Cool Dining Abounds Cool Dining Abounds

Transcription

Cool Dining Abounds Cool Dining Abounds
Kim Guadagno Defines Her Role, 4; Melissa Etheridge, 19;
Fashions for Museums, 23; Putting the You in YouTube, 36.
VPR International, a software start-up in Princeton,
feels like a college reunion.
Page 32.
010
Business Meetings
Preview
Opportunities
Singles
Jobs
Contents
38
9
18
30
42
52
2
LY 7,
© JU
At Dawn’s Early Light
Cool Dining Abounds
Pat Tanner reports on the best places
for out-of-the-cereal-box breakfasts.
Page 9 (Above:
(Above: The
The new
new patio
patio at
at the
the Nassau
Nassau Inn.)
Inn.)
Calico Grill in Princeton offers a Mexican twist.
The Cafe in Rosemont: 19th century setting.
Princeton's Business and Entertainment Weekly
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2
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
No time is a busier time than
summer for the U.S. 1 events edi-
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,
Anna Soloway
Contributors
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Copyright 2010 by Richard K. Rein
and U.S. 1 Publishing Company,
12 Roszel Road, Princeton 08540.
enough for putting the spotlight on
the healing power of pets.
Your coverage highlighted the
tor. Programs in drama, dance, mu- myriad ways pets reduce stress and
sic, and film are in full swing, in- enhance health and fitness. Similar
doors and out. The daytime hours stories of animals sustaining their
are filled with events to keep the human caretakers abound within
best and brightest kids engaged our organization; we receive
countless letters of thanks from our
and off the streets.
adopters detailing how
So what’s the best
the pets they adopted
way to inform us of
from AANJ uplifted
your event so that it
Between
their spirits and health.
can be publicized in
The
A 501(c)3 nonprofit
the paper, posted onanimal
rescue organizaline at www.princeLines
tion, AANJ saves 500
toninfo.com, and be
pets every year from euconsidered for a dayof-the-event mention on our Twit- thanasia in overburdened area aniter or Facebook page? The answer mal shelters and adopts them into
is to E-mail the information to new, loving homes. Animal Alevents@princetoninfo.com and in- liance also runs Planned Pethood
clude the date and place of the (the Greater Princeton area’s only
free-standing, low-cost spay and
event in the subject line.
If appropriate please tell us if neuter clinic), which enables us to
this E-mail is a follow-up to one save thousands more lives by prepreviously sent — this helps us venting unwanted litters by proavoid duplication of effort. And fi- viding affordable spay/neuter
nally, it’s always helpful to include services accessible to all.
We’re all volunteers, so we
your message in the main body of
the E-mail rather than making us don’t do it for the money, and the
open an attachment. Lynn Miller, work is far from glamorous. InU.S. 1’s events editor, can face as stead, we firmly believe the animany as 100 new E-mails a day. mals repay us by enhancing our
She especially will appreciate your lives. If readers are motivated by
your coverage to reap the rewards
cooperation.
of the human-animal bond, we invite them to get involved with
AANJ by donating money, resources, or time to our all-volunteer efforts; spaying or neutering
all of the animals they already
have, and encouraging friends, relhank you for developing the atives, and neighbors to do the
idea to devote the annual Health same; or adopting or fostering a
and Fitness issue of U.S. 1 to the needy pet.
Please contact AANJ and the
bond between people and their pets
(U.S. 1, June 23). This special rela- Planned Pethood clinic at www.antionship is something that we, the imalalliancenj.org, by phone at
volunteers of Animal Alliance of 609-818-1952, or by E-mail at aniNew Jersey (AANJ), are lucky malalliance@comcast.net
enough to experience first-hand
Erica Lynett
every day. We can’t thank you Volunteer, Animal Alliance of NJ
To the Editor:
The Power of Pets
T
INSIDE
Survival Guide
4
Making New Jersey More Business Friendly
More Than Anything, Leadership Takes Character
SCORE Launches Small Business Series
Making the Next Generation of Entrepreneurs
Is Your Business On YouTube? It Should Be
Overcoming the Pain of Unemployment
Corporate Angels
Business Meetings
Preview
4
6
8
8
36
37
38
38
9-31
Cover Story: Fried? Let Someone Else Cook You Breakfast
Day by Day, July 7 to 15
Opportunities
Rocking Out with No Boundaries
Theater Review: ‘Turn of the Screw’
Theater Review: ‘Little Doc’
When Mixed Media Means Buttons, Zippers, and Thread
At the Movies
U.S. 1 Singles Exchange
Don’t Let the Collar Fool You, Bring on the Steinway
Fast Lane 32
Jobs
Classifieds
9
10
18
19
21
22
23
29
30
31
39
42
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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.
Company Index
A.C. Moore, 34; Ansa Consultants, 35; Banc3, 35; Cafe at
Rosemont, 9; Caffe Galleria, 12;
Calico Grill, 11; Charles Street
Partners, 35; Edison Venture
Fund, 35.
First American Financial, 35;
Food Network, 9; Harmonic, 34; In
Person Payments, 35; International Business Research, 35; Levin
Management, 34; Nassau Inn, 11;
Pete’s Steak House, 12; QForma,
33; RealEstate.com, 34.
Samuha, 34; ShopRite, 34;
Sibson Consulting, 35; Sky High
Energy, 34; Soligenix, 35; Sprig &
Vine, 13; Sublyme Payments, 34;
Terra Momo, 12; The Neat Company, 35; Theresa Caffe, 11; VPR
International, 32; Weidel Realtors,
34.
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U.S. 1
3
4
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
Crystal Ball
a Little
Cloudy?
SURVIVAL
GUIDE
EDITOR:
SCOTT MORGAN
Katherine K
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Thursday, July 8
Kim Guadagno On
The State of Business
S
he was elected to the second
highest state governmental position with no portfolio, no job description, no salary, and no physical office. On January 19, when
Kim Guadagno was sworn in as
New Jersey’s first lieutenant governor, there was not even a chair in
all Trenton with her name on it.
Now five months settled into the
job, Guadagno handles the daunting challenge of mutually bolster-
ing both her own office and the image of New Jersey as businessfriendly. Guadagno discusses how
she achieves this in her talk “New
Jersey’s Commitment to Economic
and Business Development,” at the
Princeton Chamber on Thursday,
July 8, at 11:30 a.m. at the Princeton Marriott & Conference Center.
Cost: $60. Visit www. princetonchamber.org.
From her earliest days, when
she was Kimberly Ann McFadden,
Guadagno learned how to make
her way in new, uncharted areas.
“My father managed a series of television stations,” she recalls, “and
by the time I graduated from law
school, we had lived in 25 states.
You just lose count after a while.”
Seeking education and residential
stability, Guadagno attended Ursinus College, earning her bachelor’s in 1980, and then earned her
law degree from the American
University in Washington in 1983.
Moving to Brooklyn, Guadagno
joined the city’s anti-racketeering
squad. While prosecuting criminals, she fell in love with her boss,
squad deputy chief Michael
Guadagno. In 1991 the couple settled in Monmouth County, where
she served as assistant U.S. attorney for the district of New Jersey
and assistant attorney general.
Serving as deputy director in the
Advertising
a CMO and a
CFO can
agree on.
Whether you’re looking at headlines or bottom lines, navigating your business today is harder than
ever. You need the highest quality strategic and creative thinking to drive your marketing. But you need
it at a price that makes good financial sense. So for advertising, interactive and promotional campaigns
that are worth every penny, visit ferraracompany.com or call Chris Havard at 609-945-8700.
A DV E RT I S I N G
A N D
M A R K E T I N G
Left Brain. Right Results.
Serious Business:
Lieutenant Governor
Kim Guadagno
speaks at the Princeton Chamber July 8.
Division of Criminal Justice,
Guadagno supervised the prosecution of David L. Smith, creator and
perpetrator of the “Melissa Computer Virus” which involved $40
million in financial fraud. In 2007,
before accepting Chris Christie’s
request as running mate, Guadagno was elected as Monmouth
County’s first female sheriff.
Although her current office is
new, Guadagno says her path has
been markedly clear. Much of that
came
from
then-candidate
Christie, who, even before selecting a running mate, announced that
his lieutenant governor would be in
charge of economic development.
Office design. “The governor
and I realized that we could hardly
run on a campaign of reduced government, and then come in with another layer of bureaucracy,” says
Guadagno. In her first days, the
lieutenant governor was also given
the duties of the former Secretary
of State’s office. Thus, in addition
to her economic development
charge, she took over purview of
the State Council of the Arts, His-
‘The only way to develop business is to
create a smaller government, with less
taxes on all fronts.’
torical Commission and Cultural
Trust; the State Museum; the Veterans Administration board; Americore; the Committee on Aging; and
the New Jersey Public Action
Committee.
Ensconced “just down the hall”
from the governor, Guadagno has
adapted well to her two-hat position, lunching with Christie twice a
week, and sitting in on many of his
endless round of meetings. On her
own schedule, she works to put
herself and the administration in
front of the public at all levels.
“Most of my days are spent
making speeches that explain our
pro-business policies, talking with
people, and calling individual
businesses, getting them to come
to, or stay in New Jersey.”
A recent, average day, was June
8, when Guadagno journeyed up to
Hoboken to attend the opening of
Carlo’s City Hall Bake Shop —
home of the television reality show
“Cake Boss,” then tour the city
with Mayor Dawn Zimmer, asking
residents what they wanted to see
happening in their city. The Zimmer Administration just announced an $80,000 grant from the
state for improvement of pedestrian and bicycle ways within the city.
Budget culture. On June 28,
when Governor Christie signed his
Continued on page 6
JULY 7, 2010
A U.S. 1 ADVERTISING FEATURE
DENTAL
INSURANCE??
The Advancement of Social Media & Alternative Billing Options
R
egardless of the industry,
the ability to succeed and
remain competitive depends upon adaptability. The financial instability and insecurity
stemming from the economic
downturn provokes business
owners to seek and evaluate
new directions to ensure profitability and protect against future
downturns. Let's explore a marketing direction and a financial
option as examples of adapting
to our business environment.
Marketing Directions: Did
you know that we live in the "Attention Age"? This era is characterized by instant information,
created by and for consumers,
shared through the use of internet sites such as Facebook,
LinkedIn, and Twitter. Small and
mid-sized businesses are seeking ways to draw attention to
their businesses by working in
concert with their websites,
blogs, and digital e-marketing
campaigns to create a strong
and positive digital image. Your
website and web presence serve
as a first impression. A negative
reaction can result in a click of
the mouse and you potential customer is lost. It is vital, therefore,
to understand the impact of social media as a marketing tool
and a way to service your customers and clients.
Even the most conservative
By Ryan A. Marrone, Esq.
professionals must admit that
this is the current and future
business environment. The "information age" has evolved into
the "attention age." Businesses
are vying for the attention of their
consumers through social media. However, as beneficial as
social media is, caution must be
exercised in the use of the internet's sites, particularly in blogging. The professional, for example, must be cognizant of any
ethical restrictions it may have
with respect to advertising. Further, any information provided in
the form of a blog should be of a
general nature. You do not want
to expose yourself to any liability
risk for malpractice.
Financial Options: A financial option which offers the opportunity to adapt to the changing business environment and
remain competitive is to explore
alternative billing methods. To
use the law firm example, alternative billing arrangements enable both the law firm and its
clients to alleviate the uncertainty and unpredictability of most legal costs. They work together to
establish an ongoing relationship
to minimize redundancy.
While the billable hour remains a vital and integral part of
providing comprehensive legal
U.S. 1
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your dental plan?
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services to companies, it should
only be one of several tools used
in conjunction with a customized
legal fee structure. The structure
is based upon the client's historic
and projected legal needs. Its
overall objective is to provide
both the business and the law
firm with greater ability to budget
and manage costs. This model
can extend to other professional
services as well as small and
mid-sized businesses.
Today's business challenges
demand innovative approaches
and adaptability to the changing
marketing and financial environments. Keeping your business
competitive requires acceptance
of these challenges and positive
action in meeting them.
Ryan A. Marrone, Esq. of
counsel at Szaferman Lakind.
609-275-0400,
rmarrone@szaferman.com.
Melvin S. Babad, DMD
Fine dental care since 1975
1941 S. Broad St.
Hamilton NJ
Corner of S. Broad & Chambers Sts.
609-396-9491
www.melvinbabaddmd.com
The economic downturn provokes business owners to seek and evaluate new
directions to ensure profitability and protect against future downturns.
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U.S. 1
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A U.S. 1 ADVERTISING FEATURE
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Their Name Isn't Well-Known, But Their Clients Are
T
he Name Behind the
Names." That's what 25year-old Princeton advertising and marketing firm Ferrara
& Company prides itself on being. "You might not know who we
are, but you've certainly heard of
our clients and the campaigns
we develop for them," says Chris
Havard, VP Marketing at the
Princeton-based advertising
firm.
Their "world class clients" include Church and Dwight's ARM
& HAMMER products such as
laundry detergent, baking soda,
cat litter and oral care. They
have developed digital work for a
portfolio of Heinz brands including Smart Ones, Lea Perrins and
Classico sauce.
They have updated the classic
"Who's behind those Foster
Grants" with an advertising campaign featuring Raquel Welch. In
addition, they have a professional services division which mar-
kets products such as Trojan and
oral care brands to healthcare
professionals.
Ferrara & Company has since
made a name for itself with its
blend of "left brain, right results,"
explains Havard. By this he
means that the company combines both product and consumer research with creative
and visionary marketing and advertising. "We develop an understanding of customer behavior
through research insights that
gives us the ability to come up
with exactly the right creative
message," he says.
Ferrara & Company provides
"360 degree thinking" offering a
full line of services, "very unusual in a company our size,"
Havard adds. This includes the
ability to develop television commercials, print and radio ads and
promotions. They also have an
extensive online and new media
marketing group to help their
clients keep in touch with their
customers and develop product
visibility and recognition.
But why Princeton rather than
New York City? "Princeton is
known for its smart and creative
people. With the great brands we
work on, the agency is a magnet
for the highest caliber people;
people who have already worked
on major national and international campaigns," says Havard.
"We offer clients that same talent
as New York at a fair and reasonable cost". We're a right-sized
company that is nimble and
quick, so we can take on any
marketing challenge and deliver
results.
You can find out more about
Ferrara and Company at
www.Ferraracompany.com. Or
call 609-945-8700.
Ferrara & Company. 29 Airpark Road, Princeton. 609-9458700. www.Ferraracompany.com
Ferrara & Company provides "360 degree thinking" offering a full line of services. This includes television commercials, print and radio ads, and promotions.
Continued from page 4
Wills & Estate Planning
Mary Ann Pidgeon
Pidgeon & Pidgeon, PC
Attorney, LLM in Taxation
600 Alexander Road
Princeton
609-520-1010
www.pidgeonlaw.com
“necessarily painful” budget, almost everyone took issue with
some of the cuts. Education and tax
rebates each received historically
unprecedented slashes in state
funding. Guadagno, although expressing no personal preference for
any particular state program, noted, “I think I am most proud of our
maintaining the funding for the
Arts, Historical and Cultural Commission.”
Again this year, the government’s Council on the Arts, Historical Commission and Cultural
Trust, provided the full $23 million
to art, historic, and cultural venues.
The money comes from hotel/motel tax revenues.
Fiscally this should prove a wise
choice. Last April Secretary of
State Nina Mitchell Wells testified
that the state’s artistic, cultural, and
historical assets were greatly responsible for New Jersey’s $38.8
billion tourism industry.
Tourism, New Jersey’s third
largest industry, provides 450,000
jobs and accounts for 11 percent of
the state’s total employment. Without tourism revenues, Wells said
last year, every household in New
Jersey would have to pitch in an additional $1,427 to maintain state
coffers. Also, the arts and culture
are a cash cow in and of themselves, with every dollar appropriated returning roughly two dollars
in state tax revenue.
Business boost. As to her plans
for providing the Garden State with
a more business friendly image,
Guadagno echoes her boss’s sentiments. “The only way to develop
business is to create a smaller government, with less taxes on all
fronts,” she insists. In keeping with
her aim, she has cut 12 slots from
the Secretary of State’s office.
Many have argued that New Jersey holds more business attractions
than sheer thrift. When asked about
the highly educated workforce, the
unprecedentedly profitable alternative plans, the roadway networks, and other advantages,
Guadagno remarks, “We will always maintain a safety net. Those
things will always be available and
kept for New Jersey.” She cites that
Main Street, which provides renovation funds for small downtowns,
and several other business incentives which were saved with full
funding.
As she continues to juggle the
broad-ranging elements of her secretary of state and lieutenant governor offices, we asked her for advice to any aspirants for her job.
“Tell them to get elected in a time
when the economy is not so
rough,” she laughs.
— Bart Jackson
Want to Lead?
You’ll Need Character
G
reat leaders aren’t born,
they are made, says Stephen Duncanson, president of True Destiny
Communications in New York.
And if his life is any indication,
he’s right. “The reality is, everyone
Made Man: Ex-NYC
police officer
Stephen Duncanson
says great leaders
are made, not born.
goes through the process of becoming a good leader.
Whether it was from his family,
mentors, or career experience,
Duncanson has built a lifetime of
on-the-job leadership training. His
career began right out of college,
when he became a New York City
police officer. After retiring, he
went to work for advisors, authors
and businessmen Warren Bennis
and John Maxwell.
But the seeds of leadership were
planted long before college and a
professional career. It was living
with his mother and father that set
him on the path to success.
“My mom was a great homemaker, a steady person, and she
showed people what a good
woman was supposed to be,” he
says. “Certainly, my dad was the
head of my home, but he realized
that with his ability to do what he
did he needed someone else. My
mother was the nurturer.”
Duncanson will share his experiences during the SkillPath “Leadership Development and Teambuilding Conference” on Thursday, June 8, at 9 a.m. at the Holiday
Inn. Cost: $199. Visit www.skillpath.com to register.
“Character is the most important
part of leadership. No matter what
it is we say, character has proven itself to be key,” he says. “It’s the
difference maker. If people can’t
buy into you, then you can’t be a
leader.”
Looking for leaders. The consensus today, says Duncanson, is
JULY 7, 2010
that leaders are made through the
TRAINS FROM NEW YORK
TRAINS TO NEW YORK
development of certain trainable
Monday
through
Friday
(effective May 23, 2010)
traits.
“It’s not going to happen by acNew York
Princeton Jct. Hamilton
Hamilton
Princeton Jct.
New York
cident,” he says. “It happens
through development, through
study and research. Up to the age of
30, when I met [motivational
speaker] John Maxwell, I don’t
think I’d ever read any books all
the way through, even in college.
Up to that point I wasn’t concerned
with learning, I was concerned
with getting a degree. But I became
a voracious reader, especially on
leadership and personal development.”
Among those books was “Leadership Challenge,” by M. Kouzes
and Barry Z. Posner. In it, several
thousand people throughout the
world were asked what people are
looking for in a leader. Four main
traits came out of it — being a forward thinker, being inspiring, being honest, and being competent.
These are all skills that can be
learned, he says.
Leading and managing. Leadership, says Duncanson, is more
than just managers managing and
businessmen making decisions. It
is often an intangible quality that
only a few people possess.
“Warren Bennis [author of several business leadership books]
captured it best — efficient manSaturday - Sunday - Major Holidays
agement without effective leadership is like rearranging the chairs
on the Titanic,” he says. “In or out
of the workplace, being a leader
means having the ability to take
people in a specific and predetermined direction.”
Unfortunately, being a good
manager and being a good leader
are not synonymous, and developing that quality is something more
and more businessmen are recognizing as a key to success because
in the end, he says. “While managers may do the things right, it is
leaders who do the right thing. “
“When all is said and done, here
is what we know. People don’t
want to be managed, they want to
be led,” Duncason says. “If I am
the leader of an organization, I realize I have to surround myself
Train also stops at Newark Int. Airport Sta.
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managers. If they can be both,
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that’s great, but if I had to choose
one, give me leaders.”
On the homefront. To this day, his time there, he worked his way perceptible how I came into this
Duncanson still looks at his mother up to sergeant, and from the facet of teaching leadership, beas a confidant and as a role model. precinct level to investigating or- cause it’s what I believe to be the
As a child she studied business ad- ganized crime, specifically nar- foundation of my life, all my life.”
— John Saccenti
ministration and the Bible. Recent- cotics in Manhattan, Harlem, and
ly, she became the oldest graduate the Upper East and West sides for
Continued on following page
in her class at Nyack College, nine years.
“I
don’t
ever
remember
not
where she earned a general studies
degree. In that respect, Duncanson wanting to be a cop,” he says.
says he is a lot like his mother. He “Through high school and elemenembraces the concept of lifelong tary school I’d planned to be a polearning and seeks ways to im- lice officer. It was just something
that was in me, so at the earliest opprove himself and what he does.
portunity after college that’s what I
“To this day,
did and I went
she is also not
full steam ahead
just my mom,
from there.”
‘People don’t want to
she’s my friend
While with
and my confibe managed, they
the force, Dundant,” he says.
canson began to
want to be led. Give
“If I’m learnsee a pattern. He
me
leaders
any
day.’
ing something
was locking up
new and want
the same people
to share it with
over and over
someone, I call my mom.”
again.
Soon
after
he decided to
Duncanson’s father was an acmake
a
difference
in
another way,
countant and, later an insurance
salesmen. But he also had an entre- working for the deputy commispreneurial streak in him, owning a sioner of community affairs, where
cookie factory and an ice cream he assisted in training and leadership development for sergeants,
shop in New York for a while.
Even though he died when Dun- lieutenants, and captains.
Later, he was recruited to work
canson was 25, the lessons he took
as
chief
of staff for outbound operfrom his father — in particular that
ations,
a
position that allowed him
entrepreneurial spirit — have lastto travel and speak to audiences
ed a lifetime.
“My father laid the foundation throughout the world.
“My greatest ability is the abiliin character and leadership and in
being consistent to who and what ty to connect with people,” he says.
“To connect with who they are.”
you are,” he says.
Remember, Duncanson’s comDuncanson graduated from
pany
is called True Destiny. “PeoJohn Jay College of Criminal Jusple
think
destiny is based on what
tice with a degree in police science
before joining the NYPD. During people told them, they believe they
can become more. It’s almost im-
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Monday, July 19, 2010
Advanced Course: Thursday, July 22, 2010
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8
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
Continued from preceding page
R O B I N N A L LY
A D V E R T I S I N G
&
D
E
S
I
G
N
Monday, July 12
Teens and Business –
An Ideal Summer Duo
R
ADVERTISEMENTS • ANNUAL REPORTS • BROCHURES
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oasting
marshmallows,
belting out campfire songs, and
creating picture frames out of macaroni noodles not your teen’s
thing?
No
sweat,
says
John
Crawford, co-founder of Parsippany-based consulting firm Enspirix and longtime instructor at
Fairleigh Dickinson University’s
Discover Teen Busine$$ Camp.
“Teens can go to soccer camp or art
camp, but this is another escape for
them where they can learn about
business and careers and discover
what interests them,” he says. “It’s
a fun thing to do every year. It’s a
creative idea.”
The one-week Teen Busine$$
Camp runs Monday to Friday, July
12 to 16, beginning at 9 a.m. at
FDU’s Florham campus in Madison. All participants will receive a
certificate of completion at the
camp’s conclusion, and lunch and
snacks will be provided, but teens
can also bring their own.
Tuition costs $490. Call 973443-8842, or visit www.fdu.edu. A
medical form is available online.
Teen Busine$$ teaches youngsters about basic business skills
through educational and entertaining activities, something Crawford
says he could have benefited from
when he was a youngster.
A creative teen who enjoyed art
and music, Crawford had no distinct career path. He grew up in
Hillsborough with his father, a
mid-level manager for an industri-
SCORE Small Business Workshop Series
T
he Greater Princeton Area
Chapter of SCORE, Counselors
to America’s Small Business is
launching a series of workshops
to help budding business owners
understand what they want to get
themselves into.
The series, comprised of five
sessions beginning on Thursday,
July 8, runs through August 18
and helps entrepreneurs grow
their ideas into a business plan
ready for funding. All workshops begin at 5:45 p.m.a t the
al company, and his mother, a
homemaker who often worked
part-time at a pharmaceutical company.
Crawford received a football
scholarship at the University of
Rhode Island, where he was asked
to write a jingle for an American
‘The future of business is not going to
be people sitting
across the table, it’s
going to be people
across the world.’
Federation of Advertising competition during his freshman year. He
learned he had a knack for business
and sales.
“I was definitely drawn to business, but I also was artistic and I
played the guitar,” he says. “That
competition was the spark that got
me interested in using all of my interests. I could see using my cre-
Available Now!
U.S. 1 Directory
2010-2011
Princeton Public Library. The
introductory session on July 8 is
free and each remaining class
costs $40, $128 for all four
workshops.
Visit
www.scoreprinceton.org.
The second workshop, “Business Concepts,” takes place on
Monday, July 19.”Marketing
Plan” takes place on Thursday,
July 29; “Financial Projections”
takes place on Monday, August
9; and “Funding Sources/Next
Steps” takes place on Wednesday, August 18.
ative talent to solve a problem that
was unique.”
At that point Crawford focused
on marketing and advertising. He
earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration; he later
earned both an M.B.A and a master’s degree in psychology and organizational behavior from Fairleigh Dickinson University.
Crawford took an entry-level
sales job at ITT in New York City.
“I was quickly able to showcase
some of my talents on some voluntary assignments,” he says. “People started to see the kinds of things
I could potentially do, and they
created a series of positions for me
that didn’t exist prior. I was able to
do a lot of sales and support-related
roles.”
By age 26 Crawford oversaw
the sales incentive programs for a
large number of ITT employees.
“That combined creativity and
business,” he says. “I had to put together structured incentive programs that spurred sales people to
overachieve.”
Continued on page 35
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JULY 7, 2010
ART
FILM
LITERATURE
DANCE
DRAMA
U.S. 1
9
MUSIC
PREVIEW
Fried? Let Someone Else Cook You Breakfast
B
ack in January I was
contacted by the folks at Food Network Magazine for a story they
were planning for their July/August issue on the 50 best breakfasts
in the United States, one in each
state. I was asked to nominate three
New Jersey places, specifically
with an eye toward “dishes that are
memorable, wacky, locally inspired, the kind of place locals are
fanatical about and where you’d
want to take your out-of-town visitors.” I was pleased when they selected my number one choice: the
egg-cheese-and-pork-roll sandwich at the vintage Summit Diner
(in Union County).
Now I’m always looking for
ways to promote New Jersey, but I
was particularly psyched about
this opportunity because breakfast
is hands-down my favorite meal. I
happily eat traditional breakfast
foods — even cereal — for lunch
and dinner. In fact, I prefer many of
them later in the day, and I bemoan
the fact that each year there are
fewer and fewer places that serve
breakfast at all hours (other than
run-of-the-mill diners that use prefab mixes for hotcakes and pastured eggs from cartons. I’ll pass
on those, thank you.)
The breakfast hour, it turns out,
has been a rare high spot for the
restaurant business in the United
States over the last five years. Nation’s Restaurant News, a trade
publication, cites a recent report by
the NPD Group, a market research
company based in Port Washington, NY, that shows that breakfast
by Pat Tanner
accounted for almost 60 percent of
the restaurant industry’s growth
during that time and states, “if not
for the increase in traffic during the
morning, restaurant visit declines
over the past two years would have
been steeper.”
