JP Morgan`s Carolyn P. Sanderson, a member of the
Transcription
JP Morgan`s Carolyn P. Sanderson, a member of the
The End of Cheap Energy, page 4; The Iconic Sounds of the 1940s, 23. Up in the Air: Music in the Afternoon: Hanna Montana co-star Emily Osment appears at the Balloon Festival in Readington on Saturday, July 24. The Alice Project performs on Saturday, July 24, 2 to 4 p.m., on the Palmer Square green. © 21, JULY 2010 JOIN THE CLUB J.P. Morgan’s Carolyn P. Sanderson, a member of the Nassau Club (inset), is among the Princeton professionals who use a private club as an alternate ‘office.’ Susan Van Dongen reports on central New Jersey’s business and country clubs, page 32. Table of Contents: Page 2 SANDERSON PHOTO: FRANK WOJCIECHOWSKI Princeton's Business and Entertainment Weekly Telephone: 609-452-7000. Fax: 609-452-0033 Home page: www.princetoninfo.com 2 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 T 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 Diana Joseph-Riley Martha Moore Account Executives Lawrence L. DuPraz 1919-2006 Founding Production Adviser Stan Kephart – Design1986-2007 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 2010 by Richard K. Rein and U.S. 1 Publishing Company, 12 Roszel Road, Princeton 08540. rying to keep up with a score who, in fact, recruited Reed in of active septuagenarians proved 1996. Mandel also lives in Princeto be a challenge to our relatively ton. youthful editorial staff. In our rush We wish we could use the exto prepare the July 14 cover story cuse of a “senior moment,” but it on “Super 70s,” we allowed some won’t fly. The average age of our of our incomplete thoughts into editorial team is 43. So we will print. Here’s what we meant to say. simply apologize. Bill Lockwood, special programming director at McCarter Theater, got the bright idea that arts programming could be a viable enterprise in 1959, when he and two other Princeton seniors organized a Kingston Trio concert. The concert had to be postponed, Lockwood egarding your July 14 cover and friends had to return tickets to story on “Super 70s,” and particudisappointed fans, and Lockwood larly your section on “Ageless Arfelt first-hand the commercial ap- chitects,” you might be interested peal of contemporary musicians. in my March 30 posting on the AtFormer Bristol-Myers Squibb lantic’s blog (www.theatlantic.VP Dick Druckman’s Gold Medal com): Impressions Gallery is located at Elite architects seem 43 Princetonto go on and on. If The Hightstown Road in Between Washington Post’s Princeton Junction. Philip Kennicott is The World-renowned right, Frank Gehry’s architect Michael Lines Eisenhower Memorial Graves’ redesign in Washington will be and expansion of another hit, if possibly a controverthe Arts Council of Princeton was sial one. A new Ike Age appears to completed in 2008. We also incorrectly identified be dawning. Gehry’s admiration the title of Ingrid Reed, who had shines through in a way that a just retired but is remaining active much younger architect probably in several other areas. Reed was di- could not express: Gehry, 81, said he does not often rector of the New Jersey Project, one of the elements of the Eagleton enter the sort of design competition Institute at Rutgers. The director of that led to his selection for the projthe Institute itself is Ruth Mandel ect, which is estimated to cost between $90 million and $110 million and tentatively scheduled to open in 2015. But he was moved by the figure of Eisenhower and his often overlooked contributions. It U.S. 1 WELCOMES let“made me very tearful to realize ters to the editor, corrections, that this great man was not recogsecond thoughts, and critinized,” Gehry said. cisms of our stories and Gehry is not the first great octocolumns. E-mail your thoughts directly to our editor: rein@princetoninfo.com. Continued on page 4 To the Editor: ‘Ageless’ Architects R You Are Invited INSIDE Survival Guide 4 Energy Is About To Get Very Pricey Building an E-Health Records Network Wedding Bells Go Ka-Ching, Ka-Ching Business Meetings Preview 4 6 8 40 9-31 Day by Day, July 21 to 28 Pat Tanner: First Field Ketchup Let’s Try: Princeton Sports Bar Theater Review: ‘Misalliance’ Theater Review: ‘Cliffhanger’ Opera Review: ‘Don Pasquale’ Step Back in Time to the Iconic Sounds of the ‘40s Opportunities Clifford Adams’ Mission: Give Trenton Kids Instruments At the Movies U.S. 1 Singles Exchange Sixty Years Later, Still Tickling the Ivories Cover Story: The Private Clubs Fast Lane 37 Classifieds Jobs 42 Richard K. Rein 9 10 15 18 21 22 23 25 26 29 30 31 32 40 43 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 © 2010 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. Company Index American Clean Energy, 4; Bank of Princeton, 37; Bedens Brook Club, 35; BluePrint Healthcare IT, 6; Bridal Expo Inc., 8; Brides.com, 8; Cherry Valley Country Club, 36. Forsgate, 33; Greenacres, 36; J.P. Morgan Chase, 32; Kavayah Solutions, 39; Malouf Auto Group, 33; Nassau Club, 32; NJWedding.com, 8. Penntex Group, 38; Petra Solar, 4; Pretty Brook Tennis Club, 36; Re/Max One, 38; Roma Bank, 37; RomAsia, 38; Rutgers, 4. Sills, Cummis and Gross, 34; Springdale Golf Club, 36; Stuart Country Day School, 36; TPC/Jasna Polana, 34; VIA Pharmaceuticals, 39; WeddingZone.net, 8. It’s only by staying one step ahead that you can truly lead the pack branding Q We can make it happen. It all begins corporate identity Q with branding – the right branding web design Q can lead to exponential growth, brochures Q bring your vision to life, help you advertising Q direct mail Q cut through the clutter and create market demand. Ready to take your company to the next level? Start by giving us a call. Princeton, NJ t 609.577.5449 lynne@redwolfdesign.com www.redwolfdesign.com JULY 21, 2010 U.S. 1 Is your child with ADHD having sleeping problems? ( Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Associated Insomnia) Then you may be interested to know that ... Your child may qualify for a research study of the investigational use of a medication for sleep problems, or insomnia, in children with ADHD. The medication is approved for use in adults for the treatment of insomnia. Qualified participants will receive: Your child must be: Study medication and study related 6 to 17 years of age exams including lab tests Have ADHD and problems sleeping Reimbursement for time and travel may be available For more information call us at: 609-921-6050 www.gminstitutes.com Where Today’s Research Brings Tomorrow’s Solutions 3 4 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 of History at 78), wrote in “The Past and the Present Revisited” (1987), the “real victims” of social change have been the “mature, sober” men and women whose experience was once admired, facing “the demotion of the middle-aged and the elevation of the adolescent and the youth.” And it is part of the plight of middle age that any special provision for it — unlike a “youth program” or a “senior center” — would on its face seem ridiculous. No wonder protest movements now have an older, but not elderly, center of gravity. Edward Tenner Tenner (Princeton, Class of 1965) is a historian of technology and culture. He was a founding advisor of Smithsonian’s Lemelson Center and holds a Ph.D in European history. Between the Lines Continued from page 2 genarian of his profession. Listen to Philip Johnson in the early 1990s. I.M. Pei is still going strong at 83, Oscar Niemeyer (maybe a bit slower) at 102. And think of Frank Lloyd Wright and Buckminster Fuller. Another superstar, Viktor Schreckengost, who created the first academic industrial design program in the 1930s and was celebrated for everything from ceramics to bicycles, lived to 102. In fact, there’s a big list of articles and books on creativity in the old. And while architecture is an especially difficult profession to enter during a real estate collapse, intrepid young architects have always had unconventional alternatives. Responding to the Depression and sex discrimination, Tatiana Proskouriakoff became one of the world’s greatest Mayanists, reconstructing ruins with breathtaking renderings. On the other hand, maybe the old are not the main victims of ageism after all. Psychologists have found that the 40s are the pits for human happiness today. And there are good historical reasons. As one of my undergraduate teachers, the historian Lawrence Stone (still Princeton’s Dodge Professor Paying Attention To 70s’ Wisdom T hanks to Barbara Figge Fox for her personal and self revelatory commentary in the July 14 issue of U.S. 1. It is a very moving piece, at least to me. I was inspired by its contents. I am at a younger phase of life, a parent of teens, yet Fox describes a stage not so far off for me. I can see and feel the time coming. This is a call to attention and action, as in “attention must be paid.” I also liked the reluctant turn to death and the need to be considerate in death, something not openly discussed by many. A deep and satisfying read, for which we owe heartfelt congratulations and words of praise. Hanan Isaacs Isaacs is an attorney with a practice at 601 Ewing Street. Publication Dates U.S. 1 WILL PUBLISH its Summer Fiction issue next Wednesday, July 28. After a summer break we resume weekly publication on August 11. Our Summer Fiction reception will be Thursday, August 12, from 5 to 7:30 p.m. at Labyrinth Books. SURVIVAL GUIDE EDITOR: SCOTT MORGAN morgan@princetoninfo.com Wednesday, July 21 Energy Was Cheap – Hope You Enjoyed It E nergy is cheap in the United States, and we like it that way. But although cheap energy has created a comfortable lifestyle, it is not a sustainable one. Rather, it encourages over-consumption of fossil fuels that are rapidly disappearing. The reason energy prices are so low in the United States is that subsidies hide the true costs of fuels. “We have, by some accounts, 250 different subsidies that apply to traditional energy sources that help hold costs down,” says Stephen Morgan, CEO of American Clean Energy in Saddle Brook. Because American consumers do not pay for the full costs of the energy we use, we consume the world’s fossil fuels at rate much higher than those of Germany and other Western European countries that began to tax energy in all forms after the 1973 oil embargo. “This drove up the price of energy,” says Morgan. “It significantly increased the price of the com- Clear Skin! Student Special! 3 Treatments for $235 (plus tax) (40% Savings) Offer good through 7/31/10. (Valid for one time only.) A COMPLETE APPROACH TO SKIN CARE Let our medically trained staff help to not only treat 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 modities over a long period of time in a way that didn’t wreck their economies.” This slow but steady increase in energy prices over 35 to 40 years had the consequence of driving down energy consumption on a per-capita basis. “Germany pays four times as much as we do, on average, per kilowatt of electricity and uses one-half to one-third of what we use per capita,” says Morgan. “Price is the driver.” Comparing energy prices and energy use in the United States with international averages yields an even more sobering picture. “The U.S. pays one-third to oneeighth of what other nations pay per kilowatt hour for electricity,” says Morgan. “The real price of electricity in the U.S. at the end of 2007, inflation adjusted, is the same as it was in 1960.” As a result, the United States has three to eight times the per-capita consumption of the rest of the world. “The amount of energy we consume is huge,” says Morgan. “We use 25 percent of the world’s oil, and we benefit from having access to that oil at relatively cheap prices — at the expense largely of the rest of the world.” Morgan is part of a New Jersey Technology Council panel on “What’s Next in Federal Energy Policy?” on Wednesday, July 21, at 4 p.m. at Weiser LLP in Edison. Other panelists are Christine Bator, adjunct professor at Rutgers School of Law and former Board of Public Utilities Commissioner, and Laurent Paty, director of customer programs and market development for Petra Solar. Cost: $70. Visit njtc.org or call 856-7879700. One result of the high energy consumption in the United States is its effect on utilities, says Morgan, who spent most of his career with FirstEnergy and its affiliated companies. Utilities are legally required to build enough capacity to serve peak demand, which lasts for less than 100 hours per year and is driven by a comfort issue — air conditioning. “Utilities have to be able to serve that peak demand, and 8,600 hours a year that capacity sits idle,” he says. “It becomes an uneconomic investment that utilities are required by law to make.” A national energy policy that responds to issues of energy security, fuel preference, and climate change should take into account the issues of artificially low prices, over-consumption, and idle capacity. But Morgan says this is not happening. “What’s lacking in this arena is what is lacking in most of our large policy decisions — we don’t have a full fact base when we start the debate,” he says. “We have opinions and preferential outcomes — not ‘What is the problem?’” So, what is the problem. With no national policy, the United States is stumbling along. “We have de facto a system of state-bystate decision-making on the matter,” says Morgan. Policies enacted at the state level range from doing little or nothing to two states that have enacted strong energy policies — California and New Jersey. We need to take into account the realities of the past four decades. People who have been happily consuming lots of cheap energy will not give up the resulting lifestyles in response to dire warnings of future consequences. Arguing that people should conserve because we are going to run out of oil or because our climate will change for the worse will not compel them to modify their consumption habits. These consequences are too distant from their lives and the necessary changes are too expensive. JULY 21, 2010 Left to their own, suggests Morgan, people in the United States will decide that it is cheaper to waste energy than to remediate. This in direct contrast to people in Germany, who are conserving naturally because it is cheaper for them to conserve than to waste energy. What won’t work. What the United States can’t do, says Morgan, is what Germany has easily accomplished. Five or six years ago it instituted an alternative technologies initiative, focusing mostly on solar energy. “It leveled what amounts to a tax across the board,” says Morgan. And because the price was already so high, consumers barely registered the 5 percent or so across-the-board increase in electricity costs. The price increase supports a feed-in tariff — a premium paid by a utility to its consumers for excess power they generate from renewable energy sources. As a result, Germany, which has the same solar radiation characteristics as New Jersey — similar cloud cover and length of the winter season — today has 41 percent of the world’s photovoltaic energy installations. But in the United States imposing a surcharge that would support a similar feed-in tariff would mean a $300 to $400 increase in electricity prices. Whereas Germans pay about 44 cents per kilowatt hour, the average price in New Jersey is 13 cents a kilowatt hour and instituting a feed-in tariff would mean quadrupling people’s electric bills. Consequently, the United States is not in a position to expand the building of alternative energy installations by increasing energy prices. Citing the ugly results of Maryland’s attempt a few years ago to institute a 75-percent increase in the price of electricity, Morgan says, “People won’t pay exorbitant increases over a short period. The only ways to drive alternative energy into the marketplace are policy initiatives, like tax incentives.” What might work. For the moment, Congress seems to be stymied. “The Congress knows these things, but the facts are overwhelmed by local points of view and perspectives,” says Morgan. If you are an oil-producing state, you don’t want an increase in oil prices; if you are coal producing, you do not want taxes on coal and carbon emissions. Morgan suggests that our national policymakers instead follow New Jersey’s lead and take Con- National energy policy should consider the issues of artificially low prices, over-consumption, and idle capacity gressional action to establish a national renewable portfolio standard. In New Jersey, by 2020, 22.5 percent of all energy must come from renewable sources like solar, biomass, hydro, nuclear, and wind. In New Jersey producers of electricity have three options: (1) providing the mandated portion of energy from renewable sources; (2) buying solar renewable energy credits that are issued in the form of a tradable certificate by the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities; or (3) paying an alternative compliance penalty. New Jersey’s policy has developed in fits and starts, says Morgan. “But we’re one of the states that has gotten it as right as it can be, given the current fragmentation. What we really need is for the federal government to impose a similar program across the 50 states.” Morgan suggests that policymakers go back to the core problem rather than arguing about regional preferences. “We live in a closed biosphere,” he says. “All the energy forms of this planet are solar, and I, as an engineer, believe that the most direct conversion process is the one that is the best.” His company, American Clean Energy, fits well into this scenario; it is a New Jersey-based renewable energy company focused specifically on developing solar photovoltaic developments for commercial customers. Morgan was born in Illinois farm country and moved to Ohio in his teens. His parents were largely blue collar and Morgan was the first person in his family to go to college. After graduating from Ohio State University with a bachelor of science in electrical engineering in 1977, he went to work for FirstEnergy Corporation, headquartered in Ohio. During his nearly 33 years at FirstEnergy Corporation, Morgan worked in engineering, operational management, and executive positions. He was president, CEO, and chairman of the board at Jersey Central Power and Lightfrom 2004 to 2009. He became chief executive officer of American Clean Energy in September, 2009. Through the Center for Environment, Energy and Economic Policy at the Bloustein School at Rutgers University, Morgan was involved in crafting the New Jersey Energy Master Plan. Continued on following page Recession-Proof Your Business! 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Katherine K ish NJBiz Top , President 50 Wo in Business men Too many changes coming too fast? Too little information to make decisions? Too few clear paths? Helping you move ahead with confidence on strategic and marketing directions. Market Entry, Inc. 609-799-8898 WBE/SBE certified kkish@MarketEntryInc.com O Why Record A Deed? ur recording system, having its roots in England, is basically a system for determining priority of legal claims against real estate. Thus, when one acquires title to real estate, or mortgages property, those instruments affecting title are usually recorded in the county clerk's office. N.J.S.A. 46:21-1 entitled, "Recorded deeds or instruments as notice to subsequent judgement creditors, purchasers and mortgagees," makes clear the purpose of our recording statutes. It states: Except as otherwise provided herein, whenever any deed or instrument of the nature or description set forth in section 46:16-1 of this title, which shall have been or shall be duly acknowledged or proved and certified, shall have been or shall be duly recorded or lodged for record with the county recording officer of the county in which the real estate or other property affected thereby is situated or located such record shall, from time to time, be notice to all subsequent judgment creditors, purchasers and mortgagees of the execution of the deed or instrument so recorded or of the contents thereof. N.J.S.A. 46:16-1 sets forth a non-exclusive list of instruments entitled to be recorded. While, the recording of a document does not affect its validity as between the parties to the document, the consequences of not recording is set forth in N.J.S.A. 46:22-1: Every deed or instrument of the nature or description set forth in section 46:16-1 of this title shall, until duly recorded or lodged for record By Barbara Strapp Nelson, Esq. in the office of the county recording officer in which the affected real estate or other property is situate, be void and of no effect against subsequent judgement creditors without notice, and against all subsequent bona fide purchasers and mortgagees for valuable consideration, not having notice thereof, whose deed shall have been first duly recorded or whose mortgage shall have been first duly recorded or registered; but any such deed or instrument shall be valid and operative, although not recorded, except as against such subsequent judgement creditors, purchasers and mortgagees. Thus, the principal purpose of New Jersey's Recording Act is to protect subsequent judgment creditors, bona fide purchasers, and bona fide mortgagees against assertion of prior claims to land based upon unrecorded instruments. This statutory scheme, is referred to as a "race-notice" system. A party who is a bona fide purchaser, mortgage holder, etc., for value and without any actual or constructive notice of adverse interests, is entitled to the protection of this statute. The requirements for recording an instrument affecting title or an interest in real estate are not onerous; the instrument needs only to: • Be in English or accompanied by an English translation; • Bear a signature • Be acknowledged or proved as required by statute • Have the names appear typed, printed or stamped beneath the signatures of any parties to the instrument and the officer before whom it was acknowledged or proved; • Have the required recording fee paid; and • Include the name and signature of its preparer on the first page and the tax block and lot number if the instrument is a deed conveying real property. If the instrument meets all the requirements for recording, the county recording officer will then copy it into the record and return the original document to the person submitting it for recording. It becomes important to record all instruments affecting title to real estate to protect the recording party, as it will be generally presumed that all persons who deal with the property after that will do so with knowledge of the recorded instrument. For additional information, please contact Ms. Nelson at bnelson@stark-stark.com Barbara Strapp Nelson is a Shareholder in the Real Estate Group of Stark & Stark, 993 Lenox Drive, Lawrenceville, 609896-9060. www.stark-stark.com. The NJ Recording Act protects subsequent judgment creditors, purchasers, and mortgagees against assertion of prior claims to land based upon unrecorded instruments. American Clean Energy is focused on solar energy, the technology Morgan sees as having the best opportunity to work. The kinds of commercial solar installations his company creates will also help utilities — which may only deliver electricity but not generate it — to solve the issues of peak usage. Luckily the hours of peak load in the summer air-conditioning season are in the afternoon when solar energy is at its maximum. Hence, explains Morgan, putting solar cells on commercial institutions that need energy at peak times solves this problem economically. “Our standard of living has directly benefited from low prices of energy, but it is unsustainable,” concludes Morgan. “We can’t do it forever and eventually we have to solve this problem.” What else might work. What we need to do is to start including “externalities,” those additional costs to the broader society that are not included in fuel prices, to bring the true cost of traditional forms of energy more in line with the costs of renewable energy. One example of is the mountain tops in West Virginia that are removed to get at the coal underneath. “We don’t pay for the cost of the loss of that mountain,” says Morgan. “The same applies to every traditional fuel source. We have excluded those externalities from the true cost of energy, and that s why it’s so cheap.” — Michele Alperin Thursday, July 22 E-Health Records T he doctor who pulls out pen and carefully takes notes while patients detail their physical ailments is becoming a dinosaur. In the wake of the 2009 Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, which authorized incentive payments to clinicians and hospitals that use electronic health records to improve care delivery, paper is fast finding no place in the exam room. With complex diseases and conditions in the hands of specialists and hospitals, it becomes more and more essential that all notes and test results about a particular patient be widely accessible. To support the adoption of electronic health records, the government is giving incentive payments over 10 years of up to $27 billion through Medicare and Medicaid to physicians who follow the standards for “meaningful use” of electronic health records as issued by the Department of Health and Human Services. To be considered “meaningful users” in 2011 and 2012, physicians must, for example, enter demographics, vital signs, active medications and allergies, smoking status, and current diagnoses. They also must use clinical decision support software to enter clinical orders and prescriptions and electronically report data on quality of care. And they must meet privacy and security standards. Once doctors and hospitals develop electronic health records, they will need to be able to share them through health information exchanges. This “mobilizes clinical health-care information electronically across organizations within a region, community, or hospital system,” says Vikas Khosla, president and chief executive officer of BluePrint Healthcare IT in Cranbury. “The government is also looking at this as a results-oriented endeavor,” says Khosla. “It is looking to track particular patient outcomes, trends, and benefits.” Public health officials, for example, may be investigating the effects of smoking or high blood pressure and cholesterol, or following the progress of pandemic. A health-information exchange would enable policymakers to capture and share this information. Khosla will speak at the New Jersey Technology Council’s Health Information Exchange Summit on Thursday, July 22, at 8:30 a.m. at the New Jersey Hospital Association conference center, 760 Alexander Road. Cost: $110. For more information and to register, go to NJTC.org or call 856787-9700. The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology is responsible for the adoption of health information exchange technology nationwide. The challenge ahead is that while JULY 21, 2010 most hospitals have implemented For the Record: electronic health records, less than Vikas Khosla says the 20 percent of physicians have done success of an Eso. health records system Privacy. “If patients don’t feel rests on our ability to their information is being securely stored and transmitted nationwide, trust that it works. they will opt out,” says Khosla. “We need the involvement of patients and physicians and their ac- extension centers that will provide ceptance to let data freely flow physicians with technological and planning capabilities to implement over the network.” Laws about patient consent vary fully functioning electronic medby state. In some states, patients ical records. Some states are well ahead of may opt out of participating in health information exchange ini- others in moving toward health-intiatives; in others they are in auto- formation exchanges. The leaders, matically and must deliberately opt says Khosla, are New York, Massout. Patients will need to be educat- achusetts, Delaware, Indiana, and ed about what happens to their per- New Mexico. “The common sonal information to encourage thread in states ahead of the curve is typically funding mandates that their consent. But security is a very real issue, are able to convince legislators and says Khosla, and it is impossible to state government to invest in stop breaches of personal health in- health information technology,” he formation. The HHS website keeps says. Two years ago, for example, a list of breaches that grows daily. New York passed a law to invest But by addressing technical and $160 million statewide in health physical security, Khosla adds, information technology. New Jersey, he says, is probably protection can improve. “We can’t stop breaches from happening but in the middle of the pack. The we can lower the risk and number Christie administration recently of incidents by implementing a se- appointed Colleen Woods as health information technology cocurity program,” he says. Standardizing practices. Clin- ordinator. “She will be the one to ical information systems in hospi- facilitate the activities among varitals and physician practices have ous stakeholders in New Jersey,” been implemented in customized says Khosla. New Jersey has also received ways and must be able to speak to each other. “The challenge of cre- federal funding for four health inating a health information ex- formation exchange organizations, change is sharing information that and a New Jersey regional extenmay be stored in different forms in sion center by the Health Informadifferent places,” says Khosla. tion Technology for Economic and “The goal of meaningful use is to Clinical Health Act. New Jersey has put in place the standardize all of these practices framework for across the a health inforhealthcare mation exspectrum so ‘We need the involvechange and there is comwill be submitment of patients and mon language ting final plans for communiphysicians to let data to the federal cating health infreely flow over the Egovernment in formation.” the next month records network.’ In part, says or so. When Khosla, the dethis is apcision to implement electronic healthcare records proved, funding from the federal (EHR) software, which can cost as government should follow, includmuch as $25,000, is generational. ing approximately $12 million for Whereas older physicians may feel the four health information exthat changes in their practices and change organizations and $23 milworkflow would be burdensome, lion for the regional extension cenyounger physicians are likely to ter. Once health information exstart their practices with some form of electronic health records in changes are in place, another longer-term issue will come to fore place. Khosla offers an example of a — how to financially sustain the doctor in Chicago with five offices effort. Funding may come through who was pushed into electronic membership fees, grants, and records by his office staff. “Before, paired compensation models, as in they had to fax or send records by California, where some of the courier, with less time to see the pa- largest payers have committed to tient,” says Khosla. “Now he can participating, figuring that the imincrease the volume of patients and proved patient care that results will increase revenues — not to men- be financially beneficial for them. Khosla came to New Jersey tion have a much happier office from India at age 6 and grew up in staff.” Newark and Roselle. His father is a Because physicians do not usually have the technical staff neces- retired photographer and his mothsary to adopt and implement elec- er is a retired banker; her last bank tronic health records, the Office of was Wachovia, before the merger. the National Coordinator for He graduated from Rutgers UniHealth Information Technology versity in 1990 with a double major has established grants for regional in psychology and English. U.S. 1 R O B I N N A L LY A D V E R T I S I N G Khosla started his first business with his brother, Computer Conductors, a network services consulting company dealing with network infrastructure like routers, switches, and servers.. Having begun in the late 1990s at Computer Conductors to build a customer base of hospital companies that needed help on network security and technological infrastructure, Khosla and his brother started BluePrint in 2003. It now has 44 employees. “We have a core competency in health information security, privacy, and compliance,” says Khosla. “Relative to a health information exchange, these are the founda- & D E S I G N ADVERTISEMENTS • ANNUAL REPORTS • BROCHURES CATALOGUES • CORPORATE IDENTITY • DIRECT MAIL INTERACTIVE MULTIMEDIA • PACKAGE DESIGN PHOTO SHOOTS • P.O.P. DISPLAYS PROMOTIONAL MATERIAL • WEB DESIGN 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 Continued on following page University Medical Center of Princeton at Plainsboro BY BARRY RABNER PRESIDENT AND CEO OF PRINCETON HEALTHCARE SYSTEM Why is University Medical Center at Princeton relocating? Our region has changed since the hospital’s founding in 1919, and so has the practice of medicine. By building a new hospital, medical office building and skilled nursing facility, Princeton HealthCare System (PHCS) can ensure that we are able to continue providing the kind of outstanding care we have delivered for generations, while meeting the changing healthcare needs of our region over time. When will the new hospital and the new Merwick be completed? We expect the new hospital to open in early 2012. The new skilled nursing facility will open in fall 2011. Where is it located? The hospital is located on Route 1, between Scudders Mill Road and the Millstone River, in Plainsboro, 2.5 miles from the center of Princeton and 1.6 miles from Plainsboro Village. That location is closer to 70 percent of our current patients. How big is the hospital? 