces avail for immediate occupancy: $2400/mo +util. Private 4 offices + conference and PR & 4 car parking $1600/mo +util 3 room with shared PR + 2 car parking. Call Stockton Real Estate, LLC 609-924-1416. Licensed real estate broker. INDUSTRIAL SPACE Unique Rental Space zoning (I3), ordinance passed for retail and recreation activities, ample parking all utilities, one 1200’, one 2000’, one 2500’ one 3600’, and one 10,000. Located at 325 and 335 New Road, Monmouth Junction. Call Harold 732-329-2311. COMMERCIAL SPACE HAMILTON & LAMBERTVILLE - 300 to 50,000 SF Office/WH/Flex/Showroom/Studios. Amazing spaces in extraordinary buildings! Low rents / high quality units with all you need! Brian @ 609-731-0378, brushing@firstprops.com. CLASSIFIED BY EMAIL Hamilton Small efficient house. 1+ bedroom, washer/dryer, dishwasher, air conditioning, excellent location, plus more. Non-smoking, no pets. 609-5877682. RESORTS Summer rental - condo unit. Oceanfront building - Montoloking NJ (next to Lavallette). Private beach, heated Olympic size pool, gated entry. Call Sofia, 609-203-3717. INTERIOR DESIGN Do Your Rooms Need a Rescue? Room Makeover? Staging your home to sell? If you prefer to do-it-yourself but don’t know where to begin, The Artful Arranger can help you get started with a customized action plan, whether you’re moving in, moving out, or just want a change. Call for details and mention this ad for a 20% discount on service. Roberta Hurley, 609-460-4082. TREES Norway spruce - wholesale - privacy screening - local trees. 570-9165514. DECKS REFINISHED Cleaning/Stripping and Staining of All Exterior Woods: Craftsmanship quality work. Fully insured and licensed with references. Windsor WoodCare. 609-799-6093. www.windsorwoodcare.com. PM WHITNEY POWER WASHING AND DECK CARE Siding, patios, roofs, concrete, buildings. Decks cleaned, sealed, repaired. 609-897-9494. www.powerwashthehouse.com CONTRACTING Handyman/Yardwork: Painting/Carpentry/Masonry/Hauling/All Yard Work from top to bottom. Done by pros. Call 609-737-9259 or 609-273-5135. PAINTING Affordable Quality Work. Interior-Exterior, Wallpaper Removal, Drywall Installation and Repair. Call: 609-731-7711. CLEANING SERVICES For a high-quality, trustworthy cleaning service, look no further than “A Clean House Is A Happy House Inc.” Call Renata Yunque at 609-6835889. The best around since 1989. class@princetoninfo.com For Sale or Lease Premier Princeton Borough Building - Ideal for owner-user or Investment - 4030 sf available retail, plus basement - 7800 sf on three floors - Two large apartments on second and third floors - Recently renovated Al Toto, Senior Vice President Commercial Property Network, Inc. totocpn@aol.com • 609-921-8844 Exclusive Broker Commercial Property Network, Inc. We Have a Place For Your Company HOME MAINTENANCE A handyman loves to repair things around your home or property and solves your problems. Free estimates. Cell 609-213-8271. PM Whitney Power Washing and Deck Care Siding, patios, roofs, concrete, buildings. Decks cleaned, sealed, repaired. 609-897-9494. www.powerwashthehouse.com 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, 609269-5919. BUSINESS SERVICES Bookkeeper/Administrative Specialist: Versatile & experienced professional will gladly handle your bookkeeping and/or administrative needs. Many services available. Reasonable rates. Work done at your office or mine. Call Debra @ 609-448-6005 or visit www.vyours.com. Your Perfect Corporate Image: Princeton Route 1. Virtual Offices, Offices, Receptionist, Business Address Service, Telephone Answering Service, Conference Rooms, Instant Activation, Flexible Terms. Call 609-514-5100 or visit www.princeton-office.com Continued on following page U.S. 1 47 48 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 COMPUTER SERVICES Continued from preceding page ANDLogic Computers: Reduce your IT costs .. guaranteed. Computers, Telephone Systems and Video Surveillance. Sales (new and refurb.), Service, Install Small Business Network Servers, Data Restore, Database Design, Cabling, Telephones & VOIP systems. “We don’t Bill per hour but Invoice per Project”. A+. NET+, Security+ Cert. Techs. Voice: 609-610-5752 FREE Computer Training for Unemployed. www.andlogiccomputers.net Office/Medical NJ Small Business Networks: Computer Services, IT Consulting, Repairs, Virus Removal, www.njsmallbusinessnetworks.com 609-577-6364. GRAPHIC ARTS VanNest Office Park Quakerbridge Road, Hamilton, NJ 353 Nassau Street, Princeton, NJ Building II Completed: 33,000 SF Available, Divisible to 2,000 SF ■ Build to Suit – 1st or 2nd Floor Units New Brick Construction with Perimeter Windows Throughout Restaurants, Banking and Shopping within Walking Distance Close Proximity to Hospitals, Route 1, I-295 & the Hamilton Train Station ■ Built-Out Units Available Immediately - 3,600 SF Div. Office Building for Lease 6,000 SF on 1st & 2nd Floors Passenger Elevator ■ 7 Parking Spaces Kitchenette Area ■ High Quality Interior Finishes Walking Distance to All Amenities Prestigious Downtown Princeton Location Near Harrison Street Graphic Design Services: Logos, Newsletters, Brochures, Direct Mail, etc. Reasonable rates. Fast turnaround. Call 732-331-2717 or email ksmyth1228@comcast.net www.kathysmythdesign.com FINANCIAL SERVICES Bookkeeping services for your bottom line. Certified QuickBooks ProAdvisor and BBB Accredited Business. For information, call Joan at Kaspin Associates 609-490-0888 or visit www.KaspinAssociates.com Princeton Financial Care Services, LLC CPA firm with 40 years of experience. Bill paying, checkbook reconciliation, financial reports, tax return preparation. Call 609-730-0067 or E-mail princecare@aol.com. Check our website at www.princetonfcs.com for further information. 