I am convinced that I personally
accounted for part of that growth, at
least here in the Princeton area, as I
ate my way through several restaurants for this snapshot of excellent
breakfast spots. Each offers something unique when it comes to the
Brunch is fine for a
special Sunday but
where to go for a
hands-down perfect
breakfast out any day?
Our food writer rises to
the challenge.
first meal of the day, which explains
why places like diners, chain
restaurants, and big hotel dining
rooms are not among them. Admittedly, there are several fine restaurants in the area that serve a delicious Sunday brunch — Brothers
Moon in Hopewell in particular
comes to mind — but they are also
not the focus here. On that note I did
include Sprig & Vine, a new fine
dining vegan place (U.S. 1, May
19), not only because it offers good
food but because of the daunting
challenge behind creating breakfast
meals without eggs, milk, and butter — not to mention bacon,
sausage, pork roll, scrapple, steak,
or other traditional breakfast meats.
Cafe at Rosemont
This charming spot was one of
my three Food Network Magazine
nominations. (The third was Mustache Bill’s Diner in Barnegat
Light, which in 2009 was the first
diner ever to win a James Beard
Award.) With its authentic, plainJane country ambiance — the
space started life in 1865 as a general store — this spot in the tiny village of Rosemont in Hunterdon
County technically serves brunch,
not breakfast, on weekends. But
with a starting time of 9 a.m. and
with all the breakfast must-haves
on the menu, it fits my criteria.
Plus, its worn wooden floors, mismatched chairs, and flea market
crockery match up perfectly with
the made-from-scratch fare that is a
canny combination of homespun
and cosmopolitan.
Four exceptionally fine, tender
omelets are featured on the regular
menu, but that number is always
enhanced by at least two specials,
perhaps, say, one featuring prosciutto and asiago, another with
roasted pear and blue cheese. The
Food Network folks asked me to
pinpoint one special dish from each
of my Jersey-centric nominees,
and here it was no contest. I chose
the Russian Peasant omelet, with
its filling of soft chunks of red potato and its swathes of rich sour
Breakfast in the Country
At the Cafe at Rosemont in the Hunterdon
hills, the French toast, made from a baguette,
comes with real maple syrup. And the Russian
Peasant omelet is topped with real caviar.
cream festooned with scallion
rings, topped with a generous
amount of black lumpfish caviar.
Where else can you find such delicious decadence for only $9.50?
Owner Lola Wykoff stands firm in
using black lumpfish. “I tell people
it may be at the bottom of the classic caviar chain, but if I used Beluga, I’d have to charge $90!”
French toast — a gargantuan
portion — delivers thick, diagonal
cuts of baguette, crisp on the outside and custardy inside, and real
maple syrup, of course. No matter
what you choose, my advice is to also indulge in as many accoutrements as can be consumed at one
sitting. Among these are a generous
basket of baked goods that may include a homemade muffin (whole
grain with cranberries on one visit);
a warm, tender croissant that left
me licking my buttery fingers; and
the bread of the day. I looked
askance at the thick, dark brown
slabs of bread, anticipating a deadly
dense, chewy “health” creation.
But the reality — Russian pumpernickel — was surprisingly light,
airy, and flavorful, especially when
smeared with the excellent sweet
butter, strawberry jam, and orange
marmalade that reside on the table.
If you like home-style potatoes,
by all means order a side of Pota-
toes from Heaven, the name of
which is only a tad hyperbolic.
Dark, crispy bits are the best part,
but all is redolent of olive oil, rosemary, garlic, onion, and more than
a touch of cayenne. Same directive
goes for the breakfast bangers.
Wykoff gets these sausage links
made to the cafe’s specifications,
without preservatives, by Maresca’s of Sergeantsville.
The coffee is first-rate, even the
decaf, which the menu specifies is
“Columbian, water-processed.”
Twinings and herbal teas (including echinacea) are offered, as is
lunch fare such as black bean chili,
sandwiches, and salads. Reservations are not accepted for brunch,
but somehow the room accommodates a steady stream of patrons
without a wait.
A bonus: If you’re coming into
Rosemont from the east, you will
drive through New Jersey’s last remaining covered bridge. On the
other side you emerge into pretty,
rolling hillside dotted with picturepostcard farms.
Cafe at Rosemont, Routes 519
& 604, Rosemont. 609-397-4097,
cafeatrosemont.com. Brunch: Saturday and Sunday, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Continued on page 11
10
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
DAY-BY-DAY EVENTS,
JULY 7 TO 15
Like eating at “Nonna’s” house!
New Chef from New York’s R
Mulberry Street in “Little Italy”
R
Wednesday
July 7
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
Knit One, Pearl Two
R Musicians
on Fridays & Saturdays R
Unwind at the End of the Week
R
Jazz & Blues
Catering for All Occasions R
On or Off Premises
206 Farnsworth Avenue
•
Bordentown
•
Knitting Circle, Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane and Route 1,
Lawrence Township, 609-9896922. www.mcl.org. For knitters
who already know the basics. Ann
Garwig is available to assist. Other needle crafters are invited.
Register. 7 to 8:30 p.m.
609-298-8360
www.ilovemarcellos.com
Midweek Music Series, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-8822.
princetonlibrary.org. Steve Hiltner
and the Sustainable Jazz Ensemble in concert. Free. 7 p.m.
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
$
Over 20 Sushi selections from 2.29
Choose from Teriyaki, Tempura, Udon or Combos & Platters.
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
Art
Art After Hours, Zimmerli Art
Museum, George and Hamilton
streets, New Brunswick, 732-9327237. www.zimmerlimuseum.rutgers.edu. Gallery tours, music,
readings, refreshments. $3. 6 to 9
p.m.
Dance
Summer Series, Mason Gross
School of the Arts, New Theater,
New Brunswick, 732-932-7511.
www.masongross.rutgers.edu.
Nimbus Dance Works and Taiwan’s Taipei Crossover Dance
Company in the world premiere of
a collaborative work. 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.
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: “This Land is My
Land” and “Consenting Adults.”
Free. 1:30 to 3 p.m.
Film 101: American Cinema,
Trenton Film Society, Cafe Ole,
126 South Warren Street, Trenton, 609-396-6966. www.trentonfilmfestival.org. Screening of
Charlie Chaplin’s “City Lights”
and discussion. $5. 7 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, Suzanne Patterson
Center, Monument Drive, 609924-6763. www.princetoncountrydancers.org. Instruction
followed by dance. $8. 7:30 to
10:30 p.m.
PREVIEW EDITOR:
JAMIE SAXON
jsaxon@princetoninfo.com
Food & Dining
Wherever the Olive Grows,
Mediterra, 29 Hulfish Street,
Princeton, 609-252-9680.
www.terramomo.com. “A Celebration of Italian Islands” focuses
on the traditional cuisine and wine
of the area. Register. $45. 6 p.m.
Wine Regions of the World, Mercer College, West Windsor, 609570-3324. www.mccc.edu. “Summer Bubbles” with Bruce Smith.
Register. $42. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Wines of Sonoma, One53, 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. cityofbordentown.com.
Produce, foods, plants, crafts,
soaps, cooking demonstrations,
entertainment, and educational
programming. 4 p.m. to dusk.
Health & Wellness
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.
Easy Flow, Princeton Center for
Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite 506, Skillman, 609-9247294. www.princetonyoga.com. A
gentle workout for body, mind,
and spirit. $17. 9:30 to 10:45
a.m.
Meditation Group, Mercer Free
School, Ewing Library, 609-4566821. Discussion and practice.
Free. 2 to 3 p.m.
Tarot, Planet Apothecary, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 732-4066865. www.planetapothecary.com. A reading of Tarot cards by
Jeanette Wolfe. $15. 4 to 5 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.
Continued on page 14
Good Causes
WHY SIT IN ROUTE 1 RUSH HOUR TRAFFIC?
EARLY BIRD SPECIAL (NO COUPONS/DISCOUNTS)
3 COURSE DINNER 12-6PM $15 PER PERSON
SATURDAY & SUNDAY BRUNCH
BLOODY MARY AND MIMOSA SPECIALS
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY 7/9
SATURDAY 7/10
SUNDAY 7/11
DANCE PARTY W/DJ DARIUS - 9PM
STRING BEAN & THE STALKER
featuring SIM CAIN (Rock & Blues) - 9PM
TRIVIA NIGHT - 7PM
Volunteer Orientation Meeting,
HomeFront, 1880 Princeton Avenue, Lawrenceville, 609-9899417. www.homefrontnj.org. Information about volunteer opportunities. Register. 6 p.m.
Comedy
Gallagher, The Record Collector
Store, 358 Farnsworth Avenue,
Bordentown, 609-324-0880.
www.the-record-collector.com.
$25. 7:30 p.m.
Fairs
Kutztown Festival, Fairgrounds,
Route 222, between Allentown
and Reading, 888-674-6136.
www.kutztownfestival.com. Family-oriented festival that celebrates
Pennsylvania Dutch folklife. Juried folk artists, American craftsmen, music, country dancing,
children’s activities, quilt sale,
and food. $12. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
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.
JULY 7, 2010
U.S. 1
11
$32
3-Course
Prix Fixe Dinner
Monday - Thursday
Does not include
tax, gratuity
or drinks.
Breakfast Destinations
www.lahieres.com
Continued from page 9
Witherspoon St. ~ Princeton, NJ
609-921-2798
Calico Grill
T
his bright and airy casual
spot, which opened in 2007 in the
alley behind Cox’s Market on Nassau Street in Princeton quickly became a personal favorite. It is
owned and managed by the same
folks who have operated Cox’s
since 2004, Marguerite and Alan
Heap and Carlos Espichan. Their
fare is a highly personal take on the
fresh, bright cuisines of the Pacific
Rim locales they know well firsthand — primarily those of California and Mexico (hence the cafe’s
clever name), but also those of
Hawaii, Asia’s Pacific coast, and
Central America.
The room itself, which seats 30,
makes me smile every time I enter.
Two walls are painted floor-toceiling with a well executed mural
that mimics a stone terrace looking
out onto tropical seas. A painted
palm even spills its fronds onto the
coffered ceiling. The other walls
continue the ruse with a faux treatment that evokes weathered stucco, while the floor of (real) slate
tile adds to the effect. The mise-enscene is completed with table
linens that include bright orange
napkins and seat cushions striped
in primary colors.
Here, traditional French toast
and pancakes can be had with blueberries, strawberries, or chocolate,
but for a tropical touch try the mango. But what makes Calico Grill
worth seeking out are the Mexican
and Latino breakfast dishes: the
burrito, quesadilla, “loco moco”
(eggs with crab cakes, fish of the
day, or grilled steak), and what the
menu terms a “Spanish continental
breakfast.” That last, my favorite,
consists of two fried eggs served
with flour tortillas, sides of fried
plantains and small black beans,
and pots of creamy white queso
fresco and mild, house-made
tomato salsa. Along with a mug of
Seattle’s Best coffee or one of the
Shangri La teas, this is my idea of
breakfast heaven.
If what you order doesn’t include a side of the plantains, I
strongly urge you to order these
sticky-sweet, sticky-starchy treats.
Oh yes: plus an order of Spanishstyle chorizo. It comes incorporated into the breakfast quesadilla, a
satisfying concoction of scrambled
eggs, molten cheddar, and sauteed
peppers and onions in a flour tortilla. The quesadilla is served with
rice cooked in what looks to be the
water from black beans.
Calico Grill, alley behind Cox’s
Market, 180 Nassau Street. 609924-0500, coxsmarket.com. Breakfast: Tuesday through Friday, 10
a.m. to noon; Saturday and Sunday,
7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
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.
Princeton Eats: A pair of out-of-towners, above
left, and commercial real estate developer Jamie
Herring and his girls start the day off right at the
Calico Grill. Above: No need to wait for dinner to
dine al fresco at the new Nassau Inn Patio.
Nassau Inn Patio
I
n late May the venerable Nassau Inn unveiled its long-awaited
patio next to Lindt Chocolates on
Palmer Square — and boy is it ever
worth the wait. On a beautiful day
this attractive fieldstone-and-floral
space ranks among the top choices
in Princeton for al fresco dining.
As they say in real estate, location, location, location — and so it
is with this most appealing spot.
Wisely, the space was excavated so
the patio sits below ground level
(or at least, it gives that impression) and, streetside, a tall stone
wall capped by stone planters
bursting with colorful flowers effectively obscures the sights and
sounds of passing traffic and
parked cars. Tan umbrellas help
keep the sun from beating down on
the traditional black metal patio tables and extra-wide chairs with
deep, striped cushions. Service is
neither rushed nor rushing. At least
on one weekday morning, we lingered as long as we wished while
other patrons read their Kindles,
fired up their laptops, and talked on
their cell phones.
The food is typical of a mediumsize hotel. The patio offers the
same breakfast, lunch, and dinner
menus as served in the inn’s restaurant, the Yankee Doodle Tap
Room. The menus were recently
developed by chef Matt Volpe. The
breakfast offerings include some
modern, beckoning choices like
beignets, a breakfast wrap, omelets
with chorizo or feta, and dried
cherry and mascarpone pancakes.
I tried one such update: the
breakfast panini. Pressed inside
slices of thick, grilled brioche are a
two-egg omelet, Canadian bacon,
and bright orange cheddar. All flavors seem a bit muted, and the
brioche itself has the consistency
of white bread. It comes with
O’Brien potatoes — now there’s a
throwback! — but one I welcome.
This version, however, has no trace
of the red and green peppers that
define the dish.
If you find yourself dining with
children, either the chocolate chip
and banana pancakes or the mixed
berry stuffed French toast should
be a hit. The latter falls squarely into the dessert-masquerading-asbreakfast category that, truth be
told, as many adults as children favor. It utilizes that same rather airy
brioche, is liberally drizzled with a
sweeter-than-sweet
raspberry
sauce, and is dusted with powdered
sugar.
Next time I go — and there will
be a next time, because this space is
drawing me like a magnet — I’ll
opt for the simpler choices, like the
fruit plate with yogurt or the oatmeal with dried cranberries. And
I’ll repeat the real estate mantra,
“location, location, location,”
while sipping the inn’s very good
coffee.
Nassau Inn Patio, 10 Palmer
Square, next to Lindt Chocolates.
609-921-7500,
nassauinn.com.
Breakfast: Seven days a weekt
(weather permitting), 7 a.m. to
11:30 a.m.
Teresa’s Caffe
T
his, the most casual of the
restaurants owned by the Terra
Momo Group (which also includes
Mediterra, Eno Terra, and the
Witherspoon Bread Company),
has been a perennial favorite with
area diners, including me, for its authentic trattoria ambiance and its
consistently good food and drink
Continued on following page
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
“I find that my experience at The Peacock Inn to be spotless
and the service exceptional. The décor was serene and inviting,
nicely set for conversation as well as a good evening of relaxation.
The magical hospitality and continued hard work makes
The Peacock Inn a fine dining experience.”
Richard Ruderman
“The newly refurbished Peacock Inn is just a delight – cozy,
comfortable, and luxurious. The new kitchen with Chef Manuel
Perez turns out some of the most glorious food in New Jersey.”
Ariane Batterberry, Food Arts Magazine
12
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
Continued from preceding page
that also represent good values. But
I was unaware until recently that
Teresa’s, under lead chef Luis Martinez, serves a mean breakfast on
weekends. And if you come early
enough you won’t have a wait at
this no-reservations spot. I wish I
had known sooner! I was captivated
first by the Mediterranean timbre of
the menu, with offerings of frittata,
crepes, and breakfast pizzette as
well as brioche and croissants from
Witherspoon Bread.
Here, a simple poached egg (organic and brown) becomes a feast
with grilled country bread, organic
smoked bacon, Portobello mushroom, and asiago cheese. One of
the four individual pizzas is topped
with egg scrambled with black
truffles, pancetta, and fontina; others feature prosciutto, spinach, asparagus — you can see the appeal.
After much hemming and hawing I settled on a most unusual dish:
eggs baked in a ramekin along with
chunks of roasted butternut squash
and prosciutto di Parma, all capped
by a layer of melted Swiss cheese.
The rich orange yolk — half runny,
half cooked through — melded
beautifully with the slight sweetness of the squash and the salty
tang of the ham. I plan on asking
for the recipe. My guest chose a
pizzetta slathered with fresh ricotta
sauce, liberally swathed with excellent quality smoked salmon, and
dotted with goat cheese, capers,
and red onion — wonderfully salty
and with an excellent chewycrispy crust. Like the baked egg, it
is even better than it sounds.
Both these dishes left me wanting to try every other thing on the
menu of this Palmer Square veteran. Next time, though, I will be
savvier about one quirk that has an
especially significant impact at
breakfast. For coffee, the restaurant utilizes an espresso machine.
Order “regular” and a standard size
coffee cup arrives at the table, with
brewed espresso in the bottom.
Your server then adds hot water.
Surprisingly, this tastes just fine.
But should you want more, be advised that you’ll pay $2.75 each
time the cup is refilled.
Teresa’s Caffe, 23 Palmer
Square East. 609-921-1974, terramomo.com. Breakfast/brunch:
Saturday and Sunday, 9 a.m. to 2
p.m.
Caffe Galleria
W
hen DeAnna’s, the popular
Lambertville Italian restaurant,
moved from these small but delightful digs on South Main Street several years ago, Dawn Raia moved
over her Caffe Galleria. The space
matches up well with her laid-back,
vaguely hippie sensibilities when it
comes to decor and to the fiercely
fresh, made-to-order breakfast,
lunch, and dinner fare. There is
nothing particularly startling or
unique on the breakfast menu of
omelettes (the restaurant’s spelling), eggs, French toast, pancakes,
oatmeal, yogurt, granola, and baked
goods. Yet Caffe Galleria provided
us with our tastiest breakfast of the
bunch, hands down.
I cannot count how many versions of buttermilk pancakes with
fresh blueberries I’ve eaten over
the years — including my own formidable made-from-scratch ones
— but Caffe Galleria’s outshines
them all. Light and ridiculously
fluffy, yes, but the batter itself has
tons of flavor. The berries somehow taste blueberrier than some
I’ve plucked off the bush and
popped directly into my mouth.
These pancakes are served with real maple syrup — nothing else
would do them justice. On the side
we ordered honey-glazed ham, and
it turned out to be the real deal, too.
I especially like how the thick slabs
are crisp-sauteed. Canadian bacon
will forevermore seem unacceptably wimpy.
Unless you’re an oatmeal lover
like me, you probably won’t under-
stand the deep, abiding appreciation I have for the multi-grain oatmeal here, which tastes like that of
days gone by. (All right, of decades
gone by.) Here’s one indication of
how good it is: I didn’t bother to
add any sugar.
Excellent coffee, freely refilled,
adds to the delights here. Service is
unhurried and since hot dishes are
made to order, be sure to allow
plenty of time to dine here. Waiting
isn’t onerous, because the setting
has real charm. The small dining
room seats only 25 around a colorful and comfortable banquette
backed with throw pillows. “Colorful” also describes the warm gold
Eggs-actly:
At Teresa’s Caffe on
Palmer Square, a
simple poached egg
can become a feast.
and blue tones of the Venetianplaster walls and the local artwork,
which changes monthly.
If weather permits, opt to dine
on the pretty rear patio, with its
lacy black metal tables and chairs.
City Market, which Dawn Raia
opened on Main Street, offers
much of the same fare as the cafe,
for eating in and taking out.
Caffe Galleria, 18 South Main
Street, Lambertville, 609-3972400, caffegalleria.com, Breakfast: Seven days a week, starting at
7 a.m.; ending time is flexible. The
breakfast menu can be had through
lunch time if restaurant is not too
busy.
Pete’s Steak House
G
NOW HIRING!
Email resu
info@cranberrys mes to
gourmet.com
oing just by the name, this
place near the Trenton Farmers
Market doesn’t sound at first blush
like it would be a terrific breakfast
spot. But it comes highly recommended by U.S. 1 Preview editor
Jamie Saxon, who is more or less a
regular at Pete’s (or as she calls it,
Eat at Pete’s, which is what is written at the top of the menu here), primarily because they serve breakfast all day Saturday — til 9 p.m.,
and Sundays til 2 p.m. Their bacon
servings are enormous, and the
prices are bargain-basement perfect.
The owner and cook at this diner-ish spot with 1950s-themed
decor and music is Keith Casey. At
breakfast, the chef on duty is Jack
Palumbo, who years ago had his
own restaurant, Palumbo’s, in West
Trenton. Casey took over this version of Pete’s in 1997. It had originally been but is no longer related
to Pete’s Steak House and Tavern
in Hamilton, which itself was related to the original Pete’s in Chambersburg.
Since Casey liked Pete’s ’50s
decor he replicated it here, complete
with
black-and-white
checked tile and red vinyl booths
and counter stools, as well as a
(non-working)
jukebox
and
framed Life magazine covers, LP
covers, and ’50s movies posters.
There is at least one period CocaCola sign, and the beverage fridge
stocks the much admired Mexicanformula Coke.
Pete’s is best known for its
cheese steak sandwiches and its
pizza, but breakfast brings lots of
good, substantial fare at very affordable prices, served cheerfully
in the best diner tradition. The most
popular breakfast items, Casey
says, are his homemade hot cakes,
especially the strawberry, blueberry, or chocolate chip versions. I got
a short stack of the plain and found
them good though not exceptional.
Although the glob of butter on
them is real, the syrup is the ubiquitous and euphemistic “table syrup”
or “pancake syrup.” But remember, the price is right. Next time I’ll
JULY 7, 2010
try the French toast, since the breads for it —
regular, cinnamon-raisin, and cheese — are
made in-house.
The short stack includes two eggs any
style, and the ones over easy, as I requested,
were perfectly cooked, fresh as could be, and
sported yolks the color of marigolds. I also
rounded out my plate with a selection from
what the menu denotes as “breakfast meat.” I
opted for pork roll — the place is on the Trenton border, after all — and this salty treat
came hot and nicely crisped.
Casey told me after my visit that other
customer favorites are the broccoli and cheddar omelet and the Italian sausage omelet. I
can’t imagine that they are any better than
the giambotta, an Italian kitchen-sink affair
that I swear must have close to a dozen eggs
in it. It came to our table literally hanging
over every edge of its sizeable platter, stuffed
to the gills with nubs of excellent Italian
sausage, sauteed potatoes, hot and sweet
peppers, onions, and melted provolone — all
topped with a ladle of excellent pizza sauce.
Pete’s Steak House, 1855 North Olden
Avenue Extension, corner of Route 31, Ewing. 609-771-6747. Breakfast: Monday
through Friday, 6 a.m. to 11 a.m.; Saturday, 7
a.m. to 9 p.m.; and Sunday, 7 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Sprig & Vine
A
fter enjoying an impressive lunch at
this handsome, earth-toned vegan restaurant
in May I was itching to come back for what I
like to think of as breakfast, despite the fact
that owner/chef Ross Olchvary calls it
brunch and serves it only on Sundays from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. So there I was on a recent
Sunday, even before they opened the doors,
ravenous. I steadfastly ignored such
“brunchy” menu items as the strawberryarugula salad and the tempeh Reuben on
pumpernickel, despite the lure of its Thousand Island dressing and artisan pickles and
sauerkraut. I headed straight for the more
challenging breakfast items: tofu Benedict,
French toast, and sausage.
My husband and I had never eaten vegan
versions of any of these, so we were a bit apprehensive as we sipped our Small World
U.S. 1
13
Where to Have the Most Important Meal of the Day:
At Caffe Galleria in Lambertville, above, our writer
says the blueberries taste blueberrier. At Pete’s Steak
House (waitress Rachael Glanding, right) you’ll feel
like you’re in an authentic ’50s diner — and if you’re
a late riser, you’ll be happy to know they serve breakfast all day Saturday and Sunday until 2 p.m.
coffee and unsweetened ice tea, respectively.
That tea, really an herbal infusion, is a refreshing surprise, made from what seems to
be equal parts ruby-red rooibus leaves
(Afrikaans for “red bush”) and peppermint.
We had hedged our bets by also ordering
warm sugar-cinnamon doughnuts.
We needn’t have fretted. The French toast,
made with a traditional white loaf from the
artisan bakers at Rise in Clinton, contains
cornmeal in the batter, which gives it crunch.
It sits on a bed of maple walnut “cream” so
good I wanted to lick the plate, and it is liberally drizzled with a bright, sweet coulis of
fresh strawberries and raspberries. (The fruit
will progress with the seasons to blueberries,
blackberries, peaches, apples, etc.) Soy milk
replaces egg here, with only a slight loss of
richness and spongy texture.
The real test, though, was
eggs Benedict — sans eggs
and Canadian bacon. Hollandaise, too, requires eggs.
And
butter.
Olchvary
achieves a remarkable facsimile for the sauce, in both
taste and texture, by employing silken tofu and vegan butter substitute. But what about
the poached egg and meat? Sitting on each
half of a crunchy toasted whole-wheat English muffin is a pattie of tempeh sausage and
a tall cube of soft tofu. The latter mimics
poached egg white perfectly, but, alas, not
the yolk. The sausage has the flavor profile
of hot Italian sausage, which is perfectly
suitable, but the texture is a tad mealygrainy. Rounding out the plate are a tangle of
bright green spinach sauteed with strands of
onion and a pile of good home fries. As for
those warm, sugary doughnuts — actually,
five doughnut holes about an inch and a half
in diameter — they were simply excellent by
any standard.
Sprig & Vine, 450 Union Square Drive,
New Hope, PA. 215-693-1427, sprigandvine.com. Brunch: Sunday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
!WHOLENEWSIDEOF
2UTH´STOLOVE
)NTRODUCING2UTH´S"ISTROINOURLOUNGE
3TOPBYFORANEXCITINGNEWWAYTOENJOY
2UTH´S#HRISFEATURINGNEWITEMSLIKE2UTH´SSTYLE
SUSHISANDWICHESANDLIGHTERFAREINOURRELAXED
ANDCOMFORTABLELOUNGE
02).#%4/.).4(%&/22%34!,6),,!'%
!VAILABLEEXCLUSIVELYATOUR0RINCETONLOCATION
14
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
July 7
Continued from page 10
Intro to Martial Arts, Can Do Fitness Club, 121 Main Street, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609514-0500. www.candofitness.com. Register. Free. 7:30
to 8:30 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.
Kids Stuff
Improvmania Too, Plainsboro
Public Library, 9 Van Doren
Street, 609-275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Second session in a set of four improv drama
classes. Join Emily Vorp for your
choice of creative drama sessions. Jump into a new math story
each week. For ages 6-8. Register. Free. 1:15 p.m.
Also, Math Club. Answer a short
series of questions and then use
results to make a unique picture
to be displayed in the library. For
kids 6-8. Register. 3 p.m.
Also, Improvmania. Join Emily
Vorp for your choice of creative
drama sessions. Actors will create
and rehearse a special tribute to
celebrate the birthdays of several
mathematicians. For ages 9 & up.
Register. Free. 4:30 p.m.
Intro to Martial Arts, Can Do Fitness Club, 121 Main Street, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609514-0500. www.candofitness.com. Ages four and five. 5:15 to 6
p.m. for ages 6 to 11. Register.
Free. 4:30 p.m.
For Teens
Teen Writing Workshop, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-9529. First
session of a six-part workshop led
World Premiere: Taiwan’s Taipei Crossover
Dance Company (Xiao-Xuan Yang and Huang
Yi Chu, above, in ‘The Time Hotel’) and Nimbus
Dance Works (Samuel Pott, Jackie Elder, JeanPaul Jr., and Stephanie Chun in 'Puzzle Pieces,’
right) appear in a world premiere on Wednesday,
July 7, at New Theater, Mason Gross School of
the Arts, New Brunswick. 732-932-7511.
by mother-daugther team of Helene van Rossum and Sara Wegman. Register. 5 p.m.