630,000 square feet of interior space with 237 single patient rooms and the ability to expand to approximately 360 single patient rooms. Plans for the campus include a medical office building, a health education center, a fitness and wellness center, an acute rehabilitation center, a pediatric pavilion, an assisted living facility and more. What makes this hospital different? It will be a 21st century hospital in every respect. The patient rooms, for example, will not only be state-of-the-art in terms of technology but will also be designed to reduce the likelihood of falls and infection, aid sleep, and increase privacy and the quality of communication with the care-giver. Nursing stations will be decentralized, keeping caregivers just steps away from their patients at all times. Spacious and flexible operating rooms will accommodate today’s most sophisticated technologies such as robotic surgical systems. An enlarged Emergency Department will include specialty areas to better serve children, the geriatric community and people with behavioral health needs. In short – we are committed to building one of the finest regional medical centers in the United States – and one of the greenest. You mean it will be designed with the environment in mind? Yes. A sunlight-regulating exterior veil will reduce energy needs while permitting abundant natural light. An on-site, natural gas-fired cogeneration plant will produce electricity at double the efficiency of traditional generators. We’ll even be producing electricity in our parking lot, from arrays of photovoltaic panels. Perhaps best of all, we’re returning the Millstone River to the community as we create a 32-acre riverfront public park on what for decades had been privately-held industrial site. Will my doctors be there? The health care campus will include a Medical Office Building (MOB) connected seamlessly to the main hospital, giving patients easy access to their physicians’ offices while enhancing the continuity of care. What will happen to the current campus? The Witherspoon Street site is being sold and will be redeveloped. Current plans call for a mixed-use residential complex with an open plaza. From that site, University Medical Center of Princeton has provided generations of patients throughout the region with high quality healthcare. The tradition will continue at our new health care campus. This is the first in an occasional series about the relocation of University Medical Center of Princeton to nearby Plainsboro. Future columns will address issues such as access and technology. For additional information, see: www.princetonhcs.org/designforhealing. PAID ADVERTISEMENT 7 8 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 tions on which we can build a national health information exchange network.” Khosla’s brother is no longer with BluePrint, having spun off his own company providing information technology services to small businesses. Khosla lives in Old Bridge. Although the costs are significant, the benefits of a health information exchange will be significant. Khosla suggests it will decrease healthcare costs — for doctors, hospitals, insurers, and the federal government — both by improving patient care, reducing doctors’ time with patients, and reducing the redundant costs of duplicated tests. “Improving patient care is probably the greater cost saving,” says Khosla. “If we can reduce the amount spent on patients for healthcare, it will have an impact on the federal budget and the gross domestic product.” — Michele Alperin Tuesday, July 27 Putting the Partnership In the Wedding Industry N o business is an island. And that may be particularly true of the wedding industry, where no one business can handle all of the details needed to make a truly special day for the bride to be. There is the dress shop, the tuxedo store, the caterer, the bakery, the reception hall, the florist, the beautician, the jeweler, and the limo service. The list goes on, since there are dozens of different businesses that can cooperate and collaborate to make a great day for a bride and groom, and great business for themselves. It’s in the spirit of collaboration that traditional competitors have come together in recent years, to network not with the brides and grooms, but with each other. The Bridal and Special Events Industry event will be held on Tuesday, July 27, at 6 p.m. at the Trenton Marriott. Cost: free for up to two representatives per company, with a $10 charge for additional representatives. Call 609-689-9960, ext.14. “We want to give the attendees a chance to meet fellow colleagues and other top professionals in the wedding industry to see how they can collaborate with each other,” says Erik Kent, one of the founders of NJWedding.com, an online depot for wedding planning and consultation. Along with NJWedding.com, other event sponsors are Joe Tortorello from WeddingZone.net; David Ciccolella from WedAlert.com; Tom Chillemi from Brides.com; Gary Paris from Contemporary Bride Magazine; and Bill Lippolis from Bridal Expo Inc. Kent co-founded NJWedding.com with his wife, Beth, and in fact their own wedding was the inspiration for their business. “We met while we were both at Rutgers and got married in 1994,” he says. The two were communications majors at the university, and after college Erik got a job in marketing while Beth worked in bookkeeping. But the fun they had had planning their own wedding remained on their minds. “We wanted to work together, we just weren’t sure how at first,” he explains. A trip to Boston in 1995, where two friends were planning their own wedding almost exclusively using a new tool at the time — the Internet — was the catalyst for an idea. “We came home from that trip and went online and registered the name NJWedding.com,” he says. They officially opened their business in 1996, at first using the old-fashioned method of going door-todoor to businesses in Union and Essex counties to talk local businesses into advertising online. Cooperation, not competition. Today there are about a half-dozen online and paper magazines devoted specifically to the New Jersey wedding industry, but Kent isn’t worried about the competition. “There are about 50,000 weddings in the state of New Jersey each year. There are so many businesses in the wedding industry that need to advertise. That’s enough business to go Continued on page 39 AVAILABLE NOW! U.S. 1 DIRECTORY 2010-’11 The newly updated U.S. 1 Directory is the prime source for reaching businesses throughout central New Jersey — 5,613 companies in 226 categories. You can buy the Directory for just $18.95 at the U.S. 1 office or by mail for $23.95. THE NEW DEAL: Buy this book and get $18.95 towards your next classified or display advertisement. We will keep your coupon on file and credit it to your account. Mail this coupon with $23.95 to: U.S.1 Directory, 12 Roszel Road, Princeton 08540 Yes, please send me a 2010-’11 U.S.1 Business Directory. Enclosed is a check for $23.95. Mail the Directory ASAP to: Name Daytime Phone Company Name Address JULY 21, 2010 ART FILM LITERATURE DANCE DRAMA U.S. 1 9 MUSIC PREVIEW DAY-BY-DAY EVENTS, JULY 21 TO 28 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 Wednesday July 21 enues parking lot, 609-298-0604. www.cityofbordentown.com. Produce, foods, plants, crafts, soaps, cooking demonstrations, entertainment, and educational programming. 4 p.m. Health & Wellness IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Discover Peace Within Dancing Faith Newcomers Dance Party, American Ballroom, 569 Klockner Road, Hamilton, 609-931-0149. www.americanballroomco.com. $10. 7 to 9 p.m. Contra Dance, Princeton Country Dancers, Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Princeton, 609-924-6763. www.princetoncountrydancers.org. Instruction followed by dance. $8. 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Tzofim Friendship Caravan, Jewish Community Center, Jewish Center of Concordia, 1600 Perrineville Road, Monroe, 609219-9550. www.jcctoday.org. Song, dance, and stories in Hebrew, English, and Yiddish. Register. $18 to $25. 7 p.m. Summer Workout Series, Can Do Fitness Club, 121 Main Street, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609-514-0500. www.candofitness.com. Anti-aging. Register at reception desk. Bring a towel and water. Inside if it rains. Free. 8 a.m. Discover Peace Within, Chicklet Bookstore, Princeton Shopping Center, 301 North Harrison Street. Yoga in the Himalayan tradition with Acharya Girish Jha. Register at info@shreyasyoga.com. First class is free. 6 p.m. Healthcare Options for Seniors, Mercer County Connection, 957 Route 33, Hamilton, 609-8909800. www.mercercounty.org. Register. Free. 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Tarot, Planet Apothecary, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 732-4066865. www.planetapothecary.com. A ready of Tarot cards by Jeanette Wolfe. $15. 4 to 5 p.m. Caregiver Support Group, Buckingham Place, 155 Raymond Road, Monmouth Junction, 732329-8888. www.buckinghamplace.net. For adult children of aging parents facilitated by Louise Donangelo, Alzheimer’s Association. Peer support, resources, and tips on care giving. Supper served. Register. Free. 6 to 8:30 p.m. Holistic Weight Loss Seminar, Harvest Moon, 206 Sandpiper Court, Pennington, 609-4624717. Program focuses on cognitive, emotional, and behavioral aspects of overeating. Register. $40. 7 p.m. Multi-Level Yoga Class, Onsen For All, 4451 Route 27, Princeton, 609-924-4800. www.onsenforall.com. Explore the basic principles of alignment. Register. $15. 7 to 8 p.m. Hot Yoga, Princeton Center for Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite 506, Skillman, 609-9247294. www.princetonyoga.com. Twenty-six seated postures practiced in a heated room. Increases flexibility, improves circulation, and reduces stress. $18. 7:30 to 9 p.m. Food & Dining Kids Stuff Wine Regions of the World, Mercer College, West Windsor, 609570-3324. www.mccc.edu. “ABC: Anything But Chardonnay” with Bruce Smith. Register. $42. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Artful Conversations: Pythagoras Revisited, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609-275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Artist and mathematician Stefanie Mandelbaum discusses harmony and balance in art, math, and music. Informative talk followed by a hands-on session in mobile-making. Bring a calculator. Teens and adults only. 7 p.m. Yoga in the Himalayan Tradition, Chicklet Bookstore, Princeton Shopping Center, 301 North Harrison Street. with Acharya Girish Jha. Register at info@shreyasyoga.com. First class is free. 6 p.m. Pop Music Journeys of the Night, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, 215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org. Cabaret concert with Bethe B. Austin, John D. Smitherman, and Demetria Joyce Bailey with the BRT Band. $31. 2 p.m. World Music Summer Series, Mason Gross School of the Arts, Nicholas Music Center, 85 George Street, New Brunswick, 732-932-7511. www.masongross.rutgers.edu. The Klezmatics present jazz and punk accented Eastern European Jewish music blended with Arab, African, Latin, and Balkan rhythms. Free. 8 p.m. Cancellation Willie Nelson and Family, Patriots Theater at the War Memorial, Memorial Drive, Trenton, 609-984-8400. www.thewarmemorial.com. Country, standards, and gospel music from the late 1950s to the present. Drama Arms and The Man, Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, F.M. Kirby Theater, Drew University, Madison, 973-408-5600. 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. You can submit press releases to us by E-mail at events@princetoninfo.com; by fax at 609-452-0033; or by mail to U.S. 1, 12 Roszel Road, Princeton 08540. Ephotos (300 ppi or above) should be addressed to events@princetoninfo.com. We suggest calling before leaving home. Check our website, princetoninfo.com, for up-to-date listings, cancellations, and late listings. Wanna Be in a Rock Video? The Princeton-based experimental garage rock band ‘Dinner’ (of Princeton Record Exchange and Small World Coffee fame) gives a live concert — including a video shoot — on Friday, July 23, at the Arts Council of Princeton. 609-924-8777. www.shakespearenj.org. George Bernard Shaw drama. $31 to $54. 7:30 p.m. 42nd Street, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-862-2041. www.buckscountyplayhouse.com. Musical. $25. 8 p.m. The Servant of Two Masters, Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, College of Saint Elizabeth, 2 Convent Road, Morristown, 973-408-5600. www.shakespearenj.org. Carlo Goldoni’s comedy on the outdoor stage. $32. 8:15 p.m. Film Justice: What Is the Right Thing to Do?, South Brunswick Library, 110 Kingston Lane, Monmouth Junction, 732-329-4000. www.sbpl.info. Film, discussion, and refreshments to discuss ethical issues with a Harvard professor. Topics: “Mind Your Motive” and the “Supreme Principle of Morality.” Free. 1:30 to 3 p.m. Student Film and Video Festival, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-9248822. www.princetonlibrary.org. Two-day program featuring films submitted from throughout the nation. Intended for a teen and adult audience. Free. 7 p.m. International Film Festival, South Brunswick Library, 110 Kingston Lane, Monmouth Junc- tion, 732-329-4000. www.sbpl.info. Screening of “Easy Virtue.” Free. 7 p.m. Film 101: American Cinema, Trenton Film Society, Mill Hill Playhouse, 205 East Front Street, Trenton, 609-396-6966. www.trentonfilmfestival.org. Screening of John Sayles’ “Lone Star” and discussion. $5. 7 p.m. Literati Poetry Workshop, Delaware Valley Poets, Lawrence Public Library, Darrah Lane, 609-8829246. www.delawarevalleypoets.com. Visitors welcome. Bring 12 to 15 copies of your poem. Free. 7:30 p.m. Good Causes Shop Opening, One Simple Wish, 183 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-883-8484. www.onesimple- wish.org. Shopping to benefit the non-profit organization that grants simple wishes to foster children and impoverished families in New Jersey. Custom jewelry, personalized greeting cards, shirts, and recycled cocktail, holiday, and prom dresses. Celebration includes tacos from Mariachi Mexican Grill and virgin margaritas. 6 to 8 p.m. Farmers’ Market Wellness Wednesday, St. Francis Medical Center, Chambers Street, Trenton, 609-599-6464. www.stfrancismedical.com. Seasonal fruits and vegetables. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Farmer’s Market, Bordentown City, Farnsworth and Railroad av- Continued on following page 10 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 Pat Tanner I $32 3-Course Prix Fixe Dinner Monday - Thursday Does not include tax, gratuity or drinks. www.lahieres.com Witherspoon St. ~ Princeton, NJ 609-921-2798 t all started when Theresa Viggiano returned to New Jersey to study at Rutgers New Brunswick, where she soon will earn a Ph.D. in sociology. Her specialty is aging and mental health, and she has been doing research in that field at the university’s Institute for Health. Having gone to college and grad school at the universities of Kentucky and Indiana (Purdue-Indianapolis), she says, “I got used to open space and farmers markets. When I came here, I just couldn’t bring myself to live in an urban environment.” So she rented a farmhouse in Griggstown. Because the farm had 100 acres attached, she and her roommates decided to plant a few tomatoes, and eventually found themselves with a successful farm stand on their hands. Little did Viggiano realize that that move would lead, in seven short years, to a fledgling business, First Field, which makes artisan ketchup from organic New Jersey tomatoes. Nor could she foresee that she would be in partnership with her husband of less than a year, Patrick Leger, a certified financial analyst who is managing partner in Giverny Capital Advisors on Nassau Street in Princeton. Neither grew up in a farming environment — she spent part of her childhood in Morristown and East Windsor, and he lived in Montreal until he was 10 — but with his financial skills and her scientific background, their endeavor is thriving. “I love what I do,” Leger says, “but investing is a solitary pursuit, as is medical research. Gardening and making ketchup takes us both out of ourselves.” Before opening the Princeton branch of Giverny, which is based in Montreal, Leger worked for Steginsky Capital, also in Princeton, for three years and prior to that was with PricewaterhouseCoopers in New York. He has an MBA from Vanderbilt University and an undergraduate degree from McGill. He is the youngest of three children in a family that he says moved around a lot. His father, a retired electrical engineer in telecommunications, worked for Bell Labs in the 1960s and his mother is a homemaker. The couple, both in their mid30s, met in 2005 through an online dating service. “I was in academia, which is not conducive to meeting people,” Viggiano says. To which July 21 Garwig is available to assist. Other needle crafters are invited. Register. 7 to 8:30 p.m. Continued from preceding page For Parents Breastfeeding Support, La Leche League of Princeton, Princeton Alliance Church, Scudders Mill and Schalks Crossing roads, Plainsboro, 609-799-1302. Information and support for mothers and expectant mothers. Babies are welcome. Free. 10 a.m. Live Music Like eating at “Nonna’s” house! New Chef from New York’s R Mulberry Street in “Little Italy” R John Henry Goldman, Labyrinth Books, 122 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-497-1600. www.labyrinthbooks.com. Jazz. Refreshments. Free. 5 to 8 p.m. Trenton House Society with DJ Tony Handle, BT Bistro, 3499 Route 1 South, West Windsor, 609-919-9403. www.btbistro.com. 9 p.m. The Invitational, John & Peter’s, 96 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-862-5981. www.johnandpeters.com. 9:30 p.m. Open Mic, Alchemist & Barrister, 28 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-5555. www.theaandb.com. 10 p.m. Outdoor Action R Musicians on Fridays & Saturdays R Unwind at the End of the Week R Catering for All Occasions R On or Off Premises 206 Farnsworth Avenue • Bordentown • 609-298-8360 www.ilovemarcellos.com Summer Nature Programs, Mercer County Park Commission, Baldpate Mountain, 609-9896540. mercercounty.org. Mountain hike and yoga. Bring yoga mat and water bottle. Register by E-mail to jrogers@mercercounty.org. $12. 9:45 to 11:30 a.m. Socials Knitting Circle, Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane and Route 1, Lawrence Township, 609-9896922. www.mcl.org. For knitters who already know the basics. Ann She’s a Ph.D. candidate in sociology; he’s a managing partner in Giverny Capital Advisors on Nassau Street. Together, they make allnatural ketchup from Jersey tomatoes. Leger adds, “We were in two different fields. No longer can anyone rely on just walking down the street and meeting the person you want to spend the rest of your life with. And we’re not really bar people.” At their wedding they served jams, apple butter, and other canned goods that they had put up the year before. Soon after meeting, Viggiano got her future husband hooked on farming, and in no time they had so many tomatoes that even after canning jars and jars of sauce, there were still too many. Thursday July 22 IN THE SPOTLIGHT: For Armchair Travelers Author Event, Lawrenceville Main Street, 2683 Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609-647-1815. www.Lawrencevillemainstreet.com. Denise Sherman, author of “Destination: Paris and the French Riviera.” Reception and booksigning. Books will be available. 6 to 9 p.m. Classical Music Summer Stars Classical Series, Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association, 54 Pitman Avenue, 800-590-4094. www.oceangrove.org. Di Wu on piano. $13. 7:30 p.m. Outdoor Concerts Carnegie Center Concert Series, Patio at 502 Carnegie Center, 609-452-1444. Free. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Summer Park Series, Monroe Township Cultural Arts Commission, Thompson Park, Monroe, 732-521-2111. www.monroetownshipculturalarts.com. James L. Dean Big Band with swing and rock standards. Weather-permitting. Free. 6 to 8 p.m. Summer Courtyard Concert Series, Arts Council of Princeton, Princeton Shopping Center, 609924-8777. www.artscouncilofprinceton.org. Celtic Crossroads perform. Free. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Since Leger’s French-Canadian family had for years been making their own ketchup, he thought he’d try adapting the family recipe. “In that part of Canada, using ketchup on many dishes is traditional, including on things like holiday meat pies. But it’s sweeter ketchup than we’re used to here, often using apples as a base.” They began by learning the science of preserving and making shelf-stable products. “Canning is a scary process,” Viggiano says. “It took us a year to feel secure. We made many trips to Lancaster County to consult with the Amish to learn about things like hot pack and cold pack. We got the USDA guide. Even so, you have to take into account that the pH — the acidity level of tomatoes — can change from the beginning of harvest season to the end.” One important lesson they learned, she says, is that if you know the source of your ingredients and you use good science, safety can be assured, especially with a naturally high-acid product like ketchup. Heinz, for example, has all their tomatoes grown for them, enabling them to use an unsealed plastic screw-top on their famous squeeze bottles. L eger and Viggiano began experimenting with recipes, using different types of organic tomatoes and playing with the amount of vinegar, sugar, onion, spices, salt, and canola oil, which now comprise the totality of the ingredients in what is First Field Original Jersey Ketchup. It is sold in eightounce jars at the Whole Earth Center in Princeton and can be ordered by E-mail via the business’s website, www.first-field.com. Dance Natya Sampradaya, Integral Yoga Institute Princeton, 613 Ridge Road, Monmouth Junction, 732-274-2410. www.iyiprinceton.com. “The Ever Flowing Tradition of Bharatanatyam” presented by Divya Nayar. The lecture and demonstration focuses on the history and theoretical aspects of the ancient South Indian classical dance noted for its artistic and spiritual significance. $15 suggested donation. Register. 7 to 9 p.m. Drama Les Miserables, Rising Stars Voice Studio, Scottish Rite Hall, 103 Dunns Mill Road, Bordentown, 609-291-7440. risingstarsvoicestudio.com. $15. 7:30 p.m. 42nd Street, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-862-2041. www.buckscountyplayhouse.com. Musical. $25. 8 p.m. Misalliance, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, 609-258-7062. www.princetonsummertheater.org. George Bernard Shaw classic. $16. 8 p.m. Arms and The Man, Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, F.M. Kirby Theater, Drew University, Madison, 973-408-5600. www.shakespearenj.org. George Bernard Shaw drama. $31 to $54. 8 p.m. The Servant of Two Masters, Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, College of Saint Elizabeth, 2 Convent Road, Morristown, 973-408-5600. www.shakespearenj.org. Carlo Goldoni’s comedy on the outdoor stage. $32. 8:15 p.m. Continued on page 12 JULY 21, 2010 U.S. 1 11 Can Do: Theresa Viggiano and Patrick Leger with jars of their First Field ketchup and relish. In the early days they conducted taste tests on friends, cousins, other grad students — “anyone we could get our hands on,” says Leger. Their aim was neither to make a gourmet ketchup nor an organic version of Heinz, which they acknowledge has come to define the taste profile of ketchup in the U.S. They call their approach “seed to spoon,” which includes growing as many ingredients as they can. They also want to bring the “sweet and savory” taste of New Jersey tomatoes back into ketchup. Hence, less sugar — and certainly nothing trendy like agave syrup — and only locally grown organic tomatoes. In addition to the traditional “paste” tomatoes, Romas and San Marzanos, these include sweeter Jersey varieties, such as Rutgers or Ramapos. “Whatever Rutgers comes out with, we give a try,” says Leger. The couple currently grows about 200 tomato plants from seed, often certified organic, seeking out those that do well in the local climate. As part of their research Viggiano and Leger uncovered a dissertation called “The History of Ketchup,” which claims that tomatoes for the original Heinz ketchup were grown in Bridgeton. “We are tapping into this important part of New Jersey history. No other ketchup is being made in the state today,” Viggiano says. After her early years in New Jersey, her family, which includes three other siblings, moved to California and Boston because her father, now retired, was vice president in chemical engineering with PepsiCo and Breyers, among others. Her mother has always worked for blood banks and is currently quality control officer for one in Pittsburgh. But her dad grew up in Jersey City, where his Italian mother always kept a vegetable garden and fruit trees, and this is where Viggiano’s love of farming and tradition stems from. Once Viggiano and Leger had settled on a recipe, the next step was to find a health department-approved kitchen. “We asked around at restaurants but no one had space,” recalls Leger. “At the time, the culinary school of Elijah’s Promise (the New Brunswickbased non-profit that provides culinary education to underserved communities) was just starting their farm-to-table series. We arranged a barter: they wanted us to teach their people how to can and preserve and we could use the kitchen on weekends. They became instrumental in our start-up. They were so trusting.” At this, Viggiano shakes her head, recall- ing how they had estimated that they would need about two hours to make a batch of ketchup. “I clearly recall leaving the kitchen at 3 a.m. Once, we even set the alarms off. We would have four or five pots going at once, with burns up and down our arms.” Lisanne Finston is executive director of Elijah’s Promise. She and her staff take special pride in having partnered with First Field. “We affectionately refer to Patrick and Theresa as ‘the ketchup people.’ Sharing our facility was a way for us to further the mission and vision that fresh, local food is the best way for us to combat hunger and create healthy food options,” she writes in an E-mail. “They produced food for our operation, taught people how to preserve, and continue to inspire us.” The name “First Field” is a reference to the original field, from among the several fields on that 100-acre farm in Griggstown, where Viggiano planted the very first tomato plants. Viggiano and Leger have since moved to another farmhouse further down Canal Road, but a tenant farmer works for them at the original site. “Plus,” says Viggiano, “it refers to people’s first gardens, which are what they cherish and connect with above all others.” First Field eventually outgrew the Elijah’s Promise kitchen, and these days the couple carts bushels of tomatoes down to Rutgers’Food Innovation Center in Bridgeton, where they work primarily with Bruce Masters, a quality assurance specialist. “We want to be thoughtful about quality control,” says Viggiano. “For every six or seven batches we make, we are happy with maybe three or four.” Important factors include maintaining an exact pH level, scaling up the spices, which can be disproportionate, and monitoring the consistency of the ketchup. “It can’t be too sauce-like or it won’t stay on a hamburger,” says Viggiano. “The folks at the center have given us invaluable advice,” Leger says. One key piece was to skin and seed the tomatoes (using a press they had purchased on a trip to Montreal) and then to freeze the puree in giant tubs. “We could then process the puree at a later time.” Freezing turned out to be crucial when last August’s tomato blight hit the state. “We had no tomatoes to process!” recalls Viggiano, “So we used the puree we had frozen the previous March.” First Field ketchup is now processed in giant 100-gallon kettles. These days Viggiano and Leger spend every hour of the growing season on the business — when, that is, they are not working at their day jobs. “Scaling the business has been an issue,” says Leger. The couple have also reached the limit of how many tomato plants they can grow themselves. “We are in the process of talking with other organic farmers to see what they have as surplus so we can expand,” Leger says. Other flavors of ketchup are in the works — Cumin-Chipotle should be out soon — and First Field relish hit the Whole Earth Center shelves the week of July 12. Writes Leger in an E-mail update: “The relish is slightly more textured and not the super-sweet variety often found. It’s more vinegary, but still with a touch of sugar. It’s made of different types of green summer squash and cucumbers (both of which we grow), onion, green pepper, organic sugar, organic spices, apple cider vinegar, and salt. The relish was another way of preserving a bumper crop and adding value to a vegetable that isn’t usually preserved, especially since zucchini is another highly seasonal item that people can get overwhelmed with.” The couple is also committed to bringing back the traditional art of home canning, or what they term on their website, “bringing back the full four-season cycle of sustainable agriculture.” Leger says they are reaching out to other farmers “to see what they’re growing and how we can preserve that.” His wife adds, “People have lost the art of preserving and canning. We can fill that niche.” For more information visit www.first-field.com. NOW OPEN ! 33 Princeton-Hightstown Road • Princeton Junction, NJ 08550 Also Serving Thai Food • Take-out & Delivery Specialists 609-799-9666 or 609-683-9666 Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 10:30am - 10:30pm; Fax: 609-799-9661 Fri.-Sat. 10:30am - 11pm ~ Sun. 11am-10pm Order online at www.sultanwok.com CALL FOR A FREE CONSULTATION TODAY! PHONE: 609-799-0220 EMAIL: INFO@DICKSONDEVELOPMENT.COM TOM YUM GOONG AUTHENTIC THAI CUISINE Back to Business as Usual. Same Crew & Same Quality of Food as We Wait for Our Princeton Location to Be Rebuilt. 72 Princeton-H Hightstown Rd. ~ East Windsor (next to target) Open 7 Days ~ M-F F: 11-110pm ~ Sat & Sun: Dinner only 609-4443-11088 ~ Fax: 609-4443-11154 The Reviews are In ★★★★ Excellent “The beautifully reinvented Peacock Inn is a masterpiece of fine dining, offering an experience as magical in its mood as it is on the plate.” - Cody Kendall for the Star Ledger “Very good food with flashes of brilliance is the hallmark of the menu crafted by well credentialed executive chef Manuel Perez.” - Susan Sprague Yeske - The Times 12 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 Beach Read: Ernessa T. Carter appears on Thursday, July 22, at Artworks, Trenton, to sign copies of her Essence Book Club Pick and US Weekly Summer Beach Read, the story of an ugly duckling growing up in small-town Mississippi. Register at trentonevent@32candles.com. Indulge yourself with three hundred acres of breathtaking vistas, attentive service, and exemplary cuisine. • Four Hour Reception • Elaborate Displays • One Hour Hot & Cold Butlered Hors d’oeuvres • Four Hour Open Bar • Champagne Toast • Four Course Menu or Stations • White Glove Service • Personalized Maitre D’ Service • Linen Choice July 22 Continued from page 10 The Wedding Singer, Plays-inthe-Park, Capestro Theater, Roosevelt Park, Route 1 South, Edison, 732-548-2884. www.playsinthepark.com. Musical. Bring a chair. $5. 8:30 p.m. Film Jericho National Golf Club Inc. Newark Black Film Festival, New Jersey State Museum, Auditorium, 225 West State Street, Trenton, 609-292-5420. www.newjerseystatemuseum.org. Screening of “Still Bill” followed by a discussion. Free. 6 p.m. Artist Visions Film Festival, Lambertville Public Library, Lambertville, 609-397-0275. www.nickelodeonnights.org. Jet Weston & His Atomic Ranch 250 Brownsburg Rd • New Hope, PA 18938 215-862-8800 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 Hands and Mark Miklos in concert at Lambertville Station parking lot at 7 p.m. screening of “The Wild Swans” at 8:45 p.m., $15; Short films by area filmmakers, Wachovia Bank wall, 8:30 p.m.. 7 p.m. Student Film and Video Festival, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609924-8822. www.princetonlibrary.org. Two-day program featuring films submitted from throughout the nation. Intended for a teen and adult audience. Free. 7 p.m. Late Thursdays, Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton campus, 609-258-3788. http://artmuseum.princeton.edu. Screening of “Chinatown,” 1974, Roman Polanski. Outdoors. Bring your own seating. In McCormick 101 if it rains. Popcorn and soda will be served. Free. 8 p.m. Dancing Summer Night Swing, Forrestal Village, College Road West and Route 1 South, Plainsboro, 609799-7400. www.princetonforrestalvillage.com. Salsa presented by Ray Rodriguez y Swing Sambroso. Dance lesson with Henri Velandia from 7 to 8 p.m.; open dance at 8 p.m. Behind Salt Creek Grille. Free. 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Argentine Tango, Black Cat Tango, Viva Ballroom, 1891 Brunswick Pike, Lawrenceville, 609273-1378. www.theblackcattango.com. Beginner and intermediate classes followed by guided practice. No partner necessary. $12. 8 p.m. Literati Author Event, Artworks, 19 Everett Alley, Trenton, 609-3949436. www.artworkstrenton.org. Ernessa T. Carter, author of “32 Candles,” an Essence Book Club pick. 6 to 8 p.m. Author Event, Lawrenceville Main Street, 2683 Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609-647-1815. www.Lawrencevillemainstreet.com. Denise Sherman, author of “Destination: Paris and the French Riviera.” Reception and booksigning. Books will be available. 6 to 9 p.m. Author Event, East Brunswick Library, Jean Walling Civic Center, 732-390-6767. www.ebpl.org. Matthew Solomon, author of “Houdini, Magician of the Movies” and a professor of media culture at the College of Staten Island, presents a talk about Houdini featuring illustrations, images, and film clips. 7 p.m. Spelling Bee Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609-275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Match wits with your neighbors. All ages. 7 p.m. Good Causes Shop Opening, One Simple Wish, 183 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-883-8484. www.onesimplewish.org. Shopping to benefit the non-profit organization that grants simple wishes to foster children and impoverished families in New INTRODUCING A FANTASTIC O PLACE FOR LUNCHRDINNER Where you can enjoy the combined flavors of the Middle East & Mediterranean ARTISAN PIZZA Fabulous Falafel FLAT BREAD Homemade Hummus SUMMER SALADS Just Baked Pita & SANDWICHES AWESOME APPETIZERS LUNCH SPECIAL MON-FRI 12-2PM Bring a Friend BUY ONE GET ONE FREE Sandwich, salad, pizza, pita. Expires 7/31/10. Nassau Park Shopping Center (between Border’s & Sam’s Club) WWW.MAGMA-PIZZA.COM • 609-452-8383 JULY 21, 2010 Jersey. Custom jewelry, personalized greeting cards, shirts, and recycled cocktail, holiday, and prom dresses. Celebration includes cookies from Lovin Cookies and open mic night featuring poetry, music, and comedy. 6 to 8 p.m. Comedy Clubs Gilbert Gottfried, The Stress Factory, 90 Church Street, New Brunswick, 732-545-4242. www.stressfactory.com. Comedian who has worked in television and film. $22 to $24. 8 p.m. Faith Happy Hour, Tre Bar, Tre Piani Restaurant, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609-452-1515. www.trepiani.com. Free hors d’oeuvres. Drink specials. 4:30 to 7:30 p.m New England Clam Bake, Grounds For Sculpture, Rat’s Restaurant, 18 Fairgrounds Road, Hamilton, 609-584-7800. www.groundsforsculpture.org. Lobster, shrimp, clams, clam chowder, steamed mussels, and desserts. Register. $39. 5 to 9 p.m. U.S. 1 13 The Next Scorsese? ‘Girl in Glass,’ by Melinda Morgan, is among the films in the seventh annual Student Film & Video Festival, Wednesday and Thursday, July 21 and 22, Princeton Public Library. 609-924-9529. Farmers’ Market Tzofim Friendship Caravan, Jewish Community Center, Rider University, 2883 Lawrence Road, Lawrenceville, 609-2199550. www.jcctoday.org. Song, dance, and stories in Hebrew, English, and Yiddish. Register. $18 to $25. 7 p.m. Princeton Farmers Market, Hinds Plaza, Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-655-8095. www.princetonfarmersmarket.com. Produce, cheese, breads, baked goods, flowers, chef cooking demonstrations, books for sale, family activities, and workshops. Rain or shine. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Food & Dining Health & Wellness Grand Opening, Princeton Sports Bar & Grill, 128 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-921-7555. www.princetonsportsbar.com. Ribbon cutting ceremony to celebrate the transformation of the former Sotto Ristorante, also owned and operated by the Carnevale and Proccacino families. Classic American bar food with 15 flat-screen televisions throughout the space. 11:30 a.m. Group Studio Workout, Optimal Exercise, 27 Maplewood Avenue, Cranbury, 609-462-7722. Supervised cardio, core, strength, and stretching. Register. $20. 6 a.m. Spinning, Can Do Fitness Club, 121 Main Street, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609-514-0500. www.candofitness.com. Register at reception desk. Bring a towel and water. Free. 4:30 to 5:15 p.m. Prenatal Yoga, Princeton Center for Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite 506, Skillman, 609924-7294. www.princetonyoga.com. Class is designed to help mothers-to-be prepare body, mind, and spirit for birth and motherhood. $25. 