680-6 690 Whitehead Road, Lawrenceville, NJ For Sale or Lease ■ 11,000 SF Available Building 1: 5,000 SF & Building 2: 6,000 SF Full Basement for Storage New Roof & Upgraded HVAC Systems Convenient to Route 1, I-295 & Close to the Hamilton Train Station 707 State Road, Princeton, NJ Office for Lease ■ 22,000 SF Princeton Gateway ■ Class A Office Premier Princeton Location Striking Two-Story Design ■ Tranquil Park-like Setting Contemporary Two-story Glass Lobby 1 Mile Outside of Downtown Princeton Flex Industrial TAX SERVICES Tax Preparation and Accounting Services: For individuals and small businesses. Notary, computerized tax preparation, paralegal services. Your place or mine. Fast response, free consultation, reasonable costs. Gerald Hecker, 609-448-4284. ADULT CARE We can pay your bills, stay on top of your medical claims and keep your papers organized. For information, call Joan at Kaspin Associates 609-4900888 or visit www.KaspinAssociates.com. A BBB Accredited Business. CHILDCARE 45 Everett Dr., West Windsor, NJ Warehouse for Lease ■ 2 Warehouse Units at 5,554 SF Contiguous and Includes 1 Loading Dock and 2 Drive-in Doors, 20’ Clear Ample Parking ■ Convenient to Route 1 & I-295 4 Crossroads Drive, Hamilton, NJ 35,700 SF Available; Divisible to 4,000 SF ■ Single Story Flex Type Building, Zoned Office/Research Unit 1: 18,000 SF of Office (Includes 1,000 SF Warehouse) Unit 2: 8,000 SF of Office (Includes 1,875 SF Warehouse) Unit 3: 4,000 SF of Warehouse ■ Unit 4: 5,700 SF of office (Includes 2,900 SF of Warehouse) Close Proximity to Route 130, I-195 & the NJ Turnpike Office/Medical *ATTENTION WWP FALL KINDERGARTENERS.* Home Again Early School’s A.M. Kindergarten Program promises to compliment, enrich & enhance your child’s kindergarten experience. Individualized curriculum: teacher/parent/child plans together. P.M. enrichment & “chill out” time. Ask those who know us. www.homeagainearlyschool.com 609-799-4257. HEALTH Massage and Reflexology: The benefits are beyond what we even fathom. Experience deep relaxation, heightened well-being, improved health. Holistic practitioner offering reflexology, Swedish and shiatsu massage. Available for on-site massage at the work place, etc. Gift certificates, flexible hours. Call Marilyn 609-4038403. MASSAGE, Therapeutic and Unique. an eclectic style of Swedish, Hot Stones and Stretching. Four Hands also available. Call Marina at 609-4687726. 902 Carnegie Center, Princeton Sublease 11,400 SF ■ Class A Prime Office Space Furniture Available ■ Cafeteria & Gym On-Site www.fennelly.com 609-520-0061 Oriental Massage Therapy: Deep tissue, Swedish, Shiatsu, Reflexology by experienced Therapists, Princeton Junction off Route 1. Call 609-514-2732 for an appointment. Rev. Meryl’s Meditative Massage and Spiritual Counseling for Women: Over 25 years experience. $60 introductory special. $70 hot stone massage. The Ariel Center for Well-Being. By appointment only. 609-454-0102. www.arielcenterforwellbeing.org Swedish Massage By European Staff. Rt 1 N, 5 min from Trenton, NJ 609-802-6791. MENTAL HEALTH Having problems with life issues? Stress, anxiety, depression, relationships... Free consultation. Working in person or by phone. Rafe Sharon, Psychoanalyst 609-683-7808. Psychotherapy using a technique that can rapidly promote self-acceptance and a sense of well-being; effective with depression, anxiety, trauma, social issues, among others; approach especially effective at helping individuals form more intimate, enduring relationships. Work with individuals, youths, and families. Aetna-participating provider; accept PPOs and consider sliding scale fees. Dr. Kristine Schwartz, Psy.D. LPC, 609-937-0987. INSTRUCTION ADHD COACHING- Adults, students, & parents of children challenged with attentional issues, time management, procrastination, disorganization. Our experienced, certified coaching team will help you find effective strategies and tools. 609.683.0077, info@odysseycoaches.com, www.odysseycoaches.com *ATTENTION WWP FALL KINDERGARTENERS.* Home Again Early School’s A.M. Kindergarten Program promises to compliment, enrich & enhance your child’s kindergarten experience. Individualized curriculum: teacher/parent/child plans together. P.M. enrichment & “chill out” time. Ask those who know us. www.homeagainearlyschool.com 609-799-4257. College Professor will tutor you or your child in Lambertville NJ ACT & SAT prep Kind and Patient $50.00 per hour www.AmericanEnglishWritingTutor.com 215-499-1703 Fear Away Driving School Running special rate now. Please call 609-9249700. Lic. 0001999. Learn To Play: Piano, guitar, drum, sax, clarinet, F. horn, oboe, t-bone, voice, flute, trumpet, violin, cello, banjo, mandolin, harmonica. $28 half hour. School of Rock. Adults or kids. Join the band! Summer music camp. Princeton 609-924-8282. Princeton Junction 609897-0032. Hightstown 609-448-7170. www.farringtonsmusic.com. Lessons in Your Home: Music lessons in your home. Piano, clarinet, saxophone, flute and guitar. Call Jim 609737-9259 or 609-273-5135. Math, Science, English, ACT & SAT Tutoring: Available in your home. Brown University-educated college professor. Experienced with gifted, underachieving and learning-disabled students. Web: http://ivytutoring.intuitwebsites.com Call Bruce 609-371-0950. SAT MATH SUMMER PREP COURSE At The Lawrenceville School. Prepare to excel. Registration is now open. For more information visit: http://mathplotter.lawrenceville.org/mat hplotter/satPrep.htm or call 609-5580722. Voice lessons in Hillsborough. College professor/professional singer, new to the area, accepting private students. Beginners to advanced, teens and adults. 609-216-0033. MERCHANDISE MART 1966 Live Action TV series Batmobile Replica Only 2,500 made, retails $250, now $180. Also comic books, variant covers, action figures. Send me your wants. E-mail manhunsa@comcast.net, 848-459-4892. Computer P4 with XP: In good condition $80. Cell phone (609)213-8271. Gently used aluminum extension Louisville Ladder. Bought new for $325, will sell for $175. Two snow tires on rims, only used one season. Size 205/65R15 (used on Mercury Sable station wagon), $175. Call 609-683-8639. GARAGE SALES BARGAINS WITH BENEFITS Spring Sale: Saturday, May 14, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.; UUCP, 50 Cherry Hill Road, Princeton. Proceeds go to local charities! Antiques - jewelry - art - electronics - clothing - furniture - lamps - books - DVDs - plants kitchen appliances - gadgets - toys games - sports equipment - more! Food & music. MAY 11, 2011 Employment Exchange HOW TO ORDER HELP WANTED JOBS WANTED Phone, Fax, E-Mail: That’s all it takes to order a U.S. 1 Classified. Call 609452-7000, or fax your ad to 609-4520033, or use our E-Mail address: class@princetoninfo.com. We will confirm your insertion and the price. It won’t be much: Our classifieds are just 50 cents a word, with a $7 minimum. Repeats in succeeding issues are just 40 cents per word, and if your ad runs for 16 consecutive issues, it’s only 30 cents per word. (There is a $3 service charge if we send out a bill.) Box service is available. Questions? Call us. week, schedule varies, looking for experienced, non-smoker caregiver with references to start mid-May. Please