Lectures
Artful Conversations, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van
Doren Street, 609-275-2897.
www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. “Music and Math” with members of
the Bravura Philharmonic Orchestra. 7 p.m.
Networking Group, St. Gregory
the Great Church, 4620 Nottingham Way, Hamilton Square. Support in the job search process. Email sggngroup@gmail.com for
information. 7 to 9 p.m.
UFO Ghosts and Earth Mysteries, UFO and Paranormal Study
Group, Hamilton Township Library, Municipal Drive, 609-6318955. www.drufo.org. Discussion
about UFOs, ghosts, psychic phenomena, crop circles, poltergeists, channeling, and government cover-ups facilitated by Pat
Marcattilio. Free. 7:30 to 10 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.
Darla Rich Quartet, Fedora Cafe,
2633 Main Street, Lawrenceville,
609-895-0844. www.darlarich.com. Jazz vocals. BYOB. 7
to 9 p.m.
Trenton House Society Party
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. Regis-
ter 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
Garwig is available to assist. Other needle crafters are invited.
Register. 7 to 8:30 p.m.
Meeting, Outer Circle Ski Club,
212-620-7479. www.outercircleskiclub.org. Call for location. 8
p.m.
JULY 7, 2010
U.S. 1
Toe-Tapping: Chiara
Trentalange as Peggy
Sawyer and Jared
Mancuso as Billy
Lawler in '42nd
Street,' opening Wednesday, July 7, Bucks
County Playhouse.
215-862-2041.
Thursday
July 8
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
Chill, with Jazz
Wenonah Brooks, Nick’s Cafe
72, 72 West Upper Ferry Road,
West Trenton, 609-882-0087.
www.cafe72nj.com. Jazz vocalist.
BYOB. No cover. 7:30 to 9:30
p.m.
Classical Music
Summer Stars Classical Series,
Ocean Grove Camp Meeting
Association, 54 Pitman Avenue,
800-590-4094. www.oceangrove.org. Carnegie Ensemble
with Hugh Sung on piano and
Ray Chen on violin. $13. 7:30
p.m.
Voice Recital, Westminster
Choir College, Bristol Chapel,
Princeton, 609-921-2663.
www.rider.edu. Participants from
the CoOPERAtive program perform. Free. 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. Neil
and the Diamonds present a tribute to Neil Diamond’s hits from
the 1960s and ’70s. Weather-permitting. Free. 6 to 8 p.m.
Summer Courtyard Concert Series, Arts Council of Princeton,
Princeton Shopping Center, 609924-8777. www.artscouncilofprinceton.org. Alex Mitnick and
the Kaleidoscope Band performs.
Free. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Pop Music
The Carnegie Ensemble, Ocean
Grove Camp Meeting Association, 54 Pitman Avenue, 800590-4094. www.oceangrove.org.
The 11-piece string ensemble
presents contemporary, pop, tango, and jazz music featuring violinist Byung-Kook Kwak. $13.
7:30 p.m.
Drama
Adelaide’s Ice Cream Dreams,
Arts Council of Princeton, 102
Witherspoon Street, 609-9248777. artscouncilofprinceton.org.
Drama written and directed by
Robert Cousins. $15. 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.
The Turn of the Screw, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton
Murray Theater, 609-258-7062.
www.princetonsummertheater.org. Henry James thriller.
$16. 8 p.m.
The 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.
Film
Newark Black Film Festival, New
Jersey State Museum, Auditorium, 225 West State Street, Trenton, 609-292-5420. www.newjerseystatemuseum.org. Screening of “No! The Rape Documentary” followed by a discussion.
Free. 6 p.m.
Foreign Films, Lawrence
Library, Darrah Lane and Route
1, Lawrence Township, 609-9896920. www.mcl.org. Screening of
“The Forest for the Trees,” 2003.
Refreshments served. Register.
Free. 6:30 p.m.
924-7294. 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.
Continued on following page
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 to 10 p.m.
Argentine Tango, Black Cat Tango, Suzanne Patterson Center,
Monument Drive, 609-273-1378.
www.theblackcattango.com. Beginner and intermediate classes
followed by guided practice. No
partner necessary. $12. 8 p.m.
Good Causes
Community Justice Center, Tir
Na Nog, Hamilton Avenue, Trenton, 609-218-5120. http://www.njcommunityjusticecenter.org.
“Barbecue and Beer Benefit,”
$30. 5 p.m.
Fairs
Kutztown Festival, Fairgrounds,
Route 222, between Allentown
and Reading, 888-674-6136.
www.kutztownfestival.com. Family-oriented festival that celebrates
Pennsylvania Dutch folklife. Juried folk artists, American craftsmen, music, country dancing,
children’s activities, quilt sale,
and food. $12. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Food & Dining
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
Farmers’ Market
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.
Health & Wellness
Ashtanga Primary Series,
Princeton Center for Yoga &
Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite
506, Skillman, 609-924-7294.
www.princetonyoga.com. The series links the breath with a progressive series of postures designed to align and strengthen the
body and nervous system. $17.
9:30 to 11 a.m.
Prenatal Yoga, Princeton Center
for Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland
Drive, Suite 506, Skillman, 609-
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
15
16
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
Onsen for All
Your Ultimate Shore
Alternative
Only minutes away to
Unwind, relax and soak
your stress away!
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Spa for a healthy lifestyle
Special Offer
Receive $25 off when
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Looking for that
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make the day unique.
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info@onsenforall.com
www.onsenforall.com
A U.S. 1 ADVERTISING FEATURE
Landau Offers the Next Generation in T-shirt Printing
L
andau, the 94-year-old
shop at 102 Nassau Street
in Princeton, is proud to offer a new service: a technology
for printing T-shirts that is FAST,
EASY, AFFORDABLE, and
makes it FUN to create personalized clothing.
“It’s the next generation in digital apparel printing,” explains
Robert Landau. “We upload your
design, so you get exactly what
you want, and then print directly
on the shirt or sweatshirt of your
choice.”
In the past there were basically two methods of personalizing
clothing: screen printing and embroidery. Small quantities were
not economical, and mediumsized runs required fairly large
minimums. Colors were limited.
With the new computer printing
technology colors are just about
unlimited. “We have something
like a million colors, or at least it
seems that way,” Landau says.
Landau is a third-generation
family-run shop on Nassau
Street which opened in Princeton
in 1955. While Landau is best
known for its imported winter
woolens, they also offer licensed
Princeton University logo apparel and now custom-designed Tshirts and sweatshirts.
The efficiency with which the
products can be printed means
that you can affordably order as
few as you like; even just one.
And it’s FAST. Landau promises
next-day turnaround for printing
on all in-stock items. “If you want
something unusual, like 50 limegreen T-shirts in size medium,
we might need an additional 48
hours to get the shirts,” he says,
“But if you decide on Thursday
night that you’d like shirts for
your child’s birthday party on
Saturday, we can do it!”
Prices are affordable. Landau
quotes that an order for 15 custom-design T-shirts would be
about $12.50 per shirt. “That’s
less than many of our Princeton
University in-stock shirts,” he
mentions.
If you are looking for a creative gift, logo imprints for a team
or department, business group
or social event, family reunion, or
just for fun REMEMBER the “little olde shoppe” on Nassau
Street with the new space-age
apparel-printing technology.
Landau, 102 Nassau Street,
Princeton. 609-924-3494.
‘We upload your design, so you get exactly what you want,’ says Landau,
‘and then print directly on the shirt or sweatshirt of your choice.’
4451 Route 27 at Raymond Road • Princeton, NJ 08540
July 8
Jersey Rehabilitation Medical Clinic. P.C.
12 Roszel Road, Suite A101 • Princeton, NJ 08540
www.rehabmedicalclinic@yahoo.com
Mei Li - L. AC. MS. NJ, NY Licensed Acupuncturist
NCCAOM Acupuncture & Herb Certificate
New York College of TCM (MS) • Beijing Medical University (M.D. in China)
• Acupuncture & Herbal Medicine
• Allergies
• Gastrointestinal • Massage Therapy
• Asthma
Disorders
• Pain Management
• Diabetes
• Insomnia
• Skin Problems
• Depression • Men & Women • Stop Smoking
• Headache
Problems
• Weight Loss
Mei Li
Most Insurance Plans Accepted
609-419-0088
Chinese Accupressure
& Professional Massage
c Herbal
Foot Medicine
c Back rub, Foot Rub
c Foot Massage, Reflexology
c Deep Tissue Technique
c Truly Relieves Pain and Fatigue
Gift
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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!
Continued from preceding page
The Heart-Healthy Magic of Eating the Mediterranean Way,
Taste of Crete, 400 Route 206
South, Hillsborough, 908-6852035. Workshop led by Sandra
Hoedemaker, a holistic health
counselor. Learn how to lower
cholesterol and improve heart
health without drugs or drastic dieting. Register. $20. 7 to 8:30
p.m.
Kids Stuff
Nature Creations, Plainsboro
Public Library, 9 Van Doren
Street, 609-275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Explore the
outdoors at the Plainsboro Preserve. Story time at 11 a.m. Then
explore all the mathematics you
can find in nature. All ages welcome. 11 a.m.
Also, Mandala/Rangoli Workshop. With help from Neera
Kothary and Carol Feinstein,
make four different types of mandala/rangoli based on nature, animals, healing, and anything that
inspires you. Children under 8
must be accompanied by adult. 1
p.m.
Science Safari: Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van
Doren Street, 609-275-2897.
www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. A perfect chance to see math and science in action, as researchers explore ways to make fusion a safe
and abundant energy source for
the future. Register. 1 p.m.
Kids’ Book Club, Borders
Books, 601 Nassau Park, 609514-0040. www.bordersgroupinc.com. For ages 8 to 12. 2 p.m.
For Families
Dusk Hike for Families, Plainsboro Recreation Park Ranger
Division, Plainsboro Preserve,
609-799-0909. www.plainsboronj.com. Explore nature. Register.
Free. 7:30 p.m.
For Teens
Thursday Teen Movies, West
Windsor Library, 333 North Post
Road, 609-799-0462.
www.mcl.org. Screening of “Dogtown and Z-Boys.” For ages 13
and up. Snacks provided. Free.
6:30 p.m.
Lectures
Free Legal Consultations,
Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane
and Route 1, Lawrence Township, 609-989-6922. www.mcl.org. Attorneys from the Mercer
County Bar Association will be
available on a first-come, firstserve basis to answer questions
regarding family law, wills and estates, bankruptcy, and other ar-
Cutting Edge Film: ‘NO! The Rape Documentary’ screens at the Newark Black Film Festival,
Thursday, July 8, New Jersey State Museum,
Trenton. 609-292-5420. Photo: Scheherazade Tillet
eas. Free 15-minute consultations. 5:30 p.m.
Lawyers C.A.R.E., Mercer County Bar, Lawrence Library, Route 1
South, 609-585-6200. www.mercerbar.com. 15-minute consultations with a lawyer about legal issues of family law, real estate,
landlord and tenant law, personal
injury, criminal and municipal
court law, wills and estates, bankruptcy, and immigration. Free.
5:30 to 7 p.m.
Politics
Tea, Hopewell Valley League of
Women Voters, Le Chardon, 37
West Broad Street, Hopewell,
609-737-0867. Tea, sandwiches,
soup, and desserts available. 3
p.m.
Science Lectures
Star Show, Raritan Valley College, Planetarium, College Center, North Branch, 908-526-1200.
www.raritanval.edu. Attack of the
Space Pirates. Register. $6. 2
p.m.
Also, Star Show. Laser Kids 2.
Register. $6. 3 p.m.
Live Music
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.
Wenonah Brooks, Nick’s Cafe
72, 72 West Upper Ferry Road,
West Trenton, 609-882-0087.
Jazz vocalist. BYOB. No cover.
7:30 to 9:30 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.
Hot Foot Powder, Triumph
Brewing Company, 400 Union
Square, New Hope, 215-8628300. www.triumphbrew.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.
Singles
Divorced and Separated Support Group, Hopewell Presbyterian Church, Hopewell, 609466-0758. www.hopewellpres.org. Register. 7:30 p.m.
Socials
Happy Hour, New Jersey Young
Professionals, Yankee Doodle
Tap Room, Nassau Inn, 10
Palmer Square East, Princeton.
www.njyp.org. For ages 21 to 39.
Register online. 6 to 8 p.m.
Knitting 101, Lawrence Library,
Darrah Lane and Route 1,
Lawrence Township, 609-9896920. www.mcl.org. Basic knitting
skills. Participants will need to
bring a pair of size 10 needles
and one skein of worsted weight
yarn. Register. 7 to 8:30 p.m.
JULY 7, 2010
U.S. 1
Latin Jazz Guitar: Arturo Romay
presents original compositions on
Friday, July 9, Grounds For Sculpture,
Hamilton. 609-689-1089.
Friday
July 9
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Dancing
in the Moonlight
Outdoor Dancing, Central Jersey Dance Society, Hinds Plaza,
Witherspoon Street, Princeton,
609-945-1883. www.central
jerseydance.org. Salsa dance
with DJ Carlos Xiloj. No partner
needed. Bring water and dance
shoes that can hold up on cement
surface. Free. 7 to 10 p.m.
Outdoor Concerts
Courtyard Concerts, Grounds
For Sculpture, 18 Fairgrounds
Road, Hamilton, 609-689-1089.
www.groundsforsculpture.org. Arturo Romay presents original
compositions on guitar. Rain or
shine. $10. 7:30 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, Gallery 14, 14 Mercer
Street, Hopewell, 609-333-8511.
www.photosgallery14.com.
Opening reception for “The Best
of Eight Years at Gallery 14,” a
group show. Ken Kaplowitz, professor of art at the College of New
Jersey, chose 37 images from
250 photographs for the exhibit.
The works include black and
white, color, portraits, landscapes, abstract, and experimental work. Submissions were from
amateurs and professionals in the
New Jersey and Pennsylvania region. Meet the photographers on
Sunday, July 11, 1 to 3 p.m. On
view to August 8. 6 to 8:30 p.m.
Gallery hours are Monday to Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Saturday
and Sunday, noon to 4 p.m.
Art Exhibition, Artworks, 19
Everett Alley, Trenton, 609-3949436. www.artworkstrenton.org.
Opening of “The First Forty” featuring works from Mercer County’s art collection. Music by David
Adolf Quartet. On view to July 31.
Free. 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Art Exhibit, Straube Center,
Route 31 and West Franklin Avenue, Buildings 100 and I-108,
Pennington, 609-737-3322.
www.straubecenter.com. Opening reception for “Omnifarious Art
Show.” On view to August 20. 7 to
9 p.m.
Drama
Adelaide’s Ice Cream Dreams,
Arts Council of Princeton, 102
Witherspoon Street, 609-9248777. www.artscouncilofprinceton.org. Drama written and directed by Robert Cousins. $15. 2
p.m. 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.
Moon Over Buffalo, Washington
Crossing Open Air Theater, 355
Washington Crossing-Pennington
Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857.
www.dpacatoat.com. Backstage
farce. $10; $7 for children. Blankets, seat cushions, and insect
repellent are recommended. Picnics welcome before show. Food
available. Parking fee of $5. 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. Through July 25. $20.
8 p.m.
42nd Street, Bucks
County Playhouse, 70 South
Main Street, New
Hope, 215-8622041. www.buckscountyplayhouse.com. Musical. $25.
8 p.m.
The Tempest,
Kelsey Theater,
Mercer County
Community College, 1200 Old
Trenton Road, 609-570-3333.
www.kelseytheatre.net. Shakespeare ’70, Mercer County’s classical repertory company, kicks off
the college’s Kelsey Theatre 2010
Summer Festival. $14 for adults,
$10 for students and children. 8
p.m.
The Turn of the Screw, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton
Murray Theater, 609-258-7062.
www.princetonsummertheater.org. Henry James thriller. $16. 8
p.m.
The 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.
Dancing
Fairs
Kutztown Festival, Fairgrounds,
Route 222, between Allentown
and Reading, 888-674-6136.
www.kutztownfestival.com. Family-oriented festival that celebrates
Pennsylvania Dutch folklife. Juried folk artists, American craftsmen, music, country dancing,
children’s activities, quilt sale,
and food. $12. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
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.
Continued on following page
Outdoor Dancing, Central Jersey Dance Society, Hinds Plaza,
Witherspoon Street, Princeton,
609-945-1883. www.centraljerseydance.org. Salsa dance
with DJ Carlos Xiloj. No partner
needed. Bring water and dance
shoes that can hold up on cement
surface. Free. 7 to 10 p.m.
Dance Party, American Ballroom, 569 Klockner Road, Hamilton, 609-931-0149. americanballroomco.com. $15. 8 to 11 p.m.
Ballroom Dance Social, G & J
Studios, 5 Jill Court, Building 14,
Hillsborough, 908-892-0344.
gandjstudios.com. Standard, Latin,
smooth, and rhythm. Refreshments. BYOB. $12. 8 to 11 p.m.
Comedy Clubs
Jeff Pirrami, Catch a Rising Star,
Hyatt Regency, 102 Carnegie
Center, West Windsor, 609-9878018. www.catcharisingstar.com.
Register. $19.50. 8 p.m.
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
17
18
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
Opportunities
Museum Passes
Mercer County Library System offers free museum passes at
the West Windsor, Lawrence, and
Hopewell branches. Passes to
American Museum of Natural History, New York Historical Society,
Garden State Discovery Museum,
and the Guggenheim Museum are
available. Children’s Museum of
Manhattan and Mutter Museum
will be added later this summer.
Visit www.mcl.org or call 609989-6922 for information.
Volunteer Please
Womanspace seeks volunteers
for Victim Response Teams. New
training begins in September.
Team members respond to police
stations or hospitals and meet with
victims, providing them with support, information, and referral. Visit www.womanspace.org or call
609-394-0136 for information.
Elvis on the Big
Screen
NCM Fathom presents 1972’s
“Elvis on Tour: 75th Anniversary
Celebration” on Thursday, July 29,
at 7 p.m. at AMC Hamilton, 325
Sloan Avenue. Tickets are available at www.fathomevents.com.
Executive Director
Position
Princeton Pro Musica seeks executive director with organizational, creative, computer, communication, and relationship skills for development, fundraising, budgeting,
strategic planning, marketing, public relations, ticket sales, chorus recruitment, programs, accounting,
payroll, concert production, and
grant applications. Degree and experience in arts management a plus.
20 hours a week, $20,000 salary.
Submit resume to info@princetonpromusica.org by Friday, July 9.
Day Camp
Old Barracks Museum presents a summer day camp for fifers
and drummers from Monday to
Friday, July 12 to 16, 8:30 a.m. to 4
p.m. For ages 10 to 17. $250. Register. Call 609-396-1776 or visit
www.barracks.org.
Donate Please
Salvation Army is accepting
clothing donations to benefit its
adult rehabilitation center on
Thursday, July 15, at Trenton
Thunder Waterfront Ball Park, 1
Thunder Road, Trenton, at 7 p.m.
Call 609-599-9373 for information
or free ticket to the game.
For Women
Health offer a free, two-part workshop designed to help women of
color examine cultural, emotional,
and social issues impacting their
lives. Wednesday, July 14 and 21,
Hamilton Area YMCA, at 6:30
p.m. Register. Call 888-897-8979
or www.princetonhcs.org.
Family Camp
D&R Canal State Park offers
Family Adventure Camp on Monday to Friday, August 16 to 20,
Bulls Island recreational area in
Stockton, from 10 a.m. to noon.
Activities include biking along the
historic rail line, boating on the
canal, introduction to camping,
and creating a personalized family
tree. Rental fees for boats or bikes
apply. Program is free with registration. A parent or adult guardian
are required to attend. Call 609397-2949 or www.dandrcanal.com.
Acting Classes
Stellar Performance presents
“Auditioning and Performing for
TV and Film” and “Glee Club How
To & Do It,” four week classes
taught by a producer-director at
Trinity Church in Rocky Hill. Participants receive a DVD at the end
of the sessions showcasing their
performances. Saturdays, July 17
to August 8. $260. Call 888-7822183, E-mail am@stellarperformancenyc.com, or visit www.stellarperformancenyc.com
Princeton HealthCare System
and Princeton House Behavioral
July 9
Color Salon
Continued from preceding page
Health & Wellness
FAMILY FUN SATURDAYS!
July 10th 12:30pm - 4pm
Historic Housekeeping,
Hands-On Activities
July 17th 2pm
Colonial Ice Cream Making & Sampling
July 24th 12:30pm - 4pm
Field Trip Fridays in July & August Fresh from the Garden Theme Tours
12:30 - 2pm or 2:30 - 4pm
Hands-On Activities Vary for Children Ages 6-11
Reservations @ $5.00
July 31st 12:30pm - 4pm Tours:
What Did Trent’s Enslaved Workers Do?
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.
Power Vinyasa, Princeton Center for Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite 506, Skillman,
609-924-7294. www.princetonyoga.com. Class is focused on
deep, even breathing and learning to relax, and experiencing the
postures. $17. 9:30 to 11 a.m.
Educational Program, Alzheimer’s Association, Princeton Senior Resource Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton, 973-5864300. www.alz.org. “Know the 10
Signs: Early Detection Matters”
workshop for family caregivers.
Register. Free. Noon.
Meditation Circle, Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane and Route 1,
Lawrence Township, 609-9896920. www.mcl.org. Register.
2:30 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.
Reiki, In Balance Center for Living, 230 South Branch Road,
Hillsborough, 908-369-4949.
www.inbalancecenter.com. Information session. Register. Free. 7
p.m.
Kids Stuff
Solarbots, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Quick introduction to Lego
Mindstorm Robotics by way of using DC and solar power. Calculate speed and distance for precision runs. For kids 9 and up. No
experience needed. Register. 1
p.m. Also, Baking Counts!, Invention Challenge 1: Tumbling
Towers, Theatre Safari: Moon
OVer Buffalo, and Friday Night
Live.
Family Theater
The Best of Nosing Around,
Kelsey Theater, Mercer County
Community College, 1200 Old
Trenton Road, 609-570-3333.
www.kelseytheatre.net. Combine
magic, comedy, juggling, and
clowning antics with John and Diana Maurer with their eldest children, Stacy and Hunter. Cameras
and audience interaction encouraged. $10. 9:45 and 11:15 a.m.
The Enchantment of Beauty and
the Beast, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street,
New Hope, 215-862-2041. www.buckscountyplayhouse.com. Musical. $8. 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Snow White, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 355
Washington Crossing-Pennington
Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857.
www.dpacatoat.com. $5. 11 a.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
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.
Skytime
Star Show, Raritan Valley College, Planetarium, College Center, North Branch, 908-526-1200.
www.raritanval.edu. Summer
Skies. Register. $6. 7:30 p.m.
Also, Laser Concert. Pink
Floyd’s The Wall. $6. 8:30 p.m.
Live Music
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.
Trenton2Nite, Trenton Downtown, South Warren and
Lafayette streets, 609-393-8998.
www.trentondowntown.com. Music, art, games, and activities.
Visit website for full list. Most are
free. 5 p.m.
Dick Gratton, Chambers Walk
Cafe, 2667 Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609-896-5995. Solo
jazz guitar. 6 to 9 p.m.
Summer Wine and Music Series,
Crossing Vineyards and Winery, 1853 Wrightstown Road,
Washington Crossing, PA, 215493-6500. www.crossingvineyards.com. Opera New Jersey
with classic opera and musical
theater music. Bring a lawn chair.
$15. Wine and cheese available.
Buffet dinner and reserved seating for concert, $25. Register.
Rain or shine. 7 p.m.
Rick Fiori Jazz Trio, Trenton
Marriott, Lafayette Yard, Trenton.
7 to 9 p.m.
Arturo Romay, Grounds For
Sculpture, 18 Fairgrounds Road,
Hamilton, 609-586-0616. www.groundsforsculpture.org. Rain or
shine. Register. $10. 7:30 p.m.
The Grip Weeds, The Record
Collector Store, 358 Farnsworth
Avenue, Bordentown, 609-3240880. www.the-recordcollector.com. $12. 7:30 p.m.
Bob Egan, Bowman’s Tavern,
1600 River Road, New Hope, PA,
215-862-2972. www.bowmanstavernrestaurant.com. 8 p.m.
DJ Spoltore, Grover’s Mill Coffee House, 335 Princeton Hightstown Road, West Windsor, 609716-8771. www.groversmillcoffee.com. 8 p.m.
Scott Langdon, It’s a Grind Coffee House, 7 Schalks Crossing
Road, Plainsboro, 609-275-2919.
www.itsagrind.com. Acoustic originals and covers. 8 to 10 p.m.
DJ Darius, BT Bistro, 3499 Route
1 South, West Windsor, 609-9199403. www.btbistro.com. 9 p.m.
Countdown to Ecstasy, Triumph
Brewing Company, 400 Union
Square, New Hope, 215-8628300. www.triumphbrew.com. $5
cover. 10 p.m.
Continued on page 20
JULY 7, 2010
Rocking Out with No Boundaries
Belly Fat?
U.S. 1
19
Free
Seminar
Are You Stuck?
It’s NOT lose weight and get healthy,
its Get healthy and lose weight.
Healthy
Weight
Loss
Etheridge, a two-time Grammy
winner and and one-time Oscar
winner (for the soundtrack to “An
Inconvenient Truth”), turned 49
earlier this year. She was born in
Leavenworth, Kansas, to father
John Etheridge, a teacher, and
mother Elizabeth Williamson, a
computer consultant.
Etheridge is known for her music of course, but she is also known
for her advocacy for causes close to
her. In 1993, when she publicly acknowledged that she was a lesbian,
she instantly became an icon in the
LGBT community.
In 2004 Etheridge was diagnosed with breast cancer and underwent chemotherapy. She has
been a strong campaigner for that
cause as well, and has written
about her experiences in songs and
memoirs.
Cancer, says Etheridge, “is the
greatest thing to ever happen to me.
It changed the way I look at food,
and stress, and the choices I make in
my life, and it’s changed my work to
where I’m not fearful of saying
what I want to do, this is what makes
me happy, and this is the kind of music I want to make, down to this is
what I am going to do today to make
me happy. I’m looking at life with
more gratitude and love and just
walking that walk day to day.”
E
theridge says she hopes other women who are confronted with
cancer can see opportunity rather
than something to fear. “I would
hope that those who are stricken
with cancer now take the opportunity to change their lives,” she
says. “Cancer doesn’t just happen
to you, or fall on you during the
middle of the day because you’re
there. There’s a reason; cancer is a
symptom of a life being out of balance. I would hope they take the
opportunity to understand what
health is, and what balance is, and
take back their life, hold onto their
life and understand it’s theirs.
Every choice they make . . . they
don’t have to sacrifice themselves.
They’re the only ones living this
life. They have to learn to say yes to
themselves and no to a whole lot of
other stuff.”
Also, partly because of her cancer, she has been a huge advocate
of the use of medical marijuana.
Earlier this year, New Jersey became the 14th state to allow the legal use of medical marijuana,
though the administration of Gov-
ernor Chris Christie has yet to implement the law.
“I think — I know for sure —
that it is not only going to be accepted as the medicine that it is. Also I think it will be decriminalized
and legalized, because it is a spirit,
a plant spirit that we need, and we
need to stop fearing it, and it will
change our health system,” she
says. “Medicine, our allopathic
medical system, is all out of whack.
We pay doctors when we get sick.