6 to 7:15 p.m. Exploring Summer Solstice, Planet Apothecary, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 732-406-6865. www.planetapothecary.com. A look at foods, colors, and scents presented by Jeanette Wolfe. $20. 6:30 to 8 p.m. For Families Nature Scavenger Hunt, Plainsboro Recreation Park Ranger Division, Community Park, Plainsboro, 609-799-0909. www.plainsboronj.com. Surprise ending. Register. Free. 6:30 p.m. For Teens Live Music Studio Scrawl, West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road, 609799-0462. mcl.org. “Sport Journalism” for ages 12 to 18 presented by Len Bardsley, a graduate of Springfield College who interned for the NHL Hartford Whalers and Princeton University and was a sportswriter with the Times of Trenton for more than 15 years. Register. Free. 3:30 to 5 p.m. Edward Boutross, Santino’s Ristorante, 240 Route 130 South, Robbinsville, 609-4435600. www.santinosristorante.com. Jazz vocal standards. BYOB. 6:30 to 8 p.m. Mouth of Wilson, BT Bistro, 3499 Route 1 South, West Windsor, 609-919-9403. www.btbistro.com. Rock. 9 p.m. Singer Songwriter Showcase, Triumph Brewing Company, 138 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-924-7855. www.triumphbrew.com. Hosted by Frank Thewes of West Windsor. 9 p.m. Lectures QuickBooks Advanced, Joseph Gormley, Mercerville Fire Company, 2711 Nottingham Way, Hamilton, 609-936-9336. www.joegormleycpa.com. Register. $99. Lunch and workbook included. 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Continued on following page NOW HIRING! Email resu info@cranberrys mes to gourmet.com 14 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 July 22 Continued from preceding page Tea Leaf Green, Triumph Brewing Company, 400 Union Square, New Hope, 215-8628300. www.triumphbrew.com. Register. 9:30 p.m. Outdoor Action Summer Nature Programs, Mercer County Park Commission, Baldpate Mountain, 609-9896540. www.mercercounty.org. Hike. Wear sturdy hiking shoes and bring a water bottle. For adults. Free. 9 to 10:30 a.m. Tree Tour, Princeton Borough Shade Tree Commission, William Street parking lot. Evening tour exploring urban forestry presented by Jim Consolloy, a certified tree expert. He will answer forestry questions and offer tips on home tree care. 6:30 p.m. Politics Freeholder Candidates, Mercer County Republican Committee, Rosa’s Ristorante, 3442 South Broad Street, Hamilton, 609-5753397. Celebrate Russel Wojtenko Jr.’s 40th birthday and Jim Castelize’s 35th birthday. Register. $40; $75 per couple. 6 to 8 p.m. Colleges Paying for College, Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane and Route 1, Lawrence Township, 609-9896922. mcl.org. Learn about the state of financial aid and get an overview of key terms and the variety of financial aid available as well as a timeline and tips to help navigate the process. Presented by Kaplan Test Prep. Register. 7 p.m. Singles Happy Hour, Princeton Area Singles Network, BT Bistro, 3499 Route 1 South, West Windsor. www.meetup.com/PrincetonArea-Singles-Network. Cocktails, appetizers, and dinner available. Register online. 5:30 to 8 p.m. Dinner, Yardley Singles, The Landing, 22 North Main Street, New Hope, PA, 215-736-1288. www.yardleysingles.org. Register. 6 p.m. Divorced and Separated Support Group, Hopewell Presbyterian Church, Hopewell, 609466-0758. www.hopewellpres.org. Register. 7:30 p.m. For Seniors Workshop for Better Health, Grounds For Sculpture, 18 Fairgrounds Road, Hamilton, 609689-1089. groundsforsculpture.org. Walk followed by “Ten Thousand Steps a Day: How Far Off ’70s Throwback: Tea Leaf Green, performing Thursday, July 22, at Triumph New Hope, conjures the spirit of bands like Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, and the Grateful Dead. 215-862-8300. the Mark Are You?” a discussion presented by Stoneking Wellness Center. Includes healthy refreshments and park admission. Register. $10 9:30 a.m. Friday July 23 IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Wine for Yogis Yoga and Wine, Romy Yoga, 26 Tamar Court, Lawrenceville, 732991-6607. romyyoga.com. Vinyasa flow workshop with Romy Toussaint followed by wine tasting with Mark Censits of CoolVines. Register. $50. For ages 21 plus. 6:30 p.m. Classical Music Songs for a Summer’s Night, Opera Project, Sand Castle Winery, River Road, Erwinna, PA, 908-268-1264. Opera arias and duets by Don Sheasley, Steven Snow, Raymond Foose, Gabrielle Antonini, Lorenzo Corrado, Deborah Maher, and Sage DiPalma. $20. 7 p.m. Westminster Chamber Choir and Choral Festival Chorus, Westminster Choir College, Richardson Auditorium, Princeton University, 609-258-9220. www.rider.edu/arts. Mozart Requiem and Lang’s Little Match Girl Passion with the Westminster Festi- val Orchestra. Soloists include Rochelle Ellis, soprano; Scott McCoy, tenor; and Mark Moliterno, bass. Joe Miller conducts. $15. 7:30 p.m. Faust, Opera New Jersey, McCarter Theater, 609-258-2787. www.opera-nj.org. Gounod’s story about a man willing to trade his soul for a second chance at youth directed by Trevore Ross. In French with supertitles. New Jersey Symphony Chamber Orchestra conducted by Mark Flint. $35 to $110. 8 p.m. Folk Music Straight Drive, Folk Project, Morristown Unitarian Fellowship, 21 Normandy Heights Road, Morristown, 973-335-9489. www.folkproject.org. Bluegrass. $7. 8 to 11 p.m. Outdoor Concerts Courtyard Concerts, Grounds For Sculpture, 18 Fairgrounds Road, Hamilton, 609-689-1089. www.groundsforsculpture.org. Animus presents Eastern Mediterranean world fusion and dance blended music. Rain or shine. $10. 7:30 p.m. Pop Music Journeys of the Night, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, 215-785-0100. brtstage.org. Cabaret concert with Bethe B. Austin, John D. Smitherman, and Demetria Joyce Bailey with the BRT Band. $31. 8 p.m. Art Artists Network, Lawrenceville Main Street, 2683 Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609-647-1815. www.Lawrencevillemainstreet.com. Gallery features works by area artists. 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Art Exhibit, Thomas Sweet Ice Cream, 1330 Route 206, Skillman, 609-430-2828. “Beautiful New Jersey” presented by Darlene and John Prestbo of Skillman. He is a writer and editor with works in pastels and oils. She is a clinical social worker and photographer. On view to July 31. 1 p.m. Drama Cliffhanger, Off-Broadstreet Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-2766. www.off-broadstreet.com. Suspenseful drama. $27.50 to $29.50. 7 p.m. Les Miserables, Rising Stars Voice Studio, Scottish Rite Hall, 103 Dunns Mill Road, Bordentown, 609-291-7440. risingstarsvoicestudio.com. $15. 7:30 p.m. Into the Woods, Actors’ NET, 635 North Delmorr Avenue, Morrisville, PA, 215-295-3694. www.actorsnetbucks.org. Musical by James Lapine and Stephen Sondheim. $20. 8 p.m. 42nd Street, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-862-2041. www.buckscountyplayhouse.com. Musical. $25. 8 p.m. Plaza Suite, Kelsey Theater, Mercer County Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road, 609-570-3333. www.kelseytheatre.net. Neil Simon’s comedy presented by the Yardley Players. $14. 8 p.m. Misalliance, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, 609-258-7062. www.- JULY 21, 2010 U.S. 1 15 Let’s Try . . . Princeton Sports Bar T he change happened quietly in a matter of just a few days: the basement restaurant at 128 Nassau Street that was home to Sotto Ristorante and Lounge until late June was transformed into the Princeton Sports Bar and Grill. The owners, Rich and Joe Carnevale and John and Tino Proccacini, are the same, but sensing a surplus of fine dining establishments and a recessiondriven demand for inexpensive, casual dining options, they rebranded their restaurant as Princeton’s only sports bar. The restaurant’s cavernous basement interior is not much changed from its days as Sotto. As you come down the stairs from Nassau Street, there is a lounge area to your left with the bar and couches and a table seating area to the right. The decor, of course, has changed: the pale yellow walls now feature sports action shots by photographer Dick Druckman of Gold Medal Impressions in Princeton Junction and more than a dozen flat-screen TVs. The clientele, too, is younger and more varied than at Sotto, with several families, groups of kids, and young and middle-aged couples filling the tables. Though the TVs are everywhere, they are not overpowering. The sound is muted, and even with a mostly full restaurant on a Friday night my friends and I were able to have a comfortable conversation over dinner and drinks. But rest assured: If you came to watch sports, you’re practically guaranteed to find the sport you want to watch. From our dinner table I could see baseball and boxing, and later on from my vantage point on a couch in the lounge area, I could see the Yankees game on one TV and ESPN’s interminable Lebron James coverage on another TV a few feet away. The menu is big, varied, and distinctly Princeton Universitythemed. Typical bar food — burg- princetonsummertheater.org. George Bernard Shaw classic. $16. 8 p.m. Arms and The Man, Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, F.M. Kirby Theater, Drew University, Madison, 973-408-5600. www.shakespearenj.org. George Bernard Shaw drama. $31 to $54. 8 p.m. The Servant of Two Masters, Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, College of Saint Elizabeth, 2 Convent Road, Morristown, 973-408-5600. www.shakespearenj.org. Carlo Goldoni’s comedy on the outdoor stage. $32. 8:15 p.m. The Wedding Singer, Plays-inthe-Park, Capestro Theater, Roosevelt Park, Route 1 South, Edison, 732-548-2884. www.playsinthepark.com. Musical. Bring a chair. $5. 8:30 p.m. Karaoke Dance, American Legion Post 401, 148 Major Road, Monmouth Junction, 732-3299861. Cake to celebrate birthdays. Free. 8:30 p.m. Film Artist Visions Film Festival, Lambertville Public Library, Lambertville, 609-397-0275. www.nickelodeonnights.org. Rock poster art show in library’s lobby. Photo tour presented by Anthony Flamio to explore and photograph the town at dawn, 6:30 to 9 a.m., $30. “Photographic Monograph” exhibition at Panoply Books. Student Film Festival at the library, 3 p.m. Short films by area filmmakers, Wachovia Bank wall, 8:30 p.m. “The Bugs of Blackwood” by Andrew Piccirillo at Lambertville Station parking lot, 7:15 p.m. Screening of “The Iron Giant” in the parking lot at 8:45 p.m., $15. 3 p.m. Dancing Outdoor Dancing, Central Jersey Dance Society, Hinds Plaza, Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-945-1883. centraljerseydance.org. California mix dance. No partner needed. Surface is smooth stone. Free. 7 to 10 p.m. Dance Party, American Ballroom, 569 Klockner Road, Hamilton, 609-931-0149. www.americanballroomco.com. $15. 8 to 11 p.m. Ballroom Dance Social, G & J Studios, 5 Jill Court, Building 14, Hillsborough, 908-892-0344. www.gandjstudios.com. Standard, Latin, smooth, and rhythm. Refreshments. BYOB. $12. 8 to 11 p.m. The sports bar’s menu is big, varied, and distinctly Tiger-themed. ers, wings, and onion rings — is accompanied by Italian holdovers from the restaurant’s previous incarnation as well as pricier American fare like ribs and steaks. I had a Bicker Burger (onions, mushrooms, bacon, and blue cheese, $11), named after the process some of Princeton’s eating clubs use to select members. A friend had ahi tuna bruschetta ($11). The orange-and-black colorcoded menu is divided between house specialties (orange) and other items (black). Uniquely Prince- Good Causes Author Event, Trenton Area Soup Kitchen, College of New Jersey, Ewing, 609-695-5456. www.trentonsoupkitchen.org. “Defying Gravity and Exploration Into Your True Center of Power” presented by Caroline Myss, author of “Invisible Acts of Power,” “Sacred Contracts,” “Why People Don’t Heal,” “How They Can, Anatomy of the Spirit,” and “Entering the Castle.” Known for her writings and seminars, she has appeared on the Oprah Winfrey Show to discuss self discovery. Register. $50 to $100. 7 p.m. Comedy Clubs Ben Hague, Catch a Rising Star, Hyatt Regency, 102 Carnegie tonian selections include the Cornel West (an open-faced sirloin sandwich, $12), the Woodrow Wilson Burger ($9), the Prospect 10 (a full rack of ribs, named after the challenge of drinking a beer at each of the 10 eating clubs in the same night, $19), and the Jadwin and Hobey Baker (specialty pizzas, $11-12). The food is decent, but it’s the inexpensive beer that gives PSBG its sports bar appeal. A pint, even of Guinness, is only $5, and after 10 p.m. $1 Coors Light draughts are available. During happy hour (weekdays, 4 to 7 p.m.) there are $5 appetizers and wine, beer, and mixed drinks for $2.50 in the bar area. Gone are the classy live music and well-dressed servers from Sotto, replaced by, as one would expect in a sports bar, All Star Game viewings and a T-shirt-clad wait staff. It is a new atmosphere, to be sure, and one that should appeal to a wider swath of the Princeton community. — Sara Hastings Princeton Sports Bar and Grill, 128 Nassau Street, 609-9217555, fax: 609 921 7556, www.princetonsportsbar.com. Monday, 4 p.m. to midnight; Tuesday to Thursday, 11 a.m. to midnight; Friday and Saturday 11:30 a.m. to 1 a.m.; and Sunday 11:30 a.m. to midnight. PRINCETON GROOMING Dogs and Cats • • • • Experienced, professional master groomer Full-service grooming in your home or ours Stress-free for your dog or cat Specializing in older or sick animals that require special, tender care • Specials for two animals Center, West Windsor, 609-9878018. www.catcharisingstar.com. A winner of the 2006 Catch a New Rising Star at Providence location, Hague hosts the “Rhode Show, a daily television show in New England. Register. $19.50. 8 p.m. Rodney Laney, The Stress Factory, 90 Church Street, New Brunswick, 732-545-4242. www.stressfactory.com. $13 to $15. 8 and 10:30 p.m. We offer pick-up and drop-off locally with no extra charge, if you prefer the service outside your home. By appointment only –– 609-658-6164 mgmt@princetongrooming.com Princeton Junction Chinese Accupressure & Professional Massage Fairs Quick Chek New Jersey Festival of Ballooning, Solberg Airport, Readington, 800-HOT-AIR9. www.balloonfestival.com. More than 125 multicolored balloons dotting the skies. Ascensions are wind and weather-permitting at 6:30 p.m. $25. Air Supply in concert at 8 p.m. 1 p.m. Continued on following page N OW E NROLLING FOR F ULL c Herbal Foot Medicine rub, Foot Rub c Foot Massage, Reflexology c Deep Tissue Technique c Truly Relieves Pain and Fatigue c Back 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! AND P ART T IME C LASSES www.gentlehealingschool.com Gentle Healing Wellness Spa www.gentlehealingspa.com • 609-409-2700 1274 South River Road - Cranbury, New Jersey A RE YOU R EADY FOR A C HANGE ? D O YOU H AVE Why Choose “Gentle Healing of Massage”? • Our instructors are bodywork practitioners who have been in the field for average of over 10 years. • Small class sizes for individual attention • The School Owner has been a massage therapist for over 20 years and continues to be involved in Holistic Education Financial Aid Available through • Everything included in low tuition cost. • Beautiful Campus Designed to Feel like Home Title lV funding for those who qualify. In house financing available. • Best Education available in New Jersey Gentle Healing School of Massage is accredited by the Accrediting Commission of Career Schools and Colleges (ACCSC) *New Jersey Department of Education ( N.J.D.O.E.)*American Massage Therapy Association ( A.M.T.A.) *Associated Bodyworkers and Massage Professionals (A.B.M.P.) National Certification Board for Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork (N.C.B.T.M.B.) THE D ESIRE TO H ELP O THERS ? Come and join those who have already enrolled in Gentle Healing’s 600 Hour Massage Therapy Certification Course. This course will cover areas in Aromatherapy, Anatomy, Physiology, Shiatsu, Neuromuscular Therapy, Thai Massage, Cranio Sacral Therapy and much much more. We Also Offer Continuing Education Programs. Visit Us at: www.gentlehealingschool.com ENJOY A 55 MINUTE STUDENT CLINIC MASSAGE FOR ONLY $30 (plus tax) please bring this coupon - single use only - Select Day-Times, Evenings, and weekends( cannot be used with other offers or Gentle Healing Spa Membership) expires July 30, 2010 16 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 Rane's Guide For Dental Emergencies O ne of the common trends with dental emergencies is that, the quicker you get treatment, the better longterm prospect it usually has. As more people are realizing the benefits of early treatment, emergency dental kits are becoming quite popular. These kits contain a variety of dental treatments for emergency situations and can be bought in pharmacies and supermarkets. A dental repair kit is not intended to perform permanent repairs. However, it may help patch yourself up enough to stop the pain, protect your teeth and get professional treatment. Most kits include materials that are milder than your dentist would use. Therefore, they will only stay in place for a short period of time. However, your dental kits can be used effectively for temporary treatment in a number of different scenarios: Toothache: you may have a toothache caused by a cavity which you cannot see or reach. Your dental kit will usually include some clove oil and cotton wool. Clove oil contains eugenol, a powerful natural pain killer. Dilute it with some olive oil and soak the cotton wool, then bite down on the cotton wool with your affected tooth. This should help soothe the pain temporarily. Losing a tooth: When you lose a tooth the cavity can bleed quite heavily. Use the cotton wool balls in the kit to staunch the flow of blood. There is also some painkilling gel that can be used to soothe tender gums. Losing a filling: A lost filling can make your tooth immediately very sensitive to hot and cold. Your dental kit will include dental cement that can be used to cover the cavity and prevent debris from getting in that could cause pain. Fracturing a tooth or losing a crown: If the structure of your tooth is weakened by decay, then the tooth can crack. This can be painful and requires immediate professional treatment. In your emergency dental kit, you will find dental cement which can be used to cover the broken tooth and protect it from further damage until you can get to your dentist. Breaking a denture: This can be uncomfortable and embarrassing to manage without them. An emergency dental kit will include orthodontic wax that can help to smooth the edges of damaged dentures. Many people find it useful to keep an emergency dental kit. Parents with young children find it reassuring to be able to help their child when they are suffering from tooth pain. Teeth are most vulnerable to decay from ages six to fifteen. This is the time when we are most likely to suffer from a toothache. Therefore, it makes sense to keep a dental repair kit in the home. People are also attracted to the idea of dental repair kits when travelling. When we go on vacation, we are all used to having injections, taking malaria tablets, mosquito repellent and travel insurance. However, how many of us think about what we would do if there was a dental emergency and we were a long way from the nearest hospital? These kits are also helpful for sports physicians, team coaches and school nurses. Many of the more serious dental traumas occur on the sports field and immediate treatment can often make the difference between losing or saving a tooth. You do not necessarily have to buy a branded dental repair kit Here's a list to make your own dental emergency kit, it's a great project for you and your child to do this summer: Clove oil, antiseptic mouthwash, cotton wool, cotton gauze pads, pain relieving gel, acetaminophen tablets (Tylenol), Ibuprofen tablets (Advil), dental examining gloves, dental examining mirror, dental tweezers, dental exploring point, q-tips, dental wax, dental floss, temporary filling material, temporary dental cement, dental A U.S. 1 ADVERTISING FEATURE ointment for cold sores, salt sticks, toothbrush and toothpaste. These are the basics of any dental emergency Dr. Janhavi Rane kit. These items are available over the counter and have instructions for use. Of course it is important that you strike the right balance between equipping yourself for emergencies and ensuring that you know when to call your dentist. Remember that home dental repair kits are only designed to provide temporary relief. Many people, especially those afraid of visiting a dentist, will try to attempt what is known as DIY (do it yourself) dentistry. In virtually every case, this is ill advised. Without professional care, the condition of your teeth will deteriorate. If you have already sustained damage to your teeth, patching it up with a home kit is just a short-term fix. You have not healed the tooth. You have simply bought yourself some time and, hopefully, eased the pain while you wait for your dentist to see you. If you treat your teeth at home as an alternative to visiting your dentist, you will more than likely require more complex and expensive dental work in the future. Rane's Exclusively Yours Dental (Main Office). Plainsboro Shopping Center (Super Fresh). 10 Schalks Crossing Road, Plainsboro. 609-275-1777. www.ranesdental.com Rane's Dental Aesthetics (A Dental Specialty Extension for Orthodontics and Periodontics). New Plainsboro Village (Beside 1st Constitution Bank), 11 Schalks Crossing Road, Plainsboro. 609750-1666. July 23 Continued from preceding page Faith Outdoor Shabbat, Har Sinai Temple, 2421 Pennington Road, Pennington, 609-730-8100. www.harsinai.org. Weather permitting, Shabbat services will be held outdoors. 7 p.m. Farmers’ Market Farmers’ Market, Downtown Hightstown, Memorial Park, Main Street. www.downtownhightstown.org. Produce, flowers, baked goods, and area vendors. 4 to 8 p.m. Health & Wellness Meditation Circle, Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane and Route 1, Lawrence Township, 609-989-6920. www.mcl.org. Register. 2:30 p.m. Family Night Out, Can Do Fitness Club, 121 Main Street, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609-514-0500. www.candofitness.com. Register. Free. 6 to 9 p.m. Hatha Yoga: Spanda, Princeton Center for Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite 506, Skillman, 609-924-7294. www.princetonyoga.com. Learn asanas and pranayama in combination to build overall strength, increase flexibility, and aid in overall relaxation. $17. 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. Yoga and Wine, Romy Yoga, 26 Tamar Court, Lawrenceville, 732-991-6607. romyyoga.com. Vinyasa flow workshop with Romy Toussaint followed by wine tasting with Mark Censits of CoolVines. Register. $50. For ages 21 plus. 6:30 p.m. Kids Stuff Friday Night Live: Math Treasure Hunt, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609-275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Go on a treasure hunt around the library. Answer the math questions correctly to win the booty. Ages 9 to 14. Register. 7 p.m. JULY 21, 2010 U.S. 1 17 Family Theater Belly Fat? The Little Mermaid, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-8622041. www.buckscountyplayhouse.com. Musical. $8. 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Alice in Wonderland, Somerset Valley Players, Amwell Road, Hillsborough, 908-369-7469. www.svptheatre.org. Alice, the White Rabbit, and the Mad Hatter on stage. $10. 8 p.m. Are You Stuck? It’s NOT lose weight and get healthy, its Get healthy and lose weight. Healthy Weight Loss Lectures Happy Hour, Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-737-4465. www.hopewellvalleyvineyards.com. Wine available. 5 to 8 p.m. Flashback Fridays, KatManDu, 50 Riverview Plaza, Waterfront Park, Route 29, Trenton, 609393-7300. www.katmandutrenton.com. Buffet from 5 to 8 p.m., $5. DJs Bryan Basara and Davey Gold with music from 1970s, 80s, and 90s. 5 p.m. Dick Gratton, Chambers Walk Cafe, 2667 Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609-896-5995. Solo jazz guitar. 6 to 9 p.m. Lights on the River, Pasha Rugs, 15 Bridge Street, Lambertville, 609-397-5434. www.pasharugs.com. Fortune telling, Turkish music, and a raki tasting of the Turkish national drink. Sit on the large handmade rug pillow, a gigantic cushion made from more than 80 colorful vintage antique rugs to watch the fireworks at 9:30 p.m. 6 to 9:30 p.m. Liana Brooke Guberman, Rocky Hill Inn, 137 Washington Street, Rocky Hill, 609-683-8930. www.rockyhilltavern.com. Opera arias performed by Hillsborough resident. Reservations suggested. 6 to 8 p.m. Summer Wine and Music Series, Crossing Vineyards and Winery, 1853 Wrightstown Road, Washington Crossing, PA, 215493-6500. www.crossingvineyards.com. Karen Rodriguez Ensemble with Latin jazz. Bring a lawn chair. $15. Wine and cheese available. Buffet dinner and reserved seating for concert, $25. Register. Rain or shine. 7 p.m. Animus, Grounds For Sculpture, 18 Fairgrounds Road, Hamilton, 609-586-0616. www.groundsforsculpture.org. Rain or shine. Register. $10. 7:30 p.m. Kim Simmonds, The Record Collector Store, 358 Farnsworth Avenue, Bordentown, 609-3240880. www.the-record-collector.com. $18. 7:30 p.m. Dinner, Arts Council of Princeton, 102 Witherspoon Street, Call 609-924-2816 to sign up for the Free Seminar— limited seating. ‘Desk of Questioning’: 'Shadow and Memory: Ellis Island’s Unrestored Buildings,' featuring the photography of Christopher Barnes, is on view at the Morris Museum in Morristown through Sunday, August 1. On Thursday, July 22, 6:30 p.m., Dorothy Hartman, VP, planning & programs, Ellis Island Institute, discusses the restoration project that is underway to restore and use the 30 remaining buildings at Ellis Island. Morristown. 973-971-3700. 609-924-8777. www.artscouncilofprinceton.org. Live concert and video shoot with the Princetonbased progressive, garage rock group. $8. 8 p.m. Bob Egan, Bowman’s Tavern, 1600 River Road, New Hope, PA, 215-862-2972. www.bowmanstavernrestaurant.com. 8 p.m. Arnie Baird, It’s a Grind Coffee House, 7 Schalks Crossing Road, Plainsboro, 609-275-2919. www.itsagrind.com. Acoustic blend. 8 to 10 p.m. Dr. Doz Band, BT Bistro, 3499 Route 1 South, West Windsor, 609-919-9403. www.btbistro.com. Rock. 9 p.m. Sourland Band, John & Peter’s, 96 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-862-5981. www.johnandpeters.com. 9:30 p.m. Ghost in the Woods, Triumph Brewing Company, 400 Union Square, New Hope, 215-8628300. www.triumphbrew.com. $5 cover. 10 p.m. Fireworks Friday Night Fireworks, New Hope Chamber, New Hope, 215862-9990. newhopechamber.com. Happy hour, food specials, shopping until 10 p.m., and fireworks at 9:30 p.m., in both New Hope and Lambertville. 5 p.m. Singles Divorce Recovery Program, Princeton Church of Christ, 33 River Road, Princeton, 609-5813889. www.princetonchurchofchrist.com. Support group for men and women. Free. 7:30 p.m. Dance and Social, Professional and Business Singles Network, Brookside Manor, 50 Bustleton Pike, Trevose, PA, 610-384-5544. www.PBSNinfo.com. Cash bar. Ages 40 to 65. $15. 8 p.m. Drop In, Yardley Singles, Washington Crossing Inn, River Road, PA, 215-736-1288. Music and dancing. Cash bar. 9 p.m. Socials Luncheon, Rotary Club of the Princeton Corridor, Hyatt Regency, Carnegie Center, 609799-0525. www.princetoncorridorrotary.org. Register. Guests, $20. 12:15 p.m. Scrabble Scrabble, Classics Used and Rare Books, 117 South Warren Street, Trenton, 609-394-8400. All skill levels welcome. 6:30 p.m. ARMANI • CHANEL • HERMES Live Music Free Fat Burning Analysis. Simply call, give us your email and we will send you a link to the questions on line. This analysis goes way beyond just diet. RALPH LAUREN • ELLEN TRACY • ESCADA NEW SUMMER HOURS MON. - FRI. 10AM - 6PM SAT. 10:30AM - 5PM ADORABLE FROCKS DELICIOUS HANDBAGS FROM REGULAR TO COUTURE TO LAST THROUGHOUT THE SUMMER! 1378 Route 206, Village Shopper • Skillman, NJ 08558 • 609-924-2288 M-F 10-6; Sat. 10:30-5 • Consignments by appointment DONNA KARAN • LOUIS FERAUD • MONDI LAGERFELD • CHLOE • JAEGER Building One New Jersey, New Jersey Regional Coalition, Princeton University, Frist Campus Center, Washington Road, 609-341-4701. www.plansmartnj.org. “Building One New Jersey: State Planning for Inclusion, Sustainability, and Economic Growth,” an interchange with PlanSmart NJ. Speakers include Senator Stephen M. Sweeney, Assembly Majority Leader Joseph Cryan; Dennis Bone, president Verizon NJ; Timothy Touhey, executive vice president of NJ Builders Association and former chairman of the NJ Planning Commission; and David Rusk, author of “Inside Game, Outside Game,” and former mayor of Albuquerque. For community, clergy, and lay leaders; union and public officials, planners, municipal engineers, environmental advocates, developers, and policy advocates. Park in lot 21. Register. $100. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Consumer Affairs, Mercer County Connection, 957 Route 33, Hamilton, 609-890-9800. www.mercercounty.org. Information on credit, home improvement, automotive, or Internet fraud. Register. Free. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Meeting, Toastmasters Club, Mary Jacobs Library, 64 Washington Street, Rocky Hill, 609306-0515. http://ssu.freetoasthost.ws. Build speaking, leadership, and communication skills. Guests are welcome. 7:30 p.m. Free Seminar Saturday July 24 IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Indian Contemporary Dance Prithibhi, Kalamandir Dance Company, George Street Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732-397-3619. www.kalamandirdanceco.com. Indian contemporary dance production focusing on nature is based on Rabindranath Tagore’s poem “Prithibhi.” Indian dinner included. $25. 4:30 p.m. Classical Music Voice Recital, Westminster Choir College, Bristol Chapel, Princeton, 609-921-2663. www.rider.edu. Participants from the CoOPERAtive program perform. Free. 2 p.m. Don Giovanni, Opera New Jersey, McCarter Theater, 609-2582787. www.opera-nj.org. 8 p.m. Outdoor Concerts International Summer Music Series, Liberty Village Outlets, 1 Church Street, Flemington, 908782-8550. La Mela presents concert. Weather permitting. 1 to 4 p.m. Summer Music Series, Palmer Square, On the Green, 609-9212333. www.palmersquare.com. Alice Project performs. Free. 2 to 4 p.m. Summer Concert Series, Mercer County, Marina, Mercer County Park, West Windsor, 609-4487241. www.mercercounty.org. Stuck in the Decade, a Jersey Shore 1980s cover band. Free. 7 p.m. Continued on page 19 Color Salon Dr. Sheryl Haber-Kuo, M.D. Board Certified in Internal Medicine • Medical Preventative Maintenance • Treating Men & Women from 15 yrs to 100 + • New Patients Welcome Most Insurances Accepted Monday evening hours available Tt Cranbrook II Professional Building 2312-2314 Whitehorse-Mercerville Rd., Suite 201 • Mercerville 609-586-9566 18 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 Review: ‘Misalliance’ I find a lot of the early-to-mid 20th century British comedies to be long on comedy and short on ideas; they tend to be full of sparkling language and quotable, chuckle-inducing bon mots, but everything gets wrapped up in a pretty bow that’s all surface tension with no real thought behind it. Shaw’s never been that kind of writer, though; there’s always scandal and social upheaval right there up front or just under the surface. And there’s a lot to like about “Misalliance,” playing at Princeton Summer Theater through Sunday, August 1. The trouble is that this play is the inverse of the above formula: long on delicious ideas (and length in general), but a little on the short side when it comes to genuine laughter. You’ve got all the staples of your standard English country comedy: the play is set on a single day in May, 1909, at the greenhouse of a country estate in Surrey, which, in an interesting yet unexplained design decision, is filled with curios and props of all sorts. The estate is owned by a workingclass gentleman turned successful underwear merchant (Bradley Wilson), who lives with his wife ((Dominique Salerno), and their two grown children. Their kids appear to fall into neat little boxes at first — Johnny (Shawn Fennell) has a little bit of the dumb jock about him, and Hypatia (Veronica Siverd) is both a cultured young lady and chafing at the boundaries in which society has placed her. From this point, it looks like we might get something that looks like a Jane Austen novel. We don’t. Over the course of the evening’s near-three hour length, plot points are revealed and hinged around a series of visitors, expected and otherwise. Lord Summerhays (Andy Linz) shows up, preceded by his developmentally arrested dilettante of a son, Bentley (Daniel Rattner), who happens to be Hypatia’s fiance. On the uninvited front we have a pair of adventurers who drop in via plane crash. Yes, you read that right. A plane crash ends act one. The two characters added are Bentley’s boarding While there are dazzling moments and spirited conversations throughout, it’s a tough evening to sit through. school chum and pilo, Joey Percival (Ben Taub, full of Dudley Doright-esque charm) and the real winner of the evening’s entertainment, Lina Szczepanowska (Rebecca Foresman), a Polish acrobatess and daredevil who steals the heart of every man she meets with her aggressive charm and eyebrow-raising S&M gymnastic antics. There’s also a gunman (the genuinely funny and charming Tyler Weaks) hiding in a Turkish bath, ready to murder the family patriarch. So, quick checklist: British wealth, garden drama, English lords, adventuresome young lady, plane crash, Polish acrobat, actionhero pilot, acerbic dilettante, Turkish bath, gun wielding maniac. On those items alone, I’d be sold for the madcap adventure one expects when these elements are all put into play. T he disappointment comes in that the final product is so much less interesting than the parts that comprise it. Shaw avoided head-on scorn from critics in his day by dubbing “Misalliance” a “debate” instead of a play. And I can see what he was trying to do — there are a lot of heady ideas afoot, as each character transforms into a mouthpiece for a different perspective. We get treatises on the nature of male and female power, the plight of the working-class man, the sanctity of marriage, the ridiculousness of marriage, age-appropriate courtship, foreign policy, the pros and cons of socialism, masculinity, and even proper airplane repair and maintenance. But it all feels unfocused, as if a shotgun were loaded with all of the hotbutton issues of Shaw’s time and just fired at the stage. The company does the best they can with it, and there are certainly standouts. Siverd is charming and in firm control as Hypatia, and a surprising relationship revelation concerning her is one of the evening’s true juicy bits of repartee and surprise. Rebecca Foresman is the true scene-stealer of the play, as Lena is both a delight and a much needed firecracker of energy and verve. Comedy in the Country: Veronica Siverd and Daniel Rattner. Ultimately, I find “Misalliance” puzzling as a selection for PST’s summer season. It’s a play that requires more than half the able cast to play roles outside their normal age ranges. What has the potential to be an ambitious theater selection ultimately has its suspension of disbelief removed the moment we see age makeup on the young actors. It becomes an ambitious college theater selection instead, and the clear and present talents of this company deserve better. While there are dazzling moments and spirited conversations throughout, it’s a tough evening to sit through, especially in the increasingly-hot Hamilton Murray Theater, where a choice has to be made between making sure the actors are audible and running the AC consistently. PST has chosen the former, and the theater reaches uncomfortable levels of warmth by the evening’s end. Which is a shame; there’s fun and zany moments of joy and laughter near the play’s conclusion, that are unfortunately snuffed out by the uncomfortably hot audience. — Jonathan Elliott “Misalliance,” Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater. Through Sunday, August 1. George Bernard Shaw classic. $16. 