contact for appointment at 609-937-1660. charge. We reserve the right to edit the ads and to limit the number of times they run. If you 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, 12 Roszel Road, Princeton, NJ 08540. You must include your name, address, and phone number (for our records only). HELP WANTED * PRIVATE TUTOR - Proficient in Castilian Spanish. Part-time for Somerset County resident. Must be able to teach well, have excellent credentials and references. Cipria09@aol.com * Letter writer, good proofreader, and good speller needed $8 per hour. Contact: 609-227-7400. Ask for De Angelo. Maestro Technologies Has Multiple Job Openings: for the following positions in Princeton NJ & various client sites throughout the U.S.: Sr. .Net Software Engineer to oversee entire software development life cycle working in ASP.net, ADO.net, Visual C#.net, Visual Studio.net; Oracle Database Administrator to oversee Oracle database design working in Oracle 9i & 10g, Toad, SSRS; Sr. Oracle Software Engineer to oversee entire software development life cycle working in Oracle, ERP/CRM, Oracle Rpts, XML, Toad, PL/SQL, Unix, OAF, Oracle Workflow; Java Software Engineer to perform analysis, create functional/tech specs, & develop applications working in J2EE, JDBC, EJB, Spring, Struts, Ant, Oracle, Weblogic, Eclipse; Sr. Java Software Engineer to oversee entire software development life cycle working in Java, J2EE, EJB, Struts, Oracle, Weblogic, Ant, Toad, Unix, Eclipse, Web Services; Sr. Business Analyst to oversee analysis of asis process & to be design process, create SIPOC process and diagrams, implement SDLC, recommend process improvements, work in RUP, Agile, UML, BRD, SRS, FRS, JAD, perform UAT testing. Apply to: Maestro Technologies, 707 Alexander Road, Suite 204, Princeton, NJ 08540 Nanny Needed—Care for 3 month baby girl in Princeton area, 5 days a GARAGE SALES Garage Sale 5/14 (8am-noon) Bikes, sport equipment, furniture, tools. Something for everyone! 12 Wynwood Drive, Princeton Jct (off Lanwin Blvd). ENTERTAINMENT One Man Band: Keyboardist for your party. Perfect entertainment. Great variety. Call Ed at 609-424-0660. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS I Buy Guitars and All Musical Instruments in Any Condition: Call Rob at 609-457-5501. 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 4:00, or by appointment. Wanted: Baseball, football, basketball, hockey. 1900-1980 cards, autographs, memorabilia. Up to $1,000,000 available. Licensed corporation will travel. All calls confidential. 4thelovofcards, 908-596-0976. allstar115@verizon.net. PERSONALS Free Classifieds for Singles: And response box charges that won’t break the bank. To submit your ad simply fax it to 609-452-0033 or E-mail to info@princetoninfo.com. See the Singles Exchange at the end of the Preview Section. NATION’S PREMIER BENEFITS COMPANY is looking for leaders. Lifetime residual income. Call 1-609-8823201. everyonebenefits.com/40717949 Real Estate Sales Need a change? Looking to obtain your RE license? No experience needed! FREE coaching! Unlimited income! Call Weidel today! Hamilton: Tom 609-586-1400, twilbur@weidel.com; Princeton: Mike 609-921-2700, mike@weidel.com; West Windsor: Bruce 609-799-6200, brucebusch@weidel.com. CAREER SERVICES Job Worries? Let Dr. Sandra Grundfest, licensed psychologist and certified career counselor, help you with your career goals and job search skills. Call 609-921-8401 or 732-873-1212 (License #2855) JOBS WANTED Job Hunters: If you are looking for a full-time position, we will run a reasonably worded classified ad for you at no Home security and home maintenance all in one. Retired police officer available for security and home maintenance. Power washing. Also do lawn and garden, siding, new construction, replace doors and windows and door locks and house sitting, personal security and driving. Call 609-937-9456 or email dra203@aol.com. Registered Dietitian / Nutritionist looking for opportunities. Passionate about health lifestyle coaching and mentoring. Looking for opportunities in the areas of health and wellness promotion or childhood obesity. Good position would be health coach or health/nutrition instructor. Target industries: health clinics, non-profit and community organizations, supermarkets, insurance/financial companies, and school districts. I can be reached at: sunny.shahinian@yahoo.com U.S. 1 Available West Windsor Day Care - Church- School - Education - Convenient West Windsor Location - Play area available - Near schools, municipal buildings - Expansion opportunities - Opportunity for ownership - Ample parking William Barish, bbarish@cpnrealestate.com 609-921-8844 Cell 609-731-6076 www.cpnrealestate.com Commercial Property Network, Inc. We Have a Place For Your Company 49 50 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Housing For Sale South Brunswick Continued from page 45 14 Caraway Court. Taxes: $7,026. Listed, Tina Hess, ERA Properties Unlimited, 609-750-0372. sellingnj.com. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; 1-car garage. Townhome in Princeton Walk community. $319,000. T5 Quincy Circle. Taxes: $4,511. Listed, Shirley Messinger, Prudential Fox & Roach, 732-828-5077. shirleym.msx.mlxchange.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full finished basement. 1,500 SF end-unit townhouse with fully fenced rear yard. $274,900. 24 Joline Road. Lot size: .3085 acres. Taxes: $6,124. Listed, Carol Cohen, Coldwell Banker, 732-2977171. 4 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; 1-car garage. Ranch with addition currently used as art studio; small Florida room. $308,500. 16 Lilac Court. Taxes: $5,657. Listed, Dawn Defeir Burger, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-951-8600. picketfencehomes-nj.com. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full finished basement; 1-car garage. 1,800 SF contemporary with updated kitchen, stainless appliances, Pergo flooring. $319,900. 24 Linda Court. Taxes: $5,168. Listed, Rujira Sirihoracha, Weichert, 609-439-2238. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full finished basement. End-unit townhome with wood floors throughout, new paint, new washer/dryer. $305,900. Princeton Borough 49E Palmer Square West. Taxes: $3,914. Listed, Rita Millner, Coldwell Banker, 609-351-2092. ritamillner.net. 1 bath. Studio overlooking green, shared laundry and patio, fireplace, minimalist kitchen. $259,900. Robbinsville 41 Chatham Court. Taxes: $7,652. Listed, Danielle Spilatore, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-3950444. hendersonsir.com/1226973. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 1-car garage. Colonial townhome off culde-sac in Foxmoor; freshly painted; cherry Pergo flooring; walk-in closet and vaulted ceiling in master bedroom. $319,888. 382 Sharon Road. Lot size: .92 acres. Taxes: $7,995. Bartholomew DiNola, DiDonato Realty, 609-5862344. didonatorealtors.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Stone ranch with custom cherry cabinets. $309,000. Skillman 15 Route 518. Lot size: .57 acres. Taxes: $6,963. Listed, Carolyn Spohn, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908874-0000. hendersonsir.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; 3-car garage. Cape. $348,000. 78 Jeffrey Circle. Lot size: .12 acres. Taxes: $5,327. Listed, Cy Gaydos, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-951-8600. cygaydos.com. 2 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; 1-car garage. 1,426 SF end unit townhome, brick patio, porch. $310,999. West Windsor 96 Wenlock Court. Taxes: $7,387. Listed, ERA Properties Unlimited, 609-750-0372. sellingnj.com. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; garage. Three-level townhome. $337,888. 112 Biscayne Court #11. Taxes: $5,878. Listed, Joseph DeLorenzo, Re/Max In Town, 609-895-0500. www.calljoed.com/5866066. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. Contemporary condo. $259,999. $150,000-$250,000 Bordentown 73 Charles Bossert Drive. Lot size: 65 x 130. Taxes: $5,614. Joseph DeLorenzo, Re/Max, 609-8950500. www.calljoed.com/5870914. 4 bedrooms; 1 bath; basement. 1,465 SF Cape with loft. $199,900. East Windsor 8 Hopkinson Court. Taxes: $6,381. Linda Feldstein, Weidel, 609-921-2700. weidel.com/linda.feldstein. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths. 1,565 SF end unit with first-floor master bedroom, brick patio, loft. $209,000. 22 Hopkinson Court. Taxes: $5,803. Listed, Linda Feldstein, Weidel, 609-921-2700. weidel.com/linda.feldstein. 2 bedrooms; 1.5 baths. 1,164 SF end unit; birch cabinets and granite counters, upgraded appliances, gas fireplace. $219,000. 7 Williamson Court. Taxes: $6,735. Listed, Tina Hess, ERA Properties Unlimited, 609-750-0372. sellingnj.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths. Townhouse with sunroom. $240,888. Ewing 21 Bent Twig Lane. Lot size: 80 x 119. Taxes: $6,700. Listed, Lorraine McCormick, Re/Max In Town, 609895-0500. remax-nj.com/5861301. 3 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; basement. Ranch sold as-is; new roof needed. $157,000. 65 Lanning Street. Lot size: 43 x 128. Taxes: $4,776. Listed, John Terebey, ERA Properties Unlimited, 609-750-0372. sellingnj.com. 4 bedrooms; 1 bath; full basement. Cape with rear deck and fenced yard. $234,888. 10 Albans Avenue. Lot size: 75 x 125. Taxes: $5,610. Listed, Bartholomew DiNola, DiDonato Realty, 609586-2344. didonatorealtors.com. 3 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; partially finished basement. Split-level estate sale in Fleetwood Village. $189,000. 512 Masterson Court. Listed, Janice Wilson, Henderson, 609-3950444. hendersonsir.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. First-floor end unit, secluded patio. $185,000. 1169 Lower Ferry Road. Lot size: .46 acres. Taxes: $7,085. Listed, Kate Stinson, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. 4 bedrooms; 3 baths; 1-car garage. Colonial with fenced-in yard, sunroom, close to TCNJ and transportation. $247,500. 641 Parkway Avenue. Lot size: 41 x 113. Taxes: $5,028. Listed, Diane Detuelo, Coldwell Banker, 609203-0833. coldwellbankermoves.com/dianedetuelo. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Dutch Colonial with updated kitchen, king-size master bedroom, selling as-is, $6,000 toward closing and repairs. $162,222. 109 Violet Lane. Lot size: 22 x 87. Taxes: $6,054. Listed, Lorraine McCormick, Re/Max In Town, 609895-0500. remax-nj.com/5854771. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full unfinished basement; 1-car garage. 1,472 SF townhouse backing to wooded area in move-in condition. $215,000. 108 Kyle Way. Taxes: $5,102. Listed, Cy Gaydos, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-951-8600. cygaydos.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. 1,310 SF penthouse condo. $197,900. 10 Lorraine Drive. Lot size: 60 x 152. Taxes: $5,472. Listed, Lorraine McCormick, Re/Max In Town, 609895-0500. remax-nj.com/5769580. 3 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; full unfinished basement; 1-car garage. Cape with new roof, windows, AC, heat, water heater; fenced yard. $249,900. 424 Masterson Court. Taxes: $5,886. Listed, Susan Gordon & Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker, 609-921-1411. princetonrealestate.net; princetonhome.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. Condo. $198,000. 22 Jacobs Creek Road. Lot size: 100 x 102. Taxes: $5,186. Listed, Diane Detuelo, Coldwell Banker, 609203-0833. coldwellbankermoves.com/dianedetuelo. 2 bedrooms; 1 bath. Ranch with creek views, wall of windows in dining room, eat-in kitchen. $229,999. 26 Pioneer Court. Lot size: 22 x 75. Taxes: $5,003. Helene Fazio, Coldwell Banker, 609-658-3277. newjerseyprincetonhomes.com. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full basement; garage. Traditional. $219,500. Franklin 87 Edward Drive. Taxes: $4,166. Richard P. Guerra, 732-995-2159. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. Condo. $217,700. 94 Gregory Lane. Listed, Yvonne Bartolotta, Coldwell Banker, 732236-9439. yvonnebartolotta.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. First-floor end-unit condo with new paint and updated kitchen. $194,126. Hamilton 320 Bergen Street. Lot size: 40 x 100. Taxes: $4,836. Antoinette Shelton, DiDonato Realty, 609-586-2344. didonatorealtors.com. 4 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. Colonial. $229,000. 24 Mulberry Court. Taxes: $3,400. George Scott Glenfield, Pinnacle Realtors, 609-924-6550. njpinnacle.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. Secondfloor rear-facing condo. $153,900. 1618 South Broad Street. Lot size: 18 x 100. Taxes: $3,472. Listed, Audrey Perry, DiDonato Realty, 609586-2344. didonatorealtors.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths. Two-unit apartment with separate meters and private entrances. $160,000. 1846 Spruce Street. Lot size: 50 x 247. Taxes: $5,840. Listed, Barbara Landolfi, DiDonato Realty, 609586-2344. didonatorealtors.