The old ancient Chinese would pay
doctors when they were healthy. So
let’s just switch this paradigm.
Plant spirits, cannabis being one of
them, are part of that.”
In 2003 Etheridge married actress Tammy Lynn Michaels and also became an outspoken advocate
for the legalization of same-sex
marriage in every state. But her
same-sex marriage has not been immune to the same pressures that heterosexual couples have faced. Rumors began surfacing late last year
that Etheridge and Michaels were
on the rocks; in April the two announced that they were splitting up.
Although Etheridge says the
couple arrived at the split mutually,
Michaels seems to have a different
take on things. On her blog,
Michaels, 35, hints at being “blindsided” by the split and says Etheridge unilaterally made the move,
and she continued to profess her
love for Etheridge.
Asked about the split, Etheridge
says, “it was a horrible thing to go
through. We have children. I’m still
in the midst of it, redefining. It’s hard
to go through something like that,
and it’s really hard to go through
something like that in public.”
On Michaels’ reaction, Etheridge says, “She’s a vocal gal, and
she’s going to get her feelings out,
and that’s only fair. I get to sit down
and talk with (reporters) and get
my side of the story out — well, not
really my side, but my feelings —
and she’s got the right to get her
feelings out too.”
Etheridge has two children (13
and 11), with former partner Julie
Cypher, with whom she broke up in
2000, and three-year-old twins
with Michaels. The little ones, says
Etheridge, “will probably spend
most of their time with their other
mom when I am on the road, but the
big ones, when they’re not in camp
and doing other summer things,
will be on tour with me.”
Being away from her children,
says Etheridge, “is the price, the
sad part of touring.”
Melissa Etheridge, State Theater, 15 Livingston Avenue, New
Brunswick. Friday, July 16, 8 p.m.
“Fearless Love” tour. $35 to $100.
732-246-7469 or www.StateTheatreNJ.org.
Call 609-924-2816 to sign up for the
Free Seminar— limited seating.
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
RALPH LAUREN • ELLEN TRACY • ESCADA
DELIGHTFUL SUMMER
Dresses • Pants • Tops • Shorts • Shoes
FOR EVERY OCCASION!
1378 Route 206, Village Shopper • Skillman, NJ 08558 • 609-924-2288
M-F 10-6; Thurs. 10-7; Sat. 10:30-5 • Consignments by appointment
DONNA KARAN • LOUIS FERAUD • MONDI
Here at the House of Music,
we teach lessons on all
instruments, including band
and orchestra instruments.
We carry accessories,
music books, rental instruments
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LAGERFELD • CHLOE • JAEGER
‘Cancer changed the
way I look at food,
and stress, and the
choices I make in my
life, and it’s changed
my work.’
‘Fearless Love’:
Melissa Etheridge’s
new album features a
whole new band.
ARMANI • CHANEL • HERMES
M
elissa
Etheridge’s
new album, “Fearless Love,” is
somewhat of a stylistic departure
for her.
“Having done this now for 20
years, I have the pleasure now of
making an album for the art, simply for the pleasure of it,” says
Etheridge in a phone interview
from her Los Angeles home base as
she prepared for her 50-city summer tour, which brings her to the
State Theater in New Brunswick
on Friday, July 16.
“I love the freedom I have to do
exactly what I want and to be fearless about it. That was the whole
plan of this album, to be fearless in
every note, every word, every
melody, and just rock as hard as I
wanted to, and be fearless about it.”
Etheridge has been with the
same record company for 20 years,
and she wanted the opportunity to
rock out, to jam. Since she’s been
in the game for more than two
decades and sold millions of
records, she had the artistic freedom to call the shots. “I have an incredible record company that lets
me do what I want to do,” she says.
“They don’t suggest things — they
might say ‘please,’ but they don’t
threaten me. If I wanted to do an album of spoons, they’d say OK.”
Etheridge brought a new ensemble to this record. Her musicians —
John Shanks on guitar, Victor Indrizzo on drums, Sean Hurley on
bass, and Jamie Muhoberac on
keyboards — had never played
with her before. She says she was
searching for a new sound.
“It started with planning this album. I met with (Shanks, who produced the record), and we decided
that we were going to use completely new musicians, and that he
was going to bring in top guys, the
top musicians who were out there
right now,” Etheridge says. “So I
let go of the musicians I had, and
wished them well, sent them off
with love, and entered this project
brand spanking new. I looked for
the best road guys out there and put
together a whole new band.”
It wasn’t hard for her to find new
musicians. “The quality of musicians here in LA, this is where you
go, here and New York, if you’re at
the top of your game. All of these
guys have played with, collectively, Chris Cornell, Gwen Stefani,
Alanis Morissette, to Shakira.
They’ve played with everybody.”
She had the opportunity to perform with fellow female rockers
Joss Stone and Natasha Bedingfield, both British soulsters, as
backup singers on a couple of cuts
from the disc.
“I love these gals, they’re really
good singers and have an appreciation for the roots of music,” says
Etheridge. “R&B and rock and
roll. Especially the English gals.
The throwback to R&B, from
crazy Amy Winehouse on up,
they’re just amazing.”
by Kevin L. Carter
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.
20
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
July 9
Continued from page 18
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.
Also, 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.
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, Feasterville, PA, 610-3845544. www.PBSNinfo.com. Cash
bar. Ages 40 to 65. $15. 8 p.m.
Dance Party, Steppin’ Out Singles, American Hotel, 18-28 East
Main Street, Freehold, 732-6561801. www.steppinoutsingles.com. Music and dancing for ages
40 plus. $15. 8:30 p.m.
Drop-In, Yardley Singles, The
Runway, Trenton Mercer Airport,
Ewing, 215-736-1288. www.yardleysingles.org. Music by Rick and
Kenny, dancing, and cash bar. 9
p.m.
Socials
Luncheon, Rotary Club of the
Princeton Corridor, Hyatt Regency, Carnegie Center, 609-7990525. www.princetoncorridorrotary.org. Register. Guests, $20.
12:15 p.m.
Scrabble, Classics Used and
Rare Books, 117 South Warren
Street, Trenton, 609-394-8400. All
skill levels welcome. 6:30 p.m.
Saturday
July 10
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Have a
Ball in Gay Paree
Bastille Day Ball, Trinity Counseling Service, Forbes College,
115 Alexander Street, Princeton,
609-915-0313. www.trinity-
Happily Ever After:
Cinderella (Tess
Ammerman) and her
Prince (James Petro)
star in ‘Into the
Woods,' opening
Friday, July 9, Actors
NET, Morrisville, PA.
215-295-3694.
counseling.org. The 28th annual
ball pays homage to La Promenade de Longchamps: A Prance
Through Paris. Benefit for the organization that offers counseling
services to people in need in the
greater Princeton Area. Cocktails,
dinner, dancing, and music by
LiveWire. Register. $150. 6:30
p.m.
Outdoor Concerts
International Summer Music Series, Liberty Village Outlets, 1
Church Street, Flemington, 908782-8550. Eco Del Sur presents
concert. Weather permitting. 1 to
4 p.m.
Summer Music Series, Palmer
Square, On the Green, 609-9212333. www.palmersquare.com.
Free. 2 to 4 p.m.
Princeton Country Dancers,
West Windsor Arts Council,
Nassau Park Pavilion, West
Windsor, 609-919-1982. www.westwindsorarts.org. Callers are
Richard Fischer and Blue Jersey.
Free concert in “...and the beat
goes on” summer music series.
Bring chairs or blankets. Inside
Panera if raining. 6 p.m.
Michael Gregory and Babatunde
Lea, Blue Curtain, Pettoranello
Gardens, Route 206 and Mountain Avenue, Princeton, 609-4290505. www.bluecurtain.org.
Michael Gregory on guitar, Gene
Lake on drums, and Fima Ephron
on bass. Afro-Cuban jazz percussionist Babatunde Lea with his
quintet. Free. 7 p.m.
Pop Music
America, Ocean Grove Camp
Meeting Association, 54 Pitman
Avenue, 800-590-4094. www.oceangrove.org. English-American folk rock trio. 8 p.m.
Art
Dragonfly Art Collective, Blackwells Mills Canal House, 598
Canal Road, Somerset, 732-8732133. Exhibition and sale of handcrafted jewelry, watercolor paintings, fiber arts, film and digital
photography, ceramics, oil paintings, mixed media pieces, acrylic
paintings, and porcelain art. Portion of sales benefits the canal association. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Art Exhibit, Princeton University
Art Museum, Princeton campus,
609-258-3788. http://artmuseum.princeton.edu. First day for “Starburst: Color Photography in
America 1970 to 1980” featuring
work by 18 artists. On view to
September 26. 10 a.m.
Artists Network, Lawrenceville
Main Street, 2683 Main Street,
Lawrenceville, 609-647-1815.
www.lawrencevillemainstreet.com. Second Saturday reception
features works by area artists with
a “Down the Shore” theme. Free
children’s art class from 4:30 to
5:30 and light jazz by Treble and
Clef, Barry Wilcox, and “Lady D”
Sammons-Posey. 4 to 7 p.m.
Member Exhibition, Grounds
For Sculpture, 18 Fairgrounds
Road, Hamilton, 609-586-0616.
www.groundsforsculpture.org. Juror’s talk by Johannah Hutchinson and Liselot van der Heijden.
Free with admission. 2 p.m.
Highlights Tour, Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton
campus, 609-258-3788. http://artmuseum.princeton.edu. Free.
2 p.m.
Art Exhibit, Artists’ Gallery, 18
Bridge Street, Lambertville, 609397-4588. lambertvillearts.com.
Opening reception for “Interactions” featuring the works of Alla
Podolsky, a native of Kiev,
Ukraine, and Carol Sanzalone, a
Lambertville resident. On view to
Sunday, August 1, with closing reception from 2 to 5 p.m. 4 to 7 p.m.
Art Exhibit, New Hope Sidetracks Art Gallery, 2A Stockton
Avenue, New Hope, 215-8624586. www.nhsidetracks.com.
Opening reception for “Moby Dick
on the Delaware” featuring the
“Moby Dick Suite” by Bert Yarborough; a color lithography from
“The Passion of Ahab” by Benton
Spruance; aluminum sculpture,
paintings, and ink drawings of
Timothy Woodman; and thematic
works by gallery artists. Moby
Dick party on Sunday, September
12, from 5 to 8 p.m. 6 to 9 p.m.
Continued on page 24
JULY 7, 2010
U.S. 1
21
Review: ‘The Turn of the Screw’
A
ghost story on a midsummer’s night may seem a little
counter-intuitive in keeping with
the season; that said, I have to admit — when a story works, it
works. “The Turn of the Screw,”
playing at Princeton Summer Theater on the Princeton University
campus through Sunday, July 11, is
a suitably spooky ghost story and
rock-solid testament to the talents
of two young actors in the telling of
a spellbinding, confounding,
thought-provoking, and altogether
enjoyable evening of theater.
Adapted from Henry James’
novella, Jeffrey Hatcher (best
known for the film “Stage Beauty”
and the play from which it was
adapted) sticks closely to the original work’s structure and twists and
turns. As in the novella, a young
governess is “seduced” by a charismatic aristocrat; her heightened
sense of romanticism and naivete
lures her into a journey to the English countryside to take charge of
eight-year-old Flora and her 10year-old brother, Miles. Flora
doesn’t speak, Miles shows signs
of dangerous imbalance, and the
housekeeper warns of a past incident that scarred both children
deeply. Over the course of a week,
the mystery of what happened to
these children unfolds, as a pair of
malevolent spirits reveal themselves and their horrific designs on
the inhabitants of the isolated
country estate.
Long story short: if you’ve read
the spooky little story, you know,
plot-wise, exactly what you’re getting here. The wonder of this tale,
however, comes in its telling;
Hatcher has pared the cast down to
two: the stalwart Governess
(Heather May), in the midst of the
story’s supernatural maelstrom,
and a versatile “Man” (Andy Linz),
who shifts his way through a myriad of roles. Director Domnique
Salerno chooses to take this same
tactic and cascade it through the
show’s design, presentation, and
pace, with words and characterization handling the heavy lifting. The
resulting effect is an amped-up version of a campfire ghost story: intimate, trusted, and tense, as it beckons you to lean in while the story-
If you are in the mood
for a solid chiller and
a spirited debate on
the exact nature of
this brief tale’s
complex conclusion,
take in ‘The Turn of
the Screw.’
teller preps his mostly ghastly revelations under the grim glow of a
flashlight.
A
nd, for the most part, it’s an
effectively minimalist tactic. Linz
flows readily from one role to another, from a wealthy and dashing
Londoner to an elderly housekeeper to a 10-year-old boy and back
again, and May responds dynamically and uniquely to each new
face. Allen Grimm’s sparse set de-
sign allows for the focus to
set completely on the actors,
with delicately-chosen color
and an overhead chandelier
ably drawing attention exactly where it needs to go. The
“no frills” presentation is
slightly turned on its ear late
in the evening, making for a
strong surprise at the play’s
climax.
Salerno’s choice to cherry-pick some ghost-story
tactics results in a subtle and
nuanced application of casual and unexpected fear.
We’re drawn in by the almost-folksy nature of the
two-person storytelling, and
when things take a more macabre
and deadly turn, the result is a feeling of edge-of-your-seat immediateness and dread. Without special
effects, without gore, without a
need for boogeyman-ish “boo!”
jump-scares, the PST company
creates an ever-encroaching sense
of dread and foreboding that
erupts, almost without warning,
into a life-or-death struggle for the
souls of both the governess and her
charges.
I had a great time at “The Turn of
the Screw”; I have to readily acknowledge, however, that it might
not be everyone’s cup of tea as far
as summer fare goes. If you like
your theater chock full of props and
set pieces and window-dressing,
you won’t find it here; a lone chair,
a chandelier, and a restrained use of
environmental effects are all we
get to portray the Harley Street
manor where the tale begins and
the country estate where the bulk of
it unfolds. I have to admire the
company’s dedication to the
stripped-down aesthetic of the
writing in every aspect of the production — but it also isn’t completely successful. For all his
chameleonic skill, Linz’s gull’s
cry, used to mark the passage of
time and further heighten the
mood, comes across as a little awkward and unintentionally funny. I
was left wishing that a Foley artist
(the person on a film crew who creates most of the natural, everyday
sounds) or other method of employing a soundscape had been utilized; it’s that one additional task
lumped upon two hardworking actors that overtaxes their considerable charm and breadth.
“The Turn of the Screw” isn’t
what I’d consider an obvious
choice for a summer theater’s
repertoire; it doesn’t leave you
trading bon mots with your date or
ready to bound on over to Thomas
Sweet’s for a post-show ice cream
Ghost Story:
Andy Linz and
Heather May.
in a cloud of forgettable cheeriness.
But it’s an awfully brave one for
this talented young company, and I
both applaud their choice and the
deft, beyond-their-years focus and
nuance in presenting this piece. If
you are in the mood for a solid
chiller and a spirited debate on the
exact nature of this brief tale’s
complex conclusion, take in “The
Turn of the Screw.” You won’t be
dissappointed.
— Jonathan Elliott
“The Turn of the Screw,”
Princeton
Summer
Theater,
through Sunday, July 11, Hamilton
Murray Theater, Henry James
thriller. $16. 609-258-7062 or
www.princetonsummertheater.org.
22
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
Review: ‘Little Doc’
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ince neither youth nor
maturity are prerequisites for writing your first full-length play, it is
nevertheless encouraging that 57year-old Dan Klores, a lauded documentary filmmaker, has done just
that. Although “Little Doc” is as
perplexing in its purpose as it is
pedestrian in its presentation, it has
moments that convey Klores’s skill
with dramatic literature.
Klores, whose fame and fortune
has been indelibly linked for many
years to his successful Dan Klores
Communications firm, has been
busy of late redefining his highly
profiled life as a theatrical entrepreneur and more significantly as
an award-winning documentary
filmmaker (“The Boys of 2nd
Street Park” 2003, “Ring of Fire”;
The Emile Griffith Story, 2005;
“Crazy Love,” 2007). “Little Doc”
is his first full-length play, and it’s
a trip. But I’m not sure it’s a trip
that could be called either satisfying or properly guided.
Considering how “Crazy Love”
probed into the horrifying how and
possibly why of the very bizarre
(but true-life) relationship between
Burt and Linda Pugach (a story of
love, revenge, and reconciliation
that helped to fill the tabloids from
1959 to the present), we can see
glimpses in his first play of what
may have prompted or perhaps
even provoked Brooklyn-born
Klores to consider, among other
things, a potentially incendiary
love triangle and how it impacts the
wayward and wasted lives of four
childhood friends.
This is also a play, however, in
which a son’s failure in life is directly attributed to the presumed
misconduct and misguidance of his
father rather than to his peer associations. The play is at its most interesting as we learn how and why
these four friends chose to ignore
and disavow their potential. The tie
that binds them is fascinating and
potentially worthy of more than is
dramatized. Whether their excuses
are made persuasive is another
matter. Much of the dialogue,
when it’s coherent, validates the
closeness of these friends in their
late 20s as exceedingly bright,
even with hints of their being intellectually exceptional.
Brooklyn in the 1970s undoubtedly had its problems, but it is in
the living room of a one-bedroom
apartment under the El and above a
tiny neighborhood bar that four
childhood friends suddenly find
themselves facing a life-threatening situation. It isn’t necessarily
their resignation and commitment
to the drug and sex culture they’ve
collectively embraced and indulged without regret or remorse,
Edgy Stuff: Joanna Tucker, Adam Driver, Billy
Tangradi, Salvatore Inzerillo, and Tobias Segal.
but rather the possibility that one of
them is a thief.
The action and dialogue of the
purely fictional “Little Doc,” under
the indulgent direction of John
Gould Rubin, would seem to fulfill
some of the basic requirements of a
play picked for production by the
uncompromisingly edgy 15-yearold Rattlestick Playwrights Theater. Although I am happy to report
that no one urinates for any prolonged length of time on the stage
(as some character did with full-
Playwright Dan
Klores considers a
potentially incendiary
love triangle and how
it impacts the wayward and wasted
lives of four
childhood friends.
frontal exposure in Adam Rapp’s
“Finer Noble Gases”) there is a decided interest and considerable affection at Rattlestick for plays that
resist dealing with traditionally acceptable behavior.
S
o therefore we can be grateful that “Little Doc” keeps things
only moderately gross when Billy
(Tobias Segal), a young man who
is scared of his own shadow pukes
with gusto into a sink following an
overdose of whatever it was that
that he recently swallowed and
more recently was shot into his arm
by his friend. (I doubt if it was
meant to be as funny as the puking
scene in “God of Carnage.”)
Billy doesn’t get to say much,
but he does get to curl up in a little
ball on the sofa as well as in corners
of the room while his dearest and
closest friends sit around and
drink, get high, and say accusatory
things that don’t necessarily make
sense either to themselves, to each
other (and indirectly to us) while
becoming progressively more belligerent and intolerant under the influence of an assortment of recently acquired drugs. If there is something to snort, sniff, inhale, or inject, then it’s a reason to party for
the insecure Billy, dejected Lenny
(Billy Tangradi), bossy Ric (Adam
Driver), and Ric’s conflicted girlfriend, Peggy (Joanne Tucker),
who was formerly married to
Lenny.
At the center of the play is Ric
(as played with appropriately con-
descending authority by Driver),
who has apparently given up pursuing a career in the medical profession (hence the title), and in his
rebelliousness, taken on a more
reckless avocation. Into the mix
comes another old acquaintance
and neighborhood goon, Angelo
(Salvatore Inzerillo), who has recently been released from jail. Angelo, who seems to be unhappy that
no one from the neighborhood except Ric wrote to him, has been
sent upstairs by oldster Manny
(Dave Tawil) the owner of the bar,
a small time racketeer and apparent
mentor to Ric, to find out who has
been stealing from him. He also
harbors suspicions about Weasel
(Steven Marcus), his long-time
friend and a local odds-maker of
college basketball games who is also Ric’s father.
A little roughhouse is obligatory
as Angelo applies (mercifully unseen) the prescribed methods of interrogation to Billy and Lenny in
an adjoining room. The acting responds almost nervously to the demands of the script. However, Inzerillo gives us some scary moments as the thuggish Angelo, and
Marcus is believable and defensive, as the appropriately named
Weasel. As Lenny, Tangradi endures mightily at the hands of Ric
but also has the play’s best line,
“Getting high brings millions of
people to a better place.” And Tawil is just sinister enough as Manny,
the unforgiving Jewish bar owner,
to let us know that he is going to
make someone suffer.
I was most amused by Tucker’s
lengthy (no pun intended) description of Peggy’s first experience
performing fellatio, all its ins and
outs. Designer David Rockwell’s
appropriately seedy-looking set divides the downstairs bar and the
upstairs apartment. There is a
greater divide and design in the
way that Klores defines Ric, as
when Manny, whom Ric idolizes,
says to Weasel, “I gotta know how
his (Ric’s) mind works, how he
could be so smart and stupid at the
same time.” The play somehow also manages to be both a little smart
and a little stupid. Mostly, it just
doesn’t live up to either its promise
or its premise. **
— Simon Saltzman
“Little Doc,” through Sunday,
July 18, Rattlestick Playwrights
Theater, 224 Waverly Place. $45.
212-868-4444.
The key: ++++ Don’t miss;
+++ You won’t feel cheated; ++
Maybe you should have stayed
home; + Don’t blame us.
JULY 7, 2010
U.S. 1
23
When Mixed Media Means Buttons, Zippers, & Thread
by Helen Schwartz
H
igh fashion takes the
spotlight at area museums in a
group of exhibitions that serve up a
thoughtful look at things we wear
— from head to toe. At the James
Michener Museum in Doylestown,
PA, the lavish costumes and accessories that transformed the silver
screen into a land of dreams are
featured in “Icons of Costume:
Hollywood’s Golden Era and Beyond.” In Morristown, NJ, some
300 pairs of shoes, including those
that belonged to inventor Thomas
Edison, Yogi Berra’s sneakers, and
slippers that were the property of
Pope Pius XII, are among the feetured attractions in “The Shoe Must
Go On!” at the Morris Museum.
And the work of Philadelphia designer Michelle Berkowitz, also at
the Michener, shows how dressing
up can be translated into an artistic
statement. In the process, these exhibitions function collectively as a
lesson in the language of fashion; a
material narration that illustrates
how what we wear speaks of who
we are — our history, social status,
sense of humor, cultural connections, ethnicity, and more.
“Costume is non-verbal communication,” says costume historian Edward Maeder, special guest
curator at the Michener, describing
it as a form of material narration.
“In film, it instantly sets the stage,
fixes the time period. Before the
actress opens her mouth you know
who she is.”
“Icons of Costume” takes a loving look at an era when Hollywood
set the style, with a generous sampling of elegant wearables by celebrated designers. The Oscar-winning roster includes such legendary names as Edith Head (with
35 nominations and eight Oscars)
as well as Adrian, Walter Plunkett,
Orry-Kelly, and Bob Mackie. The
assembled gowns, men’s costumes, and accessories from the
1940s through the 1990s were
worn by a star-studded cast of performers including such headliners
as Warren Beatty, Errol Flynn, Greta Garbo, Audrey Hepburn, Marilyn Monroe, and Elizabeth Taylor.
And the telling mix is enriched
with original art, old-time movie
memories, and a nostalgia-producing array of images.
According to curator Erika
Jaeger-Smith, the names are as big
a draw as the clothes, but she notes
that the costumes ultimately upstage the actors. “(Visitors) leave
knowing where the actual art lies,
and that’s with the designers.” She
says the featured works still have
meaning after a half-century, describing them as “remarkable survivals” — old-style clothing that
remains significant in the era of the
mini and the Goth. “Their impact
on today’s fashions is immediately
recognizable.”
In the exhibition, couturiere Elsa Schiaparelli is quoted as saying,
“What Hollywood designs today,
you will be wearing tomorrow.”
Hollywood fashion firsts include
padded shoulders (Adrian for Joan
Crawford), the cling dress, and the
pillbox hat (Adrian for Greta Garbo, 1932). More than 50,000
copies of a dress he designed for
Joan Crawford in “Letty Lynton”
were shipped to the Macy’s New
York City stores alone.
Drawn from a private collection,
the exhibition focuses on Hollywood’s early decades with costumes assembled, in part, from Best
Costume Academy Award nominees. Among them are six from
films that actually took the Oscar
home. Staged chronologically, it
offers a capsule history of costume
Head to Toe: From ‘Icons of Costume’ at the
Michener Museum: ball gown designed by Edith
Head, above left, worn by Barbara Stanwyck in
'The Great Man's Lady,' 1942; ball gown designed
by Bridgehouse, worn by Joan Bennett in ‘Son of
Monte Cristo,’ 1941; costume designed by Olga
Lehmann, worn by Richard Chamberlain in ‘The
Man in the Iron Mask,’ 1977; and costume designed by Milena Canonero/Ulla-Britt Soderlund,
worn by Ryan O’Neal in ‘Barry Lyndon,’ 1975.
From ‘The Shoe Must Go On,’ at the Morris Museum: 'Immune' by Marina Dempster of Toronto,
right, mixed media: found shoes, beeswax/pine
resin, beads, yarns, recycled rabbit fur, porcupine
quills, macaw and flamingo feathers (Toronto Zoo
donations); shoes with unusual heels.
and the Hollywood film. A supporting cast of rare publicity stills, lobby cards, jewelry, and film props
helps tell the story and recreate the
essence of Hollywood glamour.
Visitors to the Michener can also get into the act in their own
screen test. Up to four aspiring actors at a time can stage a test of their
own design in which they chose
from a selection of costumes and
scripts. The results are then uploaded to the museum’s page on
YouTube.com. Screen tests cost
$20 and can be purchased online at
the museum’s website or by calling
800-595-4849.
The exhibition remains on view
through August 29. It will then
open at the Morris Museum on October 3 and continue through December 5.
A companion exhibition offers a
sampling of fashion as art with the
work of Philadelphia designer
Michelle Berkowitz, whose handmade clothing is informed by the
past. Using antique fabric and trim,
with period sewing techniques, her
one-of-a-kind gowns include such
modular components as crinolines,
underskirts, jackets and wraps that
can be interchanged to create
unique outfits.
If “The Shoe Must Go On” is any
indication, what we put on our feet
can be as glamorous as the opulent
gowns from the silver screen. What
is more, what covers the foot often
has a story to tell about the wearer,
one that speaks of other ways and
other days. In fact, the range of narrative created by the shoe often
functions as a history lesson or a bit
of social commentary, making this
exhibition food for some serious
thought as well as a particularly entertaining collection.
“Shoes can tell us something
about the place and time in which
they were made and often something about ourselves as well,”
says Linda S. Moore, co-curator
and chief operating officer of the
museum. “This is not just about
fashion. We wanted to show what
shoes can tell us about the culture
in which they were produced and
who is wearing them.”
To that end the exhibition is divided into 15 sections spanning
four centuries and include sports,
high-style fashion, famous designers, New Jersey and national politics, children’s wear, shoe-inspired
whimsy, and “What’s Hot Now.”
The assembled array of show-stopping footwear is made from silks
and satins, furs, precious metals,
jewels, vegetables, recycled materials, animal skins, and even
chocolate. The rich mix, which begins chronologically with slippers
that belonged to Mary, Queen of
Scots (1542-87), is brought up to
date with combat boots worn by
General David Petraeus and the
walking cast that Sonia Sotomayor,
associate justice, U.S. Supreme
Court, wore during her Congressional confirmation hearings.
“We cast a pretty broad net,”
says Moore. “We were looking at
shoes from all walks of life.”