609-258-7062 or www.princetonsummertheater.org. YOU CUSTOM DESIGN THE T-SHIRTS WE PRODUCE THEM OVERNIGHT, NEXT DAY, 24 HOURS REALLY FAST! ANY DESIGN, ANY GRAPHIC, ANY PHOTO, ANY COLORS, ANY QUANTITY! “Basic” Custom Design T-Shirt Price List: 1 Shirt $20 per shirt 2-3 Shirts $17.50 per shirt 4-6 Shirts $16 per shirt 7-12 Shirts $14 per shirt 13-24 Shirts $12.50 per shirt 25-49 Shirts $10.50 per shirt 50 or More Shirts $9.50 per shirt NO Design Charges. NO Set-up Charges. NO Screen Charges. READY TOMORROW, NOWHERE BUT LANDAU! Custom Design Shirt Shop Sale Hours Monday - Saturday 9:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. OPEN SUNDAYS 11:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. 102 Nassau Street • Across from the University • Princeton, NJ • (609) 924-3494 www.landauprinceton.com JULY 21, 2010 Movies for Teens: ‘Whale Rider’ screens on Thursday, July 22, at West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road. Snacks provided. 609-799-0462. July 24 Continued from page 17 Billy Walton Band, West Windsor Arts Council, Nassau Park Pavilion, West Windsor, 609-9191982. www.westwindsorarts.org. Rock and roll with Billy Walton, a guitarist and vocalist; William Paris of West Windsor on bass, and Marcus Croan on drums. Free concert in “..and the beat goes on” summer music series. Bring chairs or blankets. Inside Panera if raining. Reception at BoConcept, the Danish furniture store in Nassau Park, follows the concert. Free. 6 p.m. 6th Street Quaternion, Blue Point Grill, 258 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-921-1211. www.bluepointgrill.com. 7 p.m. Pop Music Journeys of the Night, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, 215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org. Cabaret concert with Bethe B. Austin, John D. Smitherman, and Demetria Joyce Bailey with the BRT Band. $31. 3 and 8 p.m. Smokey Robinson, Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association, 54 Pitman Avenue, 800590-4094. www.oceangrove.org. Motown. 8 p.m. Art Fine Art Workshop, Artists of Yardley, AOY Art Center, 949 Mirror Lake Road, Yardley, PA, 215-860-7877. www.artistsofyardley.org. “Color Management” with Dot Bunn. Bring your own supplies. Register. $50. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Artists Network, Lawrenceville Main Street, 2683 Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609-647-1815. www.Lawrencevillemainstreet.com. Gallery features works by area artists. 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Highlights Tour, Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton campus, 609-258-3788. http://artmuseum.princeton.edu. Free. 2 p.m. Dance Songs of Nilad and Passion and Fire, Silk City Summer Arts Festival, Eastside Park, Paterson, 212-415-5500. www.silkcityartsfestival.com. “Songs of Nilad” and “Passion and Fire” were choreographed by Marie Alonzo of West Windsor will be performed by Henri Velandia and Mira Estaphanous, also of West Windsor; Nancy Musco of Plainsboro; Kelsey Burns, Cathy Gonzales, Abdiel Cedric Jacobsen, Rogerson St. Jean, Danielle Mondi, Kevin Toft, and Danielle Mondi. Picnics and blankets are welcome. Free admission. Raindate is Sunday, July 25. Noon to 1 p.m. Prithibhi, Kalamandir Dance Company, George Street Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732-397-3619. www.kalamandirdanceco.com. Indian contemporary dance production focusing on nature is based on Rabindranath Tagore’s poem “Prithibhi.” Indian dinner included. $25. 4:30 p.m. Drama Misalliance, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, 609-258-7062. www.princetonsummertheater.org. George Bernard Shaw classic. $16. 2 and 8 p.m. Arms and The Man, Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, F.M. Kirby Theater, Drew University, Madison, 973-408-5600. www.shakespearenj.org. George Bernard Shaw drama. $31 to $54. 2 and 8 p.m. 42nd Street, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-862-2041. www.buckscountyplayhouse.com. Musical. $25. 4 and 8 p.m. Cliffhanger, Off-Broadstreet Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-2766. www.off-broadstreet.com. Suspenseful drama. $27.50 to $29.50. 7 p.m. Into the Woods, Actors’ NET, 635 North Delmorr Avenue, Morrisville, PA, 215-295-3694. www.actorsnetbucks.org. Musical by James Lapine and Stephen Sondheim. $20. 8 p.m. Plaza Suite, Kelsey Theater, Mercer County Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road, 609-570-3333. www.kelseytheatre.net. Neil Simon’s comedy presented by the Yardley Players. $14. 8 p.m. The Servant of Two Masters, Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, College of Saint Elizabeth, 2 Convent Road, Morristown, 973-408-5600. www.shakespearenj.org. Carlo Goldoni’s comedy on the outdoor stage. $32. 8:15 p.m. Continued on following page U.S. 1 19 20 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 A new menu of services begins at Onsen for All Inward Bound: Caroline Myss speaks on ‘Defying Gravity and Exploration into Your True Center of Power,’ to benefit Trenton Area Soup Kitchen, Friday, July 23, College of New Jersey. 609-695-5456. Facials, Body Treatments, Dare to Bare Waxing, Elements Day Packages July 24 Continued from preceding page Onsen for All, Onsen for You Organic Facials Spa for a healthy lifestyle Receive $25 off when you book our luxurious Innocence Facial, designed to boost collagen and cell renewal! Includes a hand, arm and scalp massage. Offer expires: July 31, 2010 Elements Day Packages Introducing EARTH Enjoy a 30 minute private soak, Signature Facial & Body Wrap, complimented with organic juice or tea. 2.5 hours $200.00 ($241.5o Value) ….Wind, Fire, and Water preview in coming weeks. reserve I 609 924 4800 info@onsenforall.com www.onsenforall.com 4451 Route 27 at Raymond Road • Princeton, NJ 08540 The Wedding Singer, Plays-inthe-Park, Capestro Theater, Roosevelt Park, Route 1 South, Edison, 732-548-2884. www.playsinthepark.com. Musical. Bring a chair. $5. 8:30 p.m. Dinner Theater A Slaying in the Speakeasy, Publick House, 111 Main Street, Chester, 908-879-6878. www.theatertogo.com. Murder mystery dinner theater performed by Theater To Go includes a four-course dinner. Register. $49. 7 p.m. Film Artist Visions Film Festival, Lambertville Public Library, Lambertville, 609-397-0275. www.nickelodeonnights.org. Wine tasting and architecture tour, 1 p.m., $10. Screening of “Gemini Rising” and meet Gina Andreoli and Chris Marston at 2 p.m., $15. Screening of “Bela Fleck: Throw Down Your Heart” at 3 p.m., $15. Upper Princeton Swing Collective in outside concert at 5 p.m. The High Hearts in concert at 6:30 p.m. Screening of “When You’re Strange” at 7:30 p.m., $15. Short films by area filmmakers at 8:30 p.m. 1 p.m. Outdoor Movie Series, Plainsboro Recreation, Morris Davison Park, Plainsboro, 609-799-0909 ext. 552. www.plainsboronj.com. Screening of “Madagascar.” Bring blankets and lawn chairs. Free. 7 p.m. Dancing Contra Dance, Princeton Country Dancers, Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Princeton, 609-924-6763. www.princetoncountrydancers.org. Instruction and dance. $12. 7:30 to 11 p.m. Ballroom Dance Social, G & J Studios, 5 Jill Court, Building 14, Hillsborough, 908-892-0344. www.gandjstudios.com. Standard, Latin, smooth, and rhythm. Refreshments. BYOB. $12. 8 to 11 p.m. Literati Author Event, Borders Books, 601 Nassau Park, 609-514-0040. www.bordersgroupinc.com. Deanna Pinns-Lawson and Stella I. Williams, authors of “Independent Women.” Booksigning. 1 p.m. Author Event, Classics Used and Rare Books, 117 South Warren Street, Trenton, 609-3948400. William Mackson discusses his kids’ book, “The Hip Hop Catz and the K9 Crew.” 2 p.m. Good Causes Shop Opening, One Simple Wish, 183 Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-883-8484. www.onesimplewish.org. Shopping to benefit the non-profit organization that grants simple wishes to foster children and impoverished families in New Jersey. Custom jewelry, personalized greeting cards, shirts, and recycled cocktail, holiday, and prom dresses. Celebration includes free coffee and donuts. 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Comedy Clubs Ben Hague, Catch a Rising Star, Hyatt Regency, 102 Carnegie Center, West Windsor, 609-9878018. www.catcharisingstar.com. Register. $22. 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Nicole Rogers and Helene Angley, Grover’s Mill Coffee House, 335 Princeton Hightstown Road, West Windsor, 609-7168771. www.groversmillcoffee.com. Music and comedy. 8 p.m. Rodney Laney, The Stress Factory, 90 Church Street, New Brunswick, 732-5454242. www.stressfactory.com. $13 to $15. 8 and 10:30 p.m. Fairs Quick Chek New Jersey Festival of Ballooning, Solberg Airport, Readington, 800-HOT-AIR9. www.balloonfestival.com. More than 125 multicolored balloons dotting the skies. Ascensions are wind and weather-permitting at 6:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. $25. Emily Osment in concert at 2 p.m. George Thorogood and the Destroyers in concert at 8 p.m. 6 a.m. Food & Dining Product Cooking Demonstration, Miele Design Center, 9 Independence Way, Princeton, 800-843-7231. www.mieleusa.com. Register. Free. Noon. Food Tastings, Nassau Seafood & Produce, 256 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-921-0620. www.nassaustreetseafood.com. Free. Noon to 2 p.m. Summer Wine Faire, New Hope Chamber, The Tuscany, 18 West Mechanic Street, New Hope, PA, 215-862-9990. www.newhopechamber.com. Wine tasting, food, and shopping. Rain or shine. Register. $25 to $30. Must be 21. Noon to 7 p.m. Farmers’ Market Jamesburg Revitalization Coalition, Jamesburg Presbyterian Church, Gatzmer Avenue and Church Street, 732-512-7417. www.ilovejamesburg.com. Produce, non-profit organizations, and specialty vendors. 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. West Windsor Community Farmers’ Market, Vaughn Drive Parking Lot, Princeton Junction Train Station, 609-577-5113. www.westwindsorfarmersmarket.org. Produce, bakery items, pizza, coffee, and other foods and flowers. West Windsor Arts Council, West Windsor Bike and Pedestrian Alliance, and Yes, We Can, a volunteer group that collects food for the Crisis Ministry of Princeton and Trenton. West Windsor Arts Council’s community art show with artist Ken Liao. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Trenton Fresh Farmers’ Market, Crisis Ministry of Princeton and Trenton, North Clinton and North Olden avenues, Trenton, 609-396-9355. www.thecrisisministry.org. Produce, health screenings, cooking demonstrations, and health and wellness programs. Vendors will accept food stamps. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Gardens Planting a Wetland Meadow, Master Gardeners of Mercer County, 431A Federal City Road, Pennington, 609-989-6830. www.mgofmc.org. Program focusing on several varieties of native wetland and rain garden plants presented by Nancy Putnam. Register. $3. 10 to 11 a.m. Health & Wellness Nia Dance, Functional Fitness, 67 Harbourton Mt. Airy Road, Lambertville, 609-577-9407. www.nianewjersey.com. Register. $17. 10 to 11 a.m. Insight Meditation Open House, Princeton Center for Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite 506, Skillman, 609-924-7294. www.princetonyoga.com. Overview of insight meditation, known in Asia as Vipassana, by Beth Evard, founder of Princeton Insight Meditation. Two short meditation practice sittings. Free. 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. History The Armory System, Washington Crossing State Park, 355 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, 609-737-2515. Stanley Saperstein presents a solo presentation as Isaac Coren, director of the Carlisle Laboratory during the Revolutionary War at 1 p.m. Visitor Center museum features Colonial and Revolutionary War artifact. $5 per car. 1 to 4 p.m. For Families Cardboard Canoe Race, Plainsboro Public Library, Waters Edge Park, 609-275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. All ages are encouraged to enter as experience has proven that adults do not have an advantage over youngsters. Plainsboro Fire Department and Rescue Squad will have crews in the water. 10 a.m. to noon. Evening Hayrides, Howell Living History Farm, Valley Road, off Route 29, Titusville, 609-7373299. www.howellfarm.org. Selfguided tours, picnic in the pine grove, marshmallow roast, and 20-minute rides. Free. 5 to 8 p.m. Family Theater The Little Mermaid, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-8622041. www.buckscountyplayhouse.com. Musical. $8. 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Alice in Wonderland, Somerset Valley Players, Amwell Road, Hillsborough, 908-369-7469. www.svptheatre.org. Alice, the White Rabbit, and the Mad Hatter on stage. $10. 8 p.m. Lectures What Does Your Handwriting Say About You?, Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane and Route 1, Lawrence Township, 609-9896922. www.mcl.org. Certified handwriting analyst Cynthia Mernone will help you to understand the inherent traits in yourself and others, identified through handwriting. Register. 10 a.m. Pakistan Lecture, Princeton Senior Resource Center, Suzanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, 609-924-7108. “Pakistan Today” presented by Akhtar Shah, a retired Pakistani military officer. Register. Free. 1 p.m. Live Music Larry Tritel and Guy DeRosa, Halo Pub, 5 Hulfish Street, Princeton, 609-921-1710. Folk and jazz. 7 to 10 p.m. John & Carm, Halo Pub, 4617 Nottingham Way, Trenton, 609586-1811. 7 p.m. Bigger Thomas, The Record Collector Store, 358 Farnsworth Avenue, Bordentown, 609-3240880. www.the-record-collector.com. $12. 7:30 p.m. John Henry Goldman, Tre Piani, 120 Rockingham Row, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609-4521515. www.straightjazz.com. Jazz with Lisle Atkinson on bass, Richard Wyands on piano, and John Henry Goldman on trumpet. 7:30 to 11 p.m. Continued on page 24 JULY 21, 2010 U.S. 1 Review: ‘Cliffhanger’ D espite the temptation in these troubled economic times to play it safe and concentrate on comedy-farces, Hopewell’s OffBroadstreet Theatre has chosen to open its 26th season with a thriller, James Yaffe’s “Cliffhanger,” which dates from the 1980s. Yaffe is perhaps better known as a novelist than a playwright, with a particular interest in Jewish themes. Audiences might be happy to learn, though, that although “Cliffhanger” may be billed as a thriller — and indeed one character is apparently dead before the first scene is even over — the play has more the flavor of a classic farce than it does of a Hitchcock movie. Henry Lowenthal, a retiring ethics professor in the philosophy department of an unnamed university, has been told by the university president that he will be appointed to a prestigious endowed lectureship and will be able to continue teaching well past retirement age. Despite the president’s support, the plan is undermined by the current head of the philosophy department, leaving Lowenthal disappointed and furious. Lowenthal is clearly a good guy, and his wife, Polly Lowenthal, is a canny, pleasant, and intelligent woman, obviously skilled at finding ways to solve problems that minimize the accompanying strife and stress. Her behavior suggests this is not the first time she’s had to do some fancy footwork on her husband’s behalf. The new head of the philosophy department, on the other hand, is an outrageously obnoxious woman, lording it over this man she’s displacing, thus Though billed as a thriller, the play has more the flavor of a classic farce than it does of a Hitchcock movie. making his desire to behave like a decent person harder to accomplish. A dding to Lowenthal’s stress are the shenanigans of a spoiled wealthy student who has failed Lowenthal’s ethics course and insists that he deserves to have his grade changed to a passing one simply because of who he is. As some of the action begins to get out of hand, the characters are joined by a police detective who senses something fishy is going on. It turns out, surprise, that the detective had also been a student of Lowenthal’s. The older characters are committed to ethical behavior, the younger ones to opportunism. But this does not prevent the older characters from behaving unethically. Indeed, one of the paradoxes the dialogue plays with is how unethical you can be if what you’re doing is for the greater good. To reveal any more of the plot would destroy too much of the play’s suspense — this is, after all, supposed to be a thriller. But it should be pointed out that as the audience enters the theater to partake of Off-Broadstreet’s signature coffee and dessert, what they see is a striking large living room. The handsome room stretches out to fill the maximum width it can. A Mozart symphony, played at low volume, adds to the serenity. I’m not usually a fan of background music, but this becomes the music that the Lowenthals listen to as the play proceeds, and the choices made here are definitely wise ones. The setting prepares the audience for the world they’re entering, though certainly not for what’s going to go on in that world. Bob Thick has directed and designed “Cliffhanger,” as always, skillfully. Ann Raymond designed the costumes efficiently and attractively, as always. All but one of the actors are OffBroadstreet veterans. The professor is played by Doug Kline, here taking on his 24th role with OffBroadstreet. (He has also served Off-Broadstreet as a director — he was responsible for last winter’s “Bedside Manners.”) Kline does a very good job of conveying his basic decency while fuming at the way he’s being treated and resisting the temptation to behave immorally. His wife is played by Mary Kemp, who has also appeared in many Off-Broadstreet shows. She handles adroitly her mission of being a nice person who is trying to circumvent those who aren’t so nice and who might even consider waiving her moral standards a bit to accomplish what needs to be accomplished. The policeman, Dave DeVito, is played by Barry Abramowitz, another veteran of several Off-Broadstreet productions. He is skilled at being the niceguy detective, whose work sometimes leads him where he doesn’t want to go. Vanessa Oates, who has acted at OffBroadstreet a few times before, is the nasty professor. The one newcomer is Alex Angilella, the failing student. One character I haven’t mentioned who is critical to the plot is Socrates; not only do his ideas keep popping up in the dialogue, but the bronze bust that represents him and sits up center stage in the foyer gets to play a role too. — Barbara Westergaard “Cliffhanger,” Off-Broadstreet Theater, 5 South Greenwood Av- enue, Hopewell. Through Saturday, August 14. Suspenseful drama. $27.50 to $29.50. Performances take place on Friday and Saturday evenings and Sunday afternoons. The theater opens for dessert at 7 and at 1:30 p.m., respectively. Evening shows begin at 8 p.m.; matinees at 2:30 p.m.. 609466-2766 or www.off-broadstreet.com. Redecorating: Doug Kline (Henry Lowenthal) of Newtown, PA; Vanessa Oates (Edith Wilshire, the corpse) of Hopewell; and Mary Kemp (Polly Lowenthal) of Trenton. 21 22 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 Opera Review: ‘Don Pasquale’ T FAMILY FUN SATURDAYS! July 24th 12:30 - 4pm Fresh from the Garden Themed Tours July 31st 12:30 - 4pm Tours: What Did Trent’s Enslaved Workers Do? August 7th Field Trip Fridays in July & August 12:30 - 4pm Garden Themed Tours 12:30 - 2pm or 2:30 - 4pm Hands-On Activities Vary for Children Ages 6-11 August 14th Reservations @ $5.00 2pm Churning & Sampling Butter 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, Department of Recreation, Natural Resources and Culture, Division of Culture with assistance from the NJ Historical Commission, Department of State. CASH Highest Price Paid GOLD • DIAMONDS • SILVER 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 he impact of a chamber opera in a small space can be as telling as a blockbuster in a large arena. Opera New Jersey’s production of Gaetano Donizetti’s farce “Don Pasquale” makes the point. The performance in McCarter’s Berlind Theater on Saturday, July 17, was a perfect gem. Every facet sparkled. Veteran ONJ collaborator Michael Scarola directed the work. Set in 19th century Rome, the opera is sung in Italian and has English supertitles. For the ears, the overture, with curtain down, foretells the evening. Mark Laycock, conducting members of the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra, promises a busy, playful experience. Laycock for a quarter century conducted the Princeton Symphony Orchestra. Under his leadership the opera orchestra played with musical lightness and propulsion. Solos for cello and bassoon declared the skill and sensitivity of the instrumental underpinnings before the action began. The curtain rises to reveal Don Pasquale (Steven Condy), an old bachelor, in bed, night cap and all, awakening. (Patricia Hibbert designed the costumes.) In his 70s, Pasquale has decided to marry in order to disinherit his nephew, Ernesto (Brian Anderson). Pasquale disapproves of Ernesto’s attraction for Norina (Ava Pine). Malatesta, Pasquale’s doctor and friend (Liam Bonner), suggests his sister, Sofronia, as a bride for Pasquale. When Pasquale meets Sofronia, he is rejuvenated. The audience experiences his renewed youthful ardor as lighting designer Ken Yunker bathes the scene in the red glow of blood boiling. Sofronia, however, does not actually exist. Malatesta has persuaded Norina to impersonate the supposed sister. After a mock wedding mediated by a mock notary (Wesley Landry), Sofronia/Norina teaches Pasquale a lesson by tormenting him. As Pasquale’s wife, Sofronia is both spendthrift and shrew. At one point, dressed in a long hot pink off-the-shoulder dress, she ties Pasquale to a chair with her long hot pink scarf. (Thanks, director Scarola and costume designer Hibbert.) Pasquale is relieved when she decides to leave him. As herself, Norina marries Ernesto. Pasqale gives his blessing to the match. Composer Donizetti’s writing invites elegance and leanness. The opera’s principals are the elemental soprano (Norina — Ava Pine), alto (tenor Ernesto — Brian Anderson), tenor (baritone Malatesta — Liam Bonner) and bass (Don Pasquale — Steven Condy). With his bel canto flourishes Donizetti presents multiple fire-and-ice opportunities. We hear them in solo arias, in the many splendid duets of the opera, and in a quartet. Particularly notable are a pre-Gilbert and Sullivan double patter aria by Pasquale and Malat- The Bachelor: Steven Condy, left, as Don Pasquale; Liam Bonner as Dr. Malatesta; and Ava Pine as Norina. This production of ‘Don Pasquale’ makes the point that the impact of a chamber opera in a small space can be as telling as a blockbuster in a large arena. Another change in texture comes from the solo trumpet that accompanies a solo aria by Ernesto. Laycock’s band helps out by furnishing dramatic silences that last for exactly the right amount of time. The star of the evening is the sole woman in a principal role, soprano Ava Pine. She is a comely Norina who floats across the stage. Her vocal accuracy, emotion, buoyancy, and appropriate movement are matched by her male colleagues. Surprisingly, “Don Pasquale” is not frequently performed. Maybe it is a difficult piece. Opera New Jersey makes it look easy. — Elaine Strauss “Don Pasquale,” Opera New Jersey, Berlind at McCarter Theater. Sunday, July 25, 2 p.m.; Friday, July 30, 8 p.m.; and Sunday, August 1, 7 p.m. 609-258-2787 or www.opera-nj.org. esta and a duet where Pasquale and Norina trill simultaneously. T he performance takes advantage of the changing textures that Donizetti wrote into the opera. A cappella singing by the chorus of servants provides a change of pace and exemplifies on-target intonation, clean delivery, and rhythmic accuracy. Keith Chambers is the chorus master. JULY 21, 2010 U.S. 1 23 Step Back in Time to the Iconic Sounds of the ’40s I by Anne Levin t is an unforgettable image his grandfather the judge, who that captured a surge of national played the clarinet. His sister is in a joy. When President Harry Truman rock band. “But my parents are announced, at 7 p.m. on Aug. 14, tone deaf,” he says. “I don’t know 1945, that Japan had surrendered to where this comes from.” the World War II Allied forces, Life Allen was a wannabe basketball Magazine photographer Alfred player who thought he might go inEisenstaedt was in Manhattan’s to sports-writing when he realized Times Square. He spotted a ran- he had a major vocal talent. He dom sailor grabbing a white-clad went to the University of Michigan nurse by the waist, bending her at Ann Arbor in 2000 and earned a back in a passionate smooch. He degree in musical theater and pointed his camera and shot. voice; then got a master’s in acting Eisenstaedt’s striking photo be- from the University of Washington came an icon of its era. Sixty years in 2003. New York was next on his later, the image inspired artist J. Se- agenda, and it wasn’t long before ward Johnson to create “Uncondi- he was on Broadway in “The Light tional Surrender,” a series of mon- in the Piazza.” umental sculptures in his signature Opera has also figured promirealistic style. One of these, 25 feet nently in Allen’s career. In 2009 he high and cast sang the role of in bronze, was Rodolpho in “A installed last View From the ‘Sinatra’s voice in the April at the Bridge” superearly years was very corner of vised by comKlockner poser William light and lyrical, beRoad and Bolcom, and last fore he smoked and Sloan Avenue February sang in drank a lot,’ says in Hamilton the New York To w n s h i p , Lyric Opera’s Glenn Seven Allen. near the 35production of acre Grounds “Rigoletto.” For Sculpture park Johnson found“I’m doing a lot of concert and ed in 1992. opera work, and that’s a huge “Unconditional Surrender,” in change in the direction of my caturn, has become the inspiration for reer,” Allen says. “I did City Center a musical celebration. On Thurs- Encores’ production of ‘Girl day, July 29, Grounds for Sculp- Crazy,’ and now I’m doing opture’s Museum Building will be the eretta. But for me, singing and actsetting for a one-hour program of ing are closely related. The only songs inspired by the World War II difference is style. I’m still telling era and, more specifically, the ear- stories when I’m singing. That’s rely artistry of Frank Sinatra. The ally what it is — I have to tell a stoshow stars Broadway vocalists ry with my voice all the time.” Glenn Seven Allen and Janine DiVita, and is presented by the Springpoint Foundation, the n recent years teaching has belargest provider of senior housing come another focus for Allen. He in New Jersey, in conjunction with has worked with such luminaries as the Laurenti Family Charitable Matthew Morrison (of “Glee” Trust and Bloomberg LLP. fame) and Kelli O’Hara, who coResidents of Springpoint’s sen- starred with Morrison in the Lincoln ior communities are big fans of Center revival of “South Pacific” Allen and DiVita. “They started and is about to return to the show afperforming for us two years ago,” ter a long maternity leave. “She can says Joseph Claffey, Springpoint’s do anything,” Allen says of O’Hara. senior vice president and chief “She was trained as an operatic sophilanthropic officer. “They’ve prano, and the role of Nellie Forbeen chosen not just because of bush is an alto. But Kelli’s not a their talent, but also because of the snob. She just put her mind to it and way they interact with the audi- used that really clear voice. She reence. Janine is a beautiful young la- ally knows what she is singing dy, and Glenn is a personable, about. I like informed singers.” handsome guy. Our residents have As for tenor Morrison, Allen loved the programs they’ve put to- says, “Everything comes easy to gether for us.” Matt. I’m envious of him. What he While the July 29 concert is does naturally, I had to study for. open to anyone visiting Grounds He’s an alien. There is Matt, and For Sculpture and free with park then there are the rest of us.” admission, seniors are a natural tarAnother student Allen is enget audience. The music on the pro- thused about is German opera gram is from an era many of them singer Jonas Kaufmann, also a remember well. For Allen, a 34- tenor. “He’s a tremendous actor. He year-old tenor, however, the con- acts everything with his voice,” cert is an opportunity to explore Allen says. “He has this freakish music that has fascinated him for ability to create a darkness and a over a decade. “This is a program baritone sound. I don’t know how I’ve wanted to do for more than 10 he does it.” years,” he says in a phone interAllen feels a connection to Sinaview from Annandale-on-Hudson, tra’s early work. “The crooning NY, where he is appearing in the style is closer to opera than people operetta “The Chocolate Soldier” realize,” he says. “It’s incredibly as part of the Bard Summerscape legato, which means tied, or conarts festival. “I had been research- nected. It’s just very smooth and eling Sinatra. I didn’t know a lot egant.” about his early years when he was The fact that Sinatra collaborat‘the Voice’ and a matinee idol. He ed with famous bandleaders Harry was a crooner who wore bow ties. I James and Tommy Dorsey led liked that, and I really liked the mu- Allen to hire a trumpet player (and sic. His voice was very light and pianist) to accompany him and Dilyrical, before he smoked and Vita at the upcoming concert. Didrank a lot. I wanted to do some Vita is a fellow graduate of the Unisort of show with that style and the versity of Michigan’s musical theenergy of the young Sinatra.” ater program and appeared most reBorn and raised in East Lansing, cently as Betty Rizzo in the BroadMI, Allen is named for his grandfa- way revival of “Grease.” ther, Judge Glenn Seven Allen Jr. “Sinatra sang and they played His mother is a writer and a teacher trombone, muted, which created who was a serious long-distance the World War II sound,” Allen runner in her youth. Allen’s father says. “I’ve always wanted to do it, wasn’t present in his life as much as and then we found out that they I A Kiss Is But a Kiss: J. Seward Johnson’s ‘Unconditional Surrender,’ above, is on view at the corner of Klockner Road and Sloan Avenue in Hamilton. Glenn Seven Allen and Janine DiVita give a 1940s-inspired concert on July 29. were looking for something, a program, to go along with the sculpture. So we felt it was the perfect time to do the World War II show. We’ve made very small orchestrations to evoke the era. The trumpet gives it a kind of visceral feeling.” Old favorites “Blue Skies” and “I’ll Be Seeing You” will be on the program along with “Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition,” a song called “Buddy on the Night Shift” by Kurt Weill, and other works. For sponsors of the show, the program is ideal. “They’ll be performing for just an hour in one of the most easily accessible venues,” says Claffey of Springpoint. “The lighting is special. Most important, we already know how talented Glenn and Janine are.” WWII Songbook Concert, Springpoint Foundation, Grounds For Sculpture, J. Seward Johnson Center for the Arts, Hamilton. Thursday, July 29, 3 to 4 p.m. In celebration of J. Seward Johnson’s “Unconditional Surrender” sculpture, Glenn Seven Allen and Janine DiVita of Signature Broadway Pops present a concert of songs written and performed during the historical WWII era. 609-720-7304.. 24 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 July 24 Continued from page 20 Roe Ferrara and Steve, It’s a Grind Coffee House, 7 Schalks Crossing Road, Plainsboro, 609275-2919. www.itsagrind.com. Old standards. 8 to 10 p.m. Cafe Improv, Arts Council of Princeton, 102 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-8777. www.cafeimprov.com. Music, poetry, and comedy. Register to perform. $2. 9 p.m. Splintered Sunlight, Triumph Brewing Company, 400 Union Square, New Hope, 215-8628300. www.triumphbrew.com. $5 cover. 10 p.m. Outdoor Action Family Nature Programs, Plainsboro Preserve, 80 Scotts Corner Road, Plainsboro, 609-897-9400. www.njaudubon.org. “The Joy of Summer Stories” presented by Corey Sperling in a program to understand the natural world through the eyes of the Native Americans. Register. $5. 3:30 to 5 p.m. Moonlight Walk, Whitesbog Preservation Trust, General Store, Browns Mills, 609-8934646. www.whitesbog.org. Three to five mile walk with a guide. Bring a flashlight. Register. $5. July’s full moon is known as the “Buck Moon.” 7 p.m. Full Moon Hike, Delaware and Raritan Canal State Park, Bulls Island, 2185 Daniel Bray Highway, Stockton, 609-924-5705. www.dandrcanal.com. One-mile hike led by Stephanie Fox, the park’s naturalist. Bring a flashlight. Register. Free. 8 p.m. Singles Wine and Dinner, Dinnermates, Princeton Area, 732-759-2174. www.dinnermates.com. Ages 30s to early 50s. Call for reservation and location. $20 plus dinner and drinks. 7:30 p.m. Crafts Knit n Stitch, Cafe Ole, 126 South Warren Street, Trenton, 877-4728817. All skill levels welcome. Free. Noon to 2 p.m. African Bead Party, Princeton Center for Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite 506, Skillman, 609-924-7294. www.princetonyoga.com. African food, African Drumming with Sharon Silverstein, and a presentation on yoga teacher Kristen Boccumini’s trip and work in Uganda. Roll beads to create necklaces and bracelets. Free. 7 to 9 p.m. Sports New Jersey State Triathlon, CGI Racing, Mercer Park, Old Trenton Road, West Windsor, 856468-0925. www.cgiracing.com. Olympic and sprint distances for swim, bike, and run race. Outdoor family activities. Bring your own kayak or boat, fish. Pre-race meeting for registered athletes at 7:15 a.m. Post race buffet, massages, raffles, live music, and beer garden. Also July 25. 7:30 a.m. Aikido Kokikai, HealthQuest, 310 Route 31 North, Flemington, 908-782-4009. Rick Goodman presents a seminar and demonstration featuring weapons and freestyle defense against multiple attackers. Free. 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday July 25 IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Wine Dummy — Cured Dummies Guide to Wine Tasting, Crossing Vineyards and Winery, 1853 Wrightstown Road, Washington Crossing, PA, 215493-6500. www.crossingvineyards.com. Wine, cheese, fruit, and instructions for savoring the flavors. Register. $30. 2 p.m. Classical Music Summer Carillon Concert Series, Princeton University, 88 College Road West, Princeton, 609-258-3654. www.princeton.edu. Claire Halpert on the fifth largest carillon in the country. Free. 1 p.m. Don Pasquale, Opera New Jersey, Berlind at McCarter Theater, 609-258-2787. www.opera-nj.org. 2 p.m. Organ Concert, Trinity Episcopal Church, 6587 Upper York Road (Route 263 and Sugan Road) Solebury, PA, 215-2975135. www.trinitysolebury.org. Timothy Harrell, organist/choirmaster at Trinity, in a program including works by Dieterich Buxtehude, Johann Sebatian Bach, Jehan Alain, Francois Couperin, and Charles Marie Widor. The recital is a benefit for Carversville United Church of Christ, which recently suffered a devasting fire. Free will offering. The organ at Trinity was built by Martin Pasi and Associates in Roy, Washington, and was installed in 2006. It is a mechanical (tracker) action organ of 29 stops and 33 ranks. 