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement. Two-apartment Colonial. $224,999. 2054 South Broad Street. Lot size: 20 x 100. Taxes: $4,422. Listed, Justo Navas, DiDonato Realty, 609586-2344. didonatorealtors.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement. Two-unit semi near bus. $199,000. 46 Kingston Boulevard. Lot size: 28 x 115. Taxes: $6,132. Listed, Diane Detuelo, Coldwell Banker, 609-203-0833. coldwellbankermoves.com/dianedetuelo. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 1-car garage. 1,800 SF townhome in adult community; vaulted ceiling in living room, private backyard, clubhouse, pool, near hospital, park. $239,900. MAY 11, 2011 1959 South Broad Street. Lot size: 25 x 125. Taxes: $4,451. Justo Navas, DiDonato Realty, 609-5862344. didonatorealtors.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; garage. Twin with covered porch. $159,000. 232 Saybrook Avenue. Lot size: .27 acres. Taxes: $4,627. Listed, Weidel, 609-799-6200. weidel.com/westwindsor. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths; finished basement. Ranch. $214,900. 835 Independence Avenue. Lot size: 45 x 100. Taxes: $3,948. Listed, John Terebey, ERA Properties, 609-750-0372. sellingnj.com. 4 bedrooms; 1 bath. Cape with storage shed. $198,888. 26 Chambord Court. Taxes: $3,610. Listed, David Thomas, Re/Max In Town, 609-895-0500. mercercountyhouses.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. 1,158 SF first-floor condo. $187,000. 444 Miller Street. Lot size: 100 x 217. Marian Conte, DiDonato, 609586-2344. didonatorealtors.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement; 1-car garage. Colonial on fenced-in lot. $209,000. 171 Atkins Avenue. Lot size: 3,900 SF. Taxes: $3,410. Listed, Cy Gaydos, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-951-8600. cygaydos.com. 2 bedrooms; 1 bath. Two-story townhome; remodeled bath with Tavertine marble, hot tub, gazebo, deck, garden. $189,999. 2210 Liberty Street. Lot size: 25 x 100. Taxes: $3,839. Joseph DeLorenzo, Re/Max In Town, 609-8950500. www.calljoed.com/5866838. 3 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; full basement. Colonial. $150,000. 72 Aspen Court. Taxes: $3,464. Marian Conte, DiDonato Realty, 609-586-2344. didonatorealtors.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. First-floor end-unit condo with laundry room and all appliances. $159,000. 337 Marshall Avenue. Lot size: 60 x 110. Taxes: $4,751. Marian Conte, DiDonato Realty, 609-5862344. didonatorealtors.com. 2 bedrooms; 1 bath; full basement; garage. Ranch with sunroom, fireplace, eat-in kitchen. $209,900. East Windsor 16 Allison Road. Listed, Smita Shah, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-951-8600. smitashah.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; finished basement; 1-car garage. 1,500 SF Colonial with fenced yard, fireplace, deck, loft. Rents for $1,700. 8 Hopkinson Court. Listed, Linda Feldstein, Weidel, 609-921-2700. weidel.com/linda.feldstein. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths. 1,565 SF end unit townhome in Georgetown community with first-floor master bedroom, brick patio, loft. Rents for $1,600. 82 Chatham Court. Listed, Smita Shah, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-951-8600. smitashah.com. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths. 1,400 SF end unit townhome with laminated floor; next to play area. Rents for $1,500. Ewing 35 Willis Drive. Listed, Rosalie LaFramboise, Gloria Nilson, 609737-9100. 5 bedrooms; 5.5 baths; finished basement; 2-car garage. Colonial; yard has babbling brook, professional landscaping, multi-level deck with retractable awning. Rents for $2,400. 109 Violet Lane. Listed, Lorraine McCormick, Re/Max In Town, 609895-0500. remax-nj.com/5854771. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full unfinished basement; 1-car garage. 1,472 SF townhouse backing to wooded area in move-in condition. Rents for $1,575. 2907 Brunswick Avenue. Listed, Lorraine McCormick, Re/Max In Town, 609-895-0500. remaxnj.com/5816501. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; full unfinished basement. 1,533 SF Colonial with electric included by solar panels; can also be home office; landlord maintains grounds. Rents for $2,150. 49 Drewes Court. Listed, Smita Shah, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-951-8600. smitashah.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths. Colonial with eat-in kitchen, enclosed sunroom, access to pool, tennis. Rents for $1,400. 11 Joyner Court. Listed, George Scott Glenfield, Pinnacle Realtors, 609-924-6550. njpinnacle.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. 1,108 SF penthouse condo. Rents for $1,300. 176 Gainsboro Road. Listed, David Thomas, Re/Max In Town, 609-895-0500. mercercountyhouses.com. 2 bedrooms; 1 bath. Second floor of Tennessee Stone Cape Cod. Rent includes heat and C/A. Rents for $950. Montgomery 923 Rhoads Drive. Listed, Rujira Sirihoracha, Weichert, 609-4392238. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; full unfin- ished basement; 1-car garage. Condo with finished loft and community amenities. Rents for $2,300. 34 Hoagland Drive. Listed, Sarah Strong Drake, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; partial crawlspace; 2-car garage. Shortterm rental; in-ground pool, recently renovated kitchen with granite countertops; 15-zone sprinkler system. Rents for $1,950. 548 Stockton Street. Listed, Martha Stockton, 609-924-1416. stocktonrealtor.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 full, 2 half baths; full finished basement; 2-car garage. Colonial with screened porch, sauna, and bomb shelter. Rents for $3,950. 156 Neil Court. Listed, Janet Stefandl, Henderson, 609-924-1000. hendersonsir.com/JanetStefandl. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; finished basement; 1-car garage. Townhouse; kitchen with granite counters, hardwood floors, woodburning fireplace. Rents for $3,000. North Brunswick Robbinsville 81 Aspen Drive. Listed, Ritu Mathur, Coldwell Banker, 732-3098166. ritumathur.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; 1-car garage. 1,800 SF Colonial townhouse. Rents for $1,900. 211 Wyndham Place. Listed, Joseph DeLorenzo, Re/Max In Town, 609-895-0500. www.calljoed.com/5853614. 2 bedrooms; 1 bath. First floor unit in Foxmoor. Rents for $1,350. Princeton Borough South Brunswick 46 Murray Place. Listed, Janet Stefandl, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609924-1000. hendersonsir.com/JanetStefandl. 