Most telling, perhaps, in this instructive collection is the section
that examines cultural differences.
Three exhibits look at
fashion — from Hollywood costumes to
shoes — as high art.
“We wanted to show what shoes
can tell us about the societies in
which they were produced” says
Moore. “Here, especially, they are
more than just shoes.”
T
he global array of footwear
speaks clearly of human diversity
with tiny, elaborate Chinese shoes
made for bound feet, peasant sandals made from rice stalks, woven
rubber shoes from Korea, Native
American beaded moccasins, gold
embroidered slippers from Algeria,
shoes made of finely etched silver
from Turkey, and fur-lined Inuit
boots.
There is also a generous helping
of style with sections on designers,
heel design, and early 20th-century
party shoes. Notable among them
is the innovative work of Dolce &
Gabbana, Ferragamo, Gucci, Prada, and Roger Vivier. And “What’s
Hot Now” includes the latest —
shoes by such contemporary stars
as Manolo Blahnik, Marc Jacobs,
Stuart Weitzman, and Giuseppe
Zanotti.
The section on heels highlights
the variety that marks shoe design.
Some are curved. Others are curly
or straight. There are those made of
gold or Lucite, studded with rhinestones, even interchangeable heels
that alter the height and line of the
shoe. Moore points out that some
innovative designs actually hold a
patent. “People don’t realize that
shoes are not just shoes, that there
are actually patents on some heel
designs.”
While shoes are often second
banana in the fashion hierarchy,
some of the original owners of the
featured footwear help put this collection in the spotlight. Shoes that
belonged to first First Lady Martha
Washington share space with those
of such newsworthy contemporaries as Mario Batali and Eliot
Spitzer.
There is even a New Jersey angle. Moore says, “We tried to make
as many local connections as we
could.” To that end there are shoes
worn by Governor Chris Christie
as well as those of his predecessors,
including Thomas Kean, Christie
Whitman, and Richard Codey. And
personal letters accompany Princeton historian James McPherson’s
tennis shoes and a pair of hand-embroidered house slippers made for
Congressman Rodney Frelinghuysen by his mother.
Former New York Giants defensive end George Martin walked
across the United States to raise
money for medical care for the first
responders to the September 11,
2001 terrorist attacks on the United
States. He walked from New York
City’s George Washington Bridge
to San Diego, from September 16,
2007 to June 21, 2008, covering
more than 3,000 miles, using 27
pairs of shoes, and raising about $2
million. A pair of Martin’s shoes
that made the journey is now on
display, along with a football commemorating his walk.
Another recent addition to the
exhibition is an art quilt, Fancy
Footwork, by New York Citybased artist Madeleine Appell.
The art of shoemaking is
brought to light in the section
called Tools of the Trade with a
cobbler’s bench, complete with
boot and shoe lasts, an assortment
of vintage tools, and a chart showing the anatomy of a shoe. The
telling mix is enriched with shoeinspired original art including a
work by Wayne Thiebaud and another, “High Heel Factory,” made
especially for this exhibition from
shoe-making
machinery
by
Stephen Gerberich.
Art Exhibits, Michener Art
Museum, 138 South Pine Street,
Doylestown. “Icons of Costume:
Hollywood’s Golden Era and Beyond,” on view to September 5;
and “Michelle Berkowitz: Contemporary Costumes,” on view to
August 8. $10. 215-340-9800 or
www.michenerartmuseum.org.
Art Exhibit, Morris Museum, 6
Normandy Heights Road, Morristown. “The Shoe Must Go On,” on
view to August 29. Guided tours of
the exhibition take place every Saturday at 1 p.m. Visitors who bring a
pair of shoes to donate to
“CUMAC — Feeding People and
Changing Lives” in Paterson, will
receive $1 off admission. 973-9713700 or ww.morrismuseum.org.
24
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
Sappho’s Cafe, West Windsor Library,
333 North Post Road, 609-799-0462. Poetry reading group. Register. 2 to 4 p.m.
Author Event, Classics Used and Rare
Books, 117 South Warren Street, Trenton,
609-394-8400. “Blessed Are You Among
Women,” with Wanda Stansbury. 1 p.m.
cushions, and insect repellent are recommended. Picnics welcome before show.
Food available. Parking fee of $5. 7:30
p.m.
Into the Woods, Actors’ NET, 635 North
Delmorr Avenue, Morrisville, PA, 215-2953694. www.actorsnetbucks.org. Musical by
James Lapine and Stephen Sondheim.
$20. 8 p.m.
Adelaide’s Ice Cream Dreams, Arts Council of Princeton, 102 Witherspoon Street,
609-924-8777. www.artscouncilofprinceton.org. Drama written and directed by
Robert Cousins. $15. 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. Symposium performance.
8:15 p.m.
Drama
Dancing
The Tempest, Kelsey Theater, Mercer
County Community College, 1200 Old
Trenton Road, 609-570-3333. www.kelseytheatre.net. Shakespeare ’70, Mercer
County’s classical repertory company,
kicks off the college’s Kelsey Theatre 2010
Summer Festival. $14 for adults, $10 for
students and children. 2 and 8 p.m.
The Turn of the Screw, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater,
609-258-7062. www.princetonsummertheater.org. Henry James thriller. $16. 2
and 8 p.m.
The Arms and The Man, Shakespeare
Theater of New Jersey, F.M. Kirby Theater, Drew University, Madison, 973-4085600. 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, 215-8622041. www.buckscountyplayhouse.com.
Musical. $25. 4 and 8 p.m.
Cliffhanger, Off-Broadstreet Theater, 5
South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609466-2766. www.off-broadstreet.com. Suspenseful drama. $27.50 to $29.50. 7 p.m.
Moon Over Buffalo, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 355 Washington
Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, 267885-9857. www.dpacatoat.com. Backstage
farce. $10; $7 for children. Blankets, seat
Ballroom Blitz, Central Jersey Dance Society, Unitarian Church, 50 Cherry Hill
Road, Princeton, 609-945-1883. www.centraljerseydance.org. Fox trot workshop and
lesson with Del Camden followed by open
dancing. No partner needed. $12. 7 to
11:30 p.m.
English Country 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, 908892-0344. www.gandjstudios.com. Standard, Latin, smooth, and rhythm. Refreshments. BYOB. $12. 8 to 11 p.m.
July 10
Continued from page 20
Art Exhibit, Riverrun Gallery, 287 South
Main Street, Lambertville, 609-397-3349.
Opening reception for shared exhibit by
Philadelphia artists Karen Fogarty and
Georganna Lenssen. Both are faculty
members of Wayne Art Center. On view to
July 31. 6:30 to 9 p.m.
Literati
Good Causes
Support Our Troops, Quaker Bridge Mall,
150 Quaker Bridge Road, Lawrenceville,
609-799-8177. www.quakerbridgemall.com. Donations of food, toiletries, games,
flashlights, phone cards, and socks invited
for troops serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Activities for children. Noon to 4. p.m.
Bluegrass Concert and Dinner Benefit,
New Jersey Museum of Agriculture,
Mountain View Golf Course, Ewing, 732249-2077. www.agriculturemuseum.org.
Benefit evening for the organization’s education department features buffet dinner,
beer and wine open bar, and music by the
Riverside Bluegrass Band. Register. $60. 6
p.m.
Bastille Day Ball, Trinity Counseling Service, Forbes College, 115 Alexander
Street, Princeton, 609-915-0313. www.trinitycounseling.org. The 28th annual ball
pays homage to La Promenade de Longchamps: A Prance Through Paris. Benefit
for the organization that offers counseling
services to people in need in the greater
Princeton Area. Cocktails, dinner, dancing,
and music by LiveWire. Register. $150.
6:30 p.m.
Comedy Clubs
Jeff Pirrami, Catch a Rising Star, Hyatt
Regency, 102 Carnegie Center, West
Windsor, 609-987-8018. www.catcharisingstar.com. Register. $22. 7:30 and 9:30
p.m.
Fairs
Kutztown Festival, Fairgrounds, Route
222, between Allentown and Reading, 888674-6136. www.kutztownfestival.com.
Family-oriented festival that celebrates
Pennsylvania Dutch folklife. Juried folk
artists, American craftsmen, music, country
dancing, children’s activities, quilt sale, and
food. $12. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Blueberry Bash, Terhune Orchards, 330
Cold Soil Road, 609-924-2310. www.terhuneorchards.com. Annual event includes
pick your own blueberries, pony rides, feed
the farm animals, and walk the farm trail.
“St. George and the Dragon” presented by
Tuckers Tales Puppet Theater. Music by
Heavy Traffic. Bring your favorite blueberry
recipe to the juried bake-off with categories
for adults and children. Blueberry treats
available. Free admission. 10 a.m. to 5
p.m.
Family Festival, South Brunswick
Library, Reichler Park, Monmouth Junction, 732-329-4000. www.sbpl.info. Face
painting, henna, crafts, performance by
Hidden Gems, drama workshop by VSA of
New Jersey, car seat check, and crafts.
Noon to 4 p.m.
Blueberry Festival, Kingston Presbyterian Church, 4565 Route 27, Kingston,
609-921-8895. www.kingstonpresbyterian.org. Music, games, along with blueberries, cake, and ice cream. Tour a fire truck
with the Kingston Volunteer Fire Company
volunteers. Free admission. 6 to 8 p.m.
In the Galleries: ‘Lanzhou’ by
Ann Mark, from a juried group
show opening Friday, July 9,
Gallery 14, 14 Mercer Street,
Hopewell. 609-333-8511.
Food & Dining
Make Your Own Wine Infused Chocolate
and Make YOur Own Mozzarella, The
Grape Escape, 12 Stults Road, Dayton,
609-409-9463. www.thegrapeescape.net.
Register. $70; $120 per couple. 9:30 a.m.
Also, Bottle Your Own Olive Oil and Balsamic Vinegar. Register. $85: $160 per
couple. 3:30 p.m.
Second Saturday, New Hope Chamber,
New Hope, 215-862-9990. newhopechamber.com. More than 30 fine art galleries, arts and crafts galleries, and specialty
shops offer hors d’oeuvres, demonstrations,
exhibitions, and entertainment. 6 to 9 p.m.
Farmers’ Market
Jamesburg Revitalization Coalition,
Jamesburg Presbyterian Church, Gatzmer
Avenue and Church Street, 732-512-7417.
www.ilovejamesburg.com. Produce, nonprofit 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. Discover the
mysterious art of native American sand
painting with West Windsor Arts Council. 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.
Health & Wellness
Holistic Health Fair, Robert Wood Johnson Hamilton Center for Health and
JULY 7, 2010
Wellness, 3100 Quakerbridge
Road, Mercerville, 609-584-5900.
www.rwjhamilton.org. Acupuncture, Feldenkrais, massage, Qi
Gong, reiki, Rubenfeld synergy,
tai chi, Trager, and yoga. Holistic
and green vendors. Register.
Free. 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Yin Yoga, Princeton Center for
Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite 506, Skillman, 609-9247294. www.princetonyoga.com.
Suitable for students of all levels
of experience. Poses are seated,
supine, or prone, and are held
with muscles relaxed for several
minutes. $17. 8:30 to 10 a.m.
Ceremonos Group, Breast Cancer Resource Center, YWCA
Princeton, Bramwell House, 59
Paul Robeson Place, 609-4972100. www.ywcaprinceton.org.
Support group for Latina breast
cancer patients and survivors. All
activities will be conducted in
Spanish. Register in Spanish with
Dora Arias at 908-410-6412.
Free. 10 to 11:30 a.m.
Nia Dance, Functional Fitness,
67 Harbourton Mt. Airy Road,
Lambertville, 609-577-9407.
www.nianewjersey.com. Register.
$17. 10 to 11 a.m.
History
Play Ball, Historical Society of
Princeton, Princeton High
School, 25 Valley Road, Princeton, 609-921-6748. www.princetonhistory.org. Historical reenactment of 19th-century baseball —
no gloves. Flemington Neshanock and Elizabeth Resolutes
play a competitive game using
rules from 1864. A short history of
the game and a recitation of
“Casey at the Bat” presented by
Brad Shaw. $2. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Open Tour, Alice Paul Institute,
128 Hooton Road, Mt. Laurel,
856-231-1885. www.alicepaul.org. Guided tour and presentation. $5. Noon to 1 p.m.
Civil War and Native American
Museum, Camp Olden, 2202
Kuser Road, Hamilton, 609-5858900. www.campolden.org. Exhibits featuring Civil War soldiers
from New Jersey include their
original uniforms, weapons, and
medical equipment. Diorama of
the Swamp Angel artillery piece
and Native American artifacts.
Free. 1 to 4 p.m.
For Families
Wheat Harvest, Howell Living
History Farm, Valley Road, off
Route 29, Titusville, 609-7373299. www.howellfarm.org. Farmers cut and shock this year’s crop
of winter wheat. Try milling in the
granary and taste homemade
wheat bread in the farmhouse.
Freshly ground wheat flour will be
for sale. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Family Theater
The Best of Nosing Around,
Kelsey Theater, Mercer County
Community College, 1200 Old
Trenton Road, 609-570-3333.
www.kelseytheatre.net. Combine
magic, comedy, juggling, and
clowning antics with John and Diana Maurer with their eldest children, Stacy and Hunter. Cameras
and audience interaction encouraged. $10. 10 a.m.
The Enchantment of Beauty and
the Beast, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street,
New Hope, 215-862-2041.
www.buckscountyplayhouse.com. Musical. $8. 11 a.m.
and 1 p.m.
Snow White, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 355
Washington Crossing-Pennington
Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857.
www.dpacatoat.com. $5. 11 a.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. 2 and 8 p.m.
Lectures
Great Decisions Discussion Forum, Monroe Public Library, 4
Municipal Plaza, Monroe, 732521-5000. www.monroetwplibrary.org. Register. Free. 10:30
a.m.
Discover the D&R Canal, Lambertville Public Library, 25
U.S. 1
25
South Union Street, Lambertville,
609-397-0275. www.lambertvillelibrary.org. Program geared towards families about the canal
presented by the state park’s historian. Walk to the canal to see
the Lambertville lock up close.
Free. 10:30 a.m.
Live Music
Ed Goldberg & The Odessa Klezmer Band, Burlington County
Library Amphitheater, 5 Pioneer
Boulevard, Westampton, 609424-0660. Odessa brings to life
the happy, foot-dancing sounds of
Klezmer music. Free. 7 p.m.
Stringzville, Halo Pub, 5 Hulfish
Street, Princeton, 609-921-1710.
Soft jazz and bossa nova. 7 to 10
p.m.
Cover This, Halo Pub, 4617 Nottingham Way, Trenton, 609-5861811. 7 p.m.
John Henry Goldman, Tre Piani,
120 Rockingham Row, Forrestal
Village, Plainsboro, 609-4521515. www.straightjazz.com.
Jazz with Jon Thompson on saxophone, Jason Fraticelli on bass,
Joe Falcey on drums, and John
Henry Goldman on trumpet. $15
minimum. 7:30 to 11 p.m.
Black Wax, Borders Books, 601
Nassau Park, 609-514-0040.
www.bordersgroupinc.com. Funk
band. 8 p.m.
3-26 Rodney & Eva, Grover’s
Mill Coffee House, 335 Princeton Hightstown Road, West Windsor, 609-716-8771. www.groversmillcoffee.com. 8 p.m.
100 Percent Cotton, It’s a Grind
Coffee House, 7 Schalks Crossing Road, Plainsboro, 609-2752919. www.itsagrind.com.
Acoustic blend. 8 to 10 p.m.
Stringbean & the Stalker, BT
Bistro, 3499 Route 1 South,
West Windsor, 609-919-9403.
www.btbistro.com. 9 p.m.
Cornmeal, Triumph Brewing
Company, 400 Union Square,
New Hope, 215-862-8300.
www.triumphbrew.com. $5 cover.
10 p.m.
Outdoor Action
Nature Field Trips, Plainsboro
Preserve, 80 Scotts Corner
Road, Plainsboro, 609-897-9400.
www.njaudubon.org. “Butterflies
Blitz,” an event using binoculars
and digital cameras in an attempt
to catalog as many species of butterfly as possible in three hours.
Register. $15. 9 a.m. to noon.
Insect Safari, Stony Brook Millstone Watershed, 31 Titus Mill
Road, Pennington, 609-7377592. www.thewatershed.org. For
adults and families. Register. $8.
9:30 to 11 a.m.
Family Nature Programs, Plainsboro Preserve, 80 Scotts Corner
Road, Plainsboro, 609-897-9400.
www.njaudubon.org. “Invasive
Species Nature Walk.” Register.
$5. 3:30 to 5 p.m.
Family Night Hike and Campfire,
Stony Brook Millstone Watershed, 31 Titus Mill Road, Pennington, 609-737-7592. www.thewatershed.org. For ages six and
up. Register. $12. 8 to 10 p.m.
Night Hike, Washington Crossing State Park, Visitor Center, Titusville, 609-737-0609. Naturalistguided hike and campfire. Bring a
flashlight. Register. $5 per car.
Enter the park from the Bear Tavern Road entrance. 8:30 p.m.
Politics
Marc’s Place Coffee House,
Central Jersey Coalition
Against Endless War, Reformed
Church, 19-21 South 2nd Avenue,
Highland Park, 732-235-1444.
www.againstendlesswar.org. “Immigrant Struggles: What Do We
Want and How Do We Get
There?” presented by Marien
Casillas, executive director of
New Labor Worker Center; and
Rita Dentino, coordinator of
CASA Freehold. Donations invited. 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.
Socials
Knit n Stitch, Cafe Ole, 126 South
Warren Street, Trenton, 877-4728817. All skill levels welcome.
Free. Noon to 2 p.m.
Sunday
July 11
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
Hail to the Blueberry
Blueberry Bash, Terhune Orchards, 330 Cold Soil Road, 609924-2310. www.terhuneorchards.com. Annual event includes pick your own blueberries,
pony rides, feed the farm animals,
and walk the farm trail. “St.
George and the Dragon” presented by Tuckers Tales Puppet Theater. Music by Heavy Traffic.
Bring your favorite blueberry
recipe to the juried bake-off with
categories for adults and children.
Blueberry treats available. Free
admission. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Classical Music
Summer Carillon Concert
Series, Princeton University, 88
College Road West, Princeton,
609-258-3654. www.princton.edu. John Widmann on the fifth
largest carillon in the country.
Free. 1 p.m.
Play Ball, circa 1864: The Flemington
Neshanock, above, play the Elizabeth Resolutes
in a competitive game using 19th century rules —
with no gloves, Saturday, July 10, Princeton High
School field on Valley Road. Presented by the
Historical Society of Princeton, 609-921-6748.
Don Giovanni, Opera New Jersey, McCarter Theater, 609-2582787. www.opera-nj.org. 2 p.m.
Piano Festival, Golandsky Institute, Taplin Auditorium, Fine Hall,
Princeton University, 877-3433434. www.golandskyinstitute.org. Guisin Onay performs. $25. 8
p.m.
Pop Music
Annual Choir Festival, Ocean
Grove Camp Meeting Association, 54 Pitman Avenue, 800-5904094. www.oceangrove.org. “In
the Beginning, God” features
1,000 choristers performing
works by contemporary and classic composers. Free will offering.
7:30 p.m.
Art
Art Exhibit, Plainsboro Public
Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. “Orchids,” an exhibit featuring a series of eight orchids and
two trees by Liz Adams. On view
to July 31. 10 a.m.
Dragonfly Art Collective, Blackwells Mills Canal House, 598
Canal Road, Somerset, 732-8732133. Exhibition and sale of handcrafted jewelry, watercolor paintings, fiber arts, film and digital
photography, ceramics, oil paintings, mixed media pieces, acrylic
paintings, and porcelain art. Portion of sales benefits the canal association. 11 a.m. to 4 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 5 p.m.
Art Exhibit, Gallery 14, 14 Mercer
Street, Hopewell, 609-333-8511.
www.photosgallery14.com. Meet
the photographers in conjunction
with “The Best of Eight Years at
Gallery 14,” a group show. Ken
Kaplowitz, professor of art at the
College of New Jersey, chose 37
images from 250 photographs for
the exhibit. The works include
black and white, color, portraits,
landscapes, abstract, and experimental work. Submissions were
from amateurs and professionals
in the New Jersey and Pennsylvania region. 1 to 3 p.m.
Art Exhibit, Gourgaud Gallery,
23 North Main Street, Cranbury,
609-395-0900. www.gourgaudhist.htm. Opening reception for
“Art Space,” works from the artists
of HomeFront. On view to July 25.
1 to 3 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.
Continued on following page
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26
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
July 11
Continued from preceding page
42nd Street, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street,
New Hope, 215-862-2041.
www.buckscountyplayhouse.com. Musical. $25. 2 p.m.
The Tempest, Kelsey Theater,
Mercer County Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road,
609-570-3333. www.kelseytheatre.net. Shakespeare ’70,
Mercer County’s classical repertory company, kicks off the college’s Kelsey Theatre 2010 Summer Festival. $14 for adults, $10
for students and children. 2 p.m.
The Turn of the Screw, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton
Murray Theater, 609-258-7062.
www.princetonsummertheater.org. Henry James thriller. $16. 2
p.m.
The 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.
Moon Over Buffalo, Washington
Crossing Open Air Theater, 355
Washington Crossing-Pennington
Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857.
dpacatoat.com. Backstage farce.
$10; $7 for children. Blankets,
seat cushions, and insect repellent are recommended. Picnics
welcome before show. Food available. Parking fee of $5. 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. Free. 2 p.m.
Good Causes
Multicultural Dance Music
Event, Web of Compassion,
Hinds Plaza, Witherspoon Street,
Princeton, 609-497-4598.
www.webofcompassion.org. Outdoor dance party to benefit Haiti
disaster relief fund. 4 to 9 p.m.
Fairs
Kutztown Festival, Fairgrounds,
Route 222, between Allentown
and Reading, 888-674-6136.
www.kutztownfestival.com. Family-oriented festival that celebrates
Pennsylvania Dutch folklife. Juried folk artists, American craftsmen, music, country dancing,
children’s activities, quilt sale, and
food. $12. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Annual Car Show, Road Angels
of Doylestown, Moravian Tile
Works, Route 313 and Cold
Spring Creamery Road, Doylestown, PA, 215-679-4992. www.roadangelsdoylestown.com. Car
enthusiasts are invited to join with
the street rod club born at Central
Bucks High School in 1954.
Awards for trucks and street rodders under the age of 30. Rain or
shine. Food, crafts, games, and
contests. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Blueberry Bash, Terhune Orchards, 330 Cold Soil Road, 609924-2310. www.terhuneorchards.com. Annual event includes pick your own blueberries,
pony rides, feed the farm animals,
and walk the farm trail. “St.
George and the Dragon” presented by Tuckers Tales Puppet Theater. Music by Heavy Traffic.
Bring your favorite blueberry
recipe to the juried bake-off with
categories for adults and children.
Blueberry treats available. Free
admission. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Food & Dining
Cooking Technique Class,
Williams Sonoma, MarketFair,
West Windsor, 609-419-1300.
“Farm to Table.” Register. Free.
11 a.m.
Farmers’ Market
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. 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Health & Wellness
Blood Drive, Plainsboro Public
Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Mini medical exam including
cholesterol test. Babysitting provided. 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Yoga for Stress Reduction,
Princeton Center for Yoga &
Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite
506, Skillman, 609-924-7294.
www.princetonyoga.com. Gentle
yoga asanas, pranayama, and
meditation. $17. 10:30 to 11:45
a.m.
Also, Cancer and Other Issues
of the Body and Mind. With Nancy Orlen Weber, RN, will explain
the healing power of aromatherapy. $25. 1 to 3 p.m.
History
Civil War and Native American
Museum, Camp Olden, 2202
Kuser Road, Hamilton, 609-5858900. www.campolden.org. Exhibits featuring Civil War soldiers
from New Jersey include their
original uniforms, weapons, and
medical equipment. Diorama of
the Swamp Angel artillery piece
and Native American artifacts.
Free. 1 to 4 p.m.
Living History Theater: Women
Preachers, Pennsbury Manor,
400 Pennsbury Memorial Road,
Morrisville, PA, 215-946-0400.
www.pennsbudymanor.org. “A
Visit from Mary Rogers and Elisabeth Webb.” Listen to two traveling Quaker ministers preach and
speak of their travels in the
colonies on “Truth’s Account.” $7
for adults; $4 for children. 1 to 4
p.m.
Walking Tour, Historical Society
of Princeton, Bainbridge House,
158 Nassau Street, Princeton,
609-921-6748. www.princetonhistory.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
Snow White, Washington Crossing Open Air Theater, 355
Washington Crossing-Pennington
Road, Titusville, 267-885-9857.
www.dpacatoat.com. $5. 4 p.m.
Live Music
Flea Market
Black Potatoe Festival, Red Mill
Museum, 56 Main Street, Clinton,
908-391-0769. Singer songwriter
Greg Provo performs. 12:25 p.m.
Jam For Life, KatManDu, Waterfront Park, Route 29, Trenton,
609-393-7300. www.katmandutrenton.com. Marathon multiband concert to benefit the Jam
for Life Foundation, which promotes awareness of organ and
tissue donation. Musicians include Mike Matisa, the Roustabouts, and the Lovestruck Band.
Benefits Mike Snyder’s, 9, attendance at the National Kidney
Foundation’s Transplant Games
in Madison, Wisconsin. Snyder, a
Hamilton resident and a medal
winner at previous games, had
his first kidney transplant when he
was two, and another four years
later. Food and drink available.
$15 donation. 1 to 5 p.m.
Larry Tritel and Guy DeRosa,
Thomas Sweet Ice Cream, 1330
Route 206, Skillman, 609-4302828. www.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 p.m.
Poker Night, BT Bistro, 3499
Route 1 South, West Windsor,
609-919-9403. www.btbistro.com.
7 p.m.
Open Mic with Mike Tusay, BT
Bistro, 3499 Route 1 South,
West Windsor, 609-919-9403.
www.btbistro.com. 9 p.m.
Princeton Elks, Route 518, Montgomery, 908-359-5652. Table
space, $10 to $15. 9 a.m. to 2
p.m.
Doll Show
Delaware Valley Doll Club of NJ,
West Trenton Fire Company, 40
West Upper Ferry Road, West
Trenton, 609-371-1902. www.dvdcnj.org. Antique, collectible,
and modern dolls and teddy
bears presented by more than 45
exhibitors from throughout the
country. Also doll furniture, miniatures, clothes, books, and accessories. $4.50 admission. 11 a.m.
to 3:30 p.m.
Socials
Chess, Plainsboro Public Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. For advanced adult players.
1 to 5 p.m.
Monday
July 12
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
Who’s Who?
Who Are They, Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane and Route 1,
Lawrence Township, 609-9896922. www.mcl.org. The Who en-
Rider Furniture
No
,
Gimmicks
e
Hassle Fre
!
Shopping
Set Up
Removal
Doll Baby: A doll show and sale, ‘Christmas in
July,’ takes place on Sunday July 11, West
Trenton Volunteer Fire Co. No. 1, 40 West Upper
Ferry Road, Ewing. 609-371-1902.
Free Sheep
With every
Perfect Sleeper
Purchase
$649
Belvedere Firm
$799
Crystal Vera Wang Euro Top
$1199
Twin Set
Full Set
King Set
Twin Set
Full Set
King Set
Fine Quality Home Furnishings at Substantial Savings
Twin Set
Full Set
King Set
Addison
$899
Twin Set
Full Set
King Set
Promise Vera Wang Pillow Top
$1399
Sofa & Recliner
Sale
Whole Month
of JANUARY!