5 p.m. Pop Music Journeys of the Night, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, 215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org. Cabaret concert with Bethe B. Austin, John D. Smitherman, and Demetria Joyce Bailey with the BRT Band. $31. 3 p.m. Art Artists Network, Lawrenceville Main Street, 2683 Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609-647-1815. www.Lawrencevillemainstreet.com. Gallery features works by area artists. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Highlights Tour, Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton campus, 609-258-3788. http://artmuseum.princeton.edu. Free. 2 p.m. Drama Cliffhanger, Off-Broadstreet Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-2766. www.off-broadstreet.com. Suspenseful drama. $27.50 to $29.50. 1:30 p.m. 42nd Street, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-862-2041. www.buckscountyplayhouse.com. Musical. $25. 2 p.m. Plaza Suite, Kelsey Theater, Mercer County Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road, 609-570-3333. www.kelseytheatre.net. Neil Simon’s comedy presented by the Yardley Players. $14. 2 p.m. Misalliance, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, 609-258-7062. www.princetonsummertheater.org. George Bernard Shaw classic. $16. 2 p.m. Arms and The Man, Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, F.M. Kirby Theater, Drew University, Madison, 973-408-5600. www.shakespearenj.org. George Bernard Shaw drama. $31 to $54. 2 and 7:30 p.m. Les Miserables, Rising Stars Voice Studio, Scottish Rite Hall, 103 Dunns Mill Road, Bordentown, 609-291-7440. risingstarsvoicestudio.com. $15. 7:30 p.m. The Servant of Two Masters, Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, College of Saint Elizabeth, 2 Convent Road, Morristown, 973-408-5600. www.shakespearenj.org. Carlo Goldoni’s comedy on the outdoor stage. $32. 8:15 p.m. Film International Film Festival, South Brunswick Library, 110 Kingston Lane, Monmouth Junction, 732-329-4000. www.sbpl.info. Screening of “The Maid.” Free. 2 p.m. ‘Discovery’: ‘Beautiful New Jersey’ presented by Skillman photographer Darlene Prestbo and her husband, John, who works in pastels and oils, through July 31, Thomas Sweet Ice Cream, 1330 Route 206, Skillman. 609-430-2828. Fairs Quick Chek New Jersey Festival of Ballooning, Solberg Airport, 37 Thor Solberg Road, Readington, 1-800-468-2479. www.balloonfestival.com. Largest summertime hot air balloon and music festival in North America featuring 125 hot air balloons from around the world, fireworks, nighttime hot air balloon glow, live concerts, interactive exhibits, amusement rides, and hundreds of arts & crafters and food vendors. Rick Springfield in concert at 3 p.m. $25. 6:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Food & Dining Summer Wine Faire, New Hope Chamber, The Tuscany, 18 West Mechanic Street, New Hope, PA, 215-862-9990. www.newhopechamber.com. Wine tasting, food, and shopping. Rain or shine. Register. $25 to $30. Must be 21. Noon to 7 p.m. Dummies Guide to Wine Tasting, Crossing Vineyards and Winery, 1853 Wrightstown Road, Washington Crossing, PA, 215493-6500. www.crossingvineyards.com. Wine, cheese, fruit, and instructions for savoring the flavors. Register. $30. 2 p.m. Farmers’ Market Lawrenceville Main Street, 11 Gordon Avenue, Lawrenceville, 609-219-9300. www.LawrencevilleMainStreet.com. Vegetables, fruits, flowers, herbs, meat, poultry, baked goods. Music, art, and good causes. Kowop Band performance from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. History Garden Highlights, Pennsbury Manor, 400 Pennsbury Memorial Road, Morrisville, PA, 215-9460400. www.pennsburymanor.org. Gardeners describe their work in the summer garden. $7; children, $4. 1 to 4 p.m. Walking Tour, Historical Society of Princeton, Bainbridge House, 158 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-921-6748. www.princeton- history.org. Two-hour walking tour of downtown Princeton and Princeton University includes stories about the early history of Princeton, the founding of the University, and the American Revolution. $7; $4 for ages 6 to 12. 2 to 4 p.m. Airport Rides, Princeton Airport, Route 206, 609-921-3100. www.princetonairport.com. Get a bird’s eye view of the Princeton area. Weigh in pay 20 cents a pound, minimum of $10 and maximum of $25. Pilots are flight instructors or commercial pilots. 3 to 6 p.m. Family Theater Alice in Wonderland, Somerset Valley Players, Amwell Road, Hillsborough, 908-369-7469. www.svptheatre.org. Alice, the White Rabbit, and the Mad Hatter on stage. $10. 2 p.m. Live Music Larry Tritel and Guy DeRosa, Thomas Sweet Ice Cream, 1330 Route 206, Skillman, 609-4302828. larrytritel.com. Guitar, harmonica, and vocals. 1 to 3 p.m. Trivia Night, BT Bistro, 3499 Route 1 South, West Windsor, 609-919-9403. www.btbistro.com. David and Nick present. 7:30 p.m. Outdoor Action Friends of Hopewell Valley Open Space, Washington Crossing State Park, Titusville. www.fohvos.org. Help rid natural areas of invasive plants. All tools provided. Register by E-mail to beth.fohvos@gmail.com 1 p.m. Family Nature Walk, Washington Crossing State Park, Visitor Center, Titusville, 609-737-0609. Informal naturalist guided walk. $5 per car. 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. Flea Market Princeton Elks, Route 518, Montgomery, 908-359-5652. Table space, $10 to $15. 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Continued on page 27 (609) 882-YOGA (9642) New Location: Suburban Square Shopping Plaza Suite 27, Ewing, NJ 08618 Also at: 405 Rt. 130 North, Lower Level East Windsor, NJ 08520 (609) 918-0963 OPEN HOUSE, SUNDAY, AUGUST 1, 11 AM - 3 PM Ewing location. Meet teachers, check out space, and register for classes. GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION Yoga Classes Now in Two Locations - for All Levels! Beginner Classes • Gentle Yoga • Hatha Yoga SATURDAY, JULY 31, 7PM Vinyasa Yoga • Pre-Natal • Kids’ Yoga • Meditation • Workshops • Reiki Ewing Location. Live Music & Dancing. Massage • Nutrition • Yoga Teacher Trainings Special Offer for Ewing: Drop-in Classes = $10 Unlimited Monthly Pass=$75 (valid for new students only, 1 time use through September 2010. Please present this ad) JULY 21, 2010 Opportunities No , Gimmicks e tors living or working within a 150Hassle Fre mile radius of New Hope,ShPennsylopping! Auditions drives. Contact Jan F r e e SR. he e pZepka at 732616-8741W or E-mail i t h e v e r y rzepka@nybloodcenter.org P e r f e c t for S l einformation. eper Purchase $649 U.S. 1 25 Rider Furniture Twin Set Fine Quality Home Furnishings at Substantial Savings Full Set Twenty Minutes to Curtain Company has auditions for “Hansel and Gretel” on Saturday, July 24, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Kelsey Theater, West Windsor. All characters must sing. Prepare one up tempo song and one ballad. Bring a photo and resume stapled together, sheet music, and appropriate dance wear. All adult roles will be paid (not teens and children). Must be six and up. Contact Michael J. Pastorok at 215-7881336 for an appointment. Playful Theater Productions has auditions for “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee on Wednesday, August 18, 7 to 10 p.m.; and Saturday, August 21, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Must be 18 or older. Bring a theatrical resume and a headshot. Prepare a song from musical theater and bring sheet music. Male actors auditioning for the role of vice principal Douglas Panch should prepare a one to three minute comic monologue. Kelsey Theater, West Windsor. Call 267-987-4113 or E-mail ruthkrese@verizon.net to schedule an appointment. Playhouse 22 seeks to fill positions for the next season. Positions include stage manager, set designer, lighting designer, sound designer, set construction, lighting operator, sound operator, costumer, properties management, and stage crew. Submit a copy of a theatrical resume with contact information by E-mail to info@playhouse2.org. vania, for its second annual SculpKing Set ture Showcase juried shows. All mediums are accepted for both indoor and outdoor works. Cash Belvedere Firm Addison Set Up Twin Set prizes. Entries may be submitted Twin Set Holy Cross Center Full Set of Learning online at http://doylestownalive.Full Set Removal King Setby a party on King Set com/bckscountygallery/. Deadline offers a mass followed is Friday, September 10. Call Saturday, September 11, at 10:30 Promise Vera Wang Pillow Top Crystal Veraa.m., Wang TopMercer at Euro Divine Parish, 201 Howard Cooperman at 215-862Twin Set Twin Set Adeline Street, Trenton. Adult and 5272 for information. Full Set • Prints and Accessories • Dining Room teen volunteers are needed to teach Full Set King Set and assist with religion and music King Set • Leather Furniture • Bedroom classes, workshops, and arrange • Antique Furniture • Occasional parties. Rose Anna L. RoSofaContact & Recliner Repair & Refinishing • Custom Made Upholstery Mercer College now offers on- manello atSale 609-882-4567. Whole Month line classes in nursing and study First Baptist Church, 125 South JANUARY! abroad programs. There are also Mainof Street, Hightstown, offers vanew transfer opportunities. Visit cation Bible school from Monday to www.mccc.edu or call 609-570- Friday, July 26 to 30, for ages 3 to 13. 3795. Call 609-448-0103 to register. Dorothea’s House offers Italian Where quality still matters. classes for adults and children; beginner, intermediate, and advanced 4621 Route 27, Kingston, NJ levels; weekdays and Saturdays. Steinert High School Class of 120 John Street, Princeton. Visit www.dorotheashouse.org or call 1980 seeks fellow classmates for a Monday-Friday 10-6; Saturday 10-5; Sunday 12-5 Gilda McCauley at 908-359-1564. 30th class reunion on Saturday, Design Services Available. www.riderfurniture.com November 27, at Trenton Marriott. Contact Eric Clark by E-mail to shsclassof80@yahoo.com. Vocal Lessons PEAC Health & Fitness is collecting athletic shoes for needy children in the community through HomeFront. Please bring new sneakers to 1440 Lower Ferry Road, Ewing. Visit www.peachealthfitness.com or call 609883-2000 for information. Trenton Area Soup Kitchen seeks donations of backpacks, pens, pencils, highlighters, crayons, spiral notebooks, pocket folders, children’s scissors, rulers, protractors, calculators, and other school supplies. Deliver all items to TASK between Monday, July 26, and Thursday, August 12. Call Mary Ann Dobson at 609-6955456, ext. 114 for information. Jersey Harmony Chorus offers women who love to sing to series of free vocal lessons on Monday evenings beginning July 26, at 20 Schalks Crossing Road, Plainsboro, at 7:15 p.m. Call Carole at 732-236-6803 or E-mail jhc.membership@gmail.com for information. Call for Art Artworks seeks entries for “Made in Metal,” a juried showcase featuring art made in metal. Cash awards. Deadline is Sunday, August 1. Visit www.artworkstrenton.org or call 609-394-9436 for information. Bucks County Gallery of Fine Art is accepting entries for sculp- Faith $799 $1199 $899 $1399 Classes Floor Model Sale - Entire Month of July Rider Furniture Reunion 609-924-0147 For the Young Historic Fallsington offers a three-day history program for girls ages 8 to 11. Fulfills Girl Scout special interest patch. 4 Yardley Avenue, Fallsington, Pennsylvania. Register. $75. Call 215-2956567 to register. Donate Please Volunteer Please New Jersey Blood Services seeks volunteers to work blood Here at the House of Music, we teach lessons on all instruments, including band and orchestra instruments. We carry accessories, music books, rental instruments and also do repairs. 2479 Pennington Road Pennington, NJ 08534 P: 609-730-0888 Health Center for Disease Control offers the National Health and Nutritional Examination survey to determine health and nutritional status of the U.S. population. Close to 7,000 randomly selected residents in 15 counties across the nation have the opportunity to participate in the latest survey. Mercer County was selected as one of the counties. PERSONAL PAPERWORK SOLUTIONS ...And More, Inc. 609-371-1466 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. 26 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 Clifford Adams’ Mission: Give Trenton Kids Instruments M by Kevin L. Carter ost people may not know the Trenton-born Ewing resident Clifford Adams as one of the top trombonists around, but the truth is that he is. Adams has been a member of the top-selling jazz/funk/soul/pop group Kool and the Gang since 1977, and he has had a hand in many of the band’s most important accomplishments. It was Adams whose very brief but expressive trombone solo highlighted the smooth and loving “Joanna,” and he has also been in the middle of the mix playing the complex, funkier horn charts on earlier, rawer hits like “Jungle Boogie,” “Hollywood Swinging,” and “Open Sesame.” Adams has also been responsible for many of the band’s distinctive melodies and horn arrangements. Now, Adams, 57, is adding philanthropy to his activities and accolades. On Saturday, July 31, Adams is headlining a free all-day show at Cadwalader Park in Trenton. He and Kool and the Gang bandmate Michael Ray, a trumpeter, will perform, as well as performers such as Grace Little, Dennis Rodgers, Instant Funk, Lady D, and others. The show, and a fundraiser afterward, is to benefit Adams’ group, DRUMM (Developmental Roundtable for the Upward Mobility of Musicians). “All these people who are participating all learned how to play music in Trenton,” Adams says in a phone interview from a Kool and the Gang tour stop in Dallas. “We are all playing music now because there were music programs in place in the schools when we were growing up. Now, in the middle schools and elementary schools there are no programs whatsoever. The only time the kids can begin learning how to play music is in high school.” That, says Adams, is not a great situation. Kids do not have opportunities to learn to play instruments, and this is a hindrance in their development. “There was a band on every corner when I was coming up in Trenton. If you can get one band of young guys together in Trenton now, that would be a surprise. That’s the travesty of what’s going on right now.” The goal of DRUMM, says Adams, is to develop a community-based music program that will be available to children from all across Trenton. “Somebody has to do something about it. We can all sit and talk about how bad things are, but that is not enough. Someone has to roll up their sleeves and do something about it. The whole community needs to get on board and do stuff.” New Mayor Tony Mack, says Adams, has pledged his support. “This is an excellent thing. We have to bring music back to the city for the young kids in the schools. There are lots of instruments in the schools, just sitting in lockers. We have to pull these instruments out and get them into the hands of these kids. We have to get the kids off the streets and give them something to do. Get them playing music. Instead of them having guns or drugs in hand, let them have instruments.” More than 33 years after joining the band in 1977, Adams continues to tour on a regular basis, mostly abroad, with Kool and the Gang. The band recently performed with the San Diego Symphony, played in front of 10,000 in Israel, in front of 250,000 in Cuba in December, and appeared in many other international shows. “We’re all over the place,” Adams says. “We were in Russia Ewing resident Clifford Adams has been a member of the top-selling jazz/funk/ soul/pop group Kool and the Gang since 1977. last year, Romania in November, we were in Singapore and Japan, in Tokyo and Osaka, sold out both places. We were in Bangkok and sold out there. Outside of the USA, we’re getting a great reception. Despite not having a hit for more than 20 years, we have a great body of work and we continue to get respect for that. Our music has survived the test of time. ‘Celebration’ is a really big song for us, that gets a great reception everywhere, so 30 years later, we’re still workin’ it.” Whether the band is playing in Africa, Australia, Asia, or Europe, says Adams, the audiences feel the music. “Even if they don’t know the (English) language, they feel the actual music and the melodic content. It strikes people, and it’s become popular around the world.” Four of the original members of the band — the Bell brothers (Robert “Kool” Bell and saxophonist Ronald Bell, from Jersey City), saxophonist Dennis Thomas, and drummer George Brown — continue to perform, as do Adams and later veteran additions such as trumpeter Michael Ray, keyboardist/trumpeter Larry Gittens, and pianist Curtis Williams. Adams says the group’s experiences in Cuba were among his most memorable. In December several American groups performed in Havana, the first to perform there since the Obama administration relaxed restrictions of performers from America traveling to Cuba as well as Cuban performers playing the U.S. “These people were crying,” says Adams. “They knew our music so well, but they never thought they’d get a chance to see Kool and the Gang live because of the embargo.” C ubans, he says, know his band’s music very well, and are among the most musical people overall he has ever encountered. “I mean, this is a musical culture,” says Adams. “They have kids who go to school all day — 9 to 5, five days a week — and just play music. And they’re studying everything. Classical, salsa, jazz, I mean, all forms of music. They can read, their reading level is very high. So it’s a very musical place. They awarded us one of the highest musical honors down there. We had a ceremony, with the minister of culture, and they presented us with this award, and we went into the hospitals, donated supplies. It was a kind of goodwill mission we were on. As highlights of my career with Kool and the Gang go, it was one of the top experiences of my career.” Kool and the Gang has been around since 1964, when the Bell brothers organized a jazz band with high school friends. By the time Adams joined the band in 1977, the group had already had a series of hits. Meanwhile, Adams, a native of Trenton, had grown up near what is now the Munoz Rivera School, then the Lincoln School, and later Junior High No. 5 on Montgomery Street. He had been playing trombone with some of the top R&B and jazz musicians since he was attending Trenton Central High, from which he graduated in 1970. His father, Clifford Sr., was a mechanic and amateur clarinetist who owned an auto repair garage that had been opened by his own father. Adams Jr. says his family’s garage, Adams Auto Services, was the first black-owned auto shop in Trenton and one of the oldest African American businesses in the city. Clifford Adams Sr., now 86, sold the business and recently retired; his son says the elder Adams worked at the garage until a couple of years ago. Adams’ mother, Evelyn, now 85, worked for the state Department of Labor. After graduating from Trenton Central, he was discovered at the Chambersburg club Fantasy Lounge by jazz organist Charles Earland. “I had only learned to play five years before, and suddenly I’m on the road and recording jazz albums,” Adams says. Three years later, Adams, Gittens, and Ray were on the road with the Stylistics, Dr. Charles D. Allen • Princeton Eyecare Associates Make an appointment today and SEE the difference! 609-924-3567 Question: Are you having trouble with your current contact lenses? Are they uncomfortable to wear for long periods? Solution: Dr. Charles D. Allen, OD, FAAO Why? Dr. Allen has been helping patients just like you since 1962. No one’s problems or concerns go unnoticed. He does an extensive, comprehensive exam for vision and eye health on every single person. He has successfully treated thousands of professionals, families, and individuals in our area and around the world. He has the experience and the credentials to back it up. Dr. Allen specializes in infants and children of all ages, 6 mos. - 99 years, glaucoma, contact lenses, and orthokeratology. Dr. Charles D. Allen LIC# 27OA00268000 NPI# 1194728899 CERT# 27OM00010900 Former assistant professor of pediatric optometry at the Eye Institute of Philadelphia. Clinical investigator for contact lens and solution companies. 601 Ewing Street, Suite A-15 • Princeton Professional Park Princeton, NJ 08540 • 609-924-3567 Kool Down: Clifford Adams performs at a concert to benefit his nonprofit, DRUMM. Photo: Philippe Levy-Stab, Phoenix. and later Adams went out again with the Duke Ellington Orchestra and Max Roach before joining Kool and the Gang. His work on “Joanna,” back in the early 1980s, was a shift in the emphasis of the band. Through the ‘70s, the group had found success with jazz (“Summer Madness”), funk (“Jungle Boogie,” “Spirit of the Boogie”), and disco (“Open Sesame”). By the following decade, however, Kool and the Gang had moved into a much more pop style, especially with the signing of vocalist J.T. Taylor. In 1984 Adams had collaborated with Claydes Charles Smith on “Joanna,” providing some of the melody and chordal structure behind Smith’s tune as well as the title. “The whole bridge was a solo, and what they did was take part of my solo and put lyrics to it,” Adams says. “Instead of it being a trombone solo for eight bars, they split up part of my solo into vocals, and that melody was part of that solo I played.” The song hit No. 2 on the Billboard charts. Also that year, according to music licensing firm BMI, “Joanna” was the most heavily played song on radio. “I have a BMI Award, most played song of the year,” says Adams. “So for that year, in America, more people listened to my solo than anything else. When I look back on that, I said, well, that’s a great accomplishment, to hear that I had recorded that song at 4 in the morning. So many other Kool songs had sax solos, and I figured, why not change it up a little with a trombone solo? It worked.” Trenton Musicians Reunion and Health Extravaganza, Developmental Roundtable for the Upward Mobility of Musicians (DRUMM), Cadwalader Park, Trenton and Trenton Elks Lodge, 42 Decou Avenue, Ewing. Saturday, July 31, 11 a.m. Performers include Instant Funk, Clifford Adams, Mike Ray, Dennis Rodgers, Lady D, Trenton Jazz Ensemble, Good Company, Once Again, Sandstorm, Grace Little, and DRUMM Band from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Cabaret after party, 8 p.m. to midnight, $20 and cash bar. 443801-8332.. JULY 21, 2010 Princeton Singles, Off Broadstreet Theater, Hopewell, 908874-6539. “Cliffhanger,” a suspenseful comedy. Register. $25. 1:30 p.m. Trenton, 609-396-1776. www.barracks.org. Through Friday, July 30. Register. 10 a.m. Colonial Camp, Pennsbury Manor, 400 Pennsbury Memorial Road, Morrisville, PA, 215-9460400. www.pennsburymanor.org. Hands-on history, arts and crafts, and games. 17th century chores, writing with a quill pen, candle making, and more. Reservations required. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Leipzig String Quartet, Princeton University Summer Concerts, Richardson Auditorium, 609-570-8404. www.pusummerchamberconcerts.org. Chamber concert featuring Haydn’s “Sunrise” quartet and Beethoven’s “Harp.” Free tickets available at the box office at 6:30 p.m. Doors open at 7:30 p.m. 8 p.m. Socials For Families Chess, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. For advanced adult players. 1 to 5 p.m. Family Math Night: Math Songs, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609-275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Need help remembering the steps for multi-digit multiplication? What about the Pythagorean Theorem? Family math sing along. 7 p.m. Carnegie Center Concert Series, Greenway Amphitheater at 202 Carnegie Center, 609-452-1444. Free. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Concerts on the Landing, Patriots Theater at the War Memorial, 1 Memorial Drive, Trenton, 609-984-8400. www.thewarmemorial.com. Dick Gratton and Bob Smith present jazz guitar improvisation of popular and original standard jazz and blues arrangements. Free. Noon to 2 p.m. July 25 Continued from page 24 Singles Sports New Jersey State Triathlon, CGI Racing, Mercer Park, Old Trenton Road, West Windsor, 856468-0925. www.cgiracing.com. Olympic and sprint distances for swim, bike, and run race. Outdoor family activities. Bring your own kayak or boat, fish. Pre-race meeting for registered athletes at 7:15 a.m. Post race buffet, massages, raffles, live music, and beer garden. 7:30 a.m. Monday July 26 IN THE SPOTLIGHT: One-Act Drama Chained to Freedom, Unitarian Church, 50 Cherry Hill Road, Princeton, 609-926-0386. A oneact play by Adam Bounville and Russell Taylor documenting Bounville’s journey into civil rights activism for “queer equality.” $10 donation. 8 to 9:30 p.m. Pop Music Rehearsal, Jersey Harmony Chorus, 20 Schalks Crossing Road, Plainsboro, 732-236-6803. www.harmonize.com/jerseyharmony. Workshop series includes vocal lessons in four-part harmony for women who love to sing. New members are welcome. Free. 7:15 to 9:30 p.m. Blawenburg Band, Hopewell Train Station, Railroad Place, Hopewell, 609-924-2790. blawenburg.band.org. Concert featuring band music. Free. 7:30 p.m. Art Art Exhibit, Red Horse Gallery, Freehold Raceway Mall. Meet the artist reception for VSA Arts of New Jersey exhibit featuring the works of Ann Crawford and students of Robyn Ellenbogen. On view to September 17. Gallery open Monday to Friday, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 6 to 8 p.m. Literati Plainsboro Literary Group, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609-275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Nibbles, conversation, and readings. 6:30 p.m. Health & Wellness Ask the Fitness Guy, Optimal Exercise, 27 Maplewood Avenue, Cranbury, 609-462-7722. Bring your questions on getting in shape or your specific program. Register. 6 p.m. Yoga Practice, Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane and Route 1, Lawrence Township, 609-9896922. www.mcl.org. Register. 7 p.m. Mixed Level Hatha Yoga, Princeton Center for Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite 506, Skillman, 609-924-7294. www.princetonyoga.com. Achieve balance from within using breath, movement, and mindfulness. $17. 7:45 to 9 p.m. History Summer Day Camp, Old Barracks Museum, Barrack Street, Singles Coffee and Conversation, Grover’s Mill Coffee House, 335 Princeton Hightstown Road, West Windsor, 609-716-8771. groversmillcoffee.com. Coffee, tea, soup, sandwich, or dessert. Register at www.meetup.com/Princeton-AreaSingles-Network. 6:30 to 8 p.m. Sports Trenton Thunder Baseball, Waterfront Park, Route 29, Trenton, 609-394-8326. www.trentonthunder.com. New Britain Rock Cats. $9 to $12. 7:05 p.m. U.S. 1 Outdoor Concerts Art Full Moon Tour and Dinner at Rat’s Restaurant, Grounds For Sculpture, 18 Fairgrounds Road, Hamilton, 609-586-0616. www.groundsforsculpture.org. Threecourse dinner for two followed by group tour lit by the full moon. Register. $55 per person. 7 p.m. The Boys in the Band: The Billy Walton Band appears on Saturday, July 24, as part of the West Windsor Music Series, Nassau Park Pavilion, West Windsor. Bring blanket or seating. Indoors if it rains. Reception at BoConcept store afterwards. 609-919-1982. Continued on following page Tuesday July 27 IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Tame the Weed Monster Ask the Gardener, Mercer County Connection, 957 Route 33, Hamilton, 609-890-9800. www.mercercounty.org. “Weed Control Workshop” presented by Barbara Bromley, Mercer County horticulturist. Register. Free. 10:30 a.m. to noon. Classical Music Carillon Concert, Princeton University, 88 College Road West, Princeton, 609-258-3654. www.princeton.edu. Concert on the fifth largest carillon in the country. Free. 6:30 p.m. Choral Reading, Westminster Choir College, Bristol Chapel, Princeton, 609-921-2663. www.rider.edu. Haydn’s “Lord Nelson Mass” led by conductor Elizabeth Schauer. Participants are invited to bring their own score or use scores provided. Free. 7:30 p.m. Dr. Mary E. Boname Optometric Physician TPA Cert #27OMO0032100 LIC #0A 5298 Benedict A. Fazio Dispensing Optician #D 1640 EVERYTHING WE OFFER IS STATE-OF-THE-ART • Comprehensive, full-service eye care • Emergency eye care • Computerized refractions • A full-service ophthalmic dispensary • Over 16 designer brand glasses and sunglasses • Contact lens fitting • Over 25 brands of contact lenses • Easy online contact lens reorder • Electronic medical records • Convenient location on U.S. Rt. 206 north • Over three decades of experience Visit our website or follow us on Facebook and Twitter 1325 ROUTE 206, SUITE 24 • SKILLMAN, NJ 08558 • TEL: 609.279.0005 FAX: 609.279.0004 • WEBSITE: WWW.MECNJ.COM EMAIL: INFO@MECNJ.COM • TWITTER: MONTGOMERY-EYES FACEBOOK: FACEBOOK.COM/MONTGOMERYEYECARE 27 28 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 WANT TO BOOST EMPLOYEE MORALE & PRODUCTIVITY? CALL FUSION FITNESS TODAY! Fusion Fitness Systems (FFS) is dedicated to bringing in the form of group classes to your business, company, or community by providing instruction at a place of your choice. BRING FITNESS TO YOUR DOOR! GET STARTED TODAY! July 27 Continued from preceding page Drama Arms and The Man, Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, F.M. Kirby Theater, Drew University, Madison, 973-408-5600. www.shakespearenj.org. George Bernard Shaw drama. $31 to $54. 7:30 p.m. The Servant of Two Masters, Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, College of Saint Elizabeth, 2 Convent Road, Morristown, 973-408-5600. www.shakespearenj.org. Carlo Goldoni’s comedy on the outdoor stage. $32. 8:15 p.m. Film Exercise Classes Include: Zumba Yoga CardioBlast Boot Camp Pilates For more information or to arrange a meeting, please contact: Fitness Coordinator: Ann Novak Email: lunovak18@yahoo.com • Phone: (609) 971-7348 Movie Series for Seniors, Princeton Senior Resource Center, Spruce Circle, Princeton, 609-924-7108. Screening of “Green Fingers.” Refreshments. Limited parking. Register. Free. 1 p.m. Fish ‘n’ Flicks, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-8822. www.princetonlibrary.org. Screening of “The End of the Line,” free. Optional discussion with Michael Dimin of Sea 2 Table, and a four-course fish dinner at Mediterra, $60. 6 p.m. Dancing August Weekl Sessions Still A y va Full Days: 8:30am ilable! -5:30pm A summer program that excels in individualization, creativity, and age + skill appropriate computer experiences • ROBOTICS • BUILD GAMES - “Stagecast,” “U-Create Games” • VIDEO CREATION - “iMovie,” “FLIP” • FITNESS FUN - With a certified trainer And much more! 28th Year in the Princeton Area (Princeton Courtyard by Marriott) Email: evalkaplan@cs.com www.computersandkids.com Assembling a robot. 609-730-0746 Summer Night Swing, Forrestal Village, College Road West and Route 1 South, Plainsboro, 609799-7400. www.princetonforrestalvillage.com. Swing music presented by Jazz Lobsters. Dance lessons by Greg Avakian and Laurie Zimmerman from 7 to 8 p.m.; open dance at 8 p.m. Behind Salt Creek Grille. Free. 7 to 10 p.m. Tuesday Night Folk Dance Group, Princeton, 609-655-0758. www.princetonfolkdance.org. Instruction and dancing. No partner needed. Call for location. $3. 7 to 9 p.m. Food & Dining Princeton Eats: Cooking with Local Ingredients, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Chef Christopher Albrecht of Eno Terra CANON SUMMER SPECIAL! Buy • Sell • Trade Powershot SX210 IS Reg: $34995 Sale: $32995 EOS 7D EOS Rebel XSI Reg: $69995 (New) Sale: $59995 (Refurbished) EOS Rebel T2I Reg: $169995 In Stock Sale: Call for Price $159995 Binoculars with Canon Image Stabilizer 12x36 IS • We buy pre-owned equipment (Phat never says ‘no’!) • Trade-ins considered • HUGE selection of used cameras • Experienced repair staff • Transfer your old movies & tapes to DVD! We carry a full line of accessories for both the professional and amateur photographer Books • Bags & Cases • Binoculars & Scopes • Digital Accessories Digital Point & Shoot • Film Filters • Dark Room • Lighting & Studio Memory Cards • Photo Center • Full Line of Cameras 654 Nassau Park Blvd. • Princeton, NJ • 609-799-0081 www.lecamera.net New Location: 1596 Kings Hwy., N., Cherry Hill, NJ. 856-429-0234 shares tips for creating meals using fresh, local ingredients. Register. Free. 10 a.m. Gardens Ask the Gardener, Mercer County Connection, 957 Route 33, Hamilton, 609-890-9800. www.mercercounty.org. “Weed Control Workshop” presented by Barbara Bromley, Mercer County horticulturist. Register. Free. 10:30 a.m. to noon. Health & Wellness Group Studio Workout, Optimal Exercise, 27 Maplewood Avenue, Cranbury, 609-462-7722. Supervised cardio, core, strength, and stretching. Register. $20. 6 a.m. Body Combat Launch, Can Do Fitness Club, 121 Main Street, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609-514-0500. www.candofitness.com. Register. Free. 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Also, Spinning. Register at reception desk. Bring a towel and water. Free. 4:30 to 5:15 p.m. Open House, Sunny Health Center, 16 Seminary Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-1227. Free 15-minute massage. Register. 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Caregiver Support Group, Alzheimer’s Association, Clare Bridge of Hamilton, 1645 Whitehorse-Mercerville Road, 800-8831180. www.alz.org. 10:30 a.m. Blood Drive, American Red Cross, Nottingham Fire Company, 200 Mercer Street, Hamilton Square, 800-733-2767. www.redcrossblood.org. 1:30 to 7:30 p.m. Beginners Yoga Class, Onsen For All, 4451 Route 27, Princeton, 609-924-4800. www.onsenforall.com. Basic instruction for those who are new to yoga. Props used, discussion of the basic principles of alignment. Register. $15. 6 to 7 p.m. Vinyasa Flow: Soma, Princeton Center for Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite 506, Skillman, 609-924-7294. www.princetonyoga.com. Focuses on moving through the poses slowly and gracefully, linking one pose to another. $17. 6 to 7:15 p.m. Workshop, Linda D. Aldrich, 84 Pinewood Drive, Hamilton Square, 609-584-8764. “Weight Management.” Register. $15. 7 to 8:30 p.m. History Colonial Camp, Pennsbury Manor, 400 Pennsbury Memorial Road, Morrisville, PA, 215-9460400. www.pennsburymanor.org. Hands-on history, arts and crafts, and games. 17th century chores, writing with a quill pen, candle making, and more. Reservations required. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Airport Tour, Princeton Airport, Route 206, 609-921-3100. www.princetonairport.com. Guided tour focuses on the daily operations of the airfield as well as the past, present, and future of the 99-year old airport. Free. 10:30 a.m. Historical Society of Princeton, Bainbridge House, 158 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-921-6748. www.princetonhistory.org. Opening reception for “Recession Hits Home: Unemployment in Central New Jersey” summer exhibiton. Tours for children available. Bring one item to support business attire accessories for Dress for Success and Career Gear. On view to August 22. 4 to 6 p.m. Free Chamber Music: The Leipzig Quartet performs Haydn, Webern, and Beethoven, Tuesday, July 27, Richardson. 609-570-8404. Kids Stuff Read & Pick on the Farm, Terhune Orchards, 330 Cold Soil Road, 609-924-2310. www.terhuneorchards.com. Story time, craft activity, and fruit or vegetable picking. Register. $7. 9:30 and 11 a.m. For Families Yoga and Creative Movement, The Infinite U, Center for Relaxation and Healing, Plainsboro, 732-407-2847. www.theinfiniteu.com. For families touched by autism. Register. $42 per family. 