4 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; unfinished basement. Furnished rental for July and August only; walk to town, university. Rents for $2,900. 54 Linden Lane. Listed, Susan Gordon & Ingela Kostenbader, Coldwell Banker, 609-921-1411. princetonrealestate.net; princetonhome.com. 2 bedrooms; 1 bath. Duplex. Rents for $2,395. 10 Clove Court. Listed, Smita Shah, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-951-8600. smitashah.com. 3 bedrooms; 3 baths; 2-car garage. At Four Season adult community; pool, club, tennis; option to buy. Rents for $2,800. 57 Deerberry Lane. Listed, Dawn Defeir Burger, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-951-8600. picketfencehomes-nj.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. Wynwood condo with updated baths, beamed ceiling in living room, separate dining room. Rents for $1,300. OPEN SUN. 1-4 PM OPEN SUN. 1-4 PM OPEN SAT. 1-4 PM OPEN SUN. 1-4 PM Beach Haven $349,900 508 Engleside Ave Own your own piece of Paradise! 3BR Condo by the bay,"Bay Breeze." Relax on your 10x26 porch. New siding, roof, tile floors, carpets, kitchen, appliances, heat & air! Best Price on LBI! Dir: LB Blvd S to Beach Haven, R on Engleside 609-586-1400 ID#5817156 Hamilton Twp. $189,000 439 Church St. Great starter home! Steinert School, spacious in quiet area close to major highways, Turnpike and Train Station. Priced to sell. Dir: Yardville Hamilton Square Rd. straight across to Church St. #439 on right. 609-921-2700 ID#5875021 Millstone Township $575,000 5 Steeple Chase Road 4 bed, 3.5 bath with contemporary ambiance on 1.9 acres. Gourmet kitchen with granite countertops. 3 fireplaces, multi-level deck, finished basement. Directions: Nurko Road to Steeple Chase Road 609-799-6200 ID# 5825578 West Windsor Township $389,898 151 Washington Road Immaculate 3 bedroom, 2 bath bungalow with inground pool & parklike backyard. Unique finished basement w/ living, work & storage space. Convenient to train station & major highways. Dir: Rt. 1 to Washington Road. 609-799-6200 ID#5860419 Hightstown 152 Mill Run E14. Listed, Robin Jackson, Henderson, 609-3950444. hendersonsir.com/891587. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. Penthouse end-unit townhome in Wyckoff’s Mill. $184,900. 21 Powell Court. Lot size: 41 x 37. Taxes: $6,022. Listed, Weidel, 609-799-6200. weidel.com/westwindsor. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. 1,120 SF end-unit condo. $180,000. OPEN SUN. 1-4 PM Hillsborough 30-43 Bloomingdale Drive. Taxes: $5,545. Listed, Cheryl Stites, Henderson Sotheby’s, 908-9633561. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths; basement; 1-car garage. Contemporary townhome in the Glen. $239,900. Hopewell 74 Hopewell-Wertsville Road. Ray Disch, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-466-4666. hendersonsir.com. 2 bedrooms; 1 bath. 968 SF Carriage House condo once part of Ralston estate. $170,000. Lawrence 767 Lake Drive. Lot size: .2 acres. Taxes: $4,482. Listed, Lisa Leray, Gloria Nilson, 609-737-9100. lisaleray.myglorianilsonagent.com. 4 bedrooms; 1 bath; full basement. Cape with hardwood floors, newer appliances, new hot water heater. $200,000. 23 Allwood Drive. Lot size: .16 acres. Taxes: $5,874. Listed, Ryan Schwab, Gloria Nilson, 609-7379100. glorianilson.com/pennington. 3 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; crawlspace; 1-car garage. 1,624 SF ranch with wood floors. $235,000. 33 Haveson Avenue. Lot size: .5 acres. Taxes: $4,800. Listed, David Thomas, Re/Max In Town, 609-8950500. mercercountyhouses.com. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement. 1,771 SF Cape Code with separate in-law apartment. $244,000. Continued on page 54 Franklin Twp. $225,000 50 Arthur Glick Blvd. End unit Condo in Society Hill VI, 2 BR 2 BTH. gas FP, EIK, Laundry RM. Master BR balcony views of open space. close to bus route and major highways. Dir: Rt. 27 to L South Middle Bush L on Arthur Glick Blvd. #50 on right. NEW LISTING CUSTOM BUILT CAPE 1776 Spruce Street Hamilton $213,000 1 owner, 4BR, 2BA LR,DR,Eat-In kit.Full Bsmt. Enclosed front porch, 2-car det. garage w loft. large lot. A Must See! Dir: Whitehorse Avenue to Spruce 609 586-1400 ID# 5879919 OPEN SUN. 1-4 PM Trenton $299,900 998 Lamberton St. Calling all investors! 5 Unit apartment building across from Waterfront Promenade Park in good condition. Close proximity to I 95, I 295, NJ Turnpike & NJ Transit Rail Sevice. 609-921-2700 ID#5877428 609-921-2700 ID#5806943 NEW LISTING REDUCED NEW LISTING NEW LISTING North Burnswick $152,900 4211 Birchwood Ct. Two bedroom 1 bath Condo, hardwood floored LR, private balcony spacious FR & finished basement. Convenient to everything. East Windsor $219,000 22 Hopkinson Ct. Not to be missed!! This Georgetown TH is move in condition; custom kit. w/granite counter tops, GE profile, gas FP, many upgrades. Must see to appreciate! 609-921-2700 609-921-2700 East Windsor Township $365,000 1 Glen Oak Drive Expanded to include two master bedroom suites and an oversized family room, a gourmet remodeled kitchen with granite countertops, marble backsplash and light cherry cabinets, located on a half acre corner lot. 609-799-6200 ID # 5871390 Ewing Township $209,000 12 Chelmsford Drive Spacious L-shaped ranch with a stone fireplace in the living room. Hardwood flooring under the carpeting. Sip your morning coffee on the back porch overlooking the good-sized lot. One year home warranty included. 609-799-6200 ID # 5863613 ID#113748 ID#5796497 NEW LISTING NEW LISTING NEW LISTING NEW LISTING Hamilton $263,900 43 Falcon Ct. Super Crosswicks Model on cul-de-sac loaded with many upgrades, hardwood floors, morning room and much more. Excellent Condition. A Must See. Pemberton $290,000 16 Homestead Dr 4BR/2.5BA, 2C gar Andover Model. HW cherry floors on 1st flr, formal LR and DR, gourmet Kit w/brkfst area, FR, 1st flr laundry. Hamilton $344,000 67 Stratton Drive Golden Crest 3BR/2BA Ranch w/music room/office. Formal DR & LR, Updated Kitchen w/stainless appliances, FP, deck, full bsmt, new heater. 609-586-1400 609-586-1400 609-586-1400 Bordentown $209,999 2 Exeter Court Move-In Cond. Adams Model Townhome. Kit w/Breakfast area and all new appliances. MBR with sitting area & walk-in closet. New windows, fixtures and ceiling fans, newer W/D, BA with updated tile. I car gar & great Patio! 