Twin Set
Full Set
King Set
• Dining Room
• Bedroom
• Occasional
• Custom Made Upholstery
• Prints and Accessories
• Leather Furniture
• Antique Furniture
Repair & Refinishing
Floor Model Sale - Entire Month of July
Rider Furniture
Where quality still matters.
4621 Route 27, Kingston, NJ
609-924-0147
Monday-Friday 10-6; Saturday 10-5; Sunday 12-5
Design Services Available. www.riderfurniture.com
JULY 7, 2010
thusiasts Jerry Monk and Tom
Gardner will lead an hour-long
discussion on the music of the
British rock ‘n’ roll band, The Who.
through handwriting. 3 p.m.
Classical Music
Piano Festival, Golandsky Institute, Taplin Auditorium, Fine Hall,
Princeton University, 877-3433434. www.golandskyinstitute.org. Josu De Solaun Soto performs. $25. 8 p.m.
Pop Music
Rehearsal, Jersey Harmony
Chorus, Call for location, 732469-3983. www.harmonize.com/jerseyharmony. New members
are welcome. 7:15 p.m.
Gardner will lead an hour-long
discussion on the music of the
British rock ‘n’ roll band, The Who.
through handwriting. 3 p.m.
Meeting, Princeton PC Users
Group, Lawrence Library, 2751
Route 1 South, 609-423-6537.
www.ppcug-nj.org. Internet update. 7:30 p.m.
Concerts on the Landing, Patriots Theater at the War Memorial, 1 Memorial Drive, Trenton,
609-984-8400. www.thewarmemorial.com. Lady D performs.
Food available. Free. Noon to 2
p.m.
Singles
The 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.
Coffee and Conversation,
Grover’s Mill Coffee House, 335
Princeton Hightstown Road, West
Windsor, 609-716-8771. www.groversmillcoffee.com. Coffee,
tea, soup, sandwich, or dessert.
Register at www.meetup.com/Princeton-Area-Singles-Network.
6:30 to 8 p.m.
Tuesday
July 13
Film
Summer Film Series, Princeton
Public Library, 65 Witherspoon
Street, 609-924-8822. www.princetonlibrary.org. Screening of
“A Fish Called Wanda.” Free. 7
p.m.
Literati
New Jersey Writers’ Society
Meeting, West Windsor Library,
333 North Post Road, 609-7990462. . 6:30 p.m.
Noodle Talk, Princeton Public
Library, 65 Witherspoon Street,
609-924-5584. http://tinyurl.com/pnoodle. Lightly structured discussion based on personal questions that embrace the human
condition instead of flinching from
it. Led by Noodle Talk’s creator
Alan Goldsmith. Free. 7 to 8:45
p.m.
Poetry Reading, Delaware Valley
Poets, Borders Books, Nassau
Park, West Windsor, 609-2036800. www.delawarevalleypoets.com. Readings by Barbara
Crooker and David Vincenti.
Open mic follows. Free. 7:30 p.m.
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
How to Do Farm to Table
Princeton Eats: Cooking with
Local Ingredients, Princeton
Public Library, 65 Witherspoon
Street, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Chef Christopher Albrecht of Eno Terra shares
tips for creating meals using
fresh, local ingredients. Register.
Free. 10 a.m.
Art
Art Exhibit, South Brunswick
Arts Commission, South
Brunswick Municipal Building,
540 Route 522, Monmouth Junction, 732-329-4000. . Opening reception for “Water, Water Everywhere,” an exhibit featuring works
of 21 artists in paint, photography,
and wood carving. On view to
September 30. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Health & Wellness
Classical Music
Hot Power Yoga, Princeton Center for Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite 506, Skillman,
609-924-7294. www.princetonyoga.com. Vigorous power
vinyasa flow class. Done in a
heated room. $17. 5:45 to 7:15
a.m.
Yoga Practice, Lawrence
Library, Darrah Lane and Route
1, Lawrence Township, 609-9896922. www.mcl.org. Register. 7
p.m.
Monthly Meeting, Compassionate Friends, Capital Health System, 1445 Whitehorse-Mercerville
Road, Hamilton, 609-516-8047.
www.tcfmercer.org. Support to
assist families toward the positive
resolution of grief following the
death of a child of any age. 7:30
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.
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.
Piano Festival, Golandsky Institute, Taplin Auditorium, Fine Hall,
Princeton University, 877-3433434. www.golandskyinstitute.org. Thomas Bagwell, pianist, and
Christopher Dylan Herbert, baritone present program of works by
J.S. Bach and Schumann. $25. 8
p.m.
History
Colonial Camp, Pennsbury
Manor, 400 Pennsbury Memorial
Road, Morrisville, PA, 215-9460400. www.pennsbudymanor.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.
Kids Stuff
For the Birds, Plainsboro Public
Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Dr. Frances Reichl, scientist/professor/author for a weeklong seminar. For adults and kids
8 & up. 10:15 a.m. Also, Textile
Design, Origami Angles, Arts Festival A Team, and Family Math
Night: Reflection Battle.
Lectures
Who Are They, Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane and Route 1,
Lawrence Township, 609-9896922. www.mcl.org. The Who enthusiasts Jerry Monk and Tom
Outdoor Concerts
Carnegie Center Concert Series,
Greenway Amphitheater at 202
Carnegie Center, 609-452-1444. .
Free. Noon to 1:30 p.m.
U.S. 1
27
Drama
Film
Movie Series for Seniors,
Princeton Senior Resource
Center, Spruce Circle, Princeton,
609-924-7108. . Screening of
“Chasing Sound.” Refreshments.
Limited parking. Register. Free. 1
p.m.
Dancing
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.
Literati
Writers Anonymous, Barnes &
Noble, 869 Route 1 South, North
Brunswick, 732-545-7860.
www.bn.com. Monthly workshop
for all levels. E-mail tryagain@optonline.net for information. 7 p.m.
Author Event, Barnes & Noble,
MarketFair, West Windsor, 609716-1570. www.bn.com. Sara
Lindsay, author of “Tempting the
Marquess.” 7:30 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 shares
tips for creating meals using
fresh, local ingredients. Register.
Free. 10 a.m.
Gardens
Flower Show, Lingohocken Garden Club, Forest Grove Church,
1856 Forest Grove Road, Forest
Grove, PA, 215-340-7677. www.lingohockengardenclub.info. $8.
10 a.m.
Health & Wellness
Blood Drive, University Medical
Center at Princeton, Hamilton
YMCA, 1315 Whitehorse-Mercerville Road, Hamilton, 609-4974366. www.princetonhcs.org. All
blood types needed. Thomas
Sweet Pint for Pint ice cream program. 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Blood Drive, American Red
Cross, Princeton University, Frist
Center, Washington Road, 800448-3543. www.pleasegiveblood.org. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Long, Slow, Deep Kripalu Flow,
Princeton Center for Yoga &
Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite
506, Skillman, 609-924-7294.
www.princetonyoga.com. Multilevel class. $17. 9:30 to 11 a.m.
Open House, Sunny Health Center, 16 Seminary Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-1227. Free 15minute 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.
Beginners Yoga Class, Onsen
For All, 4451 Route 27, Princeton,
609-924-4800. 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.
Jin Shin Jyustu, Planet Apothecary, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 732-406-6865. www.planet-
Just Be Silly: John
Cleese and Kevin
Kline star in ‘A Fish
Called Wanda,’
Monday, July 12,
Princeton Public Library. 609-924-8822.
apothecary.com. Presented by
Monica Freund. $25. 7 to 9 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.
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
a.m. and 11 a.m.
For the Birds, Plainsboro Public
Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Dr. Frances Reichl, scientist/professor/author for a weeklong seminar. For kids 8-12. Register. Free. 10:15 a.m. Also, Microscope World, Poetry + Popular
Poet Eloise Bruce, Basket Weaving: Count on Math Basket, Starlab, and Egg Dropping Competition.
Continued on following page
28
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
July 13
Continued from preceding page
For Families
Author Event, Barnes & Noble,
MarketFair, West Windsor, 609716-1570. www.bn.com. Ruth
Schwin, author of “Henry the
Lamb” presents storytime and
booksigning. 10:30 a.m.
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.
Lectures
Princeton Macintosh Users
Group, Robertson Hall, 609-2585730. www.pmug-nj.org. Free.
7:30 p.m.
Skytime
Star Show, Raritan Valley College, Planetarium, College Center, North Branch, 908-526-1200.
www.raritanval.edu. Attack of the
Space Pirates. Register. $6. 2
p.m.
Also, The Little Star That Could.
Register. $6. 3 p.m.
Live Music
Open Mic Night, Grover’s Mill
Coffee House, 335 Princeton
Hightstown Road, West Windsor,
609-716-8771. www.groversmillcoffee.com. 7 p.m.
Chris Harford & the Band of
Change, BT Bistro, 3499 Route
1 South, West Windsor, 609-9199403. www.btbistro.com. 9 p.m.
Outdoor Action
Family Night, Lawrence Nature
Center, 481 Drexel Avenue,
Lawrenceville, 609-844-7067.
www.lawrencenaturecenter.net.
“Rocks and Minerals” presented
by Dave Bosted. Rain or shine.
Free. 7 p.m.
Singles
Pizza Night, Yardley Singles,
Vince’s, 25 South Main Street,
Yardley, 215-736-1288. www.yardleysingles.org. Register. 6
p.m.
Socials
Board Meeting, Pennington
Players, Hopewell Valley Bank,
802 Denow Road, Pennington.
www.penningtonplayers.org. 7:30
p.m.
Sports for Causes
5K Run, Princeton Athletic Club,
Rosedale Park, 424 Federal City
Road, Hopewell. www.princet-
N OW E NROLLING
FOR
F ULL
onac.org. Run on the trails with
the nonprofit community running
club. Register. $12 to $15. 6:30
p.m.
Wednesday
July 14
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Arias with
Your Appetizer
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.
Classical Music
French-Themed Summer Sing,
Bucks County Choral Society,
St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, 301
North Main Street, Doylestown,
215-598-6142. www.buckschoral.org. Singers and music enthusiasts join together to sing
through works of Faure and
Racine. Scores provided. Reception follows. $8. 7:30 p.m.
Carducci String Quartet, Princeton University Summer Concerts, Richardson Auditorium,
609-570-8404. www.pusummerchamberconcerts.org. Free tickets available at the box office at
6:30 p.m. Doors open at 7:30 p.m.
8 p.m.
Jazz & Blues
Midweek Music Series, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-8822.
www.princetonlibrary.org. Gordon
James on flugelhorn and trumpet
in concert. Free. 7 p.m.
Summer Series, Mason Gross
School of the Arts, Nicholas Music Center, 85 George Street,
New Brunswick, 732-932-7511.
www.masongross.rutgers.edu.
Boston Brass presents witty
repartee. Free. 8 p.m.
Art
Art Exhibit, Windrows, 2000
Windrows Drive, Plainsboro, 800708-7007. www.princetonwindrows.net. Reception for “Captured Memories,” pastels and watercolors by Gloria Young Smith.
On view to August 31. 5 p.m.
Atelier Tour, Grounds For Sculpture, 18 Fairgrounds Road,
Hamilton, 609-586-0616. www.groundsforsculpture.org. Inside
scoop on how sculpture is made
and the processes used to create
a finished work of art. Register.
$20. 5:30 p.m.
Watercolor Workshop, AC
Moore, Route 33, Hamilton, 609-
AND
587-1636. Beginner level. Register. $22 plus supplies. 6 to 8 p.m.
Drama
The 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.
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.
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.
P ART T IME C LASSES
Let’s Dance: Web of
Compassion presents
an outdoor multicultural dance event,
Sunday, July 11,
Albert Hinds Plaza
(in front of the Princeton Public Library).
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: “Hired Gun?” and “For
Sale: Motherhood.” Free. 1:30 to
3 p.m.
International Film Festival,
South Brunswick Library, 110
Kingston Lane, Monmouth Junction, 732-329-4000. www.sbpl.info. 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.
Dancing
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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, Suzanne Patterson
Center, Monument Drive, 609924-6763. www.princetoncountrydancers.org. Instruction followed
by dance. $8. 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Literati
Author Event, Princeton Public
Library, 65 Witherspoon Street,
609-924-8822. www.princetonlibrary.org. Jennifer Weiner, author of her latest novel, “Fly Away
Home,” speaks, answers questions, and signs books. Her previous books include “Good In Bed,”
“In Her Shoes,” “Little Earthquakes,” and “Goodnight Nobody.” Luncheon, register, $25.
Booksigning at 1 p.m., free.
Noon.
Food & Dining
Calabria, Eno Terra Restaurant,
4484 Route 27, Kingston, 609497-1777. www.enoterra.com.
JULY 7, 2010
U.S. 1
At the Movies
Confirm titles with theaters.
The A-Team. Action comedy
with Liam Neeson and Jessica
Biel. AMC, Destinta, 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.
Despicable Me. Computer-animated film about the world’s
biggest heist — to steal the moon
— starring Steve Carell. AMC, Regal.
Get Him to the Greek. Comedy
with Jonah Hill. AMC, MarketFair.
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 (Lo Seno L’amore).
Italian drama about a wealthy family set in the turn of the millenium.
With Tilda Swinton. Garden,
Montgomery..
I Hate Luv Storys. Bollywoodstyle big screen romance. Multiplex, Regal.
Iron Man 2. Action with Robert
Downey Jr. and Gwyneth Paltrow.
AMC.
Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work.
Documentary about the comedienne and the entertainment industry. Montgomery.
Jonah Hex. Adventure with
Josh Brolin and John Malkovich.
Destinta.
The Karate Kid. Action remake with Jackie Chan. AMC,
Destinta, MarketFair, Multiplex,
Regal.
Knight and Day. Adventure
with Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz. AMC, Destinta, MarketFair,
Multiplex, Regal.
Mother and Child. Drama
about mothers and adoption with
Naomi Watts and Annette Bening.
Montgomery, Multiplex.
Raavan. Bollywood. Regal.
The Last Airbender. Animated
adventure fantasy film by M. Night
Shyamalan based on TV series
Avatar: The Last Airbender. AMC,
MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal, Destinta.
Five-course tasting menu with
wine pairing. Register. $80. 6
p.m.
Wine Regions of the World, Mercer College, West Windsor, 609570-3324. www.mccc.edu. “International Rose” with Bruce Smith.
Register. $42. 6:30 to 8:30 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
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.
Juried Photo Exhibit
July 9 - August 8
A Slice Off the Big Apple, Michael Kehl
The Secret in Their Eyes (El
secreto de sus ojos). Thriller with
Ricardo Darin in the lead role.
Montgomery.
The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.
Fantasy adventure film starring
Nicolas Cage. Starts Wednesday,
July 14. AMC, Multiplex, Regal.
Shrek Forever After. Animation with Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz, and Antonio
Banderas. Destinta.
Solitary Man. Drama with
Michael Douglas and Mary Louise
Parker. AMC, Montgomery, Multiplex.
Toy Story 3. Animated sequel
with voices of Tom Hanks and Tim
Allen. AMC, Destinta, MarketFair,
Multiplex, Regal.
Twilight Saga: The Eclipse.
Violent thriller returns with Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson.
AMC, Destinta, Garden, 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.
Easy Flow, Princeton Center for
Yoga & Health, 50 Vreeland Drive, Suite 506, Skillman, 609-9247294. www.princetonyoga.com. A
gentle workout for body, mind,
and spirit synchronizing breath
with movement through a flowing
series of basic asanas and sequences. $17. 9:30 to 10:45 a.m.
Also, Hot Yoga. Twenty-six seated postures practiced in a heated
room. Increases flexibility, improves circulation, and reduces
stress. $18. 7:30 to 9 p.m.
Public Meeting, Mercer County,
Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane
and Route 1, Lawrence Township.
mercercounty.org. NJ Department
of Mercer County seeks feedback
on a countywide plan for improving bicycle facilities in an openhouse style meeting. 4 to 7 p.m.
Tarot, Planet Apothecary, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 732-4066865. www.planetapothecary.com. A reading of Tarot cards
by Jeanette Wolfe. $15. 4 to 5
p.m.
Developing Meditative Skills,
Mercer College, West Windsor,
609-570-3324. www.mccc.edu.
For balance and well-being. Register. $25. 6:30 to 9 p.m.
Continued on following page
Comedy Central:
Marisa Tomei, left,
Jonah Hill, John C.
Reilly, and Catherine
Keener in 'Cyrus,'
opening late
July.
Opening Reception
July 9, 6 - 8:30 PM
Meet the Photographers
Sunday, July 11, 1-3 PM
Photographic A rt
Lanzhou, Ann Mark
609-3333-88511
14 Mercer Street • Hopewell, NJ • Saturday & Sunday • 12 - 5
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29
30
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
SINGLES
MEN SEEKING WOMEN
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
SWM, 46, brown hair, blue eyes,
non-smoker, and drug/disease-free.
Seeking a down-to-earth, genuine, and
attractive female who is sincere, honest,
and loyal, between 4’10” and 5’6” for
possible LTR. Box 236339
woman, who would make me feel special, honest, gentle, passionate, affectionate, and a one woman man. I want to
meet a friend, a soulmate who would like
a long-term relationship that will lead to
happiness. That is what we all seek for.
Life is too short - let’s enjoy it to the
fullest. Phone numbers or e-mail and
photo will be very appreciated. Box
236723
DWF, 32, brown hair, hazel eyes, living in Montgomery, seeking a male 32 45 close by who is over 5’9”. Love to eat
in small ethnic places, go out for coffee,
and relax at home in front of the fire and
TV. No kids but enjoy my small dog, love
to go to yard sales, favorite city is Rome,
speak Italian, love my job as teacher of
ESL. Box 236720
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
A real beauty - Nice, warm, loving,
loyal, honest, sincere. Compassionate
and an incurable romantic. This beauty
is not only physical. There is a lot more
inside that I could offer to the right person. I am very family-oriented, have a
good moral value and highly educated.
I’m in my early 50s, but a lot of people
say I look like I’m in my 30s. I stand 5’3”
and weigh 100 lbs. Considered beautiful
and attractive, I’m also a flexible person.
I enjoy the outdoors, travel, family, and
friends. I wish to meet a really nice gentleman who knows how to treat a
July 14
Attractive, Jewish widowed female, 62, acts and looks younger than
her age, refined, sophisticated yet very
earthy professional educated sexy fit
nurse looking for a nice Jewish guy.
Don’t tell me you’re all married or taken
— for friendship, romance, a soulmate;
must be nice-looking, 5’9” or taller. Life
is too short to live alone. Be emotionally
and financially fit. Come with a zest for
life and a sense of humor. Have similar
background. Box 236025
leries, and gardens before or after
tea. Register. $15. 1 p.m.
Continued from preceding page
Kids Stuff
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.
For the Birds, Plainsboro Public
Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Dr. Frances Reichl, scientist/professor/author for a weeklong seminar. For kids 8-12. Register. Free. 10:15 a.m. Also, Embroiderers’ Guild, We Got the
Beat! Percussion Extravaganza,
We Got the Beat! Percussion Extravaganza, Improvmania Too,
Basket Weaving: Count on Math
Basket, Math Club: Petals Around
the Rose, and Improvmania.
Dinosaur Program, Princeton
Public Library, 65 Witherspoon
Street, 609-924-8822. www.princetonlibrary.org. “Dino Dig
with Molly the Dinosaur” featuring
field paleontologists Mike and
Robert Straka. 4 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.
Stroller Strides, Historical Society of Princeton, Bainbridge
House, 158 Nassau Street,
Princeton, 609-921-6748.
www.princetonhistory.org. Walking tour of Princeton for moms,
dads, grandparents, caregivers,
and their tiny tots. Register. $7. 10
to 11 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.
Tour and Tea, Morven Museum,
55 Stockton Street, Princeton,
609-924-8144. www.morven.org.
Tour the restored mansion, gal-
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 relationship. Prefer cleancut, no hirsute
men. Photo please. Box 236082
MEN SEEKING MEN
A very attractive-looking bi white
male, 49, clean, fit, and athletic. Looking
present an enlightening tie between math and origami. Short
discussion followed by a handson origami activity. 7 p.m.
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.)
MEN SEEKING MEN
HOW TO ORDER
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
@princetoninfo.com. Be sure to include
a physical address to which we can
send responses.
HOW TO ORDER
Singles By Mail: To place your free
ad in this section mail it to U.S. 1, 12
Roszel Road, Princeton 08540, fax it to
609-452-0033, or E-mail it to class-
Open Mic, Alchemist & Barrister, 28 Witherspoon Street,
Princeton, 609-924-5555.
www.theaandb.com. 10 p.m.
Lectures
Politics
Executive Briefing, Performance
Selling LLC, 270 Davison Avenue, Somerset, 732-764-0200.
www.performancesellingllc.com.
Register. 9 a.m.
The Jersey Devil, Monroe Public
Library, 4 Municipal Plaza, Monroe, 732-521-5000. www.monroetwplibrary.org. Angus Kress Gillespie of Rutgers University presents a talk illustrated by photographs, drawings, and maps focusing on the legendary creature.
The story is about the Leeds family in 1735 at the coastal edge of
the Pine Barrens and their 13th
child — who now lurks in the
South Jersey Pine Barrens. Register. Free. 1 p.m.
Old-Fashioned Barbecue,
Hopewell Valley Republican
Association, Pennington Fire
House, Broemel Place, Pennington, 609-737-8869. Chicken, salads, and watermelon. Register.
$20. 5:30 to 8 p.m.
For Families
Science Lectures
Morning in the Garden, Waldorf
School, 1062 Cherry Hill Road,
Princeton, 609-466-1970. www.princetonwaldorf.org. Children
make clay butterfly pots, parents
are invited to cut and take home
fresh flowers, tea from the
school’s garden herbs. Register.
Free. 9:30 to 11 a.m.
Artful Conversations: Origami
Math, Plainsboro Public
Library, 9 Van Doren Street, 609275-2897. www.lmxac.org/plainsboro. Allison and Grace Kwok
Star Show, Raritan Valley College, Planetarium, College Center, North Branch, 908-526-1200.
www.raritanval.edu. Rockin’
Rocket Ride. Register. $6. 2 p.m.
Also, Star Show. Tycho to the
Moon. Register. $6. 3 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.
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.
An Evening of Jazz, Spigola Ristorante, 3817 Crosswicks-Hamilton Square Road, Hamilton, 609585-5255. www.spigola.net. Dick
Gratton on jazz guitar and Linda
Lee on vocals. Reservations recommended. 6:30 to 10:30 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.
For Seniors
Kosher Cafe East, Jewish Family and Children’s Service, Beth
El Synagogue, 50 Maple Stream
Road, East Windsor, 609-9878100. www.jfcsonline.org. Kosher
meal and speaker for ages 60
and up. Register. $5. 12:30 p.m.
Thursday
July 15
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: How
Green Is Your Family?
Author Event, Lawrence Library,
Darrah Lane and Route 1, Lawrence Township, 609-989-6922.
www.mcl.org. Catherine Zandonella, author of “The Green
Guide for Families” and a West
Windsor resident, speaks about
how parents can better our environment while raising the “greenest” generation. Register. 7 p.m.
Classical Music
Summer Stars Classical Series,
Ocean Grove Camp Meeting
Association, 54 Pitman Avenue,
800-590-4094. oceangrove.org.
Dolce Suono with Mimi Stillman,
Allen Krantz, and Charles
Abramovic. $13. 7:30 p.m.
Piano Festival, Golandsky Institute, Taplin Auditorium, Fine Hall,
Princeton University, 877-3433434. www.golandskyinstitute.org. Sean Duggan performs an
all-Bach program. $25. 8 p.m.
See story page 31.
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
HOW TO RESPOND
How to Respond: Place your note in
an envelope, write the box number on
the envelope, and mail it with $1 cash to
U.S. 1 at the address above.
Jazz & Blues
Alexander Collins Quartet, New
Brunswick Jazz Project, Makeda, 338 George Street, New
Brunswick, 732-640-0021. www.nbjp.org. Pianist Alexander
Collins and his quartet. No cover.
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. Rich
York and Caneswitch Band with
contemporary country hits from
Nashville. Line dancing encouraged. Weather-permitting. Free. 6
to 8 p.m.
Summer Courtyard Concert Series, Arts Council of Princeton,
Princeton Shopping Center, 609924-8777. www.artscouncilofprinceton.org. Eco Del Sur performs. Free. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Red, White, and Blues Series,
Barron Arts Center, 582 Rahway
Avenue, Woodbridge, 732-6340413. Andy Rothstein and
Friends. Register. Free. Indoors if
it rains. 8 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. 8
p.m.
Drama
42nd Street, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street,
New Hope, 215-862-2041.
www.buckscountyplayhouse.com. Musical. $25. 8 p.m.
The 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.
JULY 7, 2010
ART
FILM
LITERATURE
DANCE
DRAMA
U.S. 1
31
MUSIC
PREVIEW
Don’t Let the Collar Fool You, Bring on the Steinway
F
or those who need it
parsed: The Golandsky Institute’s
Summer Symposium and Piano
Festival gets its name from pianist
Edna Golandsky, its artistic director. The Institute builds on the pioneering work of Golandsky’s mentor, Dorothy Taubman, who developed a healthy approach to piano
playing that combines powerful
technique with physical comfort.
Every July since 2004 the Institute has come to Princeton. The
symposium offers participants a
week-long set of daytime lectures,
lessons, master classes, and practice opportunities. The festival
consists of a series of evening concerts. All events are open to the
public. Full information is available on the website, www.golandskyinstitute.org/summersymposium.
Among the daytime events of
special interest to those in the
Princeton area is a lecture celebrating the 200th anniversary of Frederic Chopin’s birth. Area resident
Mariam Nazarian, who has performed repeatedly in Princeton,
talks about Chopin’s B Minor
Sonata on Wednesday, July 14, at 3
p.m., in McCormick Auditorium at
the Princeton University Art Museum.
Other lectures treat Chopin’s
“Fantaisie-Impromptu” and his
“Polonaise-Fantaisie.”
Symposium presentations include a talk
about piano care and sessions on
wholesome approaches to both violin playing and computer use.
Music critic Tim Page tells about
growing up with undiagnosed Asperger’s syndrome.
The roster of performers at
evening concerts includes solo pianists Gulsin Onay (Sunday, July
11); Josu De Solaun Soto (Monday,
July 12); Sean Duggan (Thursday,
July 15); and Ilya Itin (Friday, July
16). Pianist Thomas Bagwell performs with baritone Christopher
Dylan Herbert on Tuesday, July 13.
Pianists Takeshi Ohbayashi and
Christian Li perform with a bassist,
saxophonist, and flutist from the
Berklee Global Jazz Institute on
Saturday, July 17. All concerts take
place at 8 p.m. in Taplin Auditorium in Fine Hall on the Princeton
campus.
by Elaine Strauss
In a telephone interview from
Florida, Sean Duggan talks about
his July 15 Princeton program. A
repeat performer at the Golandsky
Festival, Duggan is the pianist in
the clerical collar who specializes
in Bach. As a concert artist, he lists
himself as Father Sean Duggan.
“It will be all Bach this year,”
Duggan says, “early, middle, and
late.” Music from the early and
middle periods comes before intermission. The “Toccata in D Major”
represents the early period. Middle
period pieces are the “Six Little
Preludes” and the “Fantasy and
Fugue in A minor.” After intermission comes Bach’s “Partita No. 4,”
a late piece.
