Town Topics Newspaper September 28, 2016

Page 1

Volume LXX, Number 39

www.towntopics.com

Council Votes to Introduce Ordinance to Establish Civil Rights Commission

Campus Plans Reflects Future Direction of Princeton University . . . 7 Longtime Princeton Resident the Honorable Samuel David Lenox Jr ., 91, Who Served as a Judge for Almost 40 Years, Dies . . . . . . . . 37 PU Men’s Soccer Tops FDU With Fourth Straight Win . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 PHS Field Hockey Wins Over Notre Dame . . . . 31

Herman Melville Died in New York City 125 Years Ago Today . . . . . . . . . 14 Art . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Books . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Calendar . . . . . . . . . . 25 Cinema . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Classified Ads. . . . . . . 39 Clubs . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Mailbox . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Music/Theater . . . . . . 24 Obituaries . . . . . . . . . 37 Police Blotter . . . . . . . . 7 Real Estate . . . . . . . . 39 Religion . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Topics of the Town . . . . 5 Town Talk . . . . . . . . . . . 6

Private Schools on Page 8

At a meeting on Monday, September 26, Princeton Council voted to introduce an ordinance to re-establish a Civil Rights Commission, which previously existed in Princeton but was discontinued 18 years ago. Chaired by Leticia Fraga, a subcommittee of the town’s Human Services department has been working on the proposal for more than two years. Some members of that committee expressed reservations about certain elements of the ordinance, specifically in the procedures section. Those complaining about unfair or discriminatory treatment should be able to go directly to the Civil Rights Commission rather than having to first contact the executive director of the Human Services department, they said. “This is absolutely what we did not recommend,” said member Elizabeth Bates. “Most importantly, it is not a system that will make people comfortable.” Committee member John Heilner commented, “Multiple options for intake should be given because some residents and visitors are uncomfortable going to a direct government office, to an employee paid by the municipality. People have long memories. They remember the good situation in 1968 to 1998, when the Commission was truly independent. They recall some problems when the process was under Human Services before. Not many, but the ones that resulted in a police officer not trusting the process at all and going directly to court, and another when the process was started but the complainant pulled out when the process was tampered with. Both resulted in large settlements paid by the former Borough.” The ordinance was tabled by Council in April due to concerns expressed by members of the committee. “We believed it didn’t go far enough,” Ms. Fraga said on Monday. “We strongly believe that a Civil Rights Commission should be more than a symbolic gesture.” Ms. Fraga thanked Council for progress that has been made since April, but the ordinance is still lacking. The Commission would best serve its function if changes are made to the policies and procedures being proposed, she said. She was particularly touched by a comment from Councilman Lance Liverman. “He said that unless someone has been treated Continued on Page 18

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Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Municipality Moves Ahead on Solar Energy The town of Princeton has embarked on two groundbreaking solar energy projects — one with the Stony Brook Regional Sewerage Authority on River Road and the other with the Princeton Public Library — that could potentially bring financial rewards, save on energy bills for the participating partners, and promote sustainability by investing in renewable energy. “It’s a clear win-win for all parties,” said Council member Bernie Miller. “These are landmark projects for the municipality.” Mayor Liz Lempert added, “The River Road solar project is a great example of thinking sustainably to make an otherwise unusable site — the old landfill — a source of energy. We’re hoping to be able to do a similar project on the deck of the Spring Street garage by having solar panels there provide energy to the library. It is a prime spot for a solar project in terms of visibility, but we first need to make sure it is economically feasible.” The River Road enterprise, the municipality’s first venture into a solar energy project, will be constructed on an eightacre landfill site, according to Planning Board Director Lee Solow. GeoPeak Energy of Somerset is looking to start work

later this year and lease the ground for a 20-year term. “It made most sense to contract out rather than build, own, and maintain ourselves,” said Mr. Solow. “There’s almost no risk for us.” Mr. Solow described the projects as “part of our continuing efforts based on what the community wants to do to be more sustainable. We’ve been looking at various plans to do a solar energy project. We’ve done energy audits on all our facilities, and this is a natural outgrowth of that sustainability effort.” Referring to both projects, Mr. Miller

commented, “We’re working with contractors rather than doing it ourselves to avoid borrowing money and raising taxes to do it. Municipalities should be conservative, willing to accept a smaller reward than we could possibly get otherwise.” GeoPeak, the successful bidder on the River Road project, is currently seeking final approvals, and Mr. Solow is hopeful that they will construct a site that generates at least 1.5 megawatts of power. Sewerage Authority executive director John Kontorek explained the anticipated Continued on Page 12

Bank Street Residents Come Together, Seek Solution to Infrastructure Problems Residents and town officials are all in agreement about the need for repairs and infrastructure renovations on Bank Street. The narrow, single-block thoroughfare, tucked away off Nassau Street between Bayard Lane and Chambers Street, needs electrical, telephone, and cable lines placed underground, and the street, curbs, sidewalks, and sewage system all require extensive upgrades. “Bank Street is a wonderful Victorian street,” said Princeton Mayor Liz Lempert.

“You can tell it was designed in a different era, with homes built close together and close to the edge of the road. What makes the street special is also what makes it an engineering challenge.” Ms. Lempert went on to discuss the costs — currently estimated at $70,000 per home owner — and the complications involved in making necessary improvements. “The neighbors are hoping to bury the Continued on Page 19

JUST FOR YOU: One of the author/illustrators at Saturday’s Children’s Book Fair on Hinds Plaza inscribes a copy of her book for a young reader. Favorite books are discussed by festival participants in this week’s Town Talk. (Photo by Charles R. Plohn)


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TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 4

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Princeton Adult School Lecture Series to Begin

Topics In Brief

The Princeton Adult School A Community Bulletin (PAS) will kick off its 2016 lecture series on Monday, Street Smart NJ: On Thursday, September 29 at October 10 at 8 p.m. in the 12:30 p.m. during the Farmers Market at Hinds Plaza, Friend Center Auditorium, Mayor Liz Lempert, the Princeton Police Department William and Olden Streets, and the Greater Mercer Transportation Management with Princeton University Association kick off participation in this pedestrian Philosophy Professor Gidesafety initiative. on A. Rosen speaking on Meet the Mayor: Mayor Liz Lempert will hold open “Ethics, Politics and Social office hours from 8:30-10 a.m. on Friday, September Media.” 30 in the lobby of the Princeton Public Library. Co-sponsored by the PAS Household Hazardous Waste and Electronic and the University’s CommuWaste Disposal Day: Saturday, October 1 from 8 nity Auditing Program, the a.m. to 2 p.m., Mercer County residents can recycle lecture series will explore the common residential chemical wastes or used electrontheme of communications ics at the John T. Dempster Fire School, 350 Lawrence from philosophical, scientifStation Road, rain or shine. Call (609) 278-8100 for ic, aesthetic, psychological, more information. and technical perspectives. League of Women Voters Mayoral Forum: The Subsequent Monday evetwo candidates for Princeton mayor meet Tuesday, nings will feature David October 4 at 7 p.m. at Witherspoon Hall to take quesBellos, Princeton Profestions from the audience. sor of French, Italian, and League of Women Voters Board of Education Comparative Literature on Forum: The four School Board candidates meet Thurs“Translation and the Meanday, October 6 at 7 p.m. at Monument Hall. ing of Everything,” October Recreation Board Meeting Change: The regularly 17; Rutgers Associate Comscheduled public meeting of the Princeton Board of munication Professor Vicki Park and Recreation Commissioners for Thursday, OcKatz on ”Family Communitober 27 has been rescheduled for Thursday, October cation in the Digital Age,” 20 at 7:30 p.m. in the Recreation Department building November 7; Princeton Zoat 380 Witherspoon Street. ology Professor Daniel I. 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Photos courtesy of Thomas A. Leach, M.D.

A Conversation with the Collectors

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Thursday, October 6, 5 pm | 10 McCosh

Museum Director James Steward joins Princeton alumni Nancy Nasher and David Haemisegger in a conversation about collecting, living with art, what’s exciting in contemporary art, and the works from their collection featured in A Material Legacy. A reception in the Museum will follow Coolsculpting Sept 2016 HP.indd

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always free and open to the public artmuseum.princeton.edu

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princetonmagazine.com

SIGNIFICANT.”

License #13VH02102300 XIAN ZHANG MUSIC DIRECTOR

Nature as Muse: A Four-Part Series Offered at Mountain Lakes Preserve On Fran McManus’s regular walks through the Mountain Lakes Preserve, she often ponders the relationship of the natural world and creativity. Nature, she has come to realize, can inspire ideas in ways that are not always immediately apparent. From that realization, a four-part series of workshops has emerged. “Nature

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with The Whole Earth Center, her writings in Edible Jersey magazine, and other activities focused on farming, food, and related subjects. “When we think about natural spaces like Mountain Lakes, we think about things like rainwater and stream protection. But there is so much more. Sensory artists spend their lives honing their sensory skills, and nature is such an inspiration to them. I thought they could help us appreciate those aspects of nature. I want to bring us back to appreciating a natural setting through a whole spectrum of senses.” Each of the presenters will lead a walk through the “This is an idea I’ve been woods. Etienne Bouchaert, kicking around for years,” a perfumer from Firmenich, said Ms. McManus, who is will open the series October 9 known locally for her work Continued on Next Page as Muse: A Sensory Exploration of One Landscape Through Four Creative Perspectives” was developed by Ms. McManus and Friends of Princeton Open Space (FOPOS), which is presenting the sessions at Mountain L akes Preser ve star t ing Sunday, October 9. Local experts from the worlds of fragrance, food, graphic design, and poetry will share with participants the ways in which they are inspired by nature.

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SARAH CHANG

A FEAST FOR THE SENSES: Mountain Lakes Preserve is the setting for a four-part series of workshops focused on the way nature inspires creativity. Professionals from the worlds of food, perfume, graphic design and poetry will lead the sessions.

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Continued from Preceding Page

with a walk and talk focused on aromas in nature. Back at the Mountain Lakes House, he will explain how technology allows the capturing of fragrance. Next, on October 16, Gab Carbone, co-owner of the bent spoon ice cream and bakery shop, will talk about taking culinary inspiration from t he nat ural world. The Palmer Square store is known for its unusual flavors, and Ms. Carbone’s walk will be about sensory cues that can be used to make desserts. The tasting of raw ingredients and the ice creams they inspire is part of the workshop. On October 23, Sarah Smith of the design firm Smith + Manning will explain how she gathers inspiration from nature to create sketches and photography. Her walk through the preserve will focus on observation of color and the collection of fall leaves, and participants will use their findings to create a color exercise. Finally, on October 30, poet Douglas Piccinnini, who is also a chef at Poor Farm Food, will talk about s ens or y p ercept ion and

memory. On the walk he leads participants will document what they see, hear, feel and touch, to be reviewed and discussed back at Mountain Lakes House. Designing the series has been a learning experience in itself, Ms. McManus said. “I’m fascinated by listening

© TOWN TALK A forum for the expression of opinions

and freshly mown hay that she experienced recently at a fair in Maine. “I didn’t know what to do with that. I wished then that I had a perfumer with me,” she said. She has known Ms. Smith, for a while. “Using nature as a source of color inspiration and pattern was a natural,” she commented. As for the final workshop on writing, she said, “When I’m writing a piece for Edible Jersey, I

about local and national issues.

Question of the Week:

“What is your favorite book?”

(Asked at the Children’s Book Festival in Hinds Plaza) (Photographs by Charles R. Plohn)

Etienne Bouchaert the field views, the mountain streams, the lake, you get all of these landscapes in one area. The place is very inspiring, and we’re hoping people will come and experience what we’re offering.” —Anne Levin

Gab Carbone to creative people talk about their creative process,” she commented. “How do they get to a finished project or written work? It’s a big thing to ask someone to reflect on this. It’s not easy. But I talked, a lot, to Gab. When she talks about what influences her, it is such a privilege to listen. It is so big. She has deep connections to history.” The decision to include fragrance was easy for Ms. McManus, who mentions the aromas of heavy pine

Sarah Smith have a hard time tuning into the aspects of a landscape and making it come alive. So including that in the series made sense to me.” The workshops are being marketed as a series, priced at $100. Each takes place from 2 to 3:30 p.m. at Mountain Lakes. Visit https://nature_as_muse. eventbrite.com to sign up. “Mountain L akes is so close to Princeton, yet so many people who live here have never walked there,” Ms. McManus said. “With

Douglas Piccinnini

A partnership has been announced between Hamilton Jewelers w ith TAG Heuer to act as the “Official Timekeeper” of the HiTops Princeton Half Marathon on Sunday, November 6. The race is expected to attract approximately 1,750 runners and over 5,000 spectators. Hamilton and TAG are donating a Connected timepiece to the men’s winner and the ladies winner. The watches are available in New Jersey exclusively at Hamilton and are priced at $1,500 each. TAG Heuer Connected is equipped with directional wind and weather monitoring, RaceChrono Pro capability, and Google Fit, each designed at the synthesis of style and precision thanks to its interactive counters. Custom themes allow numerous display options and Android Wear connects with thousands of apps. The marathon benefits HiTops, the 25-year-old, Princeton-based adolescent health organization that is New Jersey’s only adolescent-focused health education center.