609-586-1400 ID#5876331 ID#5874097 ID#5875447 51 Princeton Township HOUSING FOR RENT Lawrence U.S. 1 ID#5867271 52 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 MAY 11, 2011 U.S. 1 53 54 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Richard K. Rein Schmoozing with the Nassau Street crowds at Communiversity led to schmoozing with the celebrants at the D&R Greenway benefit at Tusculum. Our editor is learning the value of getting out of the office. Now he needs to learn how to leverage those outings into material for a column (or two). Maybe next time? Don’t Let the Spring Market Pass You By For a Complimentary Consultation, Call Phyllis TODAY Phyllis(Grodnicki)Hemler Over 18 years experience Bus: 609-924-1600 Cell: 609-203-0110 Housing For Sale Continued from page 51 34 Drewes Court No. 60. Taxes: $3,739. Listed, Diane Detuelo, Coldwell Banker, 609-203-0833. coldwellbankermoves.com/dianedetuelo. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths. End unit; quick closing possible. $209,900. 49 Drewes Court. Taxes: $4,575. Listed, Smita Shah, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-951-8600. smitashah.com. 3 bedrooms; 2.5 baths. Colonial with eat-in kitchen, sunroom, access to pool, tennis. $237,000. 31 Graf Avenue. Lot size: 50 x 150. Taxes: $4,426. Joseph DeLorenzo, Re/Max In Town, 609-8950500. www.calljoed.com/5871290. 2 bedrooms; 1 bath. Ranch. $169,900. Monroe 36 New Street. Lot size: .15 acres. Listed, Donna Levine, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-395-0444. hendersonsir.com/956013. 2 bedrooms; 1 bath; basement. Traditional ranch; back-to-front living and dining room with brick woodburning fireplace. $185,000. 83 A Banyan Plaza. Taxes: $3,346. Listed, Kathryn Baxter, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-395-0444. hendersonsir.com/1156668. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths; garage, detached ranch in adult community on cul-de-sac; all new flooring; maple cabinetry. $169,000. 718 Delair Road. Taxes: $2,492. Listed, ERA Properties Unlimited, 609-750-0372. sellingnj.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths; 2-car garage. 1,820 SF ranch in Clearbrook adult community. $199,888. Montgomery 1504 Rhoads Drive. Taxes: $4,920. Listed, Carolynn Kirch, Henderson Sotheby’s, 609-924-1000. 1 bedroom; 1 bath; full finished basement. Colonial townhouse in Pike Run; balcony. $224,900. North Brunswick 292 Willowbrook Drive. Taxes: $3,866. Listed, Ya Yuan Lien, Prudential Fox & Roach, 732-297-5000. 1 bedroom; 1 bath; storage basement. 1,249 SF second-floor condo with fireplace. $189,900. 209 Darwin Lane. Taxes: $4,498. Richard P. Guerra, 732-995-2159. 2 bedrooms; 2.5 baths. Townhome. $224,900. 1325 Tupelo Court. Lot size: 23 x 105. Taxes: $5,201. Listed, Helene Fazio, Coldwell Banker, 609-6583277. newjerseyprincetonhomes.com. 2 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; garage. 1,207 SF townhome. $235,000. Open House Sun., May 15th 1-4 pm 2307 Ravens Crest Drive, Plainsboro. Penthouse w Cath Ceilg+Skylght Pergo Wood in LR/Hlwy Ceramic Tiled Foyer, DR, Kit. All Appliances included: Refrigerator, W/D, DW, Stove, Disposal, 2 Ceiling Fans. Dir: Plainsboro Rd to Ravens Crest Dr $180,000 www.2307RavensCrestDrive.com www.princetonmercerhomes.com 253 Nassau Street • Princeton An independently owned and operated member of The Prudential Real Estate Affiliates, Inc. Princeton Forrestal Village 112 Village Blvd. • Princeton, NJ 08540 Office: 609-951-8600 Ext. 144 • Cell: 609-509-0777 Each Office Independently Owned and Operated CYRIL “CY” GAYDOS REALTOR® ASSOCIATE Plainsboro 1306 Sayre Drive. Taxes: $4,303. David Thomas, Re/Max, 609-8950500. mercercountyhouses.com. 2 bedrooms; 1 bath. 935 SF penthouse condo. $209,000. 8303 Tamarron Drive. Taxes: $4,530.Cy Gaydos, Re/Max, 609951-8600. cygaydos.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. 1,029 SF condo on ground floor. $194,950. 2307 Ravens Crest Drive. Taxes: $3,660. Listed, Cy Gaydos, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-951-8600. cygaydos.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. 880 SF penthouse with skylight, balcony, all appliances included. $180,000. South Brunswick 307 Cynthia Court. Taxes: $2,975. Listed, Ya Yuan Lien, Prudential Fox & Roach, 732-297-5000. 2 bedrooms; 1.5 baths. One-story condo with community swimming pool and tennis court. $189,000. 9 Arthur Glick Boulevard. Taxes: $4,166. Dawn Defeir Burger, Re/Max Greater Princeton, 609-9518600. picketfencehomes-nj.com. 2 bedrooms; 2 baths. First-floor Society Hill condo. $189,900. Trenton 207 Butler Street. Lot size: 31 x 100. Taxes: $5,470. Listed, Marian Conte, DiDonato Realty, 609-5862344. didonatorealtors.com. 3 bedrooms; 1.5 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. $159,900. 107 Lakeside Avenue. Lot size: 30 x 100. Taxes: $3,185. Listed, Justo Navas, DiDonato Realty, 609-5862344. didonatorealtors.com. 4 bedrooms; 2 baths; full basement; 2-car garage. $175,000. West Windsor 106 Heritage Boulevard. Taxes: $4,674. Linda Feldstein, Weidel, 609-921-2700. weidel.com/linda.feldstein. 2 bedrooms; 1 bath, fireplace, deck, storage closet. $210,000. MAY 11, 2011 U.S. 1 Welcome to distinctive living. W E N R P E IC W E N R P E IC West Windsor Twp. A cheerful cedar Contemporary filled with sleek updates has beautiful blond floors spanning 3 levels Princeton Twp. - Newly constructed. Sun., Oct. 14th, 1-4 and huge windows overlooking a park-like acre+ lot. Monroe Twp. Clearbrook, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, end-unit Braeburne Excelsior model. Offers one level spacious living. Princeton Twp. - Newly constructed. Sun., Oct. 14th, 1-4 Golf, tennis, clubhouse. Princeton Twp. Uncompromising quality and detail span four levels in this newly constructed 4-bed Riverside house with Princeton Twp. - and Newly constructed. pro-style kitchen fully landscapedSun., yard.Oct. 14th, 1-4 Princeton Newly constructed. Oct. 14th, window ofTwp. this -mid-century modern,Sun., including those 1-4 within pm. Dir.: Great Rd. to Pretty Rd. to Pheasant a seamless addition lined withBrook streamlined built-ins. Hill, #16 $3,250,000 609-921-1050 Princeton Twp. Delight in lakeside views from almost every Princeton Twp. While offering the finest in new construction Princetonthis Twp.home - Newly constructed. Sun., Oct. 14th, finishes, reflects the substantiality and 1-4 grace pm.itsDir.: Rd. to Pretty Brook Rd. to beauty Pheasant of ageGreat and enjoys the incomparable ofHill, its #16 lush $3,250,000 609-921-1050 mature setting. Princeton Twp. - Newly