5:15 to 6 p.m. Newspaper Chair Competition, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609-275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. 7 p.m. Lectures Annual Meeting, New Jersey State Council on the Arts, New Jersey State Museum, Trenton, 800-thearts. www.njartscouncil.org. Voting of grants and co-sponsored projects, election of officers, and review of highlights. Register. 10 a.m. to noon. Gardening Seminar, Mercer County Connection, 957 Route 33, Hamilton, 609-890-9800. www.mercercounty.org. “Weed Control” presented by Barbara Bromley, Mercer County horticulturist. Register. Free. 10:30 a.m. to noon. Live Music Open Mic Night, Grover’s Mill Coffee House, 335 Princeton Hightstown Road, West Windsor, 609-716-8771. www.groversmillcoffee.com. 7 p.m. Chris Harford & the Band of Changes, BT Bistro, 3499 Route 1 South, West Windsor, 609-9199403. www.btbistro.com. 9 p.m. Stereofidelics, John & Peter’s, 96 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-862-5981. www.johnandpeters.com. 9:30 p.m. Outdoor Action Summer Nature Programs, Mercer County Park Commission, Baldpate Mountain, 609-9896540. www.mercercounty.org. Casual hike to spot birds. Bring binoculars. Free. 1 to 3 p.m. Family Night, Lawrence Nature Center, 481 Drexel Avenue, Lawrenceville, 609-844-7067. www.lawrencenaturecenter.net. “The Wonder of Wood” presented by Dave and Nick Bosted. Rain or shine. Free. 7 p.m. Book Sale Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609-275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. $3 for a bag. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Singles Princeton Singles, Charley Brown, Main Street, Kingston, 609-392-1786. Lunch. For ages 55-plus. Register. Noon. Pizza Night, Yardley Singles, Vince’s, 25 South Main Street, JULY 21, 2010 U.S. 1 At the Movies Confirm titles with theaters. The A-Team. Action comedy with Liam Neeson and Jessica Biel. Regal. Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky. French film that traces the affair between Chanel and the composer in Paris in 1920, the year that Chanel No. 5 was created. Montgomery. Cyrus. Comedy with John C. Reilly, Jonah Hill, and Marisa Tomei. AMC, Garden, Montgomery, Multiplex. Despicable Me. Computer-animated film about the world’s biggest heist — to steal the moon — starring Steve Carell. AMC, Destinta, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal. Dinner for Schmucks. Comedy with Steve Carell and Paul Rudd. AMC, Regal. The Girl Who Played with Fire. Also known as “Flickan som lekte med eiden.” Montgomery. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Also known as “Man som hatar Kvinnor.” Montgomery. Grown Ups. Comedy with Adam Sandler, Kevin James, Chris Rock, and David Spade. AMC, Destinta, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal. I Am Love (Io Sono l’amore). Italian drama about a wealthy family set in the turn of the millennium. With Tilda Swinton. Montgomery. I Hate Luv Storys. Bollywoodstyle big screen romance. Regal. Inception. Action with Leonardo DiCaprio. AMC, Destinta, Garden, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal. Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work. Documentary about the comedienne and the entertainment industry. Montgomery. The Karate Kid. Action remake with Jackie Chan. AMC, Multiplex, Regal. Knight and Day. Adventure with Tom Cruise and Cameron DiYardley, 215-736-1288. www.yardleysingles.org. Register. 6 p.m. Scrabbles Borders Books, 601 Nassau Park, West Windsor, 609-5140040. www.bordersgroupinc.com. Meet in the cafe. All levels are welcome. 7 p.m. Sports Trenton Thunder Baseball, Waterfront Park, Route 29, Trenton, 609-394-8326. www.trentonthunder.com. New Britain Rock Cats. $9 to $12. 12:05 p.m. Sports for Causes 5K Run, Princeton Athletic Club, Rosedale Park, 424 Federal City Road, Hopewell. www.princetonac.org. Run on the trails with the nonprofit community running club. Register. $12 to $15. 6:30 p.m. Wednesday July 28 IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Buddy Holley Redux Midweek Music Series, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-8822. www.princetonlibrary.org. Rave On! presents music of Buddy Holly and early rock. Dancing encouraged. Free. 7 p.m. az. AMC, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal. The Last Airbender. Animated adventure fantasy film by M. Night Shyamalan based on TV series Avatar: The Last Airbender. AMC, Destinta, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal. Mademoiselle Chambon. A spark between a teacher and one of her students’ fathers. Montgomery. Mother and Child. Drama about mothers and adoption with Naomi Watts and Annette Bening. Multiplex. Predators. Action with Adrien Brody. AMC, Destinta, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal. Salt. Action with Angelina Jolie and Liev Schreiber. Opens July 22. AMC, Regal. Solitary Man. Drama with Michael Douglas and Mary Louise Parker. AMC, Multiplex. The Sorcerer’s Apprentice. Fantasy adventure film starring Nicolas Cage. AMC, Destinta, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal. Standing Ovation. Music video contest for teens. AMC, Destinta, Multiplex, Regal. Toy Story 3. Animated sequel with voices of Tom Hanks and Tim Fantasy Adventure: Nicolas Cage and Monica Bellucci star in ‘The Sorcerer’s Apprentice,’ now showing. Allen. AMC, Destinta, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal. Twilight Saga: The Eclipse. Violent thriller returns with Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson. AMC, Destinta, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal. Venues AMC Hamilton 24 Theaters, 325 Sloan Avenue , I-295 Exit 65-A, 609890-8307. Destinta, Independence Plaza, 264 South Broad Street, Hamilton, 609-888-4500. Garden Theater, 160 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-683-7595. MarketFair-UA, Route 1 South, West Windsor, 609-520-8700. Montgomery Center Theater, Routes 206 and 518, Rocky Hill, 609-924-7444. Multiplex Cinemas Town Center Plaza, 319 Route 130 North, East Windsor, 609-371-8472. Regal Theaters, Route 1 South, New Brunswick, 732-940-8343. Classical Music Film Faculty Recital, Westminster Choir College, Bristol Chapel, Princeton, 609-921-2663. www.rider.edu. World premiere of “Ruminations: Six Poems of William Bronk” presented by baritone Elem Eley, clarinetist Bruce Williamson, and pianist Martin Hennessey, also the composer. Free. 7:30 p.m. Justice: What Is the Right Thing to Do?, South Brunswick Library, 110 Kingston Lane, Monmouth Junction, 732-329-4000. www.sbpl.info. Film, discussion, and refreshments to discuss ethical issues with a Harvard professor. Topics: “A Lesson in Lying” and “A Deal is a Deal.” Free. 1:30 to 3 p.m. International Film Festival, South Brunswick Library, 110 Kingston Lane, Monmouth Junction, 732-329-4000. www.sbpl.info. Screening of “The Maid.” Free. 7 p.m. Film 101: American Cinema, Trenton Film Society, Cafe Ole, 126 South Warren Street, Trenton, 609-396-6966. www.trentonfilmfestival.org. Screening and discussion. $5. 7 p.m. Jazz & Blues Summer Series, Mason Gross School of the Arts, Nicholas Music Center, 85 George Street, New Brunswick, 732-932-7511. www.masongross.rutgers.edu. Rutgers Jazz Faculty. Free. 8 p.m. Drama Arms and The Man, Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, F.M. Kirby Theater, Drew University, Madison, 973-408-5600. www.shakespearenj.org. George Bernard Shaw drama. $31 to $54. 7:30 p.m. The King and I, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, 215-862-2041. www.buckscountyplayhouse.com. Musical. $25. 8 p.m. The Servant of Two Masters, Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey, College of Saint Elizabeth, 2 Convent Road, Morristown, 973-408-5600. www.shakespearenj.org. Carlo Goldoni’s comedy on the outdoor stage. $32. 8:15 p.m. Dancing Newcomers Dance Party, American Ballroom, 569 Klockner Road, Hamilton, 609-931-0149. www.americanballroomco.com. $10. 7 to 9 p.m. Contra Dance, Princeton Country Dancers, Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Princeton, 609-924-6763. www.princetoncountrydancers.org. Instruction followed by dance. $8. 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Comedy Clubs Open Mic Night, The Stress Factory, 90 Church Street, New Brunswick, 732-545-4242. stressfactory.com. $5 to $7. 8 p.m. Continued on following page PSYCHIC READER & ADVISOR Mrs. Rossland Tarot Cards • Psychic Consultation & Spiritual Meditation Don’t be discouraged by other readers; Mrs. Rossland is well-known for her honest and accurate predictions. For over 15 years, Mrs. Rossland has helped hundreds live a healthier and stress-free life. She assures you success by advising you in love, business, marriage, divorce, health and family matters. $25 Tarot Card Reading with ad. Reg. $45 609-334-5057 • 2416 Pennington Rd., Pennington, NJ 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 29 30 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 SINGLES MEN SEEKING WOMEN Chivalry is not lost. I am a nice-looking, humble, fun-loving single black man with a good sense of humor; in search of a good physically fit black woman with some traditional values. I stand 5’9” and weigh 196 pounds and I enjoy reading, writing, good company, walks in the park, beaches, and going to the movies; in addition to other things you are free to ask me about. I work out to keep in shape and live between Princeton and Trenton. With the summer underway I would love to have an exciting, fun-loving, romance-filled escapade with that special woman. If you are curious and have something in common with me, don’t let it get the best of you without giving me consideration. Box 236643 Jewish 62 devoted man - fluent in 6 languages, widower seeks: Jewish beshert to save him from sin by keeping: shabbos, kosher, purity? Box 236790 Well-known professional artist, retied art educator, 70s, 6 ft, 180 lbs., grandfather of five girls. Enjoys theater, musical programs, art exhibits. Photo and phone number appreciated. Box 236262. WOMEN SEEKING MEN A good-looking woman, white, looking for a gentleman-type who is very earthy as well. I am laid back, positive love people, pets, laugh a lot, smile as much as possible. I am a larger woman, plus size, tall, attractive in my early 60s. I am family-oriented with good moral values. I am hoping to find a tall, white man. I love the shore, quiet times, flea markets, long drives, dining out. I have a good sense of humor, am not materialistic, am real, honest, and affectionate. July 28 Continued from preceding page Food & Dining French and American Wines, One 53, 153 Washington Street, Rocky Hill, 609-921-0153. Wine tasting and hors d’oeuvres. Register. $65. 6:30 p.m. Farmers’ Market Wellness Wednesday, St. Francis Medical Center, Chambers Street, Trenton, 609-599-6464. www.stfrancismedical.com. Seasonal fruits and vegetables. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Farmer’s Market, Bordentown City, Farnsworth and Railroad avenues parking lot, 609-2980604. www.cityofbordentown.com. Produce, foods, plants, crafts, soaps, cooking demonstrations, entertainment, and educational programming. 4 p.m. to dusk. Health & Wellness For Daily Updates on Events, Traffic, and More: Follow PrincetonInfo on or Become a Fan on Discover Peace Within, Chicklet Bookstore, Princeton Shopping Center, 301 North Harrison Street. Yoga in the Himalayan tradition with Acharya Girish Jha. Register at info@shreyasyoga.com. First class is free. 8:15 a.m. and 6 p.m. Tarot, Planet Apothecary, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 732-4066865. www.planetapothecary.com. A ready of Tarot cards by Jeanette Wolfe. $15. 4 to 5 p.m. Caregiver Support Group, Alzheimer’s Association, Buckingham Place, 155 Raymond Road, Princeton, 800-883-1180. www.alz.org. Light dinner provided. 5:30 p.m. Creative Visualization, Mercer College, West Windsor, 609-5703324. www.mccc.edu. “A Tool for Positive Change.” Register. $25. 6:30 to 9 p.m. Holistic Weight Loss Seminar, Harvest Moon, 206 Sandpiper Court, Pennington, 609-4624717. Program focuses on cognitive, emotional, and behavioral SINGLES BY MAIL TO SUBMIT your ad simply send it by mail or fax or E-mail to U.S. 1. Include your name and the address to which we should send responses (we will keep that information confidential). We will assign a box number, print the ad in forthcoming issues of U.S. 1 and forward all responses to you ASAP. Remember: it’s free, and people can respond to you for just $1. Good luck and have fun. (Offer limited to those who work and live in the greater Princeton business community.) TO RESPOND simply write out your reply, put it in an envelope marked with the box number you are responding to, and mail that with $1 in cash to U.S. 1 Singles Exchange, 12 Roszel Road, Princeton 08540. (We reserve the right to discard responses weighing more than 1 ounce.) WOMEN SEEKING MEN WOMEN SEEKING MEN Please send photo with your name and phone number. Box 236268 lationship. Prefer cleancut, no hirsute men. Photo please. Box 236082 Happiness is always in season: Attractive, single, Jewish female with red hair, blue eyes, physically fit, non-smoker in her 60s. Seeking a single Jewish male in his 50s or 60s who is 5’9” or taller and is looking for friendship and/or a relationship. Blue collar Jewish men are a plus and very welcome. Blue collar men are very happy to see their woman at the end of the day. Enjoy dining, dancing, traveling, and exercise. Let’s make the year 2010 a very special one. In your response, please include your name, age, and telephone number. Box 236797 SBF, early 30s, tall, attractive and open-minded. In search of a summer romance filled with fun, excitement, and lots of laughs with a tall (5’9” and over), attractive, white male 30-45 years old looking for the same. I enjoy the usual dining out, long walks in the park, etc., but would love to try something new. Write back, let’s exchange ideas and see what happens. Box 236774 My birthday wish: DWF, pretty, curvy “Leo” ISO attractive, available white male, n/s, 5’10 to 6’1, 38 to 55 years old. Help me to celebrate my mid-August birthday. I am hoping to meet someone who is looking for a dating, romantic re- aspects of overeating. Register. $40. 7 p.m. Multi-Level Yoga Class, Onsen For All, 4451 Route 27, Princeton, 609-924-4800. www.onsenforall.com. Explore the basic principles of alignment. Register. $15. 7 to 8 p.m. Hot Yoga, Princeton Center for Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite 506, Skillman, 609-9247294. www.princetonyoga.com. Twenty-six seated postures practiced in a heated room. Increases flexibility, improves circulation, and reduces stress. $18. 7:30 to 9 p.m. History Guided Tour, Drumthwacket Foundation, 354 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609-683-0057. www.drumthwacket.org. New Jersey governor’s official residence. Register. $5 donation. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Colonial Camp, Pennsbury Manor, 400 Pennsbury Memorial Road, Morrisville, PA, 215-9460400. www.pennsburymanor.org. Hands-on history, arts and crafts, and games. 17th century chores, writing with a quill pen, candle making, and more. Reservations required. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tour and Tea, Morven Museum, 55 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609-924-8144. www.morven.org. Tour the restored mansion, galleries, and gardens before or after tea. Register. $15. 1 p.m. Kids Stuff Birthday Bash, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609-275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Evening of birthday celebrations. The Improvmania Players impersonate their favorite mathematicians. 7 p.m. For Teens Studio Scrawl, West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road, 609799-0462. www.mcl.org. “Songwriting” for ages 12 to 18 presented by Kathy Moser, a songwriter, performer, teacher, and social artist who performs and tours nationally. Her work encourages MEN SEEKING MEN A very attractive-looking bi white male, 49, clean, fit, and athletic. Looking to meet the friendship of a fun, fit white male with a flexible daytime schedule. All replies with phone number will be answered. Box 236768 young people to find a place to make a positive contribution to their communities. Register. Free. 6:30 to 5 p.m. Lectures Medieval Reliquaries, Institute for Advanced Study and Princeton University, West Hall, Einstein Drive, Princeton, 609734-8175. www.ias.edu. “Christianity in Miniature: A Look Inside Medieval Reliquaries” presented by Julia Smith, professor of Medieval history at the University of Glasgow and a former member of the school of historical studies at the Institute. Free. 4:30 p.m. Live Music John Henry Goldman, Labyrinth Books, 122 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-497-1600. www.labyrinthbooks.com. Jazz. Refreshments. Free. 5 to 8 p.m. Trenton House Society with DJ Tony Handle, BT Bistro, 3499 Route 1 South, West Windsor, 609-919-9403. www.btbistro.com. 9 p.m. Open Mic, Alchemist & Barrister, 28 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-5555. www.theaandb.com. 10 p.m. Outdoor Action Summer Nature Programs, Mercer County Park Commission, Baldpate Mountain, 609-9896540. www.mercercounty.org. Mountain hike and yoga. Bring yoga mat and water bottle. Register by E-mail to jrogers@mercercounty.org. $12. 9:45 to 11:30 a.m. Knitting Borders Books, 601 Nassau Park, 609-514-0040. www.bordersgroupinc.com. Meet in the cafe. 7 p.m. Sports Trenton Thunder Baseball, Waterfront Park, Route 29, Trenton, 609-394-8326. www.trentonthunder.com. New Britain Rock Cats. $9 to $12. 12:05 p.m. JULY 21, 2010 ART FILM LITERATURE DANCE DRAMA U.S. 1 31 MUSIC PREVIEW Sixty Years Later, Still Tickling the Ivories I n 1950 co-founders Frances Clark and Louise Goss discussed what to call the school for piano study that they intended to start. “I remember the conversation,” says Goss, during an interview in her Stonebridge apartment. “Frances said, ‘I think we should call it the New School.’ I said, ‘But 10 years from now it won’t be a new school.’ And Frances said, ‘If it isn’t I won’t want to have anything to do with it.’” Clark’s motto was obviously “Every day, another discovery.” Clark and Goss’s New School for Music Study in Kingston, which struggles to stay small and intimate, now enrolls 250 students and has a teaching staff of a dozen men and women. The school accepts both children and adults. No auditions are required; enrollment is on a first come, first served basis. The New School kicks off its 60th birthday year this year with a threeday celebration. Tony Caramia opens the festivities with a jazz concert on Tuesday, August 3, 7:30 p.m. Duo pianists Ena Barton and Phyllis Lehrer perform four-hand music on Wednesday, August 4, at 8 p.m. Both concerts, which are free, take place in Bristol Chapel on the campus of Westminster Choir College of Rider University. Caramia, Barton, and Lehrer have all participated in the New School as faculty members. Caramia’s program pays homage to Frederic Chopin, whose 200th birthday is being celebrated this season, and includes Chopin works, as well as several pieces whose theme is “birthdays.” Caramia is currently professor of piano at Rochester’s Eastman School of Music, where he is director of piano pedagogy studies and coordinator of the class piano program. Barton and Lehrer play works by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Johannes Brahms, Frederic Chopin, Robert Schumann, Manuel Infante, and Sergei Rachmaninoff. Barton is head of the piano department at the Westminster Conservatory and a member of the piano faculty of Westminster. Lehrer is professor of piano and director of piano pedagogy at Westminster. A piano pedagogy seminar, open to the public, takes place on Wednesday, August 4, and Thursday, August 5, in the downstairs auditorium of Talbott Library at Westminster Choir College. The fee is $50. The presenters are piano pedagogues who received their training at the New School. The New School is a division of the Frances Clark Center, established in 2000, two years after New School founder Clark’s death at age 93 in 1998. Co-founder Louise Goss, who is 22 years younger than Clark, is chair of the center’s board of directors. The mission of the center is to extend the groundbreaking philosophy of music education developed at the New School. The New School approach by Elaine Strauss is embodied in a graded series of instructional books, the Frances Clark Library, known as the “Music Tree.” Clark and Goss are coauthors. A gracious hostess, Goss allows me to rearrange the furniture in her dining room to set up. Indulging her taste for intimacy, she pulls up a chair close to me and my computer at the dining room table. Goss speaks in entire paragraphs with well-formulated sentences. She makes virtually no false starts. She takes credit for the name “Music Tree.” Why “tree,” I wonder. Goss gives a single-word explanation. “Growth,” she says. Her sense of drama overcomes her fluency with language. Goss likes to set musical study in the larger context of living. She is convinced that living and learning require working out how the whole and the parts relate, without preconceptions. “I would like people to get excited about the fact that the Music Tree is a holistic approach,” she says. “Good education in all fields needs to be holistic. “The source for that idea came through my college philosophy teacher, who made a major impact on my thinking,” Goss says. “He was holistic, and promoted no particular philosophy. He didn’t like labels. I majored in philosophy. I also majored in music and English.” B y the time triple major Goss entered Michigan’s Kalamazoo College, she already had a substantial resume. Born in 1926 in Kalamazoo, she was 15 when the United States entered World War II. “The music critic of the Kalamazoo Gazette was drafted while I was a [high school] freshman, and somehow the editor learned that I had quite a lot of writing experience. He invited me to become the new music critic,” she told Craig Sale for an interview in Clavier Companion’s November/December 2009 issue. Because of the war, the Kalamazoo junior high schools lost their music directors. “I was excused from morning classes in my senior year,” Goss told Sale, “and rode around town on my bicycle, directing orchestras in our five junior high schools. It goes without saying that I had no idea what I was doing, but somehow I managed to keep discipline, polish some repertoire, and present spring recitals. “I didn’t think about being a music critic at 14 and conducting at 17 as anything but fun activities,” she tells me. “At the time I was not at all impressed at what I was doing. It didn’t come home to me until later.” When she entered college, Goss assumed that she would be a singer and teacher of singing, she says in her interview with Sale. “My musical mentors advised me that I needed to be a better pianist. They shared the exciting news that Frances Clark was coming back to Kalamazoo College (Clark’s alma mater) and that they would intercede with her to take me as her student.” Reflecting on her early days with Frances Clark, Goss tells me, “Frances Clark, my pedagogy teacher, who turned me onto my life work, believed passionately in the need for holistic music training. She believed that music is for everyone and is a basic part of the curriculum because of all the many ways in which it helps people grow. “She was particularly interested in the training of teachers. She had bad training; I had bad training; and all the people she was working with had had bad training. So she devised a program of teachertraining for pianists. “Kalamazoo College did not have a strong music program. Frances thought it would be good place to try her ideas. She was a very persuasive person and was able to talk the dean into experimenting with her ideas about piano pedagogy. I and five other piano pedagogy majors were in on this from the beginning. Frances was a very imaginative, stimulating teacher who made you want to be creative. “Frances thought that using groups would give her more children to experiment with. That way she would gather more information than she could in individual lessons. Then she realized that using groups was a good idea intrinsically. Everything else children learn, BFF, Long Before Facebook: Frances Clark, left, and Louise Goss (also inset) sailing, circa 1950. they learn in groups. She enabled the children to feel free in criticizing each other. That criticism gave them a lot of training. Also, groups are more fun than private lessons. So much of the nature of piano study is private.” I n 1955 Westminster Choir College invited Clark and Goss to set up a program similar to that at Kalamazoo. Five years later they started the New School. “Our primary interest was in piano, whereas Westminster focused on choral music and organ. We wanted to work at the graduate level. When Westminster began to offer a master’s degree in piano pedagogy and performance, they invited us back. Meanwhile, the New School was not a degree-granting institution either. We offered a certificate. Probably dozens of certificates were granted.” The first location of the New School was in Princeton, on Nassau Street, near the intersection with Harrison Street. In 1970 its 10th anniversary year, the New School moved to its present location, a house built in 1740, on Route 27 in Kingston. “We were looking for the right amount of space, and a certain ambiance,” Goss says. “When we drove into the driveway with the realtor, I fell in love with the place long before the engine stopped.” Goss taught at the New School until a decade ago. “I stopped 10 years ago,” she says. “I barely can get along without teaching. I play piano for myself; I have bad arthritis.” As chair of the board of the ‘Starting piano study without the idea that you can very soon speak piano would be discouraging,’ says New School founder Louise Goss. Frances Clark Center, she exerts her influence through her wisdom and good judgment, rather than through hands-on teaching. Louise Goss offers up a summary of the philosophy embodied by the New School. Even today, it is provocative. Imagine how revolutionary it must have been more than 60 years ago when Frances Clark started her pioneering work on piano pedagogy at Kalamazoo College. “The main contribution, I believe, is the fact that every aspect of music and musical learning is imbedded in the first lesson,” Goss says. The aspects of music touched on in that first lesson include becoming sensitive to beautiful sound and learning that technical exercises are subordinate to making music. “Composition and improvisation are there from the beginning,” Goss says. “In learning any new language the greatest reward is being able to speak. Starting piano study without the idea that you can very soon speak piano would be discouraging. Students use what they have learned in the first lesson to say something of their own, something meaningful. Therefore, music becomes their language. “We offer a much broader concept than most approaches,” Goss says. “The essence of music must be available from the outset.” Jazz Concert, New School for Music Study, Westminster Choir College, Princeton. Tuesday, August 3, 7:30 p.m. Pianist Tony Caramia, Eastman School of Music. Free. 609-921-2900 or www.nsmspiano.org. Also, Concert, Wednesday, August 4, 8 p.m. Four-hand music concert presented by Ena Barton and Phyllis Lehrer on piano. Free. 32 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 Inside the Private Clubs: Not So Private Now I f you want to conduct business at the Nassau Club in Princeton you’re going to have to do it without a cell phone or laptop. The club, located in a historic building on Mercer Street, just off Nassau Street, espouses a more subtle way of doing business and does not allow cell phones or laptops in the dining areas, which makes the atmosphere more conducive to conversation. “Business is done in a social way, through communication and not with pressure,” says general manager Stephen Pieretti. “It’s more elegant, more cosmopolitan this way. And people are engaged in conversation on all subject matters.” Carolyn Sanderson, a working mother of three, a managing director in private wealth management at JPMorgan Chase on College Road East, and longtime member of the Nassau Club, says she uses the club as a convenient place to meet specifically because of its location in the center of Princeton. Encouraged by her colleagues to join about 10 years ago, Sanderson, who says she uses the club “all the time,” especially likes to hold breakfast and lunch meetings at the club. “I find that in the Princeton community, my fellow professionals really enjoy starting their workday early, so meeting for breakfast is very convenient. The Garden Room, the main dining room, is very attractive and the tables are well separated. You really feel that you have the privacy to speak with people, so you can have a real business meeting at a location that is very accessible. They also have by Susan Van Dongen private rooms that are available for different group meetings, and that has been helpful.” Sanderson notes that Pieretti, who was named general manager just under two years ago — and previously served as a consultant to the club — and the facility’s new executive chef, Brian Dougherty, have made a lot of positive changes. “The general manager has done a lot to re-invigorate the club,” she says. “They’ve done a nice job of improving the menu and the quality of the food, and that’s another reason I use the Nassau Club all the time. It seems to check every box. Over the course of time, I’ve also done larger group meetings there. If I were to have a presentation, the club is very good for accommodating speakers and doing banquets. “For example, in April, we had Robert Weiss and Barry Berger, both managing directors at JPMorgan, in to speak. They gave a presentation for about 35 of us,” Sanderson says. “It was a breakfast meeting and well-attended. It was very well-done, a successful event for everything that we were trying to do.” As a testimony to the value the Nassau Club offers working professionals, Sanderson has sponsored two people so far this year for membership, with another potential sponsorship popping up just recently. “I had a breakfast meeting at the club, and as we were leaving, my client said, ‘I love this club, I’d love to be a member,’” she says. “So I said, ‘I’d love The Breakfast Club: At the Nassau Club (left), Milton Charbonneau, above center, senior VP, brokerage services, Cassidy/Turley, Somerset, says a quick hello to Peter Ventimiglia, left, board president, McCarter Theater and retired VP, external affairs, Verizon New Jersey, and Carolyn P. Sanderson, managing director, private wealth management, JPMorgan Chase, 103 College Road East. Photo above: Frank Wojciechowski to sponsor you for a membership.’ People are responding to the fact that the facility has been redone recently. It’s always been attractive and elegant, but it looks really fresh, and people appreciate that.” The Pennington resident says she chose the Nassau Club for its loca- tion as well as its privacy and joined current member propose you, and expressly to entertain clients. Al- two other members each write a letthough she has used it for personal ter recommending you to the admisevents, the bulk of her use is profes- sions committee. You meet with the sional. “I have younger children, so admissions committee at their oncewhen we entertain, it’s usually at a-month meeting over a glass of home,” Sanderson says. “I pay for wine, and in three weeks a commitmy annual membership myself, but tee vote takes place.” Past members include Presiit’s quite reasonable — $1,000. It’s been well worth it, and I say this dents Grover Cleveland and Woodrow Wilson, whose portraits from a personal standpoint.” The Nassau Club is an example adorn the lounge. Framed letters of a private club that 50 years ago written by both hang near the enmight not have given a journalist trance hallway. There are some 600 the time of day, let alone a tour, and resident members (living within 15 would not openly suggest it was to 20 miles of the club), and about looking for members. But times 600 non-residents who live as far have changed and “private” clubs away as Hawaii, according to are more “public” than ever. Case Lahnston. It’s a diversified memin point: Cherry Valley Country bership that includes men and Club’s chef routinely appears on women in business, various professions, and acadnational televieme. Although sion, and when not limited to one of its mem‘Business is done in college gradubers recently hit ates, members two holes in one a social way, not represent severin one round of with pressure,’ says al hundred colgolf, the club isNassau Club general leges around sued a press rethe United lease. manager Stephen States, includEstablished Pieretti. ‘It’s more ing a large numin 1889, the elegant, more cosber of Princeton Nassau Club University was originally mopolitan this way.’ graduates. located at the Facilities incorner of Nassau Street and University Place. It clude six dining rooms, which can moved to its present location at 6 accommodate up to 400 guests, Mercer Street in 1903, in a house and guest rooms available to memconstructed in 1813-1814 by bers and their guests for overnight Samuel Miller, the second profes- or long-term stays. There are a sor to be appointed to the recently plethora of special events, such as established Princeton Theological themed parties and banquets Seminary. Miller’s wife, Sarah, (Seafood Evening, Jersey Fresh was the daughter of Jonathan Dick- Evening, “Lobstah” Night, and inson Sergeant, and her family had Bastille Day Buffet, for example), previously owned the property. wine tastings, and group outings. Sergeant was noted for being a “We also have a large variety of member of the Continental Con- programs such as a chess club, a gress and the Provincial Congress poker club, an investment club, a backgammon group, and a bridge of New Jersey. The Nassau Club was once exclu- club,” Lahnston says. “Many prisively for men but has welcomed vate groups such as Rotary and the women since 1990. “We are now Chamber of Commerce meet at the running about 30 percent women as Nassau Club, as well. “We also have continued our new members this year,” says Alison Lahnston, president of the club and speaker lunches on every Wednesformerly the director of planned giv- day from September to May,” she ing, now retired. at the Peddie continues. “Some of our speakers School, Explaining how member- have included Robert Hillier, J. Seship works, she says, “You have a ward Johnson, Shirley Tilghman, JULY 21, 2010 U.S. 1 33 Hold the Phone: Forsgate Country Club, near right; and the Bedens Brook Club offer challenging golf courses. Chris Christie, Doug Forrester, Freeman Dyson, and the former Senator William Frist.” General manager Pieretti says with the economy the way it’s been, clubs have had to become more in tune with their members’ needs and wants. “It’s important that a club touches its members in a very positive way,” Pieretti says. “The club experience is branded to show consistency and recognition, with recognition probably being the most important asset. “For example, people who go to a restaurant say recognition is the number one thing they wish to achieve when they go out. All our members are greeted by name, and we know where they like to sit, what they like to eat, where they’ve been on vacation — all these things bring a sense of belonging to the club. We provide various other things that they think are important, such as a table they are not rushed away from or menus that are done in an elegant way. That’s why the club business is positioned so well in these times: we are able to meet the unexpressed wishes of our members. This is what we’ve done to ramp up the ‘member touches,’ or member satisfaction.” He recognizes the reality of the weak economy of the last two years and notes that dining clubs have had an easier time than sprawling golf clubs, with all their land to be cared for. “We are a little more agile so we’re able to make changes but still preserve the heritage of the Nassau Club,” Pieretti says. “We are one of the oldest, largest dining clubs in the country, so we have a very high bar, and we reach for that.” The initiation fee for a resident member (one who regularly resides for more than 90 days per year or has a place of business within a 20-mile radius of the club) is $2,650. Annual dues are $1,020. The Nassau Club, 6 Mercer Street, Princeton. 