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Arjun: “My favorite books are the Percy Jackson Series. All of the sequels and all of the branches of it, because it’s mythological and it has a lot of adventure.” Aadytal “I like the Daria books. It’s really funny and has great pictures. It’s kind of like a comic book, and I love comics.” —(from left) Arjun and Aadytal Sil, West Windsor

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TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 6

Nature as Muse

Robert: “Tricky Vic, because I love history and mysteries, and I think Greg Pizzoli is a great writer.” Vanessa: “I really love Ame Dyckman’s Horrible Bear. It is the best. She has such a great energy and it comes out in all of her writing. It’s great.” —Robert and Vanessa Jorez, Pennsburg, Pa.

Avery: “I just finished a book called Secret, and I’m about to start the second book, If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late, by Pseudonymous Bosch.” Jason: “I like the Belly Button Book by Sandra Boynton. That was my favorite.” —Avery and Jason Fink, Erie, Pa.

Priyanksha: “My favorite book is Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. I love that they grow up at the end.” Nived: “Pete the Cat by Eric Litwin. Pete the Cat does crazy things.” Rebecca: “Mad Love is my favorite book. It is all about relationships, and I love that.” Micayla: “Harry Potter and The Goblet of Fire. I like it because of the Tri-Wizard’s Cup and the tournaments.” —(from left): Priyanksha Bakshi, with Nived Bakshi, Princeton; Rebecca Lester, Montpellier, France; Micayla Irizarry, Princeton

Johanna: “Probably Mr. Lemonciello’s Library by Chris Grabenstein, because it is really suspenseful and it has so many parts to it, like a puzzle piece.” Katharina: “I really like Jessica Darling’s IT List by Megan McCafferty, because I’m also in middle school and I can really relate to the plot of the story.” —(from left) Johanna and Katharina Mueller, Princeton

Felix: “My favorite book here that I really want to read is The Candymakers by Wendy Mass.” Joanne: “My favorite books on my list, Tor Seidler did the book First Born, about wolves, and it’s beautifully written. The next picture book would be Swatch, by Julia Denos, who is here today. Joan Bauer and Rebecca Stead, two of my favorite authors, are also here today. And Claire LeGrande, our local author, who wrote Foxheart, and I’m reading that to my son right now. It is magical.” Owen: “Well I really also want to read The Candymakers because I know it’s a really good book. A book called Flora and Ulysses by Kate DiCamillo is a also really great book that I read over the past summer.” —(from left): Felix and Joanne Farrugia, Owen Graves, all Princeton


P r i n ce ton Un iver s it y’s campus plan for the next 10 years won’t be released until next summer. But last week University administrators provided a glimpse of the document under development at a meeting of a Princeton Planning Board subcommittee. The presentation will be repeated on Wednesday, October 5 at a municipal meeting in West Windsor. The future is focused on accommodating the growth of the school’s engineering and environmental studies departments, making room for 500 more undergraduates, and housing them, along with other students, faculty and staff — either in West Windsor, the recently razed Butler Tract, or on Alexander Street. “We’re still midpoint in the process,” said Bob Durkee, the University’s vice president and secretary, in a conversation this week. “This is all about being ready.” Urban Strategies, Inc., in association with 15 planning, engineering, and architecture firms, is developing the University plan. While the focus is on the next 10 years, portions also extend to how the school might look and operate three decades from now. Meetings with students, faculty, municipal officials, and others have been held to help figure out the plan’s direction. The University’s holdings in West Windsor, on both sides of Route One, are definitely part of the plan. “Over time, which is a key phrase, we do expect to make more use of the West Windsor lands,” Mr. Durkee said. “It could be for academics, for housing, for administration, or other uses.” Also under consideration is the Springdale Golf Club, which borders Alexander Street and is owned by the University. The club’s lease expires in 2036 but with a provision that allows the University to bring it to a close after 2026. While there is nothing planned for the site as yet, “In the long term, we believe it will be converted to support the educational mission,” Mr. Durkee said. Sensitivity to the environment is a priority, according to Mr. Durkee. “Much as we’ve been restoring the natural habitat along Washington Road and Elm Drive, we think at some point we

really could improve the natural habitat along Springdale Creek,” he said. “And in the future, when it is being used to support the educational mission, we would be very sensitive to desirability of public access. This is a pretty piece of land, and we would expect to design it in a way that people can walk on it and enjoy it. And we would be respectful of any historical significance as well.” Mr. Durkee said there has been interest in the idea of putting pedestrian bridges across Carnegie Lake to connect with what might be developed in the West Windsor portion. “People seem to like the idea of having walking paths and bike paths, and being able to move back and forth with golf carts,” he said. “That makes the West Windsor lands feel more connected to the campus.” Development in West Windsor could also “recast the lake from something at the edge of the campus to being more in the middle of the campus,” he added. “So if you do it over time, and develop West Windsor in a robust way, you do get a campus where the lake gets a different relationship.” The expectation for the Butler Tract, which borders Harrison Street and for decades was housing for graduate students and their families, is that it would be used for some type of housing once more. “There is no immediate plan. But it might be a mix of graduate students, faculty, and staff,” Mr. Durkee said. “We’re just trying to identify the areas where there could be that kind of housing over the longer term.” Princeton Council has discussed the idea of rezoning the tract to residential to make sure it is used only in that manner. Planners are continuing to work on the campus blueprint. “The University has not made any decisions on any of this yet,” Mr. Durkee said. “We’re not at that point yet. Right now, we’re waiting for the planners to come back to us and say, ‘Here are your options.’ We’re trying to anticipate as much as we can.” —Anne Levin

• Recycling • MONDAY For Princeton

Princeton Seminary Annual Used Book Sale, Oct. 11-15

Browse through thousands of gently used books from a variety of genres at Princeton Theological Seminary’s Annual Used Book Sale on October 11 through 15 in the Seminar y’s W hiteley Gymnasium (at the corner of Hibben Road and Stockton Street). Proceeds support seminary libraries in developing nations and provide Princeton Seminary students with scholarship funds for travel courses. Book donations in the areas of theology, history, philosophy, science, and global studies are most appreciated, but all books will be accepted. Donations can only be accepted on October 3, 4, and 6 from 9 a.m. to noon and 5 to 8 p.m.; October 5 and October 7 from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. and 5 to 8 p.m.; and October 8 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule for the book sale is as follows: Preview Day on Tuesday, October 11 from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. ($15 entrance fee); October 12-14 from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. ($10 entrance fee); and Box Day on October 15 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. (no entrance fee; $10 per box). No outside boxes are allowed on box day. For m or e i n for m at ion about the book sale, or to schedule a drop-off at Whiteley Gym, contact annualbooksale@ptsem.edu.

HOPEWELL PUMPKIN PALOOZA: Hopewell Presbyterian Church will host a Pumpkin Palooza on Saturday, October 1 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Activities include handmade crafts, bake sale, pulled pork or soup lunch, children’s activities and, of course, pumpkins for sale! Proceeds benefit local missions. For more information, visit www.hopewellpres.org.

BILL CLINTON: NEW GILDED AGE PRESIDENT PATRICK J. MANEY

Police Blotter

Professor of History, Boston College; Author, “Bill Clinton: New Gilded Age President”

On September 20, at 8:06 p.m., a 14-year-old male was taken into custody after officers observed him throwing an unknown liquid onto a group of pedestrians in the area of South Tulane Street. He was charged with juvenile delinquency and released to a guardian. On September 21, at 8:19 a.m., a 61-year-old male from Princeton was charged with interference with transportation in the area of Pretty Brook Road after throwing a rock at a moving vehicle causing damage. On September 26, at 5:42 p.m., police were called to Albert Hinds Plaza to investigate a report of a juvenile harassing people. As the 15-year-old male was taken into custody he physically resisted and assaulted the officer. He was charged with juvenile delinquency, aggravated assault, and resisting arrest. A 14-year-old male was also charged with juvenile delinquency harassment.

A book sale and signing will follow the discussion.

Thursday,September 29, 2016 4:30 p.m. Dodds Auditorium Robertson Hall Princeton University

L O U I S C L A R K VA N U X E M L E C T U R E

David Sedlak

UC Berkeley Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering; Co-Director of the Berkeley Water Center and Author of Water 4.0

October 6, 2016 6 p.m., McCosh 50 http://lectures.princeton.edu

7 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

Update on Campus Plan Reflects University’s Direction


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2016 • 8

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chool today can offer students a lot more than the traditional course material in a typical classroom setting. Opportunities for learning go far beyond champions what once upon a time was the norm. Study abroad or at other locales in the U.S., intern• All ages and skill levels welcome ships, service programs, classes on-line, or in unique settings — including shipboard! All these and more are • Rent recreational skates for free available today, especially to many private school students in Princeton and beyond. • Only $10 per session Global reach is an important focus for many schools • Just 10 minutes from Princeton today. For example, The Pennington School’s Global Studies Certificate Program is a two-year interdisciplinary course of study for students who want to make a difference in the world, explains Pennington Headmaster William Hawkey. “By participating in this program, students develop their capacity to understand and act on Practice Timings (Open House): issues of global significance.” Mon: 6:30-9:00pm Courses include the study of language, literature, geography, religion, philosophy, environmental science, hisWed: 7:00-9:00pm tory, politics, economics, art, and more. “Global Studies Sat:9:00am-12:00pm students engage in internship and service opportunities that all support their growth as empathetic critical thinkAddress: Kendall Park Roller Skating Rink ers,” adds Mr. Hawkey. New Program 3550 State Route 27, Kendall Park, NJ 08824 The Pennington School’s Global Art and Cultural ExFind us on Facebook at “Breakaway Racing” change Program offers five scholarships each year that Website: www.breakawayracingkendallpark.com enable Pennington art students to travel to the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, China. This new program covers all the costs to attend, and is led by an arts department faculty member. The group attends lectures and receives instruction from leading Chinese artists and masters. Students learn Chinese culture and art, Chinese painting, calligraphy, and other arts, including Chinese crafts and handwork. Pennington participates in several student exchange programs, notes Mr. Hawkey. “Last year, a large group Founded 1973 Founded 1973 of Pennington students traveled to Canterbury, England over spring break, and stayed with host families, went Founded 1973 The Lewis School of Princeton An Acclaimed, Competitive, Co-educational College Preparatory Day School to school, and did some sightseeing. Students from PenFounded 1973 The Lewis School of Princeton Founded 1973 nington can study abroad in a number of places, including Where Students Who Learn Differently Founded 1973 AnAnAcclaimed, Competitive, Co-educational College School Acclaimed, Competitive, Co-educational College Preparatory Day School Preparatory The Lewis School of Princeton Spain, Day China, Italy, France, at the Island School in the Thrive and Succeed Our next Open House is Preparatory 15th, 10am 12pm WhereOctober Students Who Learn Differently An Acclaimed, Competitive, Co-educational College Day School Founded 1973 Bahamas, and many other places around the world.” An Acclaimed, Competitive, Co-educational College Preparatory Day School Students Who Learn Differently TheWhere Lewis School of Princeton Thrive and Succeed 15th, 10am 12pm Where October Students Who Learn Founded 1973 And students from abroad come to Pennington, he Where Students Who Learn- Differently Differently An Acclaimed, Competitive, Co-educational College Preparatory Day School Thrive and Succeed Curiosity, Creativity, Collaboration, Confidence adds. “A group of middle school students from our sister An Acclaimed, Competitive, Co-educational College Preparatory Day School Thrive and Succeed Thrive and Succeed Curiosity, Creativity, Collaboration, Confidence WhereWho Students Who Learn Differently Where Students Learn Differently school, Kent College in Canterbury will arrive on our Thrive and Succeed Thrive and Succeed campus in early October.” Curiosity, Creativity, Collaboration, Confidence In addition, faculty-led trips with a tie to curriculum are Curiosity, Creativity, Collaboration, Confidence Curiosity, Creativity, Collaboration, Confidence offered during school breaks. This spring and summer, The Lewis Princeton The LewisSchool School ofof Princeton Founded 1973 there will be opportunities to study language and culture The Lewis School Founded 1973of Princeton Founded 1973 in Austria, for service in the Dominican Republic and in An Acclaimed, Competitive, Co-educational College Preparatory Day School Our next Open is Preparatory Day School Haiti, to study culture and history in Italy, language and WhereCo-educational Students Who LearnHouse Differently An Acclaimed, Competitive, College An Acclaimed, Competitive, Co-educational College Preparatory Day School The Lewis School of Princeton Thrive and Succeed culture in Spain, and culture and conservation in Cuba. 15th, 10am 12pm Where October Students Who Learn Differently Founded 1973 Where Students Who Learn Differently Stuart Country Day School of the Sacred Heart in An Acclaimed, Competitive, Co-educational College Preparatory Day School Thrive and Succeed Thrive and Succeed Curiosity, Creativity, Collaboration, Confidence Where Students Who Learn Differently Princeton offers every Upper School sophomore the opThrive and Succeed portunity to study abroad at one of the school’s 150 Curiosity, Creativity, Collaboration, Confidence Curiosity, Creativity, Curiosity, Creativity,Collaboration, Collaboration, ConfidenceConfidence Sister Sacred Heart Schools around the globe through the SHAEP (Sacred Heart Academic Exchange Program), reports Robert T. Missonis III, assistant head of school for “When the“When School’s mission and and expertise respond needs of learning-different the School’s mission expertise respond uniquely uniquely toto thethe needs of learning-different students, students, academic leadership, and head of the middle school.