constructed. Sun., Oct. 14th, 1-4 home in The Ridings boasts a sunroom addition overlooking pm. Dir.: Great Rd. to Pretty Brook Rd. to Pheasant Hill, #16 the pool. $3,250,000 609-921-1050 $1,650,000 $1,295,000 $775,000 pm. Dir.: Great Rd. to Pretty Brook Rd. to Pheasant Hill, #16 $3,250,000 609-921-1050 $800,000 609-921-1050 609-921-1050 Princeton Twp. - Newly constructed. Sun., Oct. 14th, 1-4 Hopewell Twp.Rd. Plenty of curb appeal andPheasant a great Hill, layout pm. Dir.: Great to Pretty Brook Rd. to #16in Elm Ridge Park make this solid brick house with pool a wise $3,250,000 609-921-1050 buy for anyone seeking a design project. $580,000 pm. Dir.: Great Rd. to Pretty Brook Rd. to Pheasant Hill, #16 $3,250,000 609-921-1050 $149,000 609-737-7765 609-921-1050 pm. Dir.: Great Rd. to Pretty Brook Rd. to Pheasant Hill, #16 $3,250,000 609-921-1050 $1,899,000 609-921-1050 Hopewell Twp. Fully updated with warm finishes, this stately 609-737-7765 Princeton Twp. - Newly constructed. Sun., Oct. 14th, 1-4 Hopewell Twp.Rd.AtoVictorian farmhouse has impressive pm. Dir.: Great Pretty Brook Rd. to Pheasant Hill, #16 woodwork throughout sunny rooms, including a renovated $3,250,000 609-921-1050 Princeton Twp. - Newly constructed. Sun., Oct. 14th, 1-4 Plainsboro Twp. mergerBrook of two has pm. Dir.: Great Rd. A to Pretty Rd. tosun-filled Pheasant units Hill, #16 created a one-of-a-kind residence of over 2,000 sq. ft. within $3,250,000 609-921-1050 Princeton Twp. - Newly constructed. Sun., Oct. 14th, 1-4 Windrows main building, available only to those 55+. $499,000 609-921-1050 609-737-7765 kitchen. On 3 country acres with multiple outbuildings. $538,000 609-737-7765 Princeton Twp. - Newly constructed. Sun., Oct. 14th, 1-4 Trenton City. In the prized Mill Hill Historic District, this pm. Dir.: Great Rd. to Pretty Brook Rd. to Pheasant Hill, #16 tri-level Victorian boasts 10' ceilings, new kitchen and baths, $3,250,000 609-921-1050 Lawrence Twp. This villa in the 55+ community Traditions at pm. Dir.: Great Rd. to Pretty Brook Rd. to Pheasant Hill, #16 Federal Point enjoys a quiet location and offers three bedrooms $3,250,000 609-921-1050 with Southern exposure. Princeton Twp. - Newly constructed. Sun., Oct. 14th, 1-4 East Windsor Twp. Well cared-for third floor Condo offers pm. Dir.: Great Rd. to Pretty Brook Rd. to Pheasant Hill, #16 the pleasure of maintenance-free living. Swimming pool and $3,250,000 609-921-1050 $269,000 $239,000 $172,000 and an ivy-walled courtyard. 609-921-1050 609-737-7765 tennis courts are nearby. 609-737-7765 www.ntcallaway.com PRINCETON PENN INGTON HUNTERDON COUNT Y BUCKS COUNT Y Princeton NJ Princeton NJ 609.921.1050 609.921.1050 PenningtonNJ NJ Sergeantsville Lambertville Pennington NJ NJ 609.737.7765 908.788.2821 609.397.1974 609.737.7765 New Hope New Hope PA PA 215.862.6565 215.862.6565 © N.T. Callaway Real Estate Broker, LLC 55 U.S. 1 MAY 11, 2011 Real Living® W W PR LI ST IC E E US O PM H N 1-4 PE N O SU IN G Choose Our Agents with Confidence. NE NE Ewing $349,000 Custom 3 BR 2 BA Mountainview ranch; freshly painted inside and out; large half finished basement with walkout French door. Conv. loc 30 min to Phil. Ewing Twp $329,000 Zoned for residential & professional use this Colonial is sure to please. Double lot & expanded garage plus a home with 3/4 bedrooms. Franklin Twp $624,000 Princeton Highlands brick-front col. 4 BRs, 2/5 BAs; gourmet KIT; formal LR & DR w/ H/W flrs; FR w/gas fpl; beautiful sunrm overlooks patio & yard. Pennington Office 609-737-9100 Princeton Office 609-921-2600 Pennington Office 609-737-9100 Princeton Office 609-921-2600 Hamilton $142,731 Nice 2BR 1BA in Hamilton Lakes. Newer roof, 2011 stove, updated BA, wood burning stove, nice sized back yard w/ shed. Ideal starter home. Hillsborough $770,000 Beautiful 4BR, 4 full + 1 half BA. Gleaming H/W flrs; grmt Stainless S KIT w/cherry cabs & pantry; 2 fpls; plantation shutters; walkout lower lvl. Hopewell $419,000 Walk to town from this updated & upgraded 4 BR, 3 full bath home on an oversized 1 AC lot! Full basement, 2 car garage, 1 yr gas furnace & more. Pennington $535,000 This is a beautiful 4 BR, 3.5 BA col. on over 2 sprawling acres w/magnificent views. Gleaming HW flrs. flow from the entry foyer thru formal LR & DR. Princeton Office 609-921-2600 Princeton Office 609-921-2600 Princeton Junction Office 609-750-2020 Princeton Junction Office 609-750-2020 Pennington Boro $435,000 Fabulous value in Pennington. 5BR, 2.5 bath Cape featuring hardwood floors, new high efficiency AC and furnace. Walking distance to schools & town. Princeton $475,000 Over 2200 Sq. Ft.! Light & bright end unit w/one of the best locations in desirable Princeton Greens. Formal dining & living Rm, 3 BR's 2.5 baths. Princeton Junction $425,000 Carefully maintained 3 BR, 2 full BA in the heart of Dutch Neck. Pumpkin pine flrs; lrg country kit. w/newer appls; pvt patio; fully landscaped. So Brunswick $599,900 Beautiful 4 bdrm, 2.5 bath colonial located in Princeton Walk! Fireplaces in living rm & family rm, Pennington Office 609-737-9100 Princeton Junction Office 609-750-2020 Princeton Office 609-921-2600 South Brunswick Office 732-398-2600 So Brunswick $538,000 Sunny & bright Allendale model has a dramatic 2-story foyer w/Palladian window & new HW flooring flows to LR, DR & FR. Four Br's 2.5 baths. So Brunswick $469,900 Large colonial is totally redone! Brand new kitchen with granite countertops, new cabinets, appliances! West Windsor $779,900 The very desirable Versailles model in LeParc II is Avail. on one of the nicest lots backing to acres of open space. Four bedrooms, 3.5 baths. West Windsor $476,000 Enjoy the privacy of this 2 bedroom beautifully maintained single family home with community services, nestled on a wooded cul-de-sac . Princeton Junction Office 609-750-2020 South Brunswick Office 732-398-2600 Princeton Junction Office 609-750-2020 Princeton Office 609-921-2600 W LI ST IN G Lawrence Twp $200,000 767 Lake Drive. The pleasure is in the price! 4 Bdrms, 1 full bath. Hardwood floors, large backyard. Large basement! DIR: Route 1 To Lake Drive. Around Jug Handle. NE W LI ST IN G NE 56 #1 COMPA N Y IN MERCER COU N T Y IN BOT H U N ITS A N D SA LES VOLU ME FOR 2009 .* View thousands of homes at glorianilson.com. Hamilton 609-890-0007 Monroe Twp. 609-395-6600 Princeton 609-921-2600 Princeton Jct. 609-750-2020 An Independently Owned and Operated Firm. *Accordi ng to Trendgraphi x Pennington 609-737-9100 South Brunswick 732-398-2600