609-924-0580, www.nassauclub.org. Forsgate Country Club R ichard J. Malouf Jr., vice president of the Malouf Auto Group in North Brunswick, says his impression of the Forsgate Country Club is that it’s like an extended family. That “family” extends not only to guests he brings to the golf course, but to other club members who might become future clients. “When you become a member, you meet people you wouldn’t normally meet, people you wouldn’t know otherwise, so that helps to expand your network,” Malouf says. “You might meet them in the Grille Room or over appetizers and they’ll say, ‘what do you do, what line of business are you in,’ and the next thing you know, they’re coming to your place of business. They’re looking for somebody to trust, someone to talk to. “If I had advice for someone thinking of joining a club, I’d say, that’s where it’s worth your while — networking with other club members, especially with a club like Forsgate where they have hundreds of members,” he says. “Of course, you have to weigh the pros and cons, but as long as it’s smart for their business, I would say club membership really allows you to reach out to people.” A member for more than 16 years, Malouf was encouraged to join Forsgate by his father. He says he was not terribly interested in golf, but when he got out of college, his father strongly advised him to join and see what it was all about. “He told me what a great way it was to meet a lot of people,” Malouf says. “We have a corporate membership, it’s for the entire corporation to use. I’ve taken people out who use our services, or, on the other hand, we use their services. For example, I go out with our bulk oil clients or people who do our payroll. We sometimes take our employees out. And we take our reps out, representatives for Ford or General Motors, for example. To me, Forsgate is phenomenal. “It’s in a great location for us and caters to everything we could possibly want,” he continues. “To me, it’s really the only country club in central New Jersey that has everything at your fingertips, and the staff is great to work with. It has two golf courses (the original Banks course and the newer Palmer course), so if one is filled, you can use the other. The courses and facilities are always in beautiful shape. There’s a new restaurant called 37, which has modern American cuisine, a bar and pub area, a pool and recreation facilities, big ballrooms where they host proms and sweet 16 parties, those kind of affairs. We’ve not only had business events there, we’ve also had personal functions.” Membership is most definitely worth it, Malouf says. Sharing an afternoon of golf or a round of drinks “helps you get a better understanding of whom you’re working with,” Malouf says. “It’s easier to do business with people you feel comfortable with.” He considers the club to be a great marketing tool. “We can build relationships, especially with other members, and when you are buying a service or product from another member, you see these people all the time, and you know they’re going to take care of you.” Established in 1931, Forsgate began with Scottish immigrant John Forster’s vision of a self-sustaining community for his employees, away from the grind of the city. The co-founder of the insurance company Crum and Forster, he first looked over land in Monroe Township in 1913. He decided to build a town, experiment with different types of agriculture, and provide entertainment for his friends and relatives. The name Forsgate is a combination of his name and his wife’s family name, Gatenby. In building the golf course, Forster enlisted Charles “Steamshovel” Banks, who reproduced many of Forster’s favorite golf holes from his European golfing tours. The Palmer course was originally created by Hal Purdy in 1961 but was redesigned in 1995 by the Arnold Palmer Group and again in 2007 by Steven Kay. The historic clubhouse features the Highlands Ballroom, noted for its floor-to-ceiling windows. The Forsgate Sports Complex includes an outdoor junior Olympic pool, a children’s pool, and gym. Membership director Carol Rutherford says, while the average holder of a golf membership is male and in his mid-40s, with the opening of the sports complex, families and children have also been enjoying what Forsgate has to offer. “A golf membership automatically includes a spouse and children under 24,” she says. “Most of our members live within a 15 or 20-mile radius of the club, and we mostly have CEOs of corporations, executives, business owners, doctors, lawyers, and other professionals.” For a golf membership, the current joining fee is $17,000, a porContinued on following page 34 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 Continued from preceding page tion of which is a refundable deposit (if the member leaves the club), and the monthly fees calculate to about $7,500 a year. (Forsgate does not offer an annual membership.) Different levels of membership include senior, sports, and social memberships. Membership is by application. Forsgate Country Club, 375 Forsgate Drive, Monroe Township. 732-521-0700, www.forsgatecc.com. TPC/Jasna Polana ‘I use the membership for business purposes, to entertain clients and friends, and they appreciate the invitation,” says Jasna Polana member Paul Shur. “They look forward to going, to the overall experience, and that furthers my business relationship with clients and other people I bring.” An attorney of 30-plus years, specializing in commercial and finance law, Shur is with Sills, Cummis and Gross, and splits his time between the firm’s offices at 650 College Road East and New York. He graduated with a bachelor’s in history from Rutgers in 1974 and earned his law degree from Rutgers Law School in Camden in 1977. Shur, an East Brunswick resident, says even in this economy his membership at Jasna Polana is worth the costs, and has been beneficial to his business for years. “When I put together a foursome, I go to great lengths to put together groups of people I think will benefit from the experience, and sometimes the furthering of the relationship isn’t with me, but with someone else in the foursome,” he says. “I have established new relationships several times. People have done business with me, or introduced me to someone else, or I’ve been introduced to people I didn’t know.” Golf is a sociable game, with a polite tradition of socializing and networking, so it’s natural to be invited to someone else’s club and experience their course. “When you invite people to play golf at your club and they have memberships at their own clubs, they reciprocate, and then I’m introduced to even more people in that round of golf,” Shur says. “So yes, I meet new people, yes, I further relationships and then I also bring people back to Jasna Polana, people I already have a relationship with. You can never take for granted a business relationship. People have to know that you respect and care about them, and we show this by playing golf and then spending time afterwards.” A Polish phrase that means “bright meadow,” Jasna Polana in Princeton came into existence in a dramatic, almost operatic way. In 1983, the widowed Barbara Piasecka Johnson was left with a massive neo-Classical villa on an estate of almost 150 acres, when her much-older husband, J. Seward Johnson, died. The native of Poland didn’t care to remain in the United States but knew the rambling estate and lavishly decorated home couldn’t go to waste. She decided a golf course would put the land to its best use and would also ensure that the integrity of the house would remain. Affiliated with the PGA Tour, the Tournament Player’s Club (TPC) network was hired to manage the club, and famed golfer Gary Player was selected to design the course. (The Johnson family still owns the land.) Although it is a relatively young course, Jasna Polana is considered among the top private golf courses in New Jersey, with a challenging course orchestrated amidst rolling hills, hardwood trees, lakes, and ponds. Player, who is known for working with the natural environment when designing, crafted a course that supports the habitat of the existing land. WOODSIDE AT THE OFFICE CENTER Plainsboro, New Jersey Available for Immediate Occupancy. Suites from 750 to 2,000 Sq. Ft. Also, Medical Office with 2 Exam Rooms. Modern, One-Story Office Buildings • 609-799-0220 Park-Like Setting Office, Schmoffice, Come to My Club Instead: Jasna Polana clubhouse, above left, and chef Ryan Daniels, above, second from left, doing prep work in the Jasna kitchen. Below: Springdale Golf Club president Steve Wills, CFO, Palatin Technologies in Cranbury and owner of the accounting firm Wills, Owen, and Baker, at 15 Roszel Road, photographed in front of the clubhouse in 2008. Photos of Daniels and Wills: Craig Terry A charter member of the club, Shur says the golf course is “an interesting course and well-developed for as young as it is, and it’s remarkably well-maintained. I love being outside, and I’ve taken to bringing my son to Jasna Polana on weekends. It’s such a comfortable environment.” According to Peter Angerame, TPC/Jasna Polana director of sales and marketing, there are several types of memberships: golf corporate, golf charter, and social. A golf corporate membership is a $95,000 initiation fee with 75 percent refundable, or $55,000 non-refundable; a golf charter membership is $80,000 with 75 percent refundable, or $45,000 non-refundable. Golf memberships include golf privileges, dining and lodging. A social membership is $12,000 and includes social and dining privileges. Annual fees are additional. Shur holds a corporate membership. “That allows me to send guests to the course without my being available to play. (My membership) helps me with my business marketing.” To become a member, Angerame says a potential member need only call him to arrange a meeting. No letters of recommendation are required. While Shur allows that the fees are substantial, he says “other clubs are much higher, $100,000 or $200,000 for an initiation fee, and then you pay dues on top of that. But is it worth it? I would give a resounding ‘yes.’” W hat sets Jasna Polana apart for Shur is the warmth and attentiveness of the staff. Despite the palatial surroundings and size of the venue, he says it’s a warm, friendly place. “At Jasna, there’s an effort by the management and firm to be professional and to create a very business-friendly environment,” Shur says. “They try to make clients and guests feel welcome, and they can’t do enough for me. The club house is immaculate and well-maintained, Jasna has excellent dining facilities, and just in general, it’s a real treat to go to this club. Even for me, someone who goes all the time, every time I’m there, someone at Jasna does something special, goes out of their way. “When I take clients for a round of golf, it’s a whole day,” he says. “I get E-mails back from them thanking me effusively, saying what a great time they had. You don’t see this at every golf course.” Golf is not the only attraction for Shur, who has also hosted business meetings at Jasna Polana. “My clients come for the food and the meeting (experience), and the people at Jasna do a great job with this also,” he says. “When I first joined the club, I only used it for business, but now I’ve started to use it for more personal reasons, like I said, bringing my son. I think one of the best things I’ve done was to join Jasna, and I plan to stay as long as I can.” Angerame says that in the last decade the demographics at Jasna Polana have undergone a subtle change. “When we first opened, we attracted an older, high-end clientele,” he says. “Now in our 11th year, we find that we have a younger type of member, the average age would probably be in their 40s. It’s C-level executives (CEOs, CFOs, etc.), as well as professionals — doctors, lawyers, entrepreneurs, and financial professionals. It’s a bit of a cliche, but we like to say that Jasna Polana still possesses the ‘wow’ factor. But it’s also a nice place to relax.” The clubhouse occupies the Johnsons’ former home, built in the early 1970s by famed architect Wallace Harrison. The villa features luxe interior details and appointments such as antique flooring, 18th and 19th-century marble mantelpieces, bronze casement windows, antique tapestries, and 18th and 19th-century paintings from the Johnson’s collection of European works. At the focal point of the Grand Foyer is a suspended travertine stone staircase, Flemish tapestries, and original George II furnishings. JULY 21, 2010 The estate also offers overnight and meeting accommodations at the Annex, a 10-room Georgianstyle mansion built in the early 1900s, adjacent to the 14th tee. There, guests will find Persian rugs and a decorative fireplace in each room. The more modern Beata’s House, built in 1987, has six rooms. Jasna Polana’s landscaped grounds include an orchid house, an amphitheater, herb garden, and reflecting pool. Dining can be an experience that ranges from casual to formal to intimate, with the main dining room suitable for upscale dining and banquets or the Oak Room for a Is Jasna’s five-figure initiation fee worth it? ‘I would give a resounding yes,’ says member Paul Shur, an attorney. more laid-back lunch or dinner. Then there is the Wine Cellar, where guests can enjoy a private dinner for just 10 people, with a wine list numbering in the thousands. Jasna Polana is also noted for its environmental awareness and stewardship and has strived to preserve and protect native wildlife habitats as well as conserving natural resources. In recognition, Jasna is certified as part of Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary Systems by Audubon International. The club has been honored with numerous environmental awards, including the Golf Digest/Golf Course Superintendents Association of America (GCSAA) Environmental Leaders in Golf Awards. “We’re very supportive of the community, and we like it here,” Angerame says. He notes that TPC/Jasna Polana is also known for its charity, specifically its Birdies for the Brave golf event, which celebrated its fifth year last October. The event will be held this year on Monday, October 25. “100 percent of all charity money goes to support men and women fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan,” he says. “We’re always looking for sponsors and players.” TPC/Jasna Polana, 4519 Province Line Road, Princeton. 609688-0500, www.tpcatjasnapolana.com. The Bedens Brook Club E stablished in 1964, the Bedens Brook Club, located between Princeton and Hopewell and overlooking the scenic Sourlands, provides golf, recreational, and social opportunities to its members in the Greater Princeton Area. “At the Bedens Brook Club, members enjoy a welcoming environment, beautiful setting, and exceptional facilities,” says Craig W. Campbell, general manager of the Bedens Brook Club, in an E-mail. “We offer a challenging and meticulously maintained Dick Wilsondesigned, 18-hole golf course with competitive and instructional programs for all skill and age levels and no tee times. Our professional tennis staff provides competitive and recreational opportunities on our five Har-Tru tennis courts.” Amenities include four heated platform tennis courts, pool and cabana, club house, and outdoor patios. Like many clubs, cell phone use is strictly limited, with the exception of the pool cabana, the parking lot, and the clubhouse phone room. The Bedens Brook Club is a private, member-owned club offering a variety of membership categories through invitation. Management declined to state membership fees for this article. The size of the club is limited to ensure convenient access to all facilities at all times. The Bedens Brook Club, 240 Rolling Hill Road, Skillman. 609466-2646, www.bedensbrook.com. Cherry Valley Country Club Continued on following page WINDSOR INDUSTRIAL PARK OFFERS AN UNPARALLELED CENTRAL NEW JERSEY LOCATION! 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Route 9, 9, Freehold, 3499 Route Freehold, NJ07728 07728 Freehold, NJ 07728 Chatham, NJNJ 07928 Freehold, 07728NJ 973-635-2180 732-635-1055 www.cronheim.com 732-625-1055 •• 732-625-1060 732-625-1055 732-625-1060 732-635-1055 35 Mercer County’s Premier Commercial Realtor YOUR RETAIL/OFFICE SPECIALISTS NEW CONSTRUCTION F our miles outside of Princeton, Cherry Valley Country Club is known for its 18-hole championship golf course designed by Rees Jones. There is an extensive tennis program at the club, as well as an Olympic-sized pool, cabana, and children’s wading pool. According to Tom Hurley, CVCC’s general manager, the club is upscale and family-oriented, and definitely not stuffy. CVCC’s membership is diverse and reflects the demographics of business people, high-level executives, and entrepreneurs in Princeton, Hopewell, and especially Montgomery. “Cherry Valley Country Club is experiencing a banner season,” says Hurley. “Our membership categories are virtually full with the exception of a few social memberships that remain available. We encourage prospective members to contact us to explore what we refer to as ‘Awaiting’ memberships, a form of waiting list which allows prospects some limited use of the club while they await an opening. I attribute our success to our incredible golf course, tennis facilities, dining and social events, as well as our diverse membership and our unique family and social environment. Our members know how to have a good time, and our staff knows how to provide it.” U.S. 1 STORES END CAP UNIT Heritage Village, 1950 Brunswick Avenue Lawrence Twp. - Rt. 1, Medical/Office/Retail, 1,211 - 1,975 SF Units, Ready for Occupancy at Comp. Rates LEASE Route 1 Plaza, 2901 Brunswick Pike Lawrence Twp., Retail Center, 2,500 & 5,000 SF Stores Available, Near Quakberbridge Mall, Immediate Occupancy Very Comp. Rates LEASE Retail/Office Center 1938 Princeton Avenue Lawrence Twp., Outstanding Site Prominence 1,145 SF Unit, 20 Car Parking Immediate Occupancy LEASE Exclusive Broker (609) 581-4848 Ridolfi-associates.com OFFICE FOR LEASE Ewing Township - 1900 SF Reception • 3 Large Offices • Conference Room Kitchen • Storage • Bull Pen Area • First Floor Location $2600 Per Month - Includes All Utilities 609-921-8844 • Fax: 609-924-9739 Al Toto totocpn@aol.com • Exclusive Broker Commercial Property Network, Inc. We Have a Place For Your Company 36 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 Continued from preceding page REAL ESTATE Shopping Centers Multi Families Downtown Buildings Development Opportunity Lawrenceville Route 1Northbound Approved 12,000 SF mixed use retail center Approvals & plans ready // pre-leased to national tenant. Phase one started. Turn key opportunity for Real Estate Development Company or Construction Company to come in and take advantage of a ready to go project with pre-lease to national fast food tenant. BUY TODAY. BUILD TOMORROW. Hector Olaya Real Estate Broker, LLC 20 Witherspoon Street Princeton NewJersey 08542 609 575-9597 email:princetonbroker@aol.com 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 Cherry Valley can celebrate one for the record books: one of its members, Donna Cortina, basketball and golf coach at Stuart Country Day School, accomplished the near-impossible on Monday, July 12. As a guest in the TPC/Jasna Polana summer member-guest tournament, Cortina, a Skillman resident and mother of three, aced on the second hole, where she used a gap wedge, and the 17th hole, where she used an 8-iron. “I checked on Google,” says CVCC’s director of golf, Allan Bowman, “and found that this has only happened on four other occasions in history. The odds of making two hole in ones during the same round of golf are 67 million to one.” Cortina’s feat comes directly on the heels of fellow Cherry Valley member and Bowman student Peggy Ference’s fine showing on national television where she competed in Golf Digest’s U.S. Open Challenge at Pebble Beach alongside actor Mark Wahlberg, New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees, and hockey legend Wayne Gretzky. Ference is the regional business director at Allos Therapeutics at 302 Carnegie Center. Bowman says: “I wish I could take the credit but, let’s face it, Peggy earned her way to Pebble by winning a contest against 30,000 others.” Cherry Valley has other stars in its midst: executive chef Michael Giletto (michaelgiletto.com) is constantly on television and has appeared on the Tyra Banks show, Chopped, Iron Chef America, Ultimate Recipe Showdown, and more. On Wednesday, July 21, he can be seen on the Food Network’s “24 Hour Restaurant Battle,” and he just wrapped being a panelist on “The Next Food Network Star.” He recently created a five-course meal for a wealthy family on “The Millionaire Matchmaker.” “CVCC offers a range of membership categories starting at $1,000 initiation fee for a social member with no food minimum,” Hurley says. “For a full privilege membership, there is currently a $10,000 initiation fee or an option to pay $2,500 per year for five years. Annual dues are additional, and there is a waiting list for full privileges. Membership is through current member invitation, then through recommendation by a membership committee and the board of trustees.” Cherry Valley Country Club, 125 Country Club Drive, Skillman. 609-466-4244, www.cherryvalleycc.com. Greenacres Country Club A walk through the course at Greenacres Country Club in Law- renceville is like a tour of a botanical garden, with more than 150 species of flowers, plants, shrubs, and trees. There are specimens well over 100 years old scattered throughout the property, as well as those found from all over the world. The 6,400-yard course, designed by renowned golf course architects Devereux Emmett and Alfred Tull, is nestled among rolling hills and natural wetlands. The course was updated in the 1970s by George and Tom Fazio, then in 1982 by Ryan Ault, and more recently by Steven Kay. Cherry Valley Country Club’s full but it offers an ‘awaiting’ membership, which allows prospects some limited use of the club while they await an opening. Greenacres was voted “club of the year” in 2008 by the New Jersey chapter of the National Golf Course Owners Association. Founded in 1938, the club has a long tradition of and commitment to the principles of family and fellowship. According to a press statement, members share a common bond of social, civic, and charitable responsibility. The founders of Greenacres Country Club felt so strongly about giving back to their community that the governing documents of the club mandate that, in order to be a member of the club, one must make an annual donation to either United Way or the Jewish Federation. In addition, the membership of Greenacres supports a variety of sports and civic organizations and foundations, including the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Race for a Cure Foundation, the American Cancer Society, and the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation. In addition to its golf course, Greenacres offers a state-of-the-art tennis venue with terraced spectator areas, an aquatic facility with oversized pool, secure kiddie pool, spa pool, and a fully equipped fitness area. Dining is offered indoors or out, and members and guests can enjoy cocktails and appetizers in the living room lounge with mahogany bar, casual lunch or dinner in the Grill Room, or a more formal dinner in the main dining room. Greenacres’ facilities also include a sun room with floor-toceiling windows and a grand ballroom with panoramic views of the golf course. Management declined to give membership fees. Greenacres Country Club, 2170 Lawrence Road, Lawrenceville. 609-896-0259, www.greenacres-cc.com. Springdale Golf Club L ike the Nassau Club, Springdale is located in the heart of Princeton, nesled among the buildings of Princeton University and Princeton Theological Seminary near McCarter Theater. Established in 1895 by alumni, faculty, and undergraduates of Princeton, it is one of the oldest golf clubs in New Jersey. The par 71 golf course, designed by Gerard Lambet, dates from 1915 and was revised in 1926 by William Flynn. The clubhouse, originally a circa 1860 farmhouse was a gift from the Princeton Class of 1886 and in 2007, underwent an extensive upgrade and renovation. Springdale is a private club and serves as the home course for the Princeton University men’s and women’s golf teams. The club includes a professional golf shop and a state-of-the-art practice facility that includes a short-game area and fulllength driving range. Management declined to give membership fees. Springdale Golf Club, 1895 Clubhouse Drive, Princeton. 609921-8790, www.springdalegc.com. Pretty Brook Tennis Club O ne area club that is decidedly not focused on business doings is Pretty Brook Tennis Club, a small, private club with a primary focus on racquet sports. With a strong sense of tradition, PBTC is strictly for social purposes and discourages any business activity. Cell phones, Blackberries and PDAs, iPods, and other electronics are not allowed. An E-mail to one member, asking about the club, received the response “PBTC is a small, private, members-only tennis and squash facility. We do not allow photographs of the club or its facilities to appear in news media and the facilities are completely off limits for business meetings, the display of business papers, cell phones, or any BlackBerry or similar device. It is a social club. Vis a vis your article, we would prefer to have no reference to our existence. If you want to print something, we do now have a website with limited public information. We would best like to be quoted as saying, ‘No comment.’” Founded in 1929, the facilities at PBTC include four outdoor HarTru tennis courts, one outdoor tennis hard court, one indoor tennis hard court, two indoor squash courts, two heated and lighted paddle tennis courts, an outdoor swimming pool and deck area with gated baby pool and lawn, and a kids pavilion for table sports. The historic clubhouse serves casual lunches and social and athletic activities are offered year-round. Pretty Brook Tennis Club, 229 Pretty Brook Road, Princeton. 609924-0062, www.prettybrook.com. Available for Lease Pennsylvania - Bucks County - Retail/Office/Prof • The Gatherings 800-1,075 SF — $1,200-$1,500/mo. • Woodbourne Professional 100-1,925 SF — $110-$2,000/mo. • Hyde Park 2,696 SF — $19.50/SF/YR Thompson Realty 609-921-7655 JULY 21, 2010 Life in the Fast Lane T he Bank of Princeton, a community bank with branches in Pennington, Hamilton, Princeton Borough, and Princeton Township, has acquired Philadelphia-based MoreBank, which caters primarily to Asian-American clientele. According to a May letter to Bank of Princeton’s shareholders, the move is Bank of Princeton’s attempt to snare a piece of what has proved to be a lucrative AsianAmerican market. MoreBank, operated entirely by Asians, will keep its name and be run as a division of the Bank of Princeton in Philadelphia and Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Financial terms were not disclosed. While Bank of Princeton’s move follows the lead of Robbinsville-based Roma Bank, which launched RomAsia in 2008 in an effort to cash in on the growing Asian-American population in Middlesex County, Bank of Princeton chairman Andrew Chon, above right, says the acquisition has been planned for some time. A Korean immigrant himself — Chon came over as a child when his parents moved here to run “a little mom-and-pop business” and give their children a better life — Chon says he is aware of the sizable Asian-American population living “in pockets” between New Brunswick and Delaware. Short of Hispanics, Asians are the fastestgrowing population sector in the region, and a bank catering to that population simply makes sense.. “We’re entertaining the idea of Edited by Scott Morgan opening branches [of MoreBank] but we don’t know where specifically,” he says. Montgomery and Somerset counties, however, are on Bank of Princeton’s radar, as are Hamilton and Edison, where RomAsia recently open it’s second branch. For now, Chon says, Bank of Princeton and MoreBank, the latter of which features tellers who speak an array of Asian languages, will concentrate on their stock-in-trade — the local business community. “We leverage a lot of money for local business,” Chon says. Since opening in 2007, he says, Bank of Princeton has loaned roughly $200 million, almost all of it to businesses in Princeton and its immediate surroundings. “We’re looking to loan to local businesses, we’re just trying to find the right local businesses to help.” The Bank of Princeton, 183 Bayard Lane, Princeton 08542-3719; 609-921-1700; fax, 609-921-8350. Andrew Chon, chairman. www.thebankofprinceton.com. Continued on following page U.S. 1 ...Freedom of Choice West Windsor/571, Sale/lease 4,000 SF. 1 acre. Income-Development Potential. William Barish bbarish@cpnrealestate.com Princeton Commerce Center 750-7000 SF, Immediate Occupancy. Just Off Route One at Meadow Road Overpass. OFFICE FOR LEASE Kingston, NJ - Route 27 2 Suites Available - 1000 SF and 1500 SF Flexible Lease Terms 3 Minutes to Downtown Princeton 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 William Barish bbarish@cpnrealestate.com www.29emmons.com Available - Near Train - 9300 SF 777 Alexander Park. Will Divide, Great Signage. Immediate Occupancy, Cafe On Site. William Barish bbarish@cpnrealestate.com Plainsboro - Newly Renovated - 5800 SF FOR SALE! 100% Occupancy, Office Professional. Perfect for Owner/User/Investor. Al Toto totocpn@aol.com Commercial Property Network 609-921-8844 • www.cpnrealestate.com For more information and other opportunities, please call Commercial Property Network, 609-921-8844 37 38 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 Available for Lease Princeton Township - Office/Retail • 812 State Road (Rt. 206) 135-850 SF — $185-$1,200/mo. Princeton Borough - Office/Retail • 195 Nassau Street $600-$700/mo. Individual Offices Princeton Junction - Office/Med/Prof • 825-1872 SF — $1,250-$2,800/mo. • Walk to Train Station 5 Minutes Max. Lawrence Township - Office/Med/Prof - Lease or Condo Sale • 2500 Brunswick Pike (Rt. 1) 422-1,600 SF — $465-$1,750/mo. • Lawrence Office Park 650 to 6,000 SF — $900 to $8,000/mo. • Condos for SALE from $150/SF Rocky Hill - Office/Med/Prof - Lease or Condo Sale • 1026 Rt. 518 500-9,700 SF — $1,400-$16,000/mo. Hamilton - Office/Flex • Whitehorse Commercial Park 600-2,500 SF — $700-$3,000/mo • 2101 East State Street 3,300-9,900 SF Bordentown - Retail/Office/Prof • 101 Farnsworth 250-950 SF — $275-$1,000/mo. • 102 Farnsworth 1,350-1,500 SF — $1,450-$2,850/mo. • 3 Third Street 1,000-2,375 SF — $1,100-$2,500/mo. Forsgate Exit A - Retail/Office/Prof • One Rossmoor Drive 1,700-2,100 SF — $2,500-$3,000/mo. Continued from preceding page Expansions RomAsia Bank, 4287 Route 1 South, Monmouth Junction 08852; 609-8978100; fax, 609-897-8138. Dominick Mazzagetti, president and CEO. www.romasiabank.com. RomAsia, a bank catering to the AsianAmerican community in Middlesex County, has named four new members to its advisory board in the wake of the grand opening of its second branch in Edison last month. Kris Kolluri, head of the state Schools Development Authority; Nag Karaka, CEO of the Penntex Group IT firm of Edison; Edison-based attorney Jimmy Hu; and Y.C. Tsien, former executive director of the New Jersey Chinese American Chamber of Commerce, were announced on July 9. RomAsia opened its doors in Monmouth Junction in 2008 as an offshoot of Roma Financial, based in Robbinsville. This is the first satellite branch to open. Roma Bank, RomAsia’s holding company headquartered in Robbinsville, completed its $14.7 million acquisition of Mount Laurel-based Sterling Bank Monday. The acquisition was announced in March (U.S. 1, March 24), but the deal needed to be finalized. On Monday, Sterling’s 10 branches in Burlington and Camden counties opened as Roma branches, giving Roma 24 branches between Mercer and Camden counties. Sterling, which ran into trouble with spot construction loans for individuals building a house, was forced last year by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia to boost its loan loss reserves. But while Roma reported a $2.6 million profit in 2009, Sterling reported a loss of $9.6 million. According to the Philadelphia Inquirer, Sterling head nearly $379 million in assets at year’s end and the two banks now hold $1.7 billion in assets and $1.3 billion in deposits. Thompson Realty 609-921-7655 U.S. 1 DIRECTORY 2010-’11 Princeton Corporate Plaza Over 80 Scientific Companies Route 1 Frontage The newly updated U.S. 1 Directory is the prime source for reaching businesses throughout central New Jersey — 5,613 companies in 226 categories. You can buy the Directory for just $18.95 at the U.S. 1 office or by mail for $23.95. Buy this book and get $18.95 towards your next classified or display advertisement. We will keep your coupon on file and credit it to your account. Re/Max One, 4260 Route 1 North, Suite 3, Monmouth Junction 08852; 732438-0001; fax, 732-438-0007. Charan Bajwa, licensed real estate broker. www.bajwahomes.com. Real estate agent Charan Bajwa, above, recently opened her own 3,500-square-foot Re/Max office at 4260 Route 1 North in Monmouth Junction. The office serves Middlesex, Mercer, Somerset, and Monmouth counties. This is the first business for Bajwa, who has been a real estate agent for eight years. When she set out on the path to real estate, she says, she wanted to run her own business. Recently she was heralded by officials in South Brunswick for being able to reach her goal so quickly. Bajwa, the daughter of writer and playwright, grew up in India, where she received her bachelor’s in computer science. She came to the U.S. for a job in the IT industry before trading the field for real estate, hoping to start her own business. She lives in Middlesex County with her husband, two daughters, and her in-laws. Laboratories & Research Center AVAILABLE NOW! THE NEW DEAL: New in Town 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! Mail this coupon with $23.95 to: U.S.1 Directory, 12 Roszel Road, Princeton 08540 Yes, please send me a 2010-’11 U.S.1 Business Directory. Enclosed is a check for $23.95. Mail the Directory ASAP to: New Laboratory Incubator #4 Name Daytime Phone Company Name Address • • • • • 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 JULY 21, 2010 Tax Credit for Summer Childcare Expenses W orking parents: there is hope. If you are working or looking for work and need arrange for care of children under 13 during their summer break from school, you could qualify for a credit on next year’s tax return. According to the IRS, the Child and Dependent Care Credit is available to help offset the cost of day camp (expenses for overnight camps do not qualify), a sitter at your home, or a day- care facility outside the home. The actual credit can be up to 35 percent of your qualifying expenses, depending upon your income. You may use as much as $3,000 of the unreimbursed expenses paid in a year for one child or $6,000 for two or more children to figure the credit. For more information visit www.IRS.gov or call 800-TAXFORM. Kavayah Solutions Inc., 5 Independence Way, Suite 180, Princeton 08540; 609-9199797; fax, 609-919-9679. Vivek Casula, president. science, which he received from NYIT in 1994. . Kavayah Solutions, an E-commerce and IT firm founded as Multiconnect by Vivek Casula in 2002, has opened an office on Independence Way. A 15-year veteran of the enterprise-software industry, Casula is the former director of systems architecture for Thomson Peterson’s, where he headed the company’s strategic vision and technologyimplementation strategy. He also managed several software development efforts, including an E-learning system for Peterson’s online courses. Prior to joining Thomson Peterson’s, Casula held several technical, management consulting, and client-engagement positions with Thomson Consulting. He holds master’s degrees in engineering physics and computer VIA Pharmaceuticals, 101 College Road, Princeton. www.viapharmaceuticals.c om. VIA, a San Francisco-based developer of drugs and compounds that target inflammation in the blood vessel wall, has moved its College Road offices to Fort Washington, Pennsylvania. The firm can be reached at 267-513-1789 www.kavayahsolutions.com Leaving Town Deaths Joseph DeLorenzo, 94, on July 16. He was one of the founders of DeLorenzo’s Tomato Pie in Trenton. Dolores Dowd, 73, on July 16. She was the budget and personnel director for the New Jersey General Assembly. Survival Guide Continued from page 8 around for all of us. The industry is so big, we work with each other, not against each other,” he says. A challenging time. Even with all of the weddings taking place yearly in New Jersey, the past two and half years or so have been a challenge for the wedding industry. Many couples have put off their weddings because of the economic downturn, and those that have continued with their plans have been spending less. In 2009 the average price for a wedding dropped $6,000, according to a report at CNNMoney.com. But there is good news. Kent is seeing an increase in the number of weddings being planned this year. “People are starting to scramble to get contracts for a hall in the next six months,” he says. The catering hall is often the first business a couple will contact. They must reserve a date for the location before moving on to book other resources such as a DJ or band. Another piece of good news for the industry is that the first of the “echo boomers,” or Gen Y, that large group of children born to the baby boom generation, is now in their late 20s and they are starting to get married. That means an increase of weddings in the next decade as more and more members of the generation comes of age. Social networking in the industry. One important thing for people in the wedding industry to U.S. 1 39 Office Condo for Lease Montgomery Knoll, Tamarack Circle 1900 SF • Ideal medical setting 5 windowed offices • Bullpen Reception • Bath Private entrance • Ample parking Call 908-281-5374 • Meadow Run Properties Medical/Professional Office for Lease Princeton, NJ - N. Harrison St. 2200 SF (will consider subdividing) Convenient to Current and New Hospital dD Contact – Phone: (609) 658-9259 - Debra Fax: (609) 921-0775 Email: N.Harrison.Office@gmail.com COMMERCIAL DIVISION PREMIER PROPERTY Continued on following page Princeton Junction - User or Investor Opportunity. Two story masonry building containing 8 suites from 400 SF to 3000 SF FOR SALE. PRICE REDUCED! Suites – 400, 600 and 1,269 SF available FOR LEASE. OFFICE SPACE Ewing Twp. - Medical office available for lease. – close to new Capital Health facility – 2,200 SF. 