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they they grow andandachieve expectation, grow achieve beyond beyond expectation, changed by an educationattuned attuned tototheir potential, changed by an education their potential, and especially them,the the way best!” and especially to tothem, waythey theylearn learn best!”

“Stuart girls spend at least two weeks living with students and attending classes in cities such as Lima, Peru, Auckland, Australia, Paris, and Montreal, and many more, Our students often reciprocate by hosting their ‘SHAEP Sisters’ while school is in session at Stuart, enriching the entire Stuart community, and fostering international connections that can last for life.” Travel Abroad Service and travel abroad are combined at Stuart in the Middle School Leadership Trip to Belize, adds Mr. Missonis. “This year, our Middle School students will have the opportunity to travel 10 days to Belize in Central America in partnership with the World Leadership School. The experience will combine sight-seeing with environmental service work in a local community.” Service Learning Trips are also an important focus at George School in Newtown, Pa., points out Steven Fletcher, George School service learning coordinator. “Service learning has been an important part of George School’s curriculum since 1947 when the school took part in post-World War II reconciliation efforts by establishing relationships with two schools in Germany. George School students donated supplies to German students, and worked side by side with them to help rebuild their schools. “A trip to Cuba this year included a visit to a school for the deaf and blind and a trip to South Africa where students volunteered at an elementary and middle school during the morning, and assisted in an orphanage in the afternoon.” George School students also visited Haiti where they volunteered at an earthquake resettlement community; and in Nicaragua, they worked as teachers’ assistants in a working class Managua neighborhood. “Every George School student is required to complete 65 hours of service learning during his or her junior or senior year,” says Mr. Fletcher. “Students may participate in an organized service learning trip, engage in service in their local community, or devise an independent project. Service learning trips typically last for a few weeks during winter, spring, or summer break. Some opportunities, such as local volunteer programs, may last for an entire school year.” Solebury School in New Hope, Pa. is a strong proponent both of service leadership programs and cultural exchange programs, says Holly Victor, Solebury director of marketing and communications. Exciting Experiences “Each year, Solebury School offers exciting experiences abroad to help students explore new cultures, expand their world views, practice another language, and create life-long memories.” Included are: • Spanish language immersion and service learning in Costa Rica • Science trip to the Galapagos Islands • Spanish exchange in Barcelona, Spain • French exchange in St-Légier, Switzerland

Admissions Visits and Interviews (609)-924-8120

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Admissions Visits and Interviews (609)-924-8120 Admissions Visits (609)-924-8120 students, the School’s mission and expertise respond toand theInterviews needs of learning-different Admissions Visitsuniquely and Interviews (609)-924-8120 Admissions Visits andVisits Interviews and (609)-924-8120 Admissions Interviews (609)-924-8120 they grow and achieve beyond expectation, “When the School’s mission and expertise respond uniquely the needspotential, of learning-different students, changed by an education attuned tototheir growexpertise and achieve beyond expectation, uniquely to the needs of learning-different students, “When the School’s missiontothey and respond and especially them, the way they learn changed by an education attuned to their potential, best!”

they grow and beyond expectation, 53 Bayard Lane, www.lewisschool.org and especially to Princeton, them, the NJ wayachieve they learn best!” changed by an education attuned to their potential, 53 Bayard Lane, Princeton, NJ www.lewisschool.org Admissions Visits and (609)-924-8120 Admissions Visits andInterviews Interviews (609)-924-8120 “When the School’s mission and expertise respond uniquely to the needs of learning-different 53 Bayard Lane, Princeton, NJ www.lewisschool.org and especially to them, the way they learnstudents, best!” 53 Bayard Lane, Princeton, NJ www.lewisschool.org they grow and achieve beyond expectation, changed by an education attuned to their potential, 53 Bayard Lane, Princeton, NJ and especially to them, the way they learn best!”

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–Carlos lewis-Miller of limitless.” Commencement 2016 Speaker –Carlos lewis-Miller solebury.org Commencement 2016 Speaker

solebury.org

9 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2016

“We will take these four years of courage, community and self“We will take these confidence show four years ofand courage, selfyoucommunity the trueand meaning confidence and show of limitless.” you the true meaning

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215-862-5261 • Solebury.org 215-862-5261 • Solebury.org 215-862-5261 • Solebury.org

Go Well Beyond Traditional Classroom Experience “Solebury School has partnered with the non-profit organization Abriendo Mentes in Potrero, a small village in the Guanacaste region of Costa Rica. Abriendo Mentes’ mission is to empower community members through youth and adult programs, such as English, computer, and fitness classes,” explains Ms. Victor. “Solebury students will work with the students in Abriendo Mentes as well as travel around the Guanacaste region.” In June, Solebury ninth and 12th graders will have an opportunity to visit the Galalapos Islands in a servicefocused excursion. They will hike on the Sierra Negra and Chico Volcano on Isabela Island, snorkel on Floreana Island, visit the Charles Darwin Station on Santa Cruz Island, and kayak in Tortuga Bay. Students have the option of taking a course on the Galapagos Island in the spring 2017 trimester to prepare for the trip. Now in its second year, Solebury School’s partnership with St. Paul’s School in Barcelona, Spain is a one-month exchange program for five students. St Paul’s Students visit Solebury School in September and October, and Solebury students travel to St. Paul’s School in February and March. Students live with a host family, and experience the history of Spanish culture and strengthen their fluency in the language. The one month exchange program with Solebury students and students from Haut-Lac International Bilingual School in St-Légier, Switzerland offers special opportunities for 10th and 11th grade Solebury students who are in, or have taken, French classes. They will stay with host families, attend classes with their exchange students, and explore the surrounding area. Prior to their trip, Solebury students will host a Haut-Lac student in the fall semester at Solebury. Service Projects Service programs of all kinds are emphasized at Princeton area private schools, including Stuart. “Stuart girls are often doing service projects for others,” points out Robert Missonis. “At Stuart, service projects also include time for reflection and discussion. Our students can begin to understand the needs and realities of their community, and those around the world, allowing them to extend their hearts and their arms beyond the Stuart community. Our girls are committed to social justice, and they learn about the world, and that, by taking action, they can make the world a better place. And they do.” Some of Stuart’s service learning projects include the Middle School’s “Sacred Heart Goal 3 Days” (a social awareness program that compels to action). “Recently, Grade 5 worked at the Trenton Area Soup Kitchen, Grade 6 spent the day at Hamilton Grove Nursing Center, Grade 7 worked at Friends of Hopewell Valley Open Space, and Grade 8 spent the day serving at CYO East. Both the Middle and Lower School have multiple Goal 3 Days throughout the year, reports Mr. Missonis. Each summer since 1979, 20 Stuart students and faculty chaperones have traveled to Tennessee or Kentucky to help rebuild and repair houses in Appalachia, he adds. “They spend a week repairing and building, often working alongside, and getting to know the families they are

Solebury School

helping. The experience has been life-changing, and our 6832 Phillips Mill Road students find that volunteering provides a deeper view• New Hope, PA 18938 of the world and what it means to be selfless and compassionate.” Inspired. Confident. Ready. In addition, each year, a number of Upper School students are involved in various programs in New Jersey cities. For example, explains Mr. Missonis, “The Urban Challenge, which is a unique experience, offers the girls the Prekindergarten to Eighth Grade opportunity not only to learn about the struggles faced by residents of Camden but also to discover a beauty and www.chapinschool.org/admission budding life within the community.” Although service is not a requirement at The Penning609-986-1702 ton School, virtually hundreds of students participate in some form of community service, reports Headmaster Hawkey. “Community service is at the heart of what it means to be a student at Pennington. Whether it is participating weekly in the Community Cares club or jumping in the pool with fourth-graders at a Gym & Swim, Pennington students and faculty immerse themselves in a culture of October 11 Est. 1931 service that reflects our core values of Honor, Virtue, and Humility. Projects throughout the year are based on tradition, need, and student initiatives. This approach ensures a dynamic variety of opportunities. Trail Work P R I Nlewis-Miller CETON –Carlos “Traditions include the HomeFront holiday party, Run for the Cure, Race for the Cure, and Shoot for a Cure. Commencement 2016 Speaker biweekly Gym & Swims, annual trips to Haiti and Hensolebury.org derson Settlement, Kentucky; tutoring at Grant Elementary, and the Red Cross Blood Drive. Another beloved tradition is our annual Community Day during which all students head off-campus for a full day of projects, based on grade. Seniors have traditionally helped with trail work and storm clean-up with Mercer County parks, while juniors have traveled to the shore for continued Hurricane Sandy relief work.” Such focus on service to others is very much a part of Mr. Hawkey’s philosophy for the students. As he emphasizes, “I want all of our students to believe that their Pennington education prepares them to give back to the world rather than give them a leg up to get ahead in the world.” A variety of specialized programs at the area private schools provide exceptional opportunities for the students to sharpen their skills, test their abilities, and expand their horizons For example, George School offers an independent, year-long study program in advanced robotics, including three challenging courses, This is for students who have already completed the robotics and programming classes that are part of the regular curriculum. Another option for mathematically-gifted George students is to participate in the Math Team. This team competes in “Math Madness,” sponsored by the Mathematics Association of America. Students from around the country are invited to take part in a series of round-robin competitions based on skill level. Last year, the George

215-862-5261 • Solebury.org

“We will take these four years of courage, community and selfJoin us for an confidence and show Open House you the true meaning of limitless.” Chapin School

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TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2016 • 10

Private School Students Continued from Preceding Page

School team ranked 11th in the country among 350 teams. “Considering that some schools with 2,000 or more students are playing, and many of the schools are specialized math and science magnet schools, ours is a huge accomplishment,” says Kevin Moon, George School Mathematics department head. Broader Array In another field, George School students will have the option this summer to take their U.S. history course online, notes history department Head Ben Croucher. “This will allow students to participate in a broader array of the advanced courses offered during the school year, including IB (International Baccalaureate) global politics, and IB economics.” Students in IB Visual Arts have opportunities to take trips to local museums as well as those in New York and Washington, D.C., and theater students enjoy discussing productions in their stagecraft classes and then attending McCarter Theater to see the live play. The Leadership Diploma Endorsement program is an important focus at Stuart Country Day School, notes Robert Missonis. “Leadership skills are integrated into the curriculum at Stuart. In 2015, we formalized leadership training by offering leadership studies, with the option to earn a leadership endorsement to be noted on a graduate’s high school transcript. Students must apply to the program, take three independent leadership courses, complete a practicum or independent study junior year, and a final thesis presentation senior year.”

The STEM diploma endorsement offers Upper School students the opportunity to take a variety of full year and trimester courses in science, technology, engineering, and math, points out Mr. Missonis. “These courses are designed to integrate the fundamental components of STEM while inspiring innovation and creativity. A STEM endorsement on a student’s high school transcript reflects a commitment to pursuing studies in the STEM fields, above and beyond the curriculum required for graduation with a diploma from Stuart. Available STEM courses include biotechnology, design of emerging technologies, forensic science, robotics, and more.” Other programs and opportunities for Upper School Stuart students rotate yearly, explains Mr. Missonis. “For example, two years ago, our theater students performed in the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in Scotland, which include full stage productions as well as street performance. Last year, our science faculty led a STEM excursion to Iceland, which offered a dozen students the opportunity to experience firsthand some of the world’s most fascinating landscapes, along with learning more about geothermal energy and soil conservation.” The Pennington School provides a series of challenging opportunities for students to test their ability and awareness in many areas. For example, Pennington’s applied science certificate program emphasizes taking the skills students have in science, math, engineering, and technology and combining them with essential capabilities in critical thinking, problem-solving, communication, and literacy to initiate real change in the world, explains

Headmaster Hawkey. “This two-year, multi-disciplinary program guides students to design creative and practical solutions to real-world problems. Courses include design engineering, software engineering, and computer science. A brand new Maker Space invites all students to engineer, design, and build.” Personal Growth Also, highly advanced Pennington math and science students have a chance to continue studies in these courses at Princeton University, while still enrolled at Pennington. Pennington’s Horizon Senior Internship Program enables seniors to explore the world beyond the classroom and to discover or further develop a personal passion, adds Mr. Hawkey. “For more than 25 years at The Pennington School, the Horizon program has provided stimulating and purposeful experiences for personal growth for all members of the senior class. “Each Horizon project is designed by the students themselves, who work with a mentor in their chosen field. The Horizon program offers students a window into the world beyond Pennington. Through recent projects, seniors expanded their perspective through travel, traditional career internships, service opportunities, and more. Every senior participates in Horizon.” Middle school students are invited to take part in the Odyssey of the Mind competition, an international program that challenges students with creative problem-solving opportunities. Team members apply their creativity to solve problems that range from building mechanical devices to presenting their own interpretation of literary classics. Students work

in collaborative teams for more than seven months to solve an assigned program. They then bring their solutions to competition on the local, state, and world level. The Solebury School provides a unique certificate program, Teach2Serve, that aims to inspire, educate, and train high school students who are interested in addressing social and environmental problems through social innovation and service, explains Holly Victor. “Students who are accepted into this program begin by taking an honors social studies class on the history and philosophy of philanthropy and social change. They also participate in workshops and experiential learning in which they hone such skills as consensus building, creative problem-solving, effective communication, and public speaking. “First year Teach2Serve ‘cohorts’ work as a team to identify a need — on campus or in the wider community — to address through their project. Past projects have included issues such as hunger, environmental clean-up through Hurricane Sandy relief, and empowerment through education with mentoring and tutoring in inner-city schools. Solebury has also felt the benefits of this program as students have made the campus plastic water bottle-free, and created a living green wall in the science building.” Another important program at Solebury is the Senior Project. As Ms. Victor explains, “Every senior in good academic and social standing is invited to submit a proposal to go on Senior Project and spend the final three weeks of school exploring the real world. Students can choose to gain experience in a specific field or career, or perhaps a personal

cause, among many other directions. “The project requires that the student be actively handson and take the initiative to design the project, choose a mentor, and navigate the logistics of completing the project. The impact of these projects can help students determine the route they would go — or not go — in college. They have resulted in successful stories.”