Two weeks before the performance, Duggan mulls over the possibility of enlarging the program.
“The first part is probably not long
enough,” he says. “I may add the
‘Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue’ or
something else. I want to play at
least 30 minutes before intermission. The Partita, after the intermission, takes about 35 minutes.”
Life interferes with performing.
Duggan’s father died less than a
month ago. “I had a different program in mind until my dad’s health
took a turn for the worse,” Duggan
says. “I wanted to play a program
of ‘Spirituality at the Keyboard’
with Bach, Liszt, and Messiaen. It
would have required more practice
than I could give it. I think I’ll do it
next year.”
Duggan was born in Jersey City
in 1954. His father was an engineer. When Duggan was four the
family moved to Seattle. About
three years later, they moved to the
Cape Canaveral, Florida, area. His
mother still lives there. “The family was musical in a general way,”
he says. “They cared about music.
We sang and did some piano. My
sister, who’s one and a half years
younger than I am, has a wonderful
voice and is involved with church
music. My father’s younger brother was a pianist and a priest.”
Piano lessons for Duggan start-
Sounds Divine: Pianist and ordained priest Sean
Duggan performs at the Golandsky Institute program on July 15 in Princeton’s Taplin Auditorium.
ed at age 10 with the local church
organist. He earned his undergraduate music degree at Loyola University in New Orleans and a master’s degree at Carnegie Mellon
University in Pittsburgh in 1979.
For three years he was the Pittsburgh Opera Company’s pianist
and assistant chorus master. He also taught piano at Carnegie Mellon
and was a member of the Carnegie
Mellon Piano Trio. “As long as we
were around Carnegie Mellon we
kept the trio going. It evaporated
when we went our separate ways.”
Duggan left Pittsburgh to enter
the Benedictine order at St. Joseph
Abbey near Covington, Louisiana,
in 1982, earned a master’s degree
in theology from Notre Dame Seminary in New Orleans, and was ordained to the priesthood in 1988.
“The Benedictine encouragement
of spirituality and the arts is what
attracted me to the order,” he says.
After entering the monastery, he
twice won the Johann Sebastian
Bach International Competition
for Pianists in Washington, D.C.
The prize each time consisted of
concerts in the United States and a
two-month concert tour in Germany.
From 2001 to 2004 he was a visiting professor at the University of
Michigan. Since then he has been
on the faculty of the State University of New York at Fredonia, where
this year he was granted tenure.
“As far as Fredonia is concerned, I can stay there indefinitely,” Duggan says. “But my religious community may not totally
agree. Benedictines take three
vows. One is the vow of stability.
You agree to be with a particular religious community for life. That’s
usually understood in a physical
sense. But it can also be understood
as relational. The life that I’m leading can be seen as a part of Benedictine spirituality. My monastery
has been very generous to me.
“I am an unusual case. In the middle of my life I discovered an unusual love and ability for teaching piano
on the college level. That’s why I’m
allowed to do this. Still, I keep up
with the religious life. At Fredonia I
live in a rectory. I’m not part of the
staff, but I’m in residence. I help out
with masses and help the campus
ministry. I’ve got a few irons in the
fire at Fredonia.
“I’ll probably return to the community in 2013. Then, I won’t be as
free to perform as I am now. I’ll
have assignments that are not related to piano teaching and performance.”
At Fredonia, Duggan is recording the non-organ keyboard works
of Bach. His goal is to finish by
2013. “What’s great about recording is that you can remove mistakes,” he says.
“I’m trying to preserve the feeling of a live performance. I’m trying to imagine that I’m playing for
an audience, which I really am, except that the audience is not there
yet. It helps to perform on stage,
rather than in a recording studio.
The live ambiance is there when
you’re on stage.”
‘F
redonia has an SRT program — Sound Recording Technology. You can major in it. I’m lucky
that one of the guys on the faculty is
my producer. He leaves me alone
when I record. I do as many takes as
I want. That way I feel less pressure. Then we sit down together and
choose. I can do as many takes as I
want without thinking that I’m
driving somebody crazy.”
In 1996 Duggan was invited to
perform at what he calls “Taubman
Institute gatherings,” summer
workshops presenting the work of
master teacher Dorothy Taubman,
who developed the unforced pianism that Edna Golandsky carries
on. Already then, the gatherings in-
After entering a Benedictine monastery Father Sean Duggan twice won
the Johann Sebastian Bach International Competiton for Pianists.
A little common sense goes a long way. The Taubman Method Captured on DVD
When Johann Sebastian Bach was a boy, the
story goes, a fluid keyboard technique was
considered out of the question. Teachers of
the time thought that it was impossible to use
the thumb. They believed that a keyboard instrument had to be played with straight fingers extended directly forward. Since the
thumb is so much shorter than the other fingers, it cannot reach the keys. You can try this
at home.
Bach’s revolutionary insight was that if a
keyboard player allowed the fingers to curve,
the thumb could reach the keyboard. And facility at the keyboard was on its way.
Some of the insights of the Taubman/Golandsky approach to piano playing are
similarly suffused with common sense. You
can’t hang on to a note at one end of the hand,
while the other fingers play elsewhere? Let
go. You can’t connect notes a long distance
from each other? Use the pedal. One hand
can’t manage all the notes in the chord written for it? Play some of them with the other
hand. You want to play fast? Use muscles
that move quickly.
Still, common sense is not everything.
Technology is a major ingredient in the Taubman/Golandsky impact. A library of DVDs
captures the insights that Taubman began to
ferret out in the 1940s. The foundation of the
library is a 10-disc set called “Virtuosity in a
Box.” Starting with fundamentals, it is based
on the set of lectures Edna Golandsky delivered at Dorothy Taubman’s summer sessions
in the 1980s and 1990s. Taubman herself is a
participant in the “Virtuosity” discs.
Other DVDs deal with topics that came to
obsess Golandsky in recent years: the question of rhythmic propulsion and continuity is
addressed in the DVD called “The Art of
Rhythmic Expression,” and how to exploit
the lines of music hidden below the melody
is addressed in the DVD called “Forgotten
Lines.”
Another series of discs provides master
classes on particular pieces and lectures on
specialized topics. The presenters are associates of Golandsky who are expected to turn
up for the Golandsky Princeton events. They
include John Bloomfield, Father Sean Duggan, Robert Durso, Ilya Itin, and Mary
Moran. Duggan, the only member of the
team with whom I discussed the DVDs, says
cluded performances by exemplary artists, as well as Taubmantrained pianists. “They kept inviting me back,” Duggan says. “I sat
in on lectures and was fascinated.
In the fall of 2001, when I was invited to Michigan on a three-year
appointment, I thought it was a perfect time to learn more. I would fly
to New York once or twice a month
to study with Edna.
“The Golandsky/Taubman approach is useful for Bach,” Duggan
says. “It’s useful for any piano playing. Ease at the keyboard, facility,
and tone production come into play
with Bach. Even pedaling. I believe
that when you’re playing Bach on
the piano, you should use the resources of the piano to make the
music come alive. If you try to
make the piano sound like a harpsichord, the pieces sound dry and
lifeless. You have to be true to Bach
and, also, true to the piano.
“Edna had a big impact on my
performing and my teaching,” Duggan says. “My performing keeps
improving, and my teaching has
grown a lot. Edna is a remarkable
teacher. She has incredible insight.
She knows the right words to use to
get you to do the right thing. She has
razor-sharp eyes and ears. A lot of
teachers have that, but she has it to
an extent that I have never before
experienced in anybody else.”
Piano Festival, Golandsky Institute, Taplin Auditorium, Fine
Hall, Princeton University. Thursday, July 15, 8 p.m. Sean Duggan
performs an all-Bach program.
$25. 877-343-3434 or www.golandskyinstitute.org. For full
schedule visit the website.
that he uses “Virtuosity in a Box” as a review
for himself. “It’s pretty much orthodox,” he
adds, chuckling, as he enjoys his theological
choice of word.
The recordings are live. Astonishingly,
explanations are lucid and well-expressed.
The atmosphere is spontaneous. In one presentation, Duggan searches for his misplaced
notes during a lecture. In another, an intrepid
member of the audience asks Edna Golandsky to stop talking and just play what she’s
trying to explain.
The DVDs have extended Golandsky’s
global scope. Participants in Norway or Korea or Australia have learned of the DVDs on
the Internet, ordered them online, discovered
that they still have a few questions, and come
to the Princeton summer symposium in
search of additional answers. P..S. It is now
possible to take Golandsky piano lessons using Skype.
— Elaine Strauss
32
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
Life in the Fast Lane
he friendships Andrew Computershare in 2007, the team
Blane made in college have ex- wanted to stay together. They
tended far beyond graduation. To- added a fifth member, Amos Wargether with his classmates and ren, and founded VPR Internationfriends, David Genetti, Rob Pastor al to develop software technology
and Nikolajs Vedejs, he has already solutions for individual performbuilt and sold a software company. ance in the asset management inNow they are working on their sec- dustry. They started the firm on October 1, 2009 and moved into their
ond startup, VPR International.
“We were all class of 1997 or Tulane Street office on January 1.
“In the last few months we’ve
1998 at Princeton,” Blane said.
“We were very good friends and we been developing and building the
kept in touch.” David Genetti software technology that allows injoined the previous startup and he dividual investment professionals
facilitated each of the others com- to establish a personal career pering on board at different times. The formance record,” said Blane.
“Typically individual investfour friends collectively representment professionals don’t have a lot
ed the management of that firm.
“I was the last one to join,” said of performance visibility. They
Blane. “The four of us ultimately work on investment products at inhave very complementary skill sets vestment firms and typically the
that are a prerequisite for building a portfolio manager or an individual
in a leadership role is the public
technology company.
“We have the development and face of performance on those insoftware and programming capa- vestment products.
“So this is a tool set that allows
bilities, we have the business
analysis capacity, we have sales individuals to break free from that
mold to some
and marketing,
degree
and
engineering
achieve
a
and delivery
‘The ability to do or
portable record
capabilities.
die by our decisions
that
follows
“So we all
them
throughkind of overlap
is compelling to us,
out their cabut we have our
which is why we work
reer.”
own specialso well together.’
The compaties. It makes
ny now has a
for a really
beta
product
powerful team.
But because we are such good and is inviting a select group of
friends it works very well in being users on as they begin to roll out a
a nice environment to work suc- platform. “We are just at the starting line in terms of introducing the
cessfully with your friends.
Following the sale of the startup, product to the marketplace,” said
Restricted Stock Systems, to Aus- Blane. “We would anticipate probtralia-based financial services firm ably within the next quarter to have
a stable, market-ready product that
is available for public consumption.”
In addition to serving individual
users, the company is exploring the
potential to deliver a type of enterprise-class software solution to investment management firms that
would allow them to track their individual employees and their performance.
“Those would be paying data relationships,” said Blane. “We’re in
discussions with a couple of major
firms now.”
Two of the five team members
focus exclusively on the technical
aspects of product development,
the software coding and deployment.
The other three divide responsibilities of sales, marketing, marketing intelligence and client meetings. One of the three bridges the
gap between the sales and marketing side and the tech side by his
work in quality assurance review
and application testing.
The team’s last startup was also
a software business and also aimed
at the financial services industry. It
Software, Hard Work: Left to right, Nik Vedejs,
David Genetti, Andrew Blane, Rob Pastor, and
Amos Warren of Tulane Street-based VPR International. Most attended Princeton University together before starting a new software company.
sold an operational software application to automate a particular type
of stock transaction to financial
services firms.
T
he idea for VPR International was generated by Amos Warren’s father, Robert Warren. In
1969 Robert Warren founded an
executive search firm that focused
on team liftouts.
“When he first started doing
these things called liftouts it was a
new concept of moving entire
groups of investment professionals
as a team from one asset management firm to another, bringing with
them an intact performance track
record and assets to follow,” said
Blane. “It ultimately became a very
lucrative way for an asset management firm to grow and to expand
their own business. Alternatively,
they would either have to develop
these new managers internally.
That takes quite a bit of time.
And also money, as far as getting
outside investment. Or they would
have to acquire an entire firm,
which takes a tremendous amount
of money. So the liftouts became a
very powerful way for investment
management firms to grow effectively and Robert became kind of a
legend in the industry as a result.”
The team knew Robert Warren
through their friendship with his
son Amos at Princeton.
“When we were talking to him
about keeping our team together
and what would be the next step for
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JULY 7, 2010
Qforma Moves Up, but Not Too Far
Qforma, a pharma analytics company based in Santa Fe,
New Mexico, has moved its
Princeton office from 20 to 40
Nassau Street to help accommodate a recent expansion.
The company, Qforma has
nearly doubled its overall staff in
the last 18 months, from 22 to
40, including a 23-percent increase in staff in Princeton.
Qforma develops analytical
software tools designed to help
doctors and pharma clients organize data from disparate
sources and identify patterns.
The company attributes much of
its recent success — which
comes counter to the current
wave of instability gnawing at
the pharmaceutical industry in
the state — to its ability to predict trends based on patterns in
the data.
The company also advises
companies on business practices, management, and staffing.
The company was founded a
decade ago in Santa Fe, its technology based on datamining
tools developed at the Los Alamos National Laboratory and expanded to Princeton about four
years ago to be near the pharma
us, that was when the genesis of the
idea really occurred. When he
started talking about a way to gather a very unique dataset and to empower individual Investment professionals with a tool to track and
manage their own professional development.”
Blane didn’t expect to find a career in Princeton when he came to
the university. He moved back to
the area to join the first startup,
which was located in Research
Park, across from the Princeton
Airport.
The decision to locate the new
startup in Princeton was based
partly on a desire to leverage the
university atmosphere. The company hopes to eventually establish
mutually beneficial relationships
with university departments. “But
really, we all just have a special
place in our hearts for Princeton,”
said Blane.
“We enjoy being here and we
like the atmosphere. We got somewhat lucky in finding space that fit
our budget but also is newly renovated.”
The company’s current focus is
on the U.S., especially the major
money centers of New York,
Philadelphia and Boston, but they
would like to eventually serve
clients throughout the world.
Blane grew up in Amherst,
Massachusetts, the son of parents
who were both on the staff of the
University of Massachusetts. He
graduated from Princeton in 1997
with a degree in molecular biology
and intended to go to medical
school, but changed course abruptly.
“I started out somewhat leveraging my degree in that I was involved in the business side of laboratory equipment sales and doing a
specialized type of lab equipment,” said Blane. “I came in at an
entry level position and worked my
way up. Eventually I was running
global sales management for that
company.”
He left that company to join the
start-up venture with his classmates. “There I stepped back from
the sales management role and put
the direct sales hat on. I focused on
that and wound up building that
company’s business successfully,
to the point where we wound up in
acquisition and a successful exit.
“My role was the accidental
salesman. I just wound up getting
hub of central New Jersey. The
company recently inked an
agreement with newspaper USA
Today to offer consumers nationwide a free online database
for locating the most influential
doctors in major metropolitan
areas in the U.S.
Qforma’s Princeton office is
overseen by Alan Reicheg, who
has served as the company’s senior vice president of business development since it got here in
2006. Reicheg earned his bachelor’s in economics from Rutgers
before beginning his career in
pharmaceuticals. He started in
1989 as a medical sales representative at Carter Wallace and
then became manager of sales
training and development there.
Reicheg then worked in marketing and managed care with
MedPointe Pharmaceuticals and
Savient Pharmaceuticals before
joining Commodicast, later renamed Qforma.
– Scott Morgan
Qforma, 40 Nassau Street,
Princeton 08540; 609-9217979; fax, 609-924-7491.
Alan G. Reicheg, vp, business development. www.qforma.com.
the most training and exposure to
that in my first seven years out of
school. For my next challenge in
the previous start-up, I really focused on building those senior levContinued on following page
U.S. 1
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34
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
Continued from preceding page
WOODSIDE AT THE OFFICE CENTER
Plainsboro, New Jersey
el relationships with the largest financial institutions in the world
and also Fortune 100 companies.
“I enjoy that very much and
transitioned that to my role here,
where I wear the primary sales hat
and drive the relationship building
and presentations and so forth,” he
says.
Blane was attracted to a career
in start-up companies due to the
ability to guide his own destiny.
“It’s the ability to do or die by the
decisions you and your partners are
making,” he said. “That’s something that’s compelling to me, to all
of us really, which is why we work
so well together.
“There is a lot more anxiety,
stress and nerve-racking moments
in the start-up entrepreneurial environment, but the tradeoff is you
only have yourself to blame for
your failures or to thank for your
successes. It makes it much more
exhilarating and rewarding from a
business perspective.”
— J. Lee Jacobson
VPR International, 14 Tulane
Street, Princeton 08542; 609498-7772; fax, 609-4987770. Nikolas Vedels, partner. www.vprintl.com.
Commercial
Real Estate Update
Available for Immediate Occupancy.
Suites from 750 to 2,000 Sq. Ft.
Also, Medical Office with 2 Exam Rooms.
Modern, One-Story Office Buildings
•
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Park-Like Setting
Levin
Management,
893
Route 22 West, North Plainfield 07060; 908-755-2401;
fax, 908-756-6757. David
Selber, marketing director.
Levin Management, a North
Plainfield-based retail property
management and leasing company,
plans major renovations to Hamilton Plaza Shopping Center at
Route 33 and White Horse-Hamilton Square Road in Mercerville.
The main project is the expansion of the plaza’s ShopRite site.
ShopRite has over the past decade
revamped its image by converting
many of its older locations in the
state into “World Class ShopRite”
stores. The updated stores sell a
wider diversity of products and an
expanded gourmet and international line.
Levin plans to remove the front
section of the supermarket and expand the back in order to reconfigure about 86,000 square feet of retail space. Parking is also to be expanded and the roof is to be replaced.
The store is expected to remain
open during the expansion.
Hamilton Plaza also is home to
A.C. Moore Arts & Crafts and Vito’s Pizza. Levin says its plans to
reconfigure ShopRite could generate an additional 28,000 square
feet of space for retail.
New In Town
Samuha Inc., 1100 Cornwall
Road, Suite 108, Monmouth
Junction 08852; 732-7770300; fax, 732-962-1543.
Gauthaman Thangaraju, vice
president.
Samuha, an IT services
provider, has moved from Edison
to Cornwall Road in Monmouth
Junction.
Harmonic Inc., 101 Morgan
Lane, Suite 208, Plainsboro
08536-3345; 609-799-1313.
A little more than a year after
Scopus Video networks, an Israelbased company that developed and
marketed video networking technology, was bought by Harmonic
for $50 million, Harmonic has
opened an office at Morgan Lane.
Scopus had operated at 3 Independence Way before the acquisition by the California-based Har-
Real President: Bret
Violette, former president of RealEstate.com, has been
named the new president of Weidel Realtors in Pennington.
monic. Harmonic’s offers broadcast and on-demand services including high definition, video-ondemand, network personal video
recording, and time-shifted TV.
Sublyme
Payments,
34
Chambers Street, Suite 207,
Princeton 08542; 603-5467900; fax, 603-821-0255.
Jonathan Stowe, managing
partner. www.sublymepayments.com.
Jonathan Stowe has set up a regional satellite office for Sublyme
Payments, a New Hampshire
based processor of credit card payments for retailers and restaurants.
Sky High Energy, 45 Everett
Drive, Suite 40, West Windsor 08550; 609-269-5037;
fax,
609-269-5483.
www.skyhighenergy.com.
The Arizona-based solar panel
installation firm Sky High Energy
has opened an office on Everett
Drive. The business serves residential and commercial clients.
Management Moves
Weidel Realtors, 238 West
Delaware Avenue, Pennington 08534-3607; 609-7371522; fax, 609-737-3807.
Richard A. Weidel Jr., CEO.
www.weidel.com.
The former president of
RealEstate.com has been named
president and COO of Weidel Realtors in Pennington
Bret Violette assumes the responsibilities from Richard Weidel, the 95-year-old company’s
CEO, who also was its president.
Violette, who earned his bachelor’s in finance and his MBA from
Bentley College in Massachusetts,
is a longtime veteran of businesses
involving real estate — mortgage,
insurance, builder services, title,
relocation, and home services. He
began his career as the CFO and
vice president of business development of YHD-Foxtons.
He first joined RealEstate.com
as a senior vice president and was
made president in 2007.
Before that he served as president of Weichert Lead Network
and Weichert Rental Network.
Venture Financing
Edison Venture Fund, 1009
Lenox Drive, Building 4, Suite
200, Lawrenceville 08648;
609-896-1900; fax, 609-8960066. John H. Martinson,
managing
partner.
www.edisonventure.com.
Edison Venture Fund, which
provides equity financing and
guidance to growing proprietary
technology companies, recently
JULY 7, 2010
completed two financing deals
worth more than $3.7 million.
On June 29 the company announced the completion of a $1.2
million investment for In Person
Payments, a cash-preferred consumer services agency based in
Fairfield. This is the latest investment in IPP by Edison, which cumulatively has invested $11 million to bolster IPP’s marketing,
sales, products and working capital.
IPP helps convenience stores,
national grocery chains, wireless
retailers, and financial services
centers manage accounts and
transactions for cash-paying customers.
It collects payments on behalf of
utilities,
telecommunications
providers, government agencies,
and other service providers.
On June 22, Edison invested
$2.5 million in the Philadelphiabased Neat Company, which develops user-friendly scanning software and hardware solutions for
small and medium-sized businesses.
The investment, the latest in a
series of investments by Edison in
Neat totaling $15.5 million, will
expand sales, marketing, and product development.
According to Edison, Neat is developing software that scans,
reads, and organizes paper receipts, business cards, and other
documents into easy-to-read digital spreadsheet format.
Stock News
Soligenix (SNGX), 29 Emmons Drive, Suite C-10,
Princeton 08540; 609-5388200; fax, 609-452-6467.
Christopher J. Schaber, president and CEO. www.soligenix.com.
Soligenix, which develops
products to treat life-threatening
side effects of cancer treatments
and serious gastrointestinal diseases, will offer roughly 25 million
shares of its common stock in an
effort to raise $5.16 million. treatment of acute GI GVHD, an important unmet medical need.”
The Company’s common stock
will be sold to accredited investors
in a private placement.
Crosstown Moves
International Business Research (IBR), 902 Carnegie
Center, Suite 450, Princeton
08540; 609-683-1100; fax,
609-683-8917. Michael D. Allison,
CEO.
www.ibrusa.com.
IBR, which conducts “due diligence” research for IPOs, mergers
and acquisitions, insurers, and employers, has moved from 92 Nassau Street to Carnegie Center.
Sibson Consulting, 1009
Lenox Drive, Suite 115,
Lawrenceville 08648-2321;
609-482-2373; fax, 609-8950950. Richard DeFrehn, senior vice president. www.sibson.com.
Sibson, which consuls compa-
nies on organizational effectiveness, human resource, and compensation, has moved from 600
Alexander Park to a smaller office
on Lenox Drive.
Banc3 Inc. Consulting Engineers, 300 Alexander Park,
Suites 250 and 350, Princeton 08540; 609-759-1900;
fax, 609-448-5590. Babu
Cherukuri PE, president.
Home
page:
www.banc3.com.
Civil Engineering firm Banc3
has moved its offices from Princeton-Hightstown Road in Cranbury
to Alexander Park.
The company provides civile
and environmental engiineering
services, as well as land surveying
and Construction management.
Leaving Town
First American Financial Ltd
(FAF), 947 State Road,
Princeton.
www.firstam.com.
First American Financial, a
property and casualty insurance
agency, has left its office on State
Road and consolidated in the company’s Marlton headquarters. The
firm can be reached at 856-9889113.
Charles Street Partners LLC,
32 Nassau Street, Princeton.
Chris
Skudder,
CEO.
www.charlesstreetpartners.com.
Private equity firm Charles
Street Partners has left its office on
Chambers Street and no longer operates in the area. The firm, which
did not specify its new location,
can be reached by E-mail at info@charlesstreetpartners.com.
Ansa Consultants Inc., 522
Executive Drive, Princeton
08540.
Ansa Consulting, which provides clinical, staffing, nursing,
and consulting services, specialized clinical program, appears to
have left its office on Executive
Drive. The office is empty and the
company’s phone number is out of
service. There is no forwarding information.
Deaths
John Barry, 89, on July 4. He
was a longtime attorney in Mercer
County who once served as county
prosecutor. He operated his own
law firm in Ewing until his death.
Memorial services will be on
Thursday, July 8, from 9 to 10:30
a.m. at the M. William Murphy Funeral Home, 935 Parkway Avenue,
Ewing.
Edward Flagg, 66, on July 1.
He was employed with Prudential
Fox & Roach Realtors in
Lawrenceville.
Alice Satterfield, 88, on June
23. She was a longtime worker at
the Institute for Advanced Study
and was commissioner for the
Princeton Borough Housing Authority for 26 years.
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
Survival Guide
Continued from page 8
Crawford eventually moved on
to be an independent consultant for
12 years. He is now the managing
partner of Enspirix, a management
consultant firm. He lives in Essex
Fells with his wife, M.J. Jolda,
who is the head of marketing for
Marcal Manufacturing in Elmwood Park.
“We help companies more effectively get their people to use
technology so they can work in
dispersed ways,” he says of Enspirix. “Now, I’m working with
ITT on a client basis.”
Getting down to busine$$.
During the camp, teens learn skills
that can be applied to all areas of
life, both in school and in the business world. “It’s this youth movement, and they need to get on
board with what’s happening as
early as possible so they can learn,
and so we can instill the foundation and the basics,” Crawford
says. “They learn about all the key
aspects of business during the
week.”
Camp topics include communications, in which teens learn how
Continued on following page
U.S. 1
35
36
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
Continued from preceding page
REAL ESTATE
INVESTMENTS & OPPORTUNITIES
Development Opportunity
Lawrenceville Route 1Northbound
Approved 12,000 SF mixed use retail center
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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
to speak and write in professional
environments, how to make a positive first impression and appropriate business etiquette; networking,
in which teens learn how to build
relationships; finance, in which
teens learn about saving, budgeting, investment, and cash management tools; marketing, in which
teens learn how to design a market
strategy and use library and Internet resources to find business information; entrepreneurship, in
which teens learn to build a team
business plan; and leadership,
learning how to be a team player in
a global business environment.
The business of team dynamics. Crawford participates in the
teamwork and leadership segment
and stresses the importance of interacting with others. The topic, he
says, covers how to deal with conflict in a simplified way, how to
work and make decisions in a team
environment, how to influence or
motivate a team, and how to create
a team identity.
“In today’s world, working in
teams and collaborations is the
way things happen,” he says.
“With this, it’s hands-on learning,
so it’s fun. The things that we teach
them get to be applied right away.
Each exercise illustrates the lesson.”
Working with others, particularly in a global business community,
is an increasingly important skill,
especially as teens spend more
time using technology to communicate instead of having face-toface contact. “To some extent,”
Crawford says, “technology makes
business impersonal and reduces
face-to-face relationships. We try
to show them how to apply technology so they’re not overusing
technology.”
“Their future is going to be all
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Talk of the Tube: Ed
Andriessen says
businesses would be
wise to get themselves on YouTube.
about interacting,” he adds, “and
it’s not going to be people sitting
across the table. It’s going to be
people across the world.”
— Kristin Boyd
Wednesday, July 21
Are You On YouTube?
You Really Should Be
I
f you think YouTube is just for
kids, you’re making a big mistake.
It wasn’t just the under-30 set that
boosted the video-hosting site to a
new milestone of 2 billion hits a
Today’s technology
allows us all to be
videomakers. So give
your business the
Hollywood treatment.
day in mid-May.