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 Twp. - Economical 1,200+/-SF suite with seven offices, reception, secretarial area and 1/2 bath. For Sale or Lease. 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. North Brunswick - 3,315 SF single story building office/retail. Available for lease. 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 - Central business district, opposite library. Second floor, front, single office with private bath. 312 SF. 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. - Ideal for food use. 1,000 SF to 2,000 SF available for lease located in neighborhood shopping center. Hamilton - 1,600 +/- SF and 1,200 +/- SF available in neighborhood shopping center. Montgomery Twp. - Just outside of Princeton on Route 206, 1200 SF for lease. COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS Ewing Twp. - 2,500 SF clear span warehouse/shop. Lease. Ewing Twp. - 4,530 SF shop/warehouse - sale or lease. Hamilton Twp - Community Commercial zone. Allows retail and office use. Located on a 4 lane highway close to 295. 2 lots, 1 with a residence and 1 vacant. Being sold as a package. Hamilton Twp. - 3,840 SF warehouse space available for lease. Hamilton Twp. - 2000 SF building suitable for office or retail. Parking for 21 cars. 1 mile to full interchange of I-95. Available FOR SALE. North Brunswick - 3,315 SF of space available for your use in this 8,315 SF single story building. Office/retail, zoned C-1. Available for sale. LAND Hamilton Twp - Community Commercial zone. Allows retail and office use. Located on a 4 lane highway close to 295. 2 lots, 1 with a residence and 1 vacant. Being sold as a package. Hamilton Twp - Development opportunity includes Engineering drawings for development of 15,200 +/- sf, 1.9 acres in Mercerville section. 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. Lawrence Twp. - .2.28 +/- acres in professional office zoning. 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 40 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 Phyllis Over 17 years experience (Grodnicki) ER Hemler UND CT! TRA CON Bus: 609-924-1600 Cell: 609-203-0110 ! OLD S An independently owned and operated member www.princetonmercerhomes.com of The Prudential Real Estate Affiliates, Inc. 253 Nassau Street • Princeton Summer Painting INTERIOR/EXTERIOR • POWER WASHING • REPAIRS Power Washing • Perfect Preparation • Decks Stained & Sealed Interior & Exterior Painting • Expert Carpentry Repairs Certified - EPA - Lead Paint Renovating and Licensed NJ State Home Improvement Contractor “Professional Painting Pays!...In Many Ways” A 2008 Historic Restoration Award Winner Call 609-924-1474 Julius H. Gross, Inc. A Princeton Business for Over 40 years www.juliushgrosspainting.com • juliushgross@comcast.net BUYING OR SELLING? Let Stockton Real Estate Be Your Solution... ✦ ✦ ✦ ✦ Experience Honesty Integrity Sales & Rentals Stockton Real Estate, LLC 32 Chambers Street • Princeton, NJ 08542 1-800-763-1416 • 609-924-1416 SALE/LEASE 2,820 Sq. ft. Prof. Office Bldg. ASKING: $495,000 OWN W/ TENANT 3673 Quakerbridge Road - former law office. Buy w/ 1,000 sq. ft. tenant in place or lease 1,820 sq. ft. in move-in condition. 14 car parking, great highway signage. Available Immediately. ALL REASONABLE OFFERS CONSIDERED. RIDOLFI REALTORS 609-581-4848 WEST WINDSOR - 950-10,800 SF Office / R&D / Warehouse 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. 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. OFFICE RENTALS 12 Roszel Rd, Princeton, NJ: Executive suites A-204. Vacant suite with access to internal common area available. Internet Access. Call 609-720-0300 or email: MerlEnterprises@gmail.com. 186 Princeton-Hightstown Rd. Windsor Business Park. Two small suites of 915 & 1030 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, 953 sq. ft. office for lease. Also a 510 SF two-room suite available. 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.princetonoffice.com East Windsor, Route 130: Office in professional building: 240 SF @ $395. Call 609-730-0575. Large office available. Kingston Professional Buildings, 4499 Rt. 27, Village of Kingston. Close to Princeton and Rt. 1. Outdoor patio, quiet area. Ideal for single practitioner attorney, accountant, therapist, nutritionist and others. Utilities and common area charges included $975/mo. Please reply to: kingstonfivellc@gmail.com or call 609-915-4095. Lawrenceville: Psychotherapy/ Professional Service Office Space for Rent. 3rd Floor Office Suite in Lawrenceville, 2 offices available with shared waiting and group therapy rooms. Handicapped accessible. Copier, fax machine and kitchen included. High speed internet available. Great location on Princeton Pike. Immediate availability. Contact Rosemarie at 267-391-7351. Montgomery Knoll: Skillman address. CPA with 1,500 SF space wishes to sublet 12’x12’ ground floor windowed office. $400 to a CPA or attorney, $500 otherwise. Call or E-mail Henry at 609497-2929; hbmurphyjr@aol.com. Pennington - Hopewell: Straube Center Office from virtual office, 12 to 300 square feet and office suites, 500 to 2,400 square feet. From $100 per month, short and long term. Storage space, individual signage, conference rooms, copier, Verizon FIOS available, call 609-737-3322 or e-mail mgmt@straube.com www.straubecenter.com Continued from preceding page • Immediate Occupancy • Flexible Lease Terms • Ample parking • Walk to restaurants • Expansion potential William Barish bbarish@cpnrealestate.com 609-921-8844 www.cpnrealestate.com ★ Commercial Property Network, Inc. We Have a Place For Your Company be aware of is that Geny Y brides and grooms are internet-savvy. Brides these days are sharing information with each other online. “Parents aren’t paying as much as they used to and the couples themselves are paying more and planning more,” Kent says. “They are online looking for discounts and sharing that information on the wedding blogs,” he says. The new emphasis on wedding blogs and social media in the industry means that if a business does a great job (or a terrible job) at one wedding it will be discussed not just by a few of the bride’s friends, but possibly by thousands of brides on an online wedding blog site, as well. — Karen Hodges Miller 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 rates, contact: and rates,and contact Weidel Commercial 609-737-2077 www.WeidelCommercial.com PENNINGTON. Furnished private office in a five-office suite. Fax, copier and kitchen. $500/month. Call Frank at 609896-1125. 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 Junction: Prof. Office space in highly visible spot near trains, Princeton Hopsital, highways. Reasonable rents. Units from $450 to $6000 per month. Call Ali at Re/Max of Princeton 609-452-1887 or cell 609-902-0709. Princeton Office Space — Heart of downtown up to 6 offices available with shared conference, file storage and coffee rooms. Professional non-therapeutic uses only with low client traffic. 609-2521111 Princeton Office Suite for Rent 134 Nassau Street. Excellent central business district location. 2,000 SF with reception, conference, plus five private offices and spacious office gallery. Weinberg Management, 609-924-8535, www.weinbergmanagement.com Princeton-Nassau Street: Sublet 24 rooms, 2nd floor, includes parking/utilities. Call 609-924-6270. Ask for Wendy. Single story office building available. 2100 s.f. Kingston Professional Buildings, 4499 Rt. 27, Village of Kingston. Ideal for law firms, accounting firms, other professional groups. Quiet area, outdoor patio available. $23/s.f. Email Kingstonfivellc@gmail.com or call 609-915-4095 COMMERCIAL SPACE HAMILTON - WH/DIST/OFFICE space at recession-busting prices! 15,500 SF @ $3,500/mo NNN! Private BR, hi ceilings, loading dock, drive-in, great location! Also other units from 3,000 SF to 30,000 SF. MUST SEE! Brian @ 609-731-0378 or brushing@firstprops.com Photo/Video Space The Photography Studio @ Studio City New Jersey is now open. Trenton’s first movie studio has a 1750sq ft. photo studio and a 10,000sq ft. film and video sound stage with green screen available at the facility. Call for low intro rates. 609-278-2800. Visit us online at: www.studiocitynj.com Business Meetings Wednesday, July 21 4 p.m.: NJTC, “What’s Next in Energy Policy? $50. Weiser LLP, Edison. 856-787-8700. WAREHOUSE/office space 7,200 sqft & 2,500 sqft new construction can modify to your needs. Dayton location, Cranbury address, 12 ft drive-in door. Best deal around. Call Russ 732-3296991, email rwagner@bmionline.com. HOUSING FOR SALE Special - Special - Special - Roosevelt - Just Reduced. Lost job and will sacrifice this 4 BR home. NOW $274,900 - will consider any reasonable offer. Levinson Assoc. Realtors 609655-5535. Marketed by Mel Adlerman 609-655-7788 (Res.). HOUSING FOR RENT Hamilton Square: one bedroom, living room, dining area and kitchen on private treed lot near MCCC $773, heat included, available August. 609-5295891. Princeton: Executive 5BR 2.5 bath home on 2 acres, pool, woods, Herrontown area. Available immediately. 609-924-2809. REAL ESTATE SERVICES HOMESELLERS - Find out what the home down the street sold for! Free computerized list of area home sales and current listings. www.Newshortsalelistings.com RE/MAX Tri County 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. CLEANING SERVICES Window Washing: Lolio Window Washing. Also gutter cleaning and power washing. 609-271-8860. HOME MAINTENANCE Bill’s Custom Services: Residential repairs and carpentry. Practical approach, reasonable rates, local references — 32 years in business. 609-5321374. Continued on following page 10:30 a.m.: Professional Services Group, weekly career meeting, free. Mercer County One-Stop, Trenton. 609-292-7535. Tuesday, July 27 8:30 a.m.: NJTC, “Health Information Exchange,” $90. NJHA, Alexander Road. 856-787-8700. 5:30 p.m.: NJ CAMA, “Summer Networking Event,” $10. Princeton Sports Bar & Grill, 128 Nassau Street. 609-275-4123. 6 p.m.: NJ SBDC, “Doing Business in Mercer,” free. Hightstown Library. 609-771-2947. 7 a.m.: BNI Ivy League, weekly networking breakfast, free. 100 Overlook Center. 732-960-1730. 8 a.m.: Plainsboro Business Partnership, “Nine Big Mistakes In Saving for Retirement,” free. Wyndham Conference Center. 609-240-6022. 6 p.m.: Mercer Chamber, Special Events Industry Event,” free Trenton Marriott. 609-689-9960. 7:30 p.m.: JobSeekers, networking, free. Trinity Church, 33 Mercer Street. 609-924-2277. Friday, July 23 Wednesday, July 28 Thursday, July 22 9 a.m.: PlanSmart NJ, “Building One New Jersey, $100. Frist Center, Princeton University. 609393-9434. 7 a.m.: BNI West Windsor chapter, weekly networking, free. Macaroni Grill. 609-462-3875. JULY 21, 2010 U.S. 1 41 42 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 U.S. 1 Employment Exchange HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED JOBS WANTED JOBS WANTED Client Assistant: Part time position in East Windsor. Start out working 10 hours per week with potential 20 hours after training period. Bookkeeping experience, excellent organizational and communication skills and business computer knowledge are all required. Please email resume with salary requirements and references to: lar@ppsmore.com. plus incentive bonuses, 30-40 hours per week. Excellent people skills are required the rest we can teach. Call Marc 609-6310050 or send resume to mmiller@premierconsulting.co m Quality engineer/technician: Princetel; Local fiber optic component manufacturer; Adding full/part time quality staff; Qualification: intensive experience with ISO process; Pennington currently (Hamilton summer 2011); More info: www.princetel.com/career.asp; Resume: info@princetel.com. 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). expertise in corporate-wide software initiatives as well as advanced training, measurement, technology, and methodology allows me to offer significant added value in process and human resource performance improvement. I am unemployed and could begin working immediately. Box 236799 Editor: Work from home and proof federal court transcripts. Will supervise a small team. Work 25 hours per week during business hours. Income to $35 per hour, plus bonuses. Must have transcription experience, 4year college degree, and type 70 words per minute. Send resume to wtrscramp@aol.com. Janitorial part-time in Princeton area. Monday through Friday and weekends, 7 a.m. to 9 a.m. Must have experience & your own transportation. Call 856-793-0549 ext. 134. Local Hamilton NJ software consulting firm seeks part time telemarketer to prospect and qualify companies. $10-$12/hr Mall Marketing Demonstrator: Greet & Promote for National Award Winning kitchen company at local mall(s). Competitive hourly & unlimited bonuses. Call Now 888-292-6502 ext. 86. Marketing/editorial manager for sports business online subscription market research and publications database. Excellent opportunity for the right person. At least 2 years online experience required. Journalism experience helpful. Resume should include your marketing achievements. Princeton location, some travel. Send resume with references to SBRnet.com PO Box 2378 Princeton, NJ 08543. Property Inspectors: Parttime $30k, full-time $80k. No experience, will train. Call Tom, 609-731-3333. HOME MAINTENANCE Continued from preceding page Door Tech LLC: Doors, locks, door hardware, electronic access and intercoms. Lic. #34LS00012200, J.A. Luther, 609-921-3221, e-mail doortechinc@yahoo.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 609921-8401 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 charge. The U.S. 1 Jobs Wanted section has helped people like you find challenging opportunities for years now. We know this because we often hear from the people we have helped. We reserve the right to edit the ads and MENTAL HEALTH GARAGE SALES person or by phone. Rafe Sharon, Psychoanalyst 609-683-7808. Garage Sale 7/24 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. (rain date 7/25). 21 Suffolk Lane, Princeton Junction. Toys, books, household items, etc. Virtual Assistance @ Your Your Finger Tips! Executives On The Go! pampering the busy executive, helping you manage your life off and on the road. For more info: 800-745-1166 www.executivesonthego.com P E IC R 171 Atkins Ave. 2 BR, New Roof, Updated Bath; Kitchen. w Stainless Steel Appl: Refrigerator, Microwave, Stove, Dishwasher; 2 walls of Refinished Cabinets; 60’ NEW stamped concrete driveway. New floors Incl.: Carpeting & Brazilian Cherry Hardwood; Extra Deep Backyard w 18’x18’ DECK, Gazebo, Stone Patio w Hot Tub. Near Kuser Park. Directions: Cross Street: Newkirk across from Kuser Park. www.171atkinsavenue.com North Brunswick Open House Sunday, 8/1, 1-4pm $249,900 Governors Pointe II. 2 story Townhouse across from pool & tennis courts. 2010: new gas hot water heater. 2008: carpets and new ceramic tiles. New paint on interior & exterior walls. All new Thermal windows. E N W P COMPUTER SERVICES Computer repair, upgrade, data recovery, or maintenance. Free estimate. Call (cell) 609-213-8271. FINANCIAL SERVICES Bookkeeping Services for Your Bottom Line: Certified QuickBooks ProAdvisor. Call Joan today at Kaspin Associates, 609-490-0888. 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. HEALTH Hamilton Open House Sunday, 7/25, 1-4pm $214,999 W JOBS WANTED test plans. I regularly set up test environments, including virtual machines, in addition to assigning software testing tasks to QA staff based on their strengths and current workloads. Please call 609-223-9196. BUSINESS SERVICES RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE E N Interested? musicbusiness101@ yahoo.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 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. robthehandyman- licensed, insured, all work guaranteed. Free Estimates. We do it all - electric, plumbing, paint, wallpaper, powerwashing, tile, see website for more: robthehandyman.vpweb.com robthehandyman@att.net, 609-269-5919. Software Quality Assurance Manager, who lives locally and works in New York City, wants to work locally. I’m looking for the challenge of starting a software QA department for an area company. I have more than ten years of experience in writing and execution of test cases and Princeton area established Music Business is your chance…to teach music + Rent Instruments + Sell Music Accessories. Fully staffed with teachers + support staff. Needs TLC musical loving manager with entrepreneurial flair. Purchase or Partnership with limited investment. DECKS REFINISHED A - 1 Message Center - Remote receptionist, 24/7, professional & courteous. Ideal for afterhour messages, emergency patch throughs and appointment scheduling. Very reasonable rates. Located in Mercerville. www.A1messagecenter.com or 609-587-8577. 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. Management professional with over 15 years experience looking for full-time position. Experienced with an exceptional track record in senior-level project management, process & procedure design/development, training delivery and analysis of enterprise training and development initiatives. My specialized Mechanical Engineer available for FT/PT employment. Experienced as an Engineering Manager in a large manufacturing environment with heavy process equipment. Supervised both engineers and an hourly unionized work force. As a Plant Engineer I managed all aspects of a 1/2 million sq. ft. facility, including process and design elements in the manufacturing process. Call David @ 609-4484271. Do you have a dream of making a living by running a Music Business? 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. BUSINESS SERVICES Handyman: A small job or big job will be accepted for any project around the house that needs a handyman service with free estimates. Please call my cell phone 609-213-8271. Bookkeeping Newly retired bookkeeper with years of experience is looking for clients who are busy with other matters. Experienced in A/P, A/R, collection, cash applications, and overall bookkeeping needs. Organized and honest. Will work from home and at reasonable rates. You may contact me at 732-3559686 or by email at dambriosokirby@comcast.net. HELP WANTED E IC R Introductory Massage Special $60: at the Ariel Center for Wellbeing. Integrative, Swedish, Spiritual Mind Treatment. Four hands available with Krista and Meryl. By appointment only. 609454-0102. JAZZERCISE. is pure fun. Group fitness class combining cardio, strength & stretch. All ages, levels and sizes are welcome. You’ll burn 500 calories in a 60-minute Jazzercise class. For Special Deals and Class info: www.jazzplainsboro-windsors.com, 609-890-3252. 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 609-403-8403. Oriental Massage Therapy: Deep tissue, Swedish, Shiatsu, Reflexology by experienced Therapists, Princeton Juction off Route 1. Call 609-514-2732 for an appointment. www.37claystreet.com Reflexology massage by European staff on Route 1 next to Princeton BMW car dealership. 609-716-1070. Princeton Forrestal Village • 112 Village Blvd. Princeton, NJ 08540-5760 Office: 609-951-8600 Ext. 144 Cell: 609-509-0777 Each Office Independently Owned and Operated MENTAL HEALTH CYRIL “CY” GAYDOS REALTOR® ASSOCIATE Having problems with life issues? Stress, anxiety, depression, relationships... Free consultation. Working in INSTRUCTION “A Mentor” Helping you be the best person you can be. Mr. C. Free consultation. Cell 609-658-7588, 732-716-0904. ESL, conversation for adults 609751-6615. saraspeaksenglish@gmail.com. http://www.saraspeaksenglish.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 & Chemistry Tutoring: FullTime, Experienced High School Teacher (20 years). Algebra through Pre-Calc; Regular, Honors, and AP Chem. Call Matt 609-919-1280. Music Lessons - Farrington’s Music: Piano, guitar, drum, sax, clarinet, F. horn, voice, flute, trumpet, violin, banjo, mandolin, harmonica. $28 half hour. School of Rock. Join the band! Princeton 609-924-8282. Princeton Junction 609-897-0032. Hightstown 609-4487170. www.farringtonsmusic.com. NEED A LIFE COACH? Challenged by disorganization, procrastination, time management, attentional issues? Our experienced, certified coaching team will help you find effective strategies and tools. 609.683.0077, info@odysseycoaches.com, www.odysseycoaches.com Private knitting or sewing lessons with experienced teacher. Call 609-7516615. ENTERTAINMENT Entertainment Industry Studio City New Jersey, Trenton’s first movie studio has office and production space for rent to the industry. Equipment, props and vehicle storage is also available. Call for low intro rates. 609-278-2800. Visit us online at: www.studiocitynj.com One Man Band: Keyboardist for your party. Perfect entertainment. Great variety. Call Ed at 609-424-0660. 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 $120. Cell phone (609)213-8271. OLD TOWN CANOE, very light, green, one seat. Best offer over $250. 609-921-2774. Moving Sale Plainsboro 2 Queen 1 King Bed. 6 chairs/Dinning tbl. Office desk/chairs, sectional couch and more. Toyota Cmry 2005. Sale ends 26th July. 609-716-7144 email sunihunter@gmail.com. Saturday, July 24th Multi family garage sale. 8am to 1pm. No early birds! Items include, occasional furniture, books (kids & adult), games (8 - adult), collectibles, holiday, clothing, linens, picture frames, china, fabric, stuffed animals (mint condition) and more. Great stuff! 18 Prospect Street, Cranbury. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS I Buy Guitars and All Musical Instruments in Any Condition: Call Rob at 609457-5501. WANTED TO BUY Antique Military Items: And war relics wanted from all wars and countries. Top prices paid. “Armies of the Past LTD”. 2038 Greenwood Ave., Hamilton Twp., 609-890-0142. Our retail outlet is open Saturdays 10 to 4:00, 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. ANIMALS Dog Walking: Working late? Leave the walking to us. Mydogwalks.com is a private dog walking service, we keep your pets happy and safe. $15.50 per 30 minutes and $4 for second dog. 877-87My Dog. OPPORTUNITIES Work from home NYSE Powerhouse 1099 opportunity. Advanced commissions unlimited income potential. pt/ft internet and long-distance required. Call 1-888-233-2665. 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. If you prefer to mail us your ad, address it to U.S. 1 Singles Exchange, 12 Roszel Road, Princeton, NJ 08540. Include your name and the address to which we should send responses. See the Singles Exchange at the end of the Preview Section. JULY 21, 2010 I were allowed to pass but not dribble. The only exception was if one dribble would allow a player to attempt a shot. More recently Goldman has stepped up his performance schedule, building up a network of musicians who can also play with him at private parties and corporate functions — “events that will support me as a musician.” This Saturday, July 24, at Tre Piani Goldman will appear with two of the “historic jazz elders,” Richard Wyands, 81, on piano, and Lisle Atkinson, 69, on bass. Goldman is excited: “I’ve come from the age of 17, not imagining that I could ever play like these guys, to actually performing with them. It’s the full circle of a dream.” My half hour has suddenly become an hour and a quarter. Am I missing anything? Actually, yes. I never did ask about Goldman’s Pilates training. I figure that will have to wait. Goldman and friends will appear Wednesday, July 21 and 28, from 5 to 7:45 p.m. at Labyrinth Books at 122 Nassau Street, and Saturdays, July 24 and 31, from 7:30 to 11 p.m. at Tre Piani in Forrestal Village. www.straightjazz.com. U.S. 1 Richard K. Rein f you are interested in jazz music and rein@princetoninfo.com have not yet heard John Henry Goldman, jazz trumpeter, then you sions of music composition and are missing something. I stumbled performance techniques. On the upon him a few Wednesdays ago in day my kids joined in, Goldman the lower level of Labyrinth Books speaks about the challenges the on Nassau Street. I recalled an arti- player of a B-flat instrument has in cle five years ago about the trum- playing music written in the C peter playing at the old Sunny Gar- scale and later about the improden restaurant. I had wondered vised solos that are a trademark of then how that brassy instrument every jazz performance. “Think of would play inside a quiet room. it as spontaneous composition,” he says. The solo shouldn’t just be a This was my chance. Goldman makes it look easy. wild ride up and down the scale. Accompanied by a drummer, key- Nor should it be a recitation of faboard player, and bass guitarist, he miliar riffs. “It’s easy to stay in the comfort works his instrument more like a piano than a bugle. While he plays zone,” Goldman elaborates in our in front of a dozen people or so an- interview. “The challenge is to be other dozen come and go through spontaneous while still having a the bookcases filling the rest of the compositional quality to what’s beroom — the bookworms are not at ing played.” Goldman gets into a discussion of melodic and harmonall distracted by the hipcats. A few weeks later I show up at ic references. I expect him to cite a another quiet venue, Tre Piani in course at Berklee or Eastman or Forrestal Village, with my boys some other college of music. But Rick, 18, a trumpet player in his there is no college of music, no colhigh school band, and Frank, 16, a lege at all, as a matter of fact. trombone player. At the intermission I introduce myself to Goldoldman’s unusual path to man, and mention that my boys play a little music as well. He talks professional jazz trumpet playing briefly to them, discusses some began at age 6, when he was at the software that enables a player to summer camp in Maine owned and have musical accompaniment operated by his father and asked while practicing alone, and then re- the bugler if he could try to blow sumes his performance. At the end the horn. “I was hooked,” he said. of the evening, as we are leaving, The Goldman household on Long Goldman calls out to the two kids. Island was a musical place — his Would they like to stop by older siblings were “wonderful piLabyrinth on Wednesday and sit in anists” — and young John Henry (named after both his grandfathers) for some songs? They say yes. How is this going to work, I took naturally to trumpet. But in the eighth grade another wonder. I know that high school loomed: Basketball. activities are a long way from pro- interest fessional endeavors. And Goldman Though he is just shy of 5-foot-9, has never heard my kids perform. I Goldman excelled and was elected hold my breath and follow the boys captain of his team as a junior. In into Labyrinth. Somehow it all 12th grade, however, Goldman quit the team. “I devoted so much works. Now I have to find out not just time to it that it kept me from being the secret to making a trumpet exposed to other things in life.” He took trumpet lessons from work in a quiet setting, but also the Jimmy Maxwell, magic that enables who had played a seasoned profeswith Jimmy Dorsional to bring A seasoned prosey, Benny Goodsome young amafessional musiman, and the teurs into the cian brings some Tonight Show band group. I look up in the Johnny Carthe 2005 article young amateurs son era. By the time from the West up on stage. Can Goldman graduatWindsor-Plainsthis work? ed from high school boro News and he had zero interest discover that in attending colGoldman’s background also includes summer lege, but he felt confident that he camp director, basketball coach, could be a professional trumpet and Pilates instructor. I E-mail him player. However, he discovered a and ask if I can interview him. I’ll major obstacle. “I wasn’t able to only need a half hour, I promise. A stand in front of an audience.” While his peers from the Class few days later I meet him at his house in West Windsor. First, I ask, of 1970 headed off to college, could he have known that it was Goldman struck out on his own, going to work out when he brought doing landscaping and other manuthe 16-year-old — sound as yet un- al labor and ending up in Warwick, New York. There he discovered the heard — up on stage? Goldman, surprisingly, says he writing of the Russian mystic, didn’t know how it would work George Gurdjieff, whose teachings out. But he also didn’t worry about emphasized, among many other it. “It’s taken me a long time to re- things, the value of physical labor, lax enough to play my own music,” crafts, music, and group activity. he says. “I’ve finally reached the (The basketball player may have point where I don’t worry about connected with the trumpeter, I whether or not it’s going to work. If think to myself.) Goldman returned from WarFrank couldn’t play that first song, I just would have asked him to pick wick to join his father in running a melody he could play. We’d find the summer camp (a year-round job) and moved with his parents something.” As for the volume of the horn in when they relocated to central New a quiet setting, Goldman says that’s Jersey. By then he was married. He solved by bearing in mind that and his wife, Martha, have two “high volume is only relative to sons, now 30 and 28, and he credits low volume. I’ve learned to play her with finally “giving me the very softly. People can be eating at freedom to play music” in public. Goldman also rekindled his ina table three feet from where I’m playing and I can hear their conver- terest in basketball. In West Windsation. And the other musicians sor he founded a kids’ program love it, too. We can hear each other. called the Basketball Club, which My role is to accompany what’s sponsored games in which no going on in the room, not be the scores were kept, no standings maintained, and no parents were center of attention.” At Labyrinth the session occa- allowed to coach their children. sionally gives way to brief discus- Players in the Basketball Club G Cell: 609-915-0206 Office: 609-924-1600 robertaparker@aol.com 253 Nassau Street Princeton, NJ 08540 Princeton Area Real Estate 105 Bedens Brook Road, Skillman, NJ – Spectacular custom home located with views of Bedens Brook Golf Course. Short distance from downtown Princeton. 4 BR & 4.5 BA, 3 car garage. $1,499,000 RobertaSellsPrinceton.com 90th anniversary The real estate market is heating up. If you are purchasing a home or refinancing an existing mortgage, our Home Mortgage Consultants will meet you at a time and place to accommodate your busy lifestyle. Contact them today! L OU S ANTORO R ANDY S PURGIN 609.499.7600, ext. 2114 louis.santoro@romabank.com 609.223.8356 randy.spurgin@romabank.com Q Quick Response Q Low Rates Q Pre-Approvals 1.888.440.ROMA (7662) www.romabank.com MEMBER Mercer County’s Oldest and Largest Community Bank! 43 44 U.S. 1 JULY 21, 2010 Springpoint C om mu n it y En Signature Broadway Pops brings you rich ment Partner ship a WWII Songbook Concert at the Grounds for Sculpture Seward Johnson, Unconditional Surrender ©2004, all rights reserved by The Sculpture Foundation, Inc. Thursday, July 29th at 3:00pm In celebration of J. Seward Johnson’s “Unconditional Surrender” sculpture, the Springpoint Foundation, in conjunction with the Laurenti Family Charitable Trust and Bloomberg LLP, present an evening of songs written and performed during the historical WWII era by Broadway’s Glenn Seven Allen and Janine DiVita of Signature Broadway Pops, to an audience at Grounds For Sculpture. Join us for this free concert! For more information please contact the Springpoint Foundation Sponsored by: at 609.720.7304. *The Springpoint Community Enrichment Partnership provides lifelong access to art and cultural programs.