As these and other programs indicate, the opportunities at these private schools and others in the area are seemingly unlimited. They allow students to travel and explore new cultures and ideas firsthand, to challenge themselves with rigorous academic programs and hands-on projects, opening up a world filled with new possibilities and adventures. —Jean Stratton

Come visit us at our new location Open House Come visit us at Oct. 9th our new location 2-4pm

457 Nassau Street Open Princeton, NJ 08540 House (609) 924-9770 Oct. 9th ulns.org 2-4pm Founded Open House in 1949 Oct. 9th 2-4pm

accepting 457Currently Nassau Street applications for 2016/17 Princeton, NJ 08540 (609) 924-9770 ulns.org

Founded in 1949

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Wonder what a girl can do?

Stuart girls are wonder-filled as well as wonderful. From preschool to senior year, their curiosity and zest to learn are fed by outstanding academics and inspiring faculty. Our teachers know girls and know each girl well. Stuart graduates are well-educated, well-spoken and exceptionally well-prepared for highly selective colleges, fulfilling careers, and lives driven by wonder.

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Independent Girls’ Day School PS–12 l Princeton, New Jersey Stuart admits students of any race, color, religion and national or ethnic origin.

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Stuart admits students of any race, color, religion and national or ethnic origin.


Muslim and Arab-American Volunteers Provide Invaluable Support to Refugees

To the Editor: Thank you for your article last week about local efforts to resettle refugees victimized by war in their country [“Helping Refugees Is a Way of Life for Local Citizens and Educators,” Sept. 21, page 9]. We should be proud as a community to see how many individuals and groups in Princeton are, by their small gestures, making life-changing differences for others. I was mentioned as “the ESL teacher” for Nassau Presbyterian Church’s sponsorship of one Syrian family. But in fact our daily English classes — and indeed everything to do with this project — is the result of teams of people, both parishioners and others in the community, who have come together to volunteer their time and talents. One extremely important arm of volunteers went unmentioned in your article. They are our Muslim and ArabAmerican neighbors who have quietly stepped up to make a critical difference. They have provided invaluable support, especially serving as Arabic translators at school registrations, doctor appointments, English classes, etc. Their sensitivity to the family’s needs has been a touching reminder of our common humanity and goodness. With a range of customs and traditions, we are richer for our reliance on one another. BEvERLy LEACH To the Editor, Electronic Waste, or e-waste, is a growing problem in New Witherspoon Street Jersey. The State’s Electronic Waste Management Act, enacted in 2010, mandates that manufacturers of electronics recycle a determined amount each year but the legislation has not kept up with the increased volume of e-waste being produced. As a result, municipalities are facing either paying for recycling or stopping collection as has happened recently in Burlington To the Editor: I appreciate the family of Princeton High School Fresh- County. Additionally, many free e-waste collections by retailers man Owen Gerrard Bardzilowski for their willingness to have shut down or are charging a fee for items, some rather share the cause of Owen’s death [“Community Responds To steep, and are not accepting equipment over a certain size. Student’s Death With Deep Grief, Support,” Town Topics, The New Jersey Senate and Assembly have drafted bills Sept. 21, page one]. It’s important for survivors, family, A-2375 and S-981 to fix some of the provisions in the law; friends, and community to understand the angst we all en- however, it is not clear if the provisions will be adopted into counter, whether we’ve had suicidal ideations, acted upon the Act. In the meantime, we hope that residents’ recycled them, or are among those left behind to ask “why?” after computers, televisions, monitors, laptops and other electronloved ones have left us. ics at Princeton’s annual S.H.R.E.D.D.temberfest event last It is too reductive for us to suggest this simply is an is- weekend. If you were unable to make that event, the Mercer sue of mental illness, when here in Princeton suicide has County Improvement Authority has two remaining electronic become pervasive. Two of my friends killed themselves in recycling events in 2017 on Saturday, October 1 and Saturday, 2015, four months apart, both local Princeton residents. November 19. The Municipality of Princeton’s Convenience We all know of other suicides in our area. The first I heard Center on River Road is another resource for recycling most of just as I moved into town 10 years ago — of the mother e-waste. It is very important to recycle these materials propof a special needs child — which touched me deeply being erly because they contain mercury, cadmium, lead and other father to an autistic teen now at Princeton High School. materials that are toxic in small amounts. We know too of suicides before and after this, in our town, Remember, the best way to reduce waste is to not produce 2008, 2011, 2014, among these another Princeton High it in the first place. Please consider the impact to the enviSchool and another Princeton University student. And we ronment and the costs of disposal when making a decision to know that within the last three years 10 students have purchase electronics. killed themselves at nearby UPenn, and in nearly all cases HEIDI FICHTENBAUM no one expected anything was wrong. No danger signs. Board Member of Sustainable Princeton and Chair, PrincNo red flags. Nothing. eton Environmental Commission There needs to be a conversation started, and delved SOPHIE GLOvIER into, and there need to be more safe sharing spaces, the vice Chair, Princeton Environmental Commission type that exist at some area yoga studios, the monthly book CHRISTINE SyMINGTON club at Gratitude yoga, the weekly Breaking Bread fellowEnergy Director, Sustainable Princeton

New Jersey’s Electronic Waste Management Act Has Not Kept Up With Increased Volume of E-Waste

Noting the Need for a Conversation on Suicide Among Survivors, Family, Friends, Community

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Liz Lempert’s Outstanding Leadership, Fiscal Responsibility Provide Continuity

To the Editor: I’m writing to support Liz Lempert’s re-election as mayor because her outstanding leadership and fiscal responsibility provide continuity so necessary for well-being in our community. Though she would be quick to reject individual credit, it is significant that Princeton has won many grants and accolades during her administration. These grants and honors underscore Liz’s commitment to all residents, providing new support or recognition in such critical areas as improving our environment and strengthening our family services. As a result of Liz’s diligent work with dedicated staff and resident volunteers on clean air and traffic reduction initiatives, the Delaware valley Regional Planning Commission awarded Princeton a $196,000 grant for a bike-sharing program with the potential to reduce auto use in town. Developed in partnership with Princeton University, this grant provides bikes to share for community members, students, and non-residents, along with covered bike parking areas. To help address street safety and congestion, our town under Liz’s management has also received grants of $65,000 for a parking study and $300,000 for a “safe routes to school grant” for traffic signal improvements. Extending family services has been another hallmark in Liz’s tenure as mayor. Under her watch The World Health Organization in 2016 presented Princeton with a citation as an “Age Friendly Community,” the first of its kind to be received in New Jersey. Additionally, her diligent staff generated proposals resulting in almost half a million dollars to Corner House and other social agencies in town for reducing youth substance abuse especially, and to lessening addiction and alcoholism at all ages. An excellent manager, Liz Lempert’s skills of persuasion get residents involved. Community members speak with her and she shares their concerns with staff to transform that input into grant applications. The resulting awards, and not from town coffers, go far to address many urgent projects and services. I hope you’ll join me on election day to vote for Liz Lempert for mayor for another four years, continuing to bring honors to Princeton, by providing new money, and not at taxpayers’ expense, for many urgent projects and services. DOREEN BLANC ROCkSTROM Maidenhead Road

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ship in the tiny side chapel of Nassau Presbyterian, among the friendships formed in the Princeton yurt community, the Men’s Sharing Circles around town, and the classrooms of the Princeton Learning Cooperative. Also of course the open doors at Hi-TOPS, Trinity Church, and Good Grief. These are some of the bridges over our troubled waters. NAMI-Mercer’s annual Harvest of Hope will take place on October 1st, where Princeton High School students from the NAMI Stomp Out Stigma Club have volunteered every single year since the club’s founding — this too is a bridge. Safe spaces exist; we just need to open these doors, and let others in. Some of us ask “What can we do?” What we should not do is blame ourselves, nor feel despondent that we did not do enough, nor that what we did not do makes it our “fault” — it’s never anyone’s ”fault” — this does not serve those we love dearly. Instead, how about this? First, don’t wait too long to share your own story — so I openly share that I myself have suffered from severe anxiety most of my life, and periodically from debilitating depression, and yes this can be a struggle, yet I have come through it, and continue to do so. And second, the next time someone asks you “How are you?” respond honestly, so they can too. I’m feeling terribly sad, and my thoughts are with the Bardzilowski family, and the students of Princeton High School. ADNAN SHAMSI Nassau Street


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 12

Solar Energy continued from page one

benefits as the project moves forward. “I believe in renewable energy as opposed to buying power off the grid,” he said. “And we’ll save money for our customers: Princeton, South Brunswick, West Windsor, Hopewell Borough and Township, and Pennington.” Mr. Kontorek predicted total savings of about $100,000 per year. “Also,” he added, “there’s a 1.5 percent price escalator for the next 15 years versus a 2.5 percent increase with PSE&G, our current supplier, so the amount of our savings should increase each year.” With solar energy supplying 20-25 percent of the energy at the plant, Mr. Kontorek also saw the project as a “win-win situation — doing good for the environment and saving our customers money at the same time.” On the second project, the Council approved an agreement with the library earlier in the month and will be putting out a request for proposals to determine interest and feasibility, according to Bob Hough, director of infrastructure and operations at the Municipal Department of Public Works. Citing significant recent improvements in

solar energy technology, Mr. Hough was optimistic for the future of both projects and he noted that the roof of the Spring Street garage should provide an effective location for the installation of the solar panels. If successful, this project could reduce energy costs for the library. “There is a question about whether it would be economically viable,” Mr. Miller said. “If we don’t get valid proposals, we’ll know it probably is not viable.” Library Executive Director Brett Bonfield expressed enthusiasm for the possibilities of the project, which is still in its early stages. “We’re all working towards sustainability and we like partnering with the town on this. Of course, we would like to save money on energy and spend our money on library services or on the collection.” The library is already a partner with Sustainable Princeton, which holds its meetings there, and it also presents an annual environmental film festival. “We believe in sustainability and work towards it every day,” Mr. Bonfield said. “Sharing resources dovetails nicely with our sustainability efforts.” —Donald Gilpin

Crisis Ministry of Mercer all critical partners in this Now Known as Arm in Arm effort.” The Crisis Ministry of Mercer County has announced the launch of its new name, Arm in Arm. The 501(c)3 non -prof it organ i zat ion, founded in 1980 by Nassau Presbyterian Church and Trinity Church, helps secure the basic needs of food and housing and promotes longterm stability through work training and support. Today, over 5,000 families are helped each year. The new name, Arm in Arm, conveys the organization’s collaborative approach to service, its spirit of optimism, and its belief in the possibilities of the future. Executive Director Carolyn Biondi said, “Arm in Arm is a place where people in need find people who want to help. Our new name reflects our respect for the dignity of the people we serve, as well as for their own power in the process of regaining stability. Our tagline ‘Better Together’ expresses our belief that we all benefit when everyone in our community thrives — and that it takes our whole community to ensure that we all thrive. Individuals, congregations, corporations, foundations, schools, and businesses are

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Where Ever the Olive Grows

The mission and programs of Arm in Arm will continue to focus on securing basic needs of food, housing, and work to promote longer-term stability. Chante H., who recently received a security deposit from Arm in Arm for an apartment for herself and her two children, said that the assistance “has taken a huge burden off of me because now I know that my children have a place to live. I’m so grateful.” John B., who works two jobs and occasionally receives food from Arm in Arm’s food pantries, said, “I think things are looking up for me, but I’m not quite there yet. But the food is really nutritious, and I just want to say thank you.” Arm in Arm will celebrate its name change at its annual fall benefit on November 3 at The Frick Chemistry Laboratory Atrium on the campus of Princeton University. Special guest Billy Shore, co-founder and executive director of the national hunger awareness organization Share Our Strength/No Kid Hungry, will keynote the event. Visit www.arminarm. org for more information. ———