“What’s interesting is that some
days YouTube gets more traffic
than Google,” says Ed Andriessen
of Business Training Resource in
Hamilton. “It’s the 800-pound gorilla in the search engine world.”
But fear not for Google. It owns
YouTube.
Much of YouTube’s usage is due
to its entertainment value: clips
from television shows, songs from
concerts, even kids’ dance recitals.
But people are discovering that
YouTube is also useful for research, especially if you want to
learn how to do something — how
to make a blog post on WordPress,
how to fire someone. Or even how
to make a YouTube video.
Of course, videos are also useful
tools for marketing your business
and educating your customers on
how to use a product or service too.
With the help of YouTube and
some free or inexpensive tools,
you can create videos, and post
them for the world to see. Then you
can either send your customers a
link or use a bit of computer code
that YouTube provides that will allow people to view the video on
your website.
And all of this is free to you, because YouTube makes its money
from ads placed to the right of your
video; these advertise products and
services that may interest the same
population that has selected to
view your video. When someone
clicks on one of the ads, the advertiser pays Google a fee.
Andriessen will speak on how to
use YouTube to market a business
at the Mercer Regional Chamber of
Commerce on Thursday, July 14, at
8:30 a.m. at the Trenton Marriott.
JULY 7, 2010
Cost: $35. Visit mercerchamber.org or call 609-689-9960.
Create your own video channel. A channel is your personal
page on YouTube, where you can
post videos related to your business. These comprise not only the
videos you have created, but others
on YouTube that you think are related to your business or service
and whose creators have allowed
them to be shared.
Decide on your desired outcome. Your goals for a video may
be as varied as making sales, building a brand, or educating customers on how to do business with
you.
Figure out your strategy. Your
strategy may involve more than
just creating a video. It may include E-mail blitzes, making use of
informational videos that already
exist, or combining videos with a
blog, and other related activities.
Suppose, for example, you own
a sporting goods store and have a
backlog of Shimano fishing reels
that you want to get rid of. How
could you best use YouTube to further your aim?
First, you might want to search
for videos that review the reels you
want to sell (to get an idea of what
kinds of videos are available, go to
YouTube and search for “Shimano
reels”). Then you might create a
short video about how a customer
can order reels from you.
After posting all of these videos
on your YouTube channel (which
is comparable to a Facebook page),
you can send E-mails to your customers and to those likely to be interested in rods and reels, such as
subscribers to “Field and Stream”
magazine. Your E-mail should invite them to your YouTube channel
to see some videos about the reels
and also let them know that the
rods will be on sale until the end of
the month.
Make it quick. Create one or
more very brief videos of no more
than two or three minutes.
First create a script or storyboard about what you want to say
in the video. “Winging it doesn’t
work that well,” says Andriessen.
If a video is not scripted and practiced, the inevitable result is numerous takes.
You will also need to purchase
an inexpensive webcam or a Flip
video cam to shoot your video.
Many cameras even have software
to automatically upload videos to
YouTube. To show how easy it is,
Andriessen is going to interview
someone during his talk and upload the video to YouTube. “The
barriers to having your own videos
on the Internet have disappeared,”
he says.
Next, edit the video. “You can
put up the video raw, but I usually
like to have a little bit of editing,”
says Andriessen. He often uses
Windows Movie Maker to add
opening and closing slides. The
open slide, which would show for
five to six seconds, introduces the
topic of the video and his company’s name. He will then talk for
two to three minutes and end with a
slide that includes his telephone
number and the URL for his web-
U.S. 1
Overcoming the Pain of Unemployment
B
eing out of work is stressful, but there are ways to manage
the anxiety.
Tom Brophy, former owner
of Brophy’s Shoes in Princeton
and 18-year veteran of New Jersey’s Department of Labor, will
offer insights into managing the
depression and anxiety that ends
up hindering job searches on
Tuesday, July 13, at noon at the
First Presbyterian Church of Titusville. . The free event is part
of the church’s “Mercer Business and Professionals BrownBag Luncheon. Visit www.titusvillechurch.org or call 609737-1385.
Brophy is the author of “Little
Victories: Conquering Unemployment” (available at Amazon
for $19.99). In it he writes about
the secret life of the unemployed
— how much of our identities
are tied to our jobs and the sense
of loss and dismay that comes
from unemployment.
“Unemployment is a world
unto itself where we are thrust
into a new ‘neighborhood’ and
are expected to know exactly
what to do,” he writes. “We’re
site, which he will leave on for 8 to
10 seconds.
Movie Maker also lets videomakers split and trim film clips,
add clips, and put in transitions.
Don’t know how to use Movie
Maker? That’s fine. All you have to
do is bring up instructional videos
on YouTube.
Finally, upload the video. Just
Click on YouTube’s “upload my
video” button to begin the process.
Andriessen estimates that a twominute video will take about 10
minutes to upload. YouTube will
convert your video to a format that
can be viewed on YouTube.
Be content with your content.
When companies express worry
about where they will get enough
content for a video channel, Andriessen suggests that people use
content that is out there on the Web.
Relevant YouTube videos and
written pieces from article directories like ezinearticles.com (which
allows people to use the content as
long as they include a link to the
person who wrote the article) work
well.
And in doing all of this, don’t
neglect your blog, which should be
crafted in conjunction with your
YouTube site. For his blog, Andriessen will add a short teaser to
introduce the content.
Andriessen grew up in the
Bronx and moved to Monmouth
County when he was 10. Although
he did start college, studying psychology, he never finished and instead moved into the real estate
business. He spent several years in
residential real estate with such
companies as U.S. Homes, Weiner
Homes, and ERA Resale Professionals, where he helped his father
build his own real estate business.
Continued on following page
OFFICE FOR LEASE
Kingston, NJ - Route 27
numb, and we spend the next
three months going through the
motions — not grasping what really happens.”
What happens, he writes, is
pain and disbelief, emotions that
can cripple our initiative to find
new work. Too often, we simply
rehash and relive what was, losing precious time finding what’s
next.
Brophy says he was devastated when his family shoe store
closed. He then joined the state
Department of Labor’s unemployment division, where he
spent 15 years managing an unemployment office and an overall 18 years counseling more
than 40,000 professionals who
were in the same situation he had
been.
“I never forgot the gut
wrenching experience of being
unemployed,” Brophy says. “I
created a program called Transition Layoff Counseling, in
which I spent 90 minutes doing
one-on-one interviews with
clients and giving feedback.
Ninety-two percent were back to
work in five months.”
600 SF Corner Unit
Immediately Available
Kerzner Associates
4 Corporate Drive, Cranbury, NJ 08512
609-655-3100 • 609-655-4801 Fax
Cranbury Gates Office Park
109 South Main Street • Cranbury, NJ
Campus Park Location • Tenant Controlled Utilities
Private Entrance • Private Restrooms
Ideally Located on Rt. 130 between Exit 8 & 8A
of the NJ Turnpike • 1/2 Mile from Hightstown Bypass
Comcast Internet Installed in Space
Brokers Protected • www.kerznerassociates.com
PRlNCETON BOROUGH - OFFICE/MED/PROF
• Boo Building 135-850 SF — $185-$1,200/mo.
• Thompson Building $600-$700/mo. Individual Offices
PRlNCETON JUNCTION - OFFICE/MED/PROF
• Crawford Building 825-1872 SF — $1,250-$2,800/mo.
LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP - OFFICE/MED/PROF LEASE OR CONDO SALE
• 2500 Brunswick Pike 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
SKILLMAN - 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
• The Farnsworth House 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.
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
MONROE - RETAIL/OFFICE/PROF
• One Rossmoor Drive 1,700-2,100 SF — $2,500-$3,000/mo.
THOMPSON MANAGEMENT
609-921-7655
37
38
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
Continued from preceding page
...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.
His father had been one of the principal builders of the Rossmoor and
Clearbrook senior communities
who then opened a brokerage that
sold only to those communities.
Andriessen’s also was as regional sales manager for K. Hovanian
in Red Bank, from 1996 to 2005.
But when times got tight, Andriessen was let go, and he changed
direction. “I had developed some
really good skills in sales, marketing, technology, quality assurance,
and training,” he says.
So he went to work for a consulting firm, the Sharrow Group of
Rochester, New York. After a couple of years, he sat down with a
business mentor to explore
whether his skills from the homebuilding industry were transferable
to other industries.
Andriessen was able to pursue
his technology training and consulting business out of that office.
His focus is on helping people and
companies to use Internet marketing tools such as blogs, E-mail
managers, video, video E-mail,
and web conferencing. “I realized
that small to medium-sized business need help in closing the gap
between ‘I want to do this’ and “I
don’t know how,’” he says.
— Michele Alperin
Corporate Angels
iXP Corp., a Cranbury-based
provider of public safety and security solutions, has set up the iXP
Endowed Football Scholarship, to
be awarded annually to full-time
student-athletes in the Rutgers
University football program. The
scholarship will help those interested in criminal justice or business. iXP has pledged a total of
$100,000
Business Meetings
Wednesday, July 7
11:15 a.m.: Mercer Chamber, Golf
and Tennis Classic, $125. Mercer
Oaks. 609-689-9960.
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
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
Got a Meeting?
Notify U.S. 1's Survival
Guide of your upcoming
business meeting ASAP. Announcements received after
1 p.m. on Friday may not be
included in the paper published
the
following
Wednesday.
Submit releases by mail
(U.S. 1, 12 Roszel Road,
Princeton 08540), fax (609452-0033), or E-mail (meetings@princetoninfo.com).
All events are subject to
last minute changes or cancellations. Call to confirm.
Thursday, July 8
8 a.m.: SkillPath Seminars, “Conference on Leadership and Teambuilding,” $179. Holiday Inn. 800873-7545.
9 a.m.: NJ SBDC, “Meet the
Lenders,” free. New Brunswick
Municipal Building. 609-7712947.
11:30 a.m.: Princeton Chamber,
Monthly Luncheon Meeting, featuring Lieutenant Governor Kim
Guadagno, $50. Princeton Marriott. 609-924-1776.
4 p.m.: NJ Entrepreneurs Forum,
Monthly seminar, $35. Commercialization Center, New
Brunswick. 908-789-3424.
5 p.m.: Community Justice Center,
“Barbecue and Beer Benefit,”
$30. Tir Na Nog, Hamilton Avenue, Trenton. 609-218-5120.
5:45 p.m.: SCORE , “Small Business Workshop Series,” five-part
series on developing a business
idea into a business plan. $128,
or $40 per course. Part I is free.
Princeton Library, info@scoreprinceton.org. 609-393-0505.
JULY 7, 2010
U.S. 1 Classifieds
HOW TO ORDER
Phone, Fax, E-Mail: That’s all it takes
to order a U.S. 1 Classified. Call 609452-7000, or fax your ad to 609-4520033, or use our E-Mail address:
class@princetoninfo.com. We will
confirm your insertion and the price. It
won’t be much: Our classifieds are just
50 cents a word, with a $7 minimum. Repeats in succeeding issues are just 40
cents per word, and if your ad runs for 16
consecutive issues, it’s only 30 cents
per word. (There is a $3 service charge if
we send out a bill.) Box service is available. Questions? Call us.
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
e-mail: 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.princeton-office.com
East Windsor, Route 130: Two adjacent first floor offices in professional
building: 185 SF @ $340, 240 SF @
$400. Call 609-730-0575.
Lawrence Township: office suites
available 903 sq. ft., 1,135 sq. ft. 1,780
sq. ft., & 2,683 sq. ft with private bath, 1st
floor for doctor’s office/office. $10/SF +
CAM. Punia Co. LLC Broker 609-7719000.
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
Friday, July 9
8:30 a.m.: Business Development
Academy, “Negotiating Transactions,” David Wanetick, $595.
4390 Route 1, info@bdacademy.com. 609-919-1895.
9 a.m.: NJ SBDC, “Get Your Website Built in Two Days,” $89. TCNJ. 609-771-2947.
10:30 a.m.: Professional Services
Group, weekly career meeting,
support, and networking for unemployed professionals, free.
Mercer County One-Stop Career
Center, Yard Avenue, Trenton, nktreichel@comcast.net. 609-2927535.
Monday, July 12
9 a.m.: FDU Rothman Institute,
“Discover Busine$$ Teen Camp,”
one week camp on leadership,
management, money, and communications skills,” $490. Madison campus. 973-443-8842.
7:30 p.m.: Princeton PC Users
Group, Free. Lawrence Public Library, ppcug.nj@gmail.com. 609423-6537.
OFFICE RENTALS
OFFICE RENTALS
AREA OFFICE RENTALS
Princeton,
Trenton,
Hamilton, Hopewell,
Montgomery,
For All Your
Commercial
Real Estate
Needs
Ewing,in
Hightstown,
Lawrenceville
and
other
Mercer,
Mercer and Surrounding Area.
Somerset & Middlesex Communities. Class A, B and
Sale orAvailable.
Lease • Office • Warehouse
C Space
Retail and Business Opportunities
For
For details
ondetails
space on space
and
rates,
and rates, contact contact:
U.S. 1
39
Phyllis Over 17 years experience
(Grodnicki)
ER
Hemler
UND CT!
D!
SOL
TRA
CON
Bus:
609-924-1600
Cell:
609-203-0110
An independently owned
and operated member
www.princetonmercerhomes.com of The Prudential Real
Estate Affiliates, Inc.
253 Nassau Street • Princeton
Weidel Commercial 609-737-2077
www.WeidelCommercial.com
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
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 Hospital, 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 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.
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE - LIQUOR LICENSES
South Brunswick Twp. - Class “C”
$325,000. * Florence Twp. - Class “C”
$365,000. Ridolfi Realtors 609-5814848.
CLASSIFIED BY EMAIL
class@princetoninfo.com
8 a.m.: Mercer Chamber, Bordentown chapter, “Cholesterol and
Cardiac Risk,” Dr. Kristopher
Young, $35 Healthcare Specialists, 625 Farnsworth Avenue.
609-689-9960.
4:30 p.m.: Princeton Chamber,
“Mid-Summer Marketing Showcase,” free to attend. Palmer
Square. 609-924-1776.
6 p.m.: NJ SBDC, “Question & Answer Workshop for New Businesses,” $20. TCNJ. 609-7712947.
6 p.m.: NJ SBDC, “Financing Your
Business in Mercer County,” free.
1st Constitution Bank, 947 State
Road. 609-771-2947.
7:30 p.m.: JobSeekers, networking , free. Trinity Church, 33 Mercer Street. 609-924-2277.
Wednesday, July 14
7 a.m.: BNI West Windsor chapter,
weekly networking, free. Macaroni Grill. 609-462-3875.
9 a.m.: NJ SBDC, “SBE Contracts,” $39. TCNJ. 609-7712947.
Tuesday, July 13
Thursday, July 15
7 a.m.: BNI Ivy League, weekly
networking breakfast, free. 100
Overlook Center. 732-960-1730.
7:30 a.m.: Bartolomei Pucciarelli,
Business Getting Results,
Michael Pucciarelli. Free for first-
BUSINESSES FOR SALE
Looking to cut back, transition out,
or sell your business? Call 609-5167755.
COMMERCIAL SPACE
2550+ Sq Ft Professional Office—
Available immediately for sale/lease in
the Cranbrook II office complex located
at 2312 Whitehorse Mercerville Road in
Hamilton, NJ. Private kitchenette and
lavatory. Office can be divided or modified to suit your needs. Call James A.
McKenna, KELLER WILLIAMS REALTY at 609 987-8889 for more information.
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
✦ Experience
✦ Honesty
✦ Integrity
Sales & Rentals
STOCKTON REAL ESTATE
...A Princeton Tradition
32 Chambers Street • Princeton, NJ 08542
1-800-763-1416 • 609-924-1416
COMMERCIAL
DIVISION
PREMIER PROPERTY
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
Plainsboro: One bedroom condominium for sale. Large rooms, many
closets, end unit. Safe. 215-275-6043.
HOUSING FOR RENT
Townhouse for Rent. 2bdrm/2.5
bthrm available in Lawrence Square Village, near Quakerbridge Rd. Call 609647-5469.
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.
Continued on page 43
time attendees, but registration is
required. 2564 Brunswick Pike.
609-883-9000.
8 a.m.: NJ SBDC, “Mergers & Acquisitions,” Lorraine Allen, $20.
TCNJ. 609-771-2947.
9 a.m.: CareerTrack Seminars,
“Managing Multiple Priorities,
Projects, and Deadlines,” $149.
Holiday Inn. 800-780-8476.
11:30 a.m.: Edison Chamber,
“Luncheon Buffet Networking
Event,” $20. Plaza Diner, Route
27, president@edisonchamber.com. 732-738-9482.
11:30 a.m.: Mercer Chamber,
Monthly Power Luncheon, $60.
Baldassari Regency, Trenton, info@mercerchamber.org. 609689-9960.
Noon: Women Interested In Networking, monthly luncheon, $20.
Every third Thursday. Villa Manino Restaurant, Route 130, Hamilton. 609-890-4054.
Friday, July 16
10:30 a.m.: Professional Services
Group, weekly career meeting,
support, and networking for unemployed professionals, free.
Mercer County One-Stop Career
Center, Yard Avenue, Trenton, nktreichel@comcast.net. 609-2927535.
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 7, 2010
JULY 7, 2010
U.S. 1
41
42
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
U.S. 1 Employment Exchange
HOW TO ORDER
HELP WANTED
Phone, Fax, E-Mail: That’s all
it takes to order a U.S. 1 Classified. Call 609-452-7000, or fax
your ad to 609-452-0033, or use
our
E-Mail
address:
class@princetoninfo.com. We
will confirm your insertion and
the price. It won’t be much: Our
classifieds are just 50 cents a
word, with a $7 minimum. Repeats in succeeding issues are
just 40 cents per word, and if your
ad runs for 16 consecutive issues, it’s only 30 cents per word.
(There is a $3 service charge if
we send out a bill.) Box service is
available. Questions? Call us.
HELP WANTED
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.
High-End Specialty Boutique seeks full-time sales associate. Seeking candidate with
the following qualifications: Selfstarter, fashion savvy, computer
literate, service oriented, good
people skills, team player, flexible schedule, retail experience
preferred. Possibility for parttime internship. E-mail:
rachelsrags@aol.com
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.
Property Inspectors: Parttime $30k, full-time $80k. No ex-
HELP WANTED
Institutional Securities Sales Research oriented firm focused on
U.S. corporate, bankrupt / distressed
bonds. Also work on Russian
equities and other emerging mkts.
Experienced salesperson pref.
High income potential.
Fax resume to H. Rivkin & Co.,
Princeton, N.J. at (609) 730-3999.
HELP WANTED
JOBS WANTED
perience, will train. Call Tom,
609-731-3333.
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 reserve
the right to edit the ads and to
limit the number of times they
run. If you require confidentiality,
send a check for $4 with your ad
and request a U.S. 1 Response
Box. Replies will be forwarded to
you at no extra charge. Mail or
Fax your ad to U.S. 1 Jobs Wanted, 12 Roszel Road, Princeton,
NJ 08540. You must include your
name, address, and phone number (for our records only).
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.
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)
CLASSIFIED BY EMAIL
class@princetoninfo.com
Administrative
Assistant
with over 7 years experience
looking for full-time position.
Experienced with organizing
travel arrangements, conference
calls, meetings, incoming and
outgoing phone calls, FedEx,
mail, etc. Also, prepared monthly
HELP WANTED
SOCIAL WORKER
A culturally diverse apartment
housing community and
congregate program for senior
citizens seeks right person to
join dedicated staff. Must be
able to develop good rapport
with people of all ages,
languages and cultures. Must
have excellent communication
and interpersonal skills in
English with bi-lingual/bicultural capability preferred.
Work cooperatively with tenant
groups, management and other
personnel. Experience working
with seniors in a community
setting. Familiarity with
community and government
resources essential. Social Work
degree required. Please send
resume and cover letter to Kerri
Philhower by fax 609-921-1068
or e-mail kerri@princeton
communityhousing.org
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
WeTheHOpportunities
ave
are You
What
Endless...
Need
J&J Staffing Resources, has been a leader in
the employment industry since 1972.
We specialize in: Direct Hire, Temp to Hire
and Temporary Placements.
Administrative
Assistants
ADMINISTRATIVE
• LEGAL
SECRETARIES
Executive
Assistants
CUSTOMER SERVICE • ACCOUNTING
Receptionists/Customer
Service
CLERICAL • WAREHOUSE
JOBS WANTED
Warehouse/Light Industrial
timesheets, expense reports, invoices and retainers. Maintained
client records, contact lists, holiday mailings, filing system and
ordering of all office supplies. I
am currently working part-time
and would be available in 2
weeks. Box 236719
J&J STAFFING RESOURCES
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.
EOE “Staffing Success Begins Here” NO FEE
Available Now!
U.S. 1 Directory
2010-2011
103 Carnegie
Center,
Suite 107
103 Carnegie
Center
Princeton,
N.J.NJ
08540
Princeton,
609-452-2030
609-452-2030
WWW.JJSTAFF.COM
JOBS WANTED
JOBS WANTED
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
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.
Also
Available at
Barnes & No
ble!
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 at Barnes & Noble . . .
. . . or mail this coupon with $23.95 to:
U.S.1 Directory
12 Roszel Road • Princeton, NJ 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
Company Name
Address
Daytime Phone
THE NEW DEAL:
Buy this book at the
U.S. 1 office and get $18.95
towards your next classified
or display advertisement.
We will keep your
coupon on file and
credit it to your account.
JULY 7, 2010
U.S. 1 Classifieds
LAND FOR SALE
Continued from page 39
FOR SALE - LAND Hamilton Twp. 3.35 AC +/- Klockner Road. Zoned REO.
* Florence Twp. - 5.80 AC +/- US Route
130. Zoned Highway Comm. * Bordentown City - Approved 4 Townhouse Project. $329,000. Ridolfi Realtors 609581-4848.
CLEANING SERVICES
House & office cleaning. Princeton,
Hopewell, W. Windsor areas. References, free estimates. Barbara: 609394-5934 or 609-933-6701.
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.
Door Tech LLC: Doors, locks, door
hardware, electronic access and intercoms. Lic. #34LS00012200, J.A. Luther,
609-921-3221, e-mail doortechinc@yahoo.com
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.
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.
HOME ORGANIZATION
“Neat as a pin” professional home
organizer: It’s time to get organized. All
kinds of rooms: closets, kitchen cabinets, drawers garages, and so much
more... “I’m the lady who will declutter,
clean, and organize your home.” Reasonable rates. For free consultation, call
609-775-7728.
DECKS REFINISHED
Cleaning/Stripping and Staining of
All Exterior Woods: Craftsmanship
quality work. Fully insured and licensed
with references. Windsor WoodCare.
609-799-6093.
www.windsorwoodcare.com.
BUSINESS SERVICES
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.
Virtual Assistance @ Your Finger
Tips! Pampering the executive - helping
you manage your life off and on the road.
For more info: 800-745-1166 www.executivesonthego.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
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
MERCHANDISE MART
preparation, paralegal services. Your
place or mine. Fast response, free consultation, reasonable costs. Gerald
Hecker, 609-448-4284.
$250, now $180. Also comic books, variant covers, action figures. Send me your
wants. E-mail manhunsa@comcast.net, 848-459-4892.
SUMMER CAMPS
Computer P4 with XP: In good condition $120. Cell phone (609)213-8271.
HEALTH
Massage and Reflexology: The
benefits are beyond what we even fathom. Experience deep relaxation, heightened well-being, improved health. Holistic practitioner offering reflexology,
Swedish and shiatsu massage. Available for on-site massage at the work
place, etc. Gift certificates, flexible
hours. Call Marilyn 609-403-8403.
Massage Therapy: Upscale, classy
est. staff. Enjoy our hot pack service, an
oasis for your soul and spirit. Enjoy the
deep tissue and healing touch of our
friendly, certified massage therapists.
Call: 609-520-0050. (Princeton off
Route 1 Behind “Pep Boys Auto.”)
Oriental Massage Therapy: Deep
tissue, Swedish, Shiatsu, Reflexology
by experienced Therapists, Princeton
Junction off Route 1. Call 609-514-2732
for an appointment.
Reflexology massage by European
staff on Route 1 next to Princeton BMW
car dealership. 609-716-1070.
MENTAL HEALTH
Having problems with life issues?
Stress, anxiety, depression, relationships... Free consultation. Working in
person or by phone. Rafe Sharon, Psychoanalyst 609-683-7808.
INSTRUCTION
“A Mentor” Helping you be the best
person you can be. Mr. C. Free consultation. Cell 609-658-7588, 732-716-0904.
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.
ENTERTAINMENT
Live drawings (caricatures, funny
profiles): Attraction for birthdays and
parties. Art classes available also.
Princeton area. Richard Druch - artist:
609-532-3676,
druchstudio@comcast.net.
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
43
Richard K. Rein
TAX SERVICES
Summer Music Camp - Give your
child the music advantage! Recorder
playing, American Idol vocal fun, hand
percussion, Sax, guitar, or violin basics
and more. Half day 1-4pm, Mon-Fri,
June, July and Aug. Ages 6-10 and 1115. Farrington’s Music Princeton 609924-8282 West Windsor 609-897-0032
Hightstown 609-448-7170 Burlington
609-387-9631 Call today! www.farringtonsmusic.com
U.S. 1
MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS
Our editor has been spotted loitering at
Labyrinth Books, malingering at the farmers’
market in the plaza between the Princeton
Public Library and the Witherspoon Grill,
and lounging at Princeton High’s Performing
Arts Center. ‘Just taking in some live music,’
he claims. Well we claim we need a column in
this space soon, and we aren’t whistling Dixie.
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.
Cell: 609-915-0206
Office: 609-924-1600
robertaparker@aol.com
253 Nassau Street
Princeton, NJ 08540
RobertaSellsPrinceton.com
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. $1,575,000
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
Tired of running your business? Do
you love your company but desire more
free time? Do you wish to retire while
preserving your legacy? Perhaps you’re
tired of the day-to-day operations and
need a vacation? We are professionals
who work one-on-one with business
owners looking to cut back, transition
out, or sell. We are not business brokers. If you are interested in starting a
discussion, give us a call. Huntington
Management LLC - Princeton Office
609-516-7755.
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. We will assign a box number
and forward all replies to you ASAP.
People responding to your ad will be
charged just $1. See the Singles Exchange at the end of the Preview Section.
RobertaSellsPrinceton.com
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
HOW TO ORDER
Phone, Fax, E-Mail: That’s all it takes
to order a U.S. 1 Classified. Call 609452-7000, or fax your ad to 609-4520033, or use our E-Mail address:
class@princetoninfo.com. We will
confirm your insertion and the price. It
won’t be much: Our classifieds are just
50 cents a word, with a $7 minimum. Repeats in succeeding issues are just 40
cents per word, and if your ad runs for 16
consecutive issues, it’s only 30 cents
per word. (There is a $3 service charge if
we send out a bill.) Box service is available. Questions? Call us.
Pennington Borough: Rare opportunity to buy 2 separately deeded
adjacent properties with Town Center zoning. Currently used as residential,
but zoned for combined office/business/residential use. Possibility for multigenerational living or business and apartment income from one unit and
residence in the other unit. 34 S.Main has LR, DR, Kitchen, half bath on first
floor and 3 BR and Bath upstairs. 36 S. Main has two 1 BR apartments, one
upstairs and one downstairs; each consisting of LR, BR, Kitchen and bath.
Owner is licensed Realtor.
New Price: $450,000
44
U.S. 1
JULY 7, 2010
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