STYLE ICON SIMON DOONAN: Style icon and author Simon Doonan will be the guest speaker at Newark Museum’s Benefit Luncheon on Tuesday, November 1 from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. The subject of Doonan’s talk will be “What is Creativity?” Doonan will attempt to answer this complicated question with images and recollections from his ground-breaking window display career at Barneys New York. The luncheon also features a champagne reception, pop up designer trunk shows “Glow in the Dark Fitness” and raffles. The luncheon co-chairs are Stephanie Glickman At Palmer Square Green and Jazz Johnson. For tickets, visit newarkmuseum.org. Fitness in the dark, illu(Photo Credit: Albert Sanchez) minated by glow bands, will be offered on Thursday, September 29 starting at 5:30 p.m. Participation is free to all. Lululemon Athletica Lounge features mind/body coach Ed Tseng, plus glowin-the-dark body art, starting at 5:30 p.m. At 6:15 p.m., there will be a prestretch. Pure Barre holds a pop-up class from 6:30 to 7 p.m., and there will be a group run with Pacers Running, also at 6:30 p.m. Finally, a Bar Meet-up will be held at the at the Yankee Doodle Tap Room, starting at 7 p.m., where food and drink will be available for purchase. For more information, visit 609.279.1744 palmersquare.com. 18 South Tulane Street • Princeton www.Casa-Aziz.com

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13 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2016

Home & Design


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 14

BOOK REVIEW

“A Living Presence” in the Culture of Our Time : Looking Ahead to Election Day With Herman Melville

H

erman Melville died 125 years ago today in a three-story brick townhouse at 104 E. 26th Street in Manhattan. The makeshift bomb that shook the same neighborhood a week and a half ago exploded a short walk away at 23rd and Sixth Avenue. Virtually unread and unremembered on September 28, 1891, Melville’s most famous work ends, in effect, with an explosion: “then all collapsed, and the great shroud of the sea rolled on as it rolled five thousand years ago.” The actual last words of Moby Dick, however, are less epic than domestic as a ship named Rachel searching for “her missing children” only finds “another orphan.” The orphan, of course, is Melville, the metaphorical survivor of his most ambitious work, a castaway on the desert island of his obscurity sending the civilized world messages carried like “notes in a bottle” across two centuries and the ocean of the internet. In Andrew Delbanco’s Melville : His World and Work (2005), the author is seen as “a living presence in the larger culture,” not only “good for thinking about” but one of the “select company” of writers who “continue to be good for thinking with.” Since his literary revival in the mid-20th century, there have been, according to Delbanco, “a steady stream of new Melvilles, all of whom seem somehow to keep up with the preoccupations of the moment: myth-and-symbol Melville, countercultural Melville, anti-war Melville, environmentalist Melville, gay or bisexual Melville, muticultural Melville, global Melville.” And how about a political Melville? Imagine him holding forth from his island on the issue of whether “multitudes of foreign poor should be landed on our American shores,” about which he says “they have God’s right to come; though

they bring all Ireland and her miseries with them.” In the same book, Redburn: His First Voyage (1849), this time on the subject of Germans emigrating to America, he refers to “the mode in which America has been settled” that “should forever extinguish the prejudices of national dislikes,” adding with the fervor of a candidate for all time: “You can not spill a drop of American blood without spilling the blood of the whole world.” Melville in Love One of the most romanticized incarnations of the “new Melvilles” can be found in Michael Shelden’s Melville in Love : The Secret Life of Herman Melville and the Muse of Moby Dick (Ecco 2016). Readers familiar with Jay Leyda’s twovolume compendium The Melville Log, or the NorthwesternNewber r y edition of the Correspondence, not to mention Delbanco’s bio g r a p h y, a r e going to have serious doubts about Shelden’s premise, however responsive they may be to t h is re adable, amusing, and, for people new to Melville’s story, illuminating book, with its charming cover. However appealing the notion of Melville lounging in the lap of a lively literary neighbor named Sarah Morewood, Moby Dick’s muse was Nathaniel Hawthorne. Consider Melville’s reaction to the “joy-giving and exultation-breeding letter” Hawthorne sent him after reading the published book. Shelden can offer no recorded words between the supposed lovers as intense or explicit as the passage where Melville tells Hawthorne “your heart beat in my ribs and mine in yours, and both in God’s” and “By what right do you drink from my flagon of life? And when I put it to my lips — lo, they are yours and not mine. I feel that the Godhead is broken up like the bread at the Supper, and that we are the pieces. Hence this infinite fraternity of feeling.” In fact, Shelden quotes nothing from Sarah Morewood equal to the swooning words of Hawthorne’s wife Sophia referring in a letter to Melville’s “air free, brave and manly,” and “an indrawn, dim look” which “makes you feel that he is at that

instant taking deepest note of what is before him. It is a strange, lazy glance, but with a power in it quite unique. It does not seem to penetrate through you, but to take you into himself.” Melville on Race Delbanco’s “multicultural Melville,” most famously evoked in Moby Dick through the friendship between Ishmael and Queequeg, shows up two years earlier in Redburn among the “Sailor-boy’s” memories of Liverpool, “his first foreign city.” When Redburn sees the ship’s “black steward, dressed very handsomely, and walking arm in arm with a good-looking English woman,” he suggests that “in New York, such a couple would have been mobbed in three minutes ; and the steward would have been luck y to have escaped with w h ol e l i mb s.” Again, Melville could be a candidate for office holding forth on America’s racial divide as he points out that “we Americans leave to other countries the carrying out of the principle that stands at the head of our Declaration of Independence.” Con Men Then and Now While Melville might not have cast his political net wide enough to catch a phenomenon as bizarre as The Donald, Delbanco’s approach to The Confidence Man (1857), the last novel published in Melville’s lifetime, does have a familiar ring: “In the spring of 1855, there was widespread press coverage of a New York swindler who fleeced hs victims by passing himself off as a honest soul in need of an emergency loan …. Whether he is selling counterfeit stock, extorting money for some spurious charity, or ‘borrowing’ an item of value with a promise to return it with interest, the confidence man offers his customers what they most want: hope, hope for themselves, hope for the world.” Although The Confidence Man was panned at the time, one more in a series of critical dismissals beginning with Moby Dick, it has been, as Delbanco shows, “rehabilitated” for holding “a mirror up to the American people” by “telling the truth about the tricks Americans

played on themselves in their effort to worship both God and Mammon.” Says Delbanco, “Melville’s book now seems a prophetically postmodern work in which swindler cannot be distinguished from swindled.” Some lines from Melville’s poem “The House-Top,” which was inspired by the deadly Draft Riots of 1863, have a certain resonance as the storm-tossed ship of the 2016 campaign approaches the great white whale of Election Day: “All civil charms/And priestly spells which late held hearts in awe —/Fear-bound, subjected to a better sway/Than sway of self; these like a dream dissolve,/And man rebounds whole aeons back in nature.” The Plaque On a cold day in January 1982 a group of Melville scholars put up a bronze plaque on the side of a Manhattan office building just east of Park Avenue South. It reads: “HERMAN MELVILLE The American Author Resided from 1863-1891 at This Site 104 East 26th Street Where He Wrote BILLY BUDD Among Other Works.” An article by Herbert Mitgang in the January 19 New York Times quotes one of the scholars observing that when Melville was a district inspector in the Custom House Service, he walked from his house west to the Hudson River. After his post was moved uptown along the East River in later years, “he probably took the Third Avenue El to work — it was already in existence in the 1880s. It’s strange to think of this man, who once sailed in squarerigged ships, riding the El.” Next to the plaque is the rear of the 69th Regiment Armory building, which served as a counseling center for the victims and families after the September 11 attacks. Anyone curious to see how Melville anticipates the terrorist paranoia of our time through the fears and prejudices of mid-19th-century America should read his novella, Benito Cereno (1855), Greg Grandin’s The Empire of Necessity: Slavery, Freedom and Deception in the New World (2014), and Elizabeth Hardwick’s brilliant essay in the June 15, 2000 New York Review of Books, which bears the same title as Michael Shelden’s book. aving just finished Melville In Love, I think its value isn’t so much in the case it makes for a secret love affair but as a biographical introduction to a great American writer that also introduces a remarkable woman who deserves to be remembered. Sarah Morewood may not be the muse of Moby Dick, but she clearly enhanced Melville’s life. In that sense she was there: she was on board. The cover art for Shelden’s book, by the way, is based on a painting (Couple of Lovers) by Pal Szinyei Merse (1845-1920). —Stuart Mitchner

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ILLUSTRATOR AT EINSTEIN SALON: In conjunction with the exhibition “The Einstein Salon and Innovators Gallery,” the Historical Society will host the illustrator, Anne Simon, at the Updike Farmstead museum, 354 Quaker Road, on Thursday, October 6 at 5 p.m. Ms. Simon, co-author of the graphic biography of Einstein with Corinne Maier, will share the steps of her artistic process. At 4 p.m. a pre-talk conservation will be broadcast live on the official Albert Einstein Facebook page. The video will also be available online for later viewing. Labyrinth Books will be on site to sell copies of “Einstein.”

David Library Presents Lecture on Jefferson

The David Library of the American Revolution will present a lecture on Thomas Jefferson by Robert M. S. McDonald — a member of the faculty at the United States Military Academy at West Point — on Sunday, October 2 at 3 p.m. The public is invited to the admission-free event, which will be held at the David Library, 1201 River Road, Washington Crossing, Reservations are required. Mr. McDonald’s lecture is titled, “Confounding Father: Thomas Jefferson, Revered and Reviled,” and is based on his new book, Confounding Father, Thomas Jefferson’s Image in His Own Time (Univ. of Virginia Press $29.95). A n adju nct scholar of the Cato Institute, Mr. McDonald is a graduate of the University of Virginia, Oxford University, and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he earned his PhD. A specialist on Thomas Jefferson and the early American republic, he is editor of Thomas Jefferson’s Military Academy: Founding West Point, and author of Light & Liberty: Thomas Jefferson and the Power of Knowledge, and Sons of the Father: George Washington and His Protégés. He is completing an edited volume to be titled Thomas Jefferson’s Lives: Biographers and the Battle for History. He lives in Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York, with his wife, Christine, and their children Jefferson and Grace. “Few figures in American history provoke as much of a division in public opinion

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as Thomas Jefferson,” according to Mr. McDonald, who serves on the David Library’s Academic Advisory Council. Reservations for this lecture can be made by calling (215) 493-6776 x 100 or by sending an email to rsvp@ dlar.org. ———

“War of Worlds” Talk At Two Locations

A. Brad Schwar tz, author of Broadcast Hysteria: Orson Welles’s War of the Worlds and the Art of Fake News, will visit Somerset County Library System of New Jersey to reexamine this landmark moment in media history, showing that the broadcast was history’s first viral media phenomenon — decades before the age of Twitter and 24-hour news. Mr. Schwartz’s presentations will take place on October 5, 7-8 p.m. at Somerset’s Bridgewater Library branch, located at 1 Vogt Drive in Bridgewater and on October 6, 7-8 p.m. at the Hillsborough Library branch, located 379 South Branch Road in Hillsborough. Broadcast Hysteria draws upon a t rove of nearly 2,000 unpublished letters from people who heard the broadcast back in 1938, more than 200 of which came from New Jersey, giving readers a new view on this moment in media history by letting the people who experienced it speak for themselves. “It’s a thrill and an honor to come tell the story of War of the Worlds so close to the site of the most famous invasion that never hap pened,” said Mr. Schwartz. “In the course of my research, I read hundreds of letters from New Jerseyites who heard the broadcast back in 1938, and their stories — sometimes funny, often opinionated, and always

Young Author Bao Visits YA Press Corps

Young Adult (YA) author and Princeton High School alum Karen Bao, author of Dove Arising and Dove Exiled, will meet with the YA Press Corps at Labyrinth Books on Thursday, September 29 at 6 p.m. L a b y r i n t h ’s YA P r e s s Corps meet to read and talk about favorite books, and practice writing short reviews of books. “My childhood in New Jersey,” writes Karen Bao, who will talk about her writing process and answer questions, “was full of music, books, stargazing, and buggy science ‘experiments’ on the playground. As a high school senior, I wrote Dove Arising when I should have been doing my homework. I now study environmental bi-

ology at college in New York City, soaking up inspiration for future books.” Reviews by YA Press Corps members will be featured in the store and on social media. There will be book giveaways and news about what books have just been published or will be coming out this fall. There will be lemonade and cookies. All are welcome. ———

C.K. Williams Series Hosts Teddy Wayne

The C.K. Williams Reading S er ies at L aby r int h Books showcases senior thesis students of the Lewis Center for the Arts’ Program in Creative Writing with established writers as special guests. On Friday, September 30 at 6 p.m. Award-winning novelist

Teddy Wayne and five seniors — Claire Ashmead, E m m a M i ch a la k, Z e e n a Muburak, Do-Hyeong Myeong, and Steffen Seitz — will read from their work. Teddy Wayne, the author of Loner, The Love Song of Jonny Valentine, and Kapitoil, is the winner of a Whiting Writers’ Award and an NEA Fellowship as well as a finalist for the Young Lions Fiction Award, PEN/ Bingham Prize, and Dayton Literary Peace Prize. He writes regularly for The New Yorker, The New York Times, Vanit y Fair, McSweeney’s, and elsewhere. The series celebrates the memory of Pulitzer-Prizewinning poet and Princeton University faculty member C.K. Williams, who died a year ago this month. ———

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15 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

Books

illuminating — that helped make this bygone event seem fresh and exciting even after more than seven decades. Welles’ broadcast and the reaction to it revealed the persuasive power of fake news, teaching lessons that remain just as timely today — especially in this unusual election season.” Somerset County Library System of New Jersey will be giving away a signed copy of Mr. Schwartz’s book during an upcoming #FreeBookFriday promotion on the Library System’s Facebook page, Facebook.com/ SCLSNJ. Registration is required to attend these programs. For more information or to register, visit SCLSNJ.org or contact your local SCLSNJ library branch. ———


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 16


17 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 18

Civil Rights Commission Rotary Club’s Military and continued from page one

unfairly or targeted because of the color of your skin, I imagine it is difficult to really understand why this is so important,” Ms. Fraga said. “There are so many in our community that are hurting …. This is something that we need and it can’t come soon enough.” An advisory body, the Commission would meet monthly and be made up of nine members appointed by the mayor with consent of Council. All must be residents of Princeton and have experience in assisting in the resolution of discrimination complaints, according to the ordinance. Meetings can take place in closed session, to protect the privacy of those making complaints. But any documents or written materials are subject to public access under the Open Public Records Act (OPRA). A public hearing on the ordinance will take place at the October 24 meeting of Council. —Anne Levin

Veteran’s Appreciation Day

The skies over Hillsborough’s Central Jersey Regional Airport (47N) will be filled with a rare showing of military and vintage fixedwing aircraft and helicopters on Saturday, October 8, as part of a day-long event to help Rotary District 7510 raise funds for various charities and foundations dedicated to assisting active US military and veterans. Pilots from dozens of airports throughout New Jersey have been invited to participate with their planes. The event will be held from 1-5 p.m. and admission is free. “We’re very excited that the military has agreed to stage a fly-by of important military aircraft, including a C130 Transport, a C17, and Apache Helicopters,” commented Hillsborough Rotary Club member Jodi DiPane-Saleem, who heads the Rotary committee organizing the event. “We also have plans for several interactive static displays, which

children can explore, including a military helicopter!” Donations of food, clothing and toiletries for the military and veterans will be collected at the event. Participating organizations include Operation Shoebox New Jersey and Operation ChillOut. Outreach and information for members of the military and veterans, as well as their families, will be provided by several organizations, including the Veterans Administration (VA) and Welcome Home Vets of New Jersey. Veterans who need assistance with obtaining benefits or help from the VA are encouraged to come to speak with these representatives to learn about the valuable resources they provide. Operation ShoeBox, Operation ChillOut, and Welcome Home Vets of New Jersey will host displays at the event where donated items can be dropped of f. Op erat ion Shoebox New Jersey will have a display of greeting cards for

children to color. The greetings will be included in the care packages shipped overseas. Welcome Home Vets of New Jersey will have representatives on hand to assist vets with any personal and/ or financial difficulties they are having. The rain date for Military and Veterans Appreciation Day is Sunday, October 9. Entrance to the airport is located at 1034 Millstone River Road in Hillsborough.

Clubs The Women’s College Club of Princeton will meet at All Saints’ Church in Princeton on Monday, October 17 at 1 p.m. Tim Fagin (associated with Princeton Tour Company) will speak about “All Things Einstein,” with a focus on the historical figure’s humanitarian works, personal life, and civic exploits. The meeting is free 34TH ANNUAL AUTUMN HOUSE TOUR IN LAMBERTVILLE: The and open to the public. Lambertville Historical Society will hold their 34th Annual Autumn House Tour on Sunday, October 16 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Featured homes range in type from an 1877 second-empire Victorian to a simpler circa 1850 brick row house with extensive interior renovations.Additional sites include an early 19th century Greek Revival Church and an 1877 19th century Eclectic/Victorian style commercial property. The tour is selfguided. Tickets are $25 in advance ($30 on the day of the tour) and can be purchased at the Marshall House (60 Bridge Street in Lambertville), various retailers in downtown Lambertville, and online at www.LambertvilleHistoricalSociety.org. Free parking and shuttle bus service will be available on the day of the tour. For more information, call (609) 397-0770 or email info@LambertvilleHistoricalSociety.org. exactly to act as caring faMen Mentoring Men At Theological Seminary thers or caring friends, to

Men Mentoring Men (M3), a secular non-profit New Jersey organization dedicated to helping men live happier, healthier lives is hosting the first New Jersey Conference on Men and Masculinity, Friday and Saturday, November 4 and 5, at Princeton Theological Seminary, 64 Mercer Street. Open to both men and women, students, helping professionals and educators, the conference will feature author Michael Kimmel as keynote speaker. His Friday night keynote, “Men and Masculinity in a Changing World” will explore the rich diversity of men’s lives and how the majority of sensitive males who want to change do not know how. They are doubtful as to what it means

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respond nonviolently when faced with aggression, or to behave as equal partners without losing their masculinity in relationships, the workplace and the world at large. Mr. Kimmel is the author of more than 20 books, including Manhood in America, The Gendered Society, The History of Men, and Guyland. He is distinguished professor of sociology and gender studies at Stony Brook University, where he directs the Center for the Study of Men and Masculinities. Interactive Conference Workshops include “Building Connections: An Experiential Workshop in Gender Empathy” presented by Holly Barlow Sweet, PhD, co-director of the Cambridge Center for Gender Relations; “How to Find a Balance in Our Stressful Lives” presented by Ken Verni, PsyD, Director of the NJ Center for Mindful Awareness; “Men and Happiness” presented by Dr. Ed Adams, founder of Men Mentoring Men, and “Looking for Love in All the Right Places” presented by Marilee Adams, PhD, author of Change Your Questions, Change Your Life: 12 Powerful Tools for Leadership, Coaching and Life and founder of the Inquiry Institute. Saturday’s program will conclude with a Men Mentoring Men meeting for male attendees and a “More Than Men” mentoring meeting that is open to all attendees. To register visit Men Mentoring Men. For more information, email Robert Hackm a n, rob er t hack m a n5 @ gmail.com or call (484 ) 800-2203. Space is limited. Early registration for the Friday presentation is $55; the Saturday program is $180; and both days are $215. For more information on Men Mentoring Men, visit www. menmentoringmen.org.


continued from page one

utility lines underground, but the estimated costs are prohibitively expensive,” she added. “There are also complications caused by the narrowness of the road. Undergrounding the utilities could preclude space for street trees.” After many years of delay, residents and town officials are seeking ways of trimming costs and moving ahead. “The municipality is continuing to work with the neighbors to see if there are other options that haven’t been considered,” Ms. Lempert said. “Once we have a consensus from the neighbors we will move forward on the project.” At private meetings of Bank Street neighbors early last week and also at a public session at the Municipal Building last Wednesday night, residents agreed to explore how to address the challenges. “The neighborhood said they would give us a oneyear reprieve,” said municipal engineer Deanna Stockton. “There is hope for a price break from the utilities. We’re following up on our plan for roadway and sewage systems renovations. We’d like to have a comprehensive plan to see how all the pieces fit together before moving forward.” Charles Crider, Bank Street neighborhood representative, stated that the residents agreed on the need to reduce the price. “We all wanted to bring the price down, and we decided we’d be willing to wait another year if that’s what it took.” Noting the unique nature of the street, Mr. Crider was optimistic about cutting costs in the short term and about possible long-term results of the current dilemma. “This is a chance to make an investment that will pay back,” he said. “It’s a matter of horizon. It’s a special street, the pride and joy of the downtown. It’s a mix of all different kinds of people.” Mr. Crider was hopeful that the Town, engineers, and others, with the help of Assemblymen Andrew Zwicker and Jack Ciatarelli, would be able to negotiate the utilities down in price He also suggested that grants could be obtained and that the town could help spread the costs over a 10 or 20-year period. He commented on the increased communication and cooperation among Bank Street residents. Impatience and frustration mark the reactions of some Bank Street property owners and residents, however, who feel they have already waited too long. Tony Nelessen, Bank Street property owner and professor of urban planning and design at Rutgers’ Bloustein School, blamed the Municipality for the delays, stating, ”It’s been a delay for 35 years. They have not done their homework in figuring the costs.” Claiming that Bank Street had been neglected over the past decades, Mr. Nelessen explained that the problem is a complicated one. “There are so many unresolved issues here, and the town is dealing with it not in a holistic but in a piecemeal way.” Mr. Nelessen, however, did express guarded optimism in seeing the residents working together with Mr. Crider as their spokesman. —Donald Gilpin

Of Community Foundation

T he Pr inceton Area Com mu nit y Fou ndat ion has app oi nte d M ichael H. Ullmann, a long-time Princeton resident, to its Board of Trustees for a three-year term. Mr. Ullmann is the execut ive v ice pre sident, general counsel of Johnson & Johnson and a member of the company’s Executive Committee and Management Committee. He has worldwide responsibility for legal, government affairs and policy,

global security, aviation and health care compliance and privacy. Before assuming that position he served as general counsel of the Worldwide Medical Devices Group for six years. He also served as corporate secretary from 1999 to 2006. Before joining Johnson & Johnson in 1989 as a mergers and acquisitions attorney, he practiced law in New York City. He has been a Princeton resident for over 25 years. “Mike’s exper ience in b o a r d g ove r n a n c e, h i s

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Cell: 609-933-7886 jbudwig@glorianilson.com

R E A L E S T AT E 609-921-2600

pas sion for advocat ing for the needs of children, and his strong ties to central New Jersey make him an excellent addition to our Board, said Carol P. Herring, the chair of the Community Foundation’s Board of Trustees. As we move forward with our efforts to improve the lives of children and adoles cents liv ing in pover t y, we will benefit from his contributions.” T he Pr inceton Area Com mu nit y Fou ndat ion promotes philanthropy and builds community across Mercer County and central New Jersey. It helps p e ople a n d comp a n ie s make effective charitable gifts and awards grants to nonprofit groups. Since its founding in 1991, the Com mu nit y Fou ndat ion has grown into an organization with more than $120 million in assets and made grants of over $75 million, including $16 million in 2015. ———

PA L M E R S Q UA R E P R E S E N TS

FIRST LADY OF AVIATION: Charles Lindbergh wasn’t the only accredited pilot in the family. His wife, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, had her own airborne accomplishments. The couple are the focus of an ongoing exhibit at Morven Museum, 55 Stockton Street, and are the subject of a lecture on Thursday, September 29 at 7 p.m. by Dorothy Cochrane, who curates the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum’s collections of general aviation aircraft and flight material, aerial cameras, and the history of general aviation and women in aviation. She is also an accomplished author. Tickets are $25 ($20 for Friends of Morven). Visit www.morven.org or call (609) 9248144 ext. 102.

ONLINE

www.towntopics.com

A NIGHT OF

* Thursday, Sept. 29,2016 on the Green at Palmer Square

IT’S ! FREE

5:30pm

6:30-7:30pm

lululemon athletica lounge Featuring their #morethanmiles mission, meet Mind/ Body Coach Ed Tseng, plus glow-in-the-dark body art

Group Run with Pacers Running 3-miles with fellow endorphin enthusiasts

6:15pm Pre-Stretch

6:30-7:00pm Pure Barre Pop-Up Class Come experience what it means to Lift. Tone. Burn. ($27 value!)

7:00pm Bar Meet-up at the Yankee Doodle Tap Room Cheers to your hard work! Hard Cider Sangria / $5 Pulled Pork Sliders / $2.50 each Plus, football Pub Grub and Beer specials

*Glow bands will be provided

palmersquare.com

Plus shop the Square when you’re here…stores open until 8:30pm!

19 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

Bank Street Residents Michael Ullman Joins Board


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 20

Michener’s commitment to contemporary sculpture, a commitment that will be underscored this fall by another exhibition featuring the work of Robert Engman.” With its shifting forms, Hertzel’s work in both sculpture and paint represents a state of transition and explores the intersection of nature and spirit, and their connections to the artistic process. The metal sculpture Adam Splitting was the motivation behind Hertzel’s watercolor creations; it will be the only metal work presented in the exhibitions. The Michener Art Museum will host an artist gallery talk with Jonathan Hertzel at 3 p.m. on Saturday, November 12. The Michener Art Museum is located at 138 South Pine St., Doylestown, Pa. The museum is open Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m.- 4:30 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; and Sunday, noon–5 p.m. For more information, visit MichenerArtMuseum.org or call (215) 340-9800. ———

Art

“CHASING SPARKS 2”: “Jonathan Hertzel: When Sparks Fly” highlights the artist’s recent work in watercolor alongside one of his dynamic bronze sculptures. Pictured here is his 2015 watercolor on Arches paper that is on display at the Michener Art Museum until December 31.

Sparks Fly at Michener Art Museum

A new exhibition featuring works by painter and sculptor Jonathan Hertzel is open to the public at the James A. Michener Art Museum until December 31, 2016, Jonathan Hertzel: When Sparks Fly showcases the artist’s recent creations in watercolor and is accompanied by one of Hertzel’s more notable

metal sculpt ures, Adam Splitting. “Presenting the mesmerizing work of Jonathan Hertzel is an excellent opportunity for us to spotlight a contemporary artist whose work has resonated well beyond the mid-Atlantic region,” said Lisa Tremper Hanover, director and CEO of the Michener Art Museum. “This exhibition reinvigorates the

“The Built World” At PDS Art Gallery

The Anne Reid ’72 Art Gallery at Princeton Day School presents “The Built World,” featuring the work of PDS Art Faculty members Chris Maher and Chase Rosade. This exhibit will be on view from October 17 through November 10, 2016. There will be an opening reception with the artists on Wednesday, October 19 from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. The exhibit and reception are both free and open to the public. “The Built World” combines manipulation of natural materials by two artists. Through

Artist Talks Three Artists. Three Women.

Pat Steir

Teresita Fernández

October 8 at 2 pm McCosh 10

Shahzia Sikander

October 13 at 5:30 pm McCosh 10

November 17 at 5:30 pm McCosh 10

The Museum is excited to present a very special series of artists’ talks this fall. The season begins with Pat Steir—long one of the most important abstract painters on the New York scene—whose work is currently on view at the Museum with two major new acquisitions. Teresita Fernández, a leading contemporary artist, is highlighted in A Material Legacy: The Nancy A. Nasher and David J. Haemisegger Collection of Contemporary Art. Internationally acclaimed Pakistani-American artist Shahzia Sikander will be featured this fall in an exhibition of contemporary South Asian art and with two monumental new commissions on campus.

always free and open to the public artmuseum.princeton.edu

Pat Steir. Photo: Chris Sanders; Teresita Fernández. Photo: Billy Farrell; Shahzia Sikander. Photo: Erica Ede for Guggenheim Bilbao

TT_Artist Talks2016.indd 1

9/15/16 10:39 AM

“THE BUILT WORLD”: These works by PDS art faculty will be on display at the Anne Reid Art Gallery. On the right is, “Bonzai” by Chase Rosade and on the left is Chris Maher’s “Antlerback Chair.” The exhibit combines manipulation of natural materials by the two artists, specifically in the presentation of handmade furniture and bonsai. The exhibit called “The Built World” will run from October 17 through November 10. shaping the natural world shape the world around us. stown, Pennsylvania, Chase around us, Chris Maher trans- Bon, a small tray or pot, and Rosade moved to England forms wood into innovative Sai, a tree that is planted, give and finally to Nara, Japan furniture, while Chase Rosade way to Bonsai, a tree planted where he studied the art of works in the ancient tradition in a small pot. Simple enough bonsai with Kyozo Yoshida. of the art of bonsai. These in definition, yet for over a After working in this traditwo different techniques re- thousand years, this process tion for more 50 years, Mr. flect manipulation through has walked the line between Rosade has traveled to almost living and dead wood to push art and science. The manipu- every continent in the world and blur the boundaries of art lation of natural materials to lecture on the art of bonand science. has been responsible for our sai. He continues to teach and The artists note their inspi- ‘built world.’ From ship build- demonstrate in his extensive, ration: “Since humankind has ing techniques, to furniture New Hope, Pennsylvania bonwalked the earth, we have ma- design and modern architec- sai studio, which is open to nipulated the world around us. ture, controlling the tree has the public. We have turned animal hides shaped the way we live today. “The Built World” is open to clothing, ground pigments Through this work, we will ex- to the public from 9 a.m. to 5 into paint, and harnessed the plore how manipulating living p.m. Monday through Friday power of the natural world. As wood and transforming dead when the school is in session, this ability has progressed to wood have reflected human- and by appointment on weekmodern times, we now have kind’s innovations to push ends. For more information the ability to influence our and blur the boundaries of about the Anne Reid ’72 Art own biology. In this project, art and science.” Gallery, call Jody Erdman, art we use bonsai as a medium to With a degree in ornamen- gallery director, at (609) 924investigate the human desire tal horticulture from Delaware 6700 x 1772 or visit www. to utilize art and science to Valley University in Doyle- pds.org.


Play Group

Fun for your Dog, Peace of Mind for You! STUDIO JAPAN ANNUAL EXHIBITION AND SALE: Studio Japan of Kingston will hold their Annual Exhibition and Sale, October 3-18 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. Featuring traditional Japanese furnishings, TANSU cabinetry, pottery, and decorative folk arts, anyone interested in Japanese culture is encouraged to attend. The museum itself is a Sukiya tea culture inspired building reconstructed from an historic post and beam barn. Established in 1982, Studio Japan serves as the museum and conservation workshop of Ty and Kiyoko Heineken, the authors of TANSU: Traditional Japanese Cabinetry. Studio Japan is located at 110 Main Street (4505 Route 27 North) in Kingston. The event is free. To learn more visit www.tansucabinetry.com or call (609) 683-0938. Questions can be directed to ty@tansucabinetry.com.

Area Exhibits Arts Council of Princeton, 102 Witherspoon Street, has the Neighborhood Portrait Quilt on permanent exhibit. Sculptures by Patrick Strzelec are on the Graves Terrace through June 30, 2017. www. artscouncilofprinceton.org. Artworks, Everett Alley (Stockton Street), Trenton, has “Mujeres,” a group exhibit by Latina artists; “Considering Harm,” work by Pamela Flynn; and “Sarcastic, Serious, Scary,” art by Larry McKim, through October 1. www.artworkstrenton.com. Bernstein Gallery, Robertson Hall, Princeton University, has “In the Nation’s Service? Woodrow Wilson Revisited” through October 28. RevisitWilson @prince ton.edu. D&R Greenway, 1 Preservation Place, shows “Rare Wildlife Revealed: The James Fiorentino Traveling Art Exhibition” through October 14. The opening reception is September 30, 5:30-7:30 p.m. Rsvp@greenway.org. Ellarslie, Trenton’s City Museum in Cadwalader Park, Parkside Avenue, Trenton, has “Tertulia: Honoring Local and Regional Latin Artists” through November 13. (609) 989-3632. Garden State Watercolor Society Annual Art Sale is October 1-10 at 19 Hulfish Street. All original work is under $1,000 and 10 percent of sales are donated to Good Grief. Free artist demonstrations will be held. www.gswcs. com. Grounds for Sculpture, 80 Sculptors Way, Hamilton, has Paul Henry Ramirez’s “RATTLE,” a site-specific installation, on view through January 8, “Ayami Aoyama:

908.359.8388

Route 206 • Belle Mead

Silence,” “Ned Smyth: Moments of Matter” through April 2, 2017, and other works on view. www.groundsforsculpture.org. Historical Society of Princeton, Updike Farmstead, 354 Quaker Road, has “The Einstein Salon and Innovators Gallery,” and a show on John von Neumann, as well as a permanent exhibit of historic photographs. $4 admission Wednesday-Sunday, noon-4 p.m. Thursday extended hours till 7 p.m. and free admission 4-7 p.m. www.princetonhistory.org. The James A. Michener Art Museum at 138 South Pine Street in Doylestown, Pa., has “Oh Panama! Jonas Lie Paints the Panama Canal” through October 9 and “Jonathan Hertzel: When Sparks Fly” through December 31. Visit www.michenerartmuseum.org. The Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, 71 Hamilton Street, on the Rutgers campus in New Brunswick, has “Fletcher and the Knobby Boys: Illustrations by Harry Devlin” through June 25, 2017. bit.ly/ZAM MatM. Mor p e t h Conte m p o rary, 43 West Broad Street, Hopewell, has sculpture by Ayami Aoyama and paintings by Deborah Barlow through October 16. info@morpeth contemporary.com. Morven Museum and Garden, 55 Stockton Street, has docent-led tours of the historic house and its gardens, furnishings, and artifacts. “Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh: Couple of an Age” runs through October 2016. www.mor ven.org. The Princeton University Art Museum has “Surfaces Seen and Unseen: African Art at Princeton” through October 9, “Ansel Adams to Edward Weston: Examining the Legacy of David H. McAlpin” through October 2, and “A Material Legacy: The Nancy A. Nasher and David J. Haemisegger Collection of Contemporary Art” through October 30. “Remember Me: Shakespeare and his Legacy” runs October 1-De-

cember 31. (609) 258-3788. Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed Association, 31 Titus Mill Road, Pennington, has “H2O,” with works inspired by water by 30 artists, September 29-November 9. (609) 737-3735. Tigerlabs, 252 Nassau Street, has works by Ryan Lilienthal on display through January 1. info@tigerlabs.co.

More personalized than doggy day care. More interactive than a simple leash walk. The Doggie Play Group offers extended play time, personal attention and loving care for your dog by an experienced, reliable and professional pet sitter. • Extended multi-dog play sessions • Routine Pet Sitting Visits • Special Care for Puppies and Elderly Dogs

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Fruit and Vegetable Farm Great Fun for the Whole Family • Cider • Farm Market • Adventure Barn - Everything Pumpkin

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Daisy Jug Band Daisy Jug Band Too Kany Creek Barn Cats Jersey Corn Pickers Mark Miklos Raritan Valley Ramblers Mountain Heritage Tom & Jerry Band

10.10 10.15 10.16 10.22 10.23 10.29 10.30

Jay Smar Jimmy Lee Ramblers Ocean Country Band Magnolia St String Band Heavy Traffic Blue Grass Band Jersey Corn Pickers Growing Old Disgracefully

Weekend Festival admission $8 (kids under 3 free) No admission charge for Market, Tasting Room, Pick-Your-Own

21 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

Doggie The


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 22

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23 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

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TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 24

Music and Theater

Master Class in Classic South Indian Dance

Acclaimed dancer/cho r e o g r ap h e r A p a r n a R a maswamy brings her solo work They Rose at Dawn to t h e B e r l i n d T h e at r e on October 23 at 3 p.m. In this solo work, women are depicted as car r iers of r it ual. Nav igat ing in ner and outer worlds, they invoke a sense of reverence, of u nfolding mys ter y, of imagination. Ramaswamy’s performance is a master-class in the classic S out h Indian dance for m of Bharatanat yam, where the body is material — an interlocking puzzle of pieces assembled to create otherworldly grace. A live Carnatic musical ensemble accompanies Aparna as she explores the spontaneous inter play bet ween music and movement and the dynamic contours created by the artist onstage. About They Rose at D a w n, A p a r n a R a m a s wamy says: “The last few years, I’ve been thinking a lot about how culture, and ritual, are communicated through family. Those concepts of what we choose to pass on — and what we choose to leave behind. How does culture change and morph? The work that we do is s o he av i ly i n formed by where we come from. Spirituality, mythology, literature from India … but also our experiences as

Americans, being exposed to artists from so many different genres, and seeing how our work can meet, and meaningfully converse together.” Tickets are $60 and are on sale now at the McCarter Theatre Center ticket office, by phone at (609 ) 258 -2787, or on l i n e at www.mccarter.org. ———

The Stella Adler Approach Lecture and Master Class

Former Dean of the Actors Studio Drama School and master acting teacher Sam Schacht will present a lecture and master class on “Acting Chekhov: The Stella Adler Approach,” for Princeton University students, open to the public to observe, on Thursday, September 29 at 4:30 p.m. in the Whitman College Theater on the Princeton campus. The session is part of a fall course being co-taught by Professor R. N. Sandberg of the Program in Theater and the Department of English and Professor Olga P. Hasty of the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, “The Human Comedy of Anton Chekhov Off and On Stage (In English Translation).” The event is cosponsored by the Lewis Center for the Arts, the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, the Department of Comparative Literature, The Council of the Humanities Class of 1970 Fund, and the Program in Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies, and is free. The course focuses on Chekhov’s play The Three Sisters through which the students are exploring the worlds that Chekhov’s drama opens to readers, directors, actors, and spectators. The course examines the play’s text and cultural context and its various stage and film versions, and uses scene work to bring the piece alive. Sandberg has directed numerous theater productions at Princeton, including Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya.

Also a playwright, his play, Roundelay, premiered at Passage Theater in 2013, and his other plays have been seen in Australia, Canada, England, Japan, Panama, and South Korea, as well as at theaters throughout the U.S. Sandberg is a Princeton alumnus and in 2014 received the University’s President’s Distinguished Teaching Award. Hast y’s scholarly work and teaching focuses on 19th-century Russian poetry, Russian post-symbolist poetry, formalism, the Russian avant-garde, Nabokov, émigré literature, and Russian drama. On October 25 Sandberg and Hasty will screen a film of the Wooster Group’s production of Brace Up, their interpretation of Chekhov’s The Thre e Sisters, fol lowed by a discussion with members of this New York City-based company of artists who make work for theater, dance, and media. This event will also be free and open to the public. For more information on this event, visit arts.princeton.edu. ———

the festival. “It is easy to see that religious faiths and secular ideals can feed this violence by motivating it, or seeking to justify it. However, faith often provides the deepest source of hope for the victims of violence, who find it one of the few ways in which to transcend the brutality of their experience. The aim of the Princeton Theological Seminary Film Festival is to explore this paradox through the medium of film.” Films include Of Gods and Men, a French drama that centers on the monastery of Tibhirine, where nine Trappist monks lived in harmony with the largely Muslim population of Algeria, until seven of them were kidnapped and assassinated in 1996 during the Algerian Civil War. Alissa Wilkinson, critic-at-large for Christianity Today will introduce the film. She will also deliver the festival lecture, “Pain, Begone! Shadows of Incarnation in Body Horror,” on October 21. Wilkinson will reflect on how the depiction of violence to women’s bodies in such films as Black Swan, Rosemary’s Baby, and The Witch can bring together the physical and the spiritual. Other film showings include: The Passion of Joan of Arc, Winter Light, The Apostle, and films by members of NAMI Mercer and ARC Mercer. The festival closes on October 23 with film clips, reflections, and a discussion of the festival with Clive Marsh and Joseph Kickasola. For more information and to purchase a film festival badge, v isit ptsf ilmfest. com. ———

To: ___________________________ Seminary Film Festival From: _________________________ Date &Explores Time: ______________________ Human Condition The Princeton TheologiHere is a proof of your ad, scheduled to run ___________________. cal Seminar y Film FestiSOUTH INDIAN DANCE: McCarter Theatre presents Aparna val features four days of Ramaswamy “They Rose at Dawn”Please on Sunday, October 23 atit3 thoroughly and pay special attention t to hought-provok i ng f i lm s check the following: p.m. In this solo work, women are depicted as carriers of ritthat provide a unique opual. A live Carnatic musical ensemble will accompany portunity to explore some (Your checkAparna mark will tell us it’s okay) onstage. Tickets are $60 and can be purchased by phone at of the deepest aspects of (609) 258-2787 and online at www.mccarter.org.

❑ Phone number

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FOrCeHUeRE!

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❑ Fax number

the human condition. Presented by Princeton Theological Seminar y in conjunction with Princeton Garden Theatre, Princeton Community Television, and Labyrinth Books, the film festival takes place October 20–23, screening in two locations in Princeton. “Violence pervades the contemporary world in indefinitely many forms — military conflicts, terrorist attacks, mass shootings, drug wars, tribal rivalries, domestic abuse,” said Dr. G ordon G ra ha m, Henr y Luce III Professor of Philosophy and the Ar ts at Pr inceton Seminar y and one of the coordinators of

❑ Address

❑ Expiration Date

Unruly Sounds Festival Takes Over Hinds Plaza

Princeton Sound Kitchen, Princeton Public Library, and the Princeton Record Exchange will sponsor Unruly Sounds, Princeton’s latest music festival. Focusing solely on the talents of graduate student composers from Princeton UniverLESSONS • RENTALS • INSTRUMENTS & MORE sity’s Department of Music, Unruly Sounds will be held at Hinds Plaza on Sunday, October 2 from 12:30 to 7 p.m. Unruly Sounds is the Montgomery Center • Rte 206 • 609-924-8282 • www.farringtonsmusic.com Next to ShopRite • 5 miles from Downtown • Free Parking Give Your Child the Music Advantage brainchild of local resident Mika Godbole who wished to bring contemporary music into a more relaxed, public setting. Musicians include Dam•• piano •• guitar piano guitar •• drums drums sel (Beth Meyers and Mon•• violin •• voice ica Mugan), Bitter Bloom violin voice •• flute flute • cello • clarinet • sax • trumpet (Mark Harris and Domenica •• flute • trombone clarinet ••sax sax • trumpet Romagni), and the creative PRINCETON: 609-924-8282• violin • clarinet • trumpet voices of Leila Adu, Anna ★ NEW LOCATION ★ Pidgorna, Annika Socolof947 RT. 206, Suite 204 sky, Quinn Collins, Dave 609-897-0032 Molk, Pascal LeBeouf, Flo(next to Audi dealer) 609-387-9631 609-448-7170 PRINCETON JCT 609-924-8282 rent Ghys, Jeff Snyder, and 5 Minutes from Downtown BURLINGTON many more. HIGHTSTOWN PRINCETON Lessons Only FREE PARKING Attendees are encouraged www.farringtonsmusic.com to walk around, sit, eat, and immerse themselves in Unruly Sounds! This event is free.

MUSIC LESSONS RENT ALS RENTALS SCHOOL BAND

“Your teachers treat you with a great deal of respect.”

- Grant Versfeld ’17

JOYFUL LEARNING. Experience a dynamic community where

learning is a passion and each day is infused with a spirit of joy. We prepare students for college and life, with a skill-based curriculum that weaves innovative, student-centered learning opportunities within the context of a challenging STEM and humanities curriculum. We also believe that we do our best work when we are able to find joy in the process, through meaningful relationships and individualized opportunities.

L O W R AT E S

LESSONS

LIVING BODY THERAPIES

Upper School Open House, October 16th Register at hunschool.org

RESTORATIVE THERAPY FOR THE BODY AND MIND


Calendar Wednesday, September 28 1 p.m.: Wednesday Tea & Tour at Morven Museum and Garden (repeats weekly through November). Noon: Spotlight on the Humanities at Princeton Public Library presents “Religion in American Life: Black Gods, Prophets, and Utopian Visions” with Princeton University professor Judith Weisenfeld. Free. 7:30 p.m.: Art on Screen at Princeton Garden Theatre presents Hunger (2008) starring Michael Fassbender. The showing coincides with the Princeton University Art Museum’s exhibit “A Material Legacy” and includes an introduction by Associate Director of Education, Caroline Harris. 8 p.m.: Princeton Country Dancers Contra Dance featuring Sue Gola with The Gotham Gals at Suzanne Patterson Center, 1 Monument Drive, Princeton (instruction begins at 7:30 p.m.). The cost is $8 to attend.

Thursday, September 29 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.: Outdoor Princeton Farmers Market at Hinds Plaza in downtown Princeton (repeats weekly). 7 to 9 p.m.: Learn about Lenape history in the tri-state region at “Teachings from the Turtle Clan: The Original Inhabitants of the Sourland Region” at Hopewell Train Station. This event is presented by the Sourland Conservancy. Register in advance at sour land.org. 7:30 p.m.: Screening of Theeb (2014) at Princeton Garden Theatre in collaboration with the Department of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University. The film features many non-actors from the Bedouin community in Southern Jordan. 7:30 p.m.: LaShir, the Jewish Community Choir of Princeton announces auditions for its 35th season. Rehearsals take place every Thursday evening from 7:30 to 9:15 p.m. For audition details, visit www.LaShir.org or call (374) 782-2746. Friday, September 30 9:45 a.m.: Job Seekers Session at Princeton Pub-

lic Library presents “Money Saving Strategies during a Career Transition – Health Insurance, Taxes, Etc.” with Personal Financial Strategist Bill LaChance. Free. Saturday, October 1 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.: NAMI Harvest of Hope Annual Wellness Conference at the Presbyterian Church of Lawrenceville. Kevin Hines will deliver the keynote address entitled, “Cracked Not Broken.” Hines is a mental health advocate, award-winning global speaker, bestselling author and documentary filmmaker who tells audiences around the world about his unlikely survival after jumping from the Golden Gate Bridge. Register online at www.namimercer. org. For more information, call 609-799-8994, ext. 10. 9 a.m. to noon: Invasive Shrub Removal at Hopewell Borough Park. This event is sponsored by the Sourland Conservancy, Mercer County Park Commission, and Friends of Hopewell Valley Open Space. Advance registration is required by emailing lcleveland @ sour land.org.

Got prayer? Ignatian Spirituality:

How being a Jesuit has influenced Pope Francis’ Papacy

Stephen J. Connor, M.Div. RENEW International

Thu., 9/29/2016 - 7 p.m.

St. Paul Spiritual Center, Princeton, NJ St. Paul Parish, 214 Nassau Street, Princeton, NJ 08542

The Spiritual Center is below the church, entrance from the parking lot behind the church. www.stpaulsofprinceton.org

25 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

NEW TEACHING ARTISTS AT TRENTON MUSIC MAKERS PROGRAM: The 2016-17 academic year brings eight new instructors, a new middle-school site, and a larger orchestra to Trenton Music Makers, Trenton Community Music School’s El Sistema-inspired youth orchestra. Pictured front row (left to right): Laurie Cascante, Anita Hill, Kaitlyn Baum, Priscilla Allman, Jody Rajesh. Pictured back row: Anna Lim (Trenton Community Music School Advisory Board), José Sánchez, Frederic Henry, Nathan Cohen, Barrington Brown, Steven Jack, Peg Banks, and Steve Merdian. Learn more at www.trentoncommunitymusic.org. (Photo Credit: Trenton Community Music School)

9:30 a.m.: EASEL Animal Rescue League 5K Run and 1 Mile Fun Walk at The College of New Jersey (TCNJ), 2000 Pennington Road, Ewing. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.: Princeton Hospital Rummage Sale at Princeton Airport, 41 Airpark Road (off of Route 206). Shop used furniture, art, lamps, appliances, and more. Rain or shine (also on Sunday, October 2). The event is sponsored by the University Medical Center of Princeton at Plainsboro. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.: Fall Family Fun Weekends at Terhune Orchards in Lawrenceville. Celebrate the fall season with pick-your-own apples and pumpkins, corn stalk maze, live music, delicious food, tractor-drawn wagon rides, and more (repeats every weekend through the end of October). 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.: The Arts Council of Princeton hosts a Batik Workshop at Morven Museum and Garden. Attendees will work with fiber and silk artist Lian Sawires to create 3 scarves. No prior experience necessary. The cost to attend is $117. Register online at www.artscoun cilofprinceton.org. 1:30 p.m.: Historical Lecture on George Washington’s “Indispensable Men” during the Revolutionary War at Rockingham Historic Site’s Dutch Barn, 84 Laurel Avenue, Kingston. The program will be delivered by author Arthur Lefkowitz. 5:30 p.m.: The Princeton Singers perform original works written by Artistic Director Steven Sametz at Princeton University Art Museum (also at 8 p.m.). 8 p.m.: Jazz 100 at McCarter Theatre. Modern jazz artists will pay homage to the musical legacy of Thelonious Monk, Dizzy Gillespie, Ella Fitzgerald, Mongo Santamaria, and more. Sunday, October 2 12:30 p.m.: Screening of Globe Theatre’s The Merchant of Venice at Princeton Garden Theatre. Monday, October 3 Recycling 7 p.m.: Continuing Conversations on Race Series presented by members of Not In Our Town, Princetonbased interracial and interfaith social action group. Free; Princeton Public Library. Tuesday, October 4 9:30 a.m.: Read & Pick: Pumpkins at Terhune Orchards in L aw rencev ille, an innovative program that combines reading and farm activities. The cost to attend is $7. Pre-register online at www.terhuneorchards.com (also at 11 a.m.). 7 p.m.: Whitney Quesenbery delivers a lecture entitled, “Democracy is a Design Problem.” The program will examine how improved design of ballots, voting systems, voter registration, votes guides, websites, and ot her election mater ials could better serve voters. Free; Princeton Public Library. Wednesday, October 5 1 p.m.: Wednesday Tea & Tour at Morven Museum and Garden (repeats weekly through November). 8 p.m.: Princeton Country Dancers Contra Dance featuring Bob Isaacs with Blue Jersey at the Suzanne Patterson Center, 1 Monument Drive, Princeton (instr uction begins at 7:30 p.m.). The cost is $ 8 to attend.

VIENNESE REFLECTIONS: Violinist Leila Josefowicz will perform at Princeton Symphony Orchestra’s (PSO’s) “Viennese Reflections Edward T. Cone Concert” on Sunday, October 9 at 4 p.m. at Richardson Auditorium. The concert includes the world premiere of a work by Princeton-based composer Julian Grant. The October 9 concert is made possible by the generous support of the Edward T. Cone Foundation. The PSO performed his Symphony last fall. Ticket prices include admission to a pre-concert talk at 3 p.m. To purchase, call (609) 497-0020 or visit www.princetonsymphony.org. (Photo Credit: Chris Lee)

Princeton’s Tony® Award-Winning Theater

Bathing in Moonlight

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Written by Nilo Cruz

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NOW – October 9, 2016 Recipient of an Edgerton Foundation New Play Award

www.mccarter.org | 609.258.2787 This program is made possible in part by funds from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts and by funds from the National Endowment for the Arts.


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 26

The Magnificent Seven

CINEMA REVIEW

Denzel Reunites With Fuqua in Remake of Kurosawa Classic

LUNCH & WEEKEND BRUNCH

Topics

D

irected by the legendary Akira Kurosawa in 1954, Seven Samurai was a groundbreaking film that had a profound influence on the evolution of cinema for many years. Superficially, that seminal work was merely a martial arts epic set in 16th century Japan. Yet, over the years, it has spawned a series of knockoffs that reprise the picture’s narrative about a team of selfless heroes who were recruited to achieve some lofty goal. In 1960, Seven Samurai was remade as The Magnificent Seven, a Western that co-starred Steve McQueen, Yul Brynner, Charles Bronson, Eli Wallach, Robert Vaughn, and James Coburn. Today, that classic has been remade by Antoine Fuqua in a film that reunites the director with Denzel Washington after their successful collaborations on The Equalizer (2014) and Training Day (2001). The latter film won an Academy Award. This version of The Magnificent Seven has a few variations on the original theme. For example, the picture’s bad guy is now an avaricious white man who is intent on seizing a mining town’s gold — instead of a Mexican bandito who has been staging a series of border raids. And the good guys enlisted to take care of the greedy villains are a politically correct rainbow coalition comprised of heroes who come from diverse ethnic backgrounds. Otherwise, the essence of the original plot remains intact. As the film unfolds, we find that the people in

the frontier settlement of Rose Creek are living in fear of Bartholomew Bogue and his gang of marauders. Bogue is your stereotypical, bloodthirsty villain, played to perfection by Peter Sarsgaard. It is made clear just how low the diabolical Bogue will stoop to achieve his evil ends when he murders an innocent woman and burns the church to the ground. The frightened local people are at their wit’s end, and are glad to welcome the arrival in town of the bounty hunter Sam Chisolm (Washington). They have no idea that Chisolm isn’t being merely altruistic and that he has his own reasons to eliminate Bogue. After Chilsholm is deputized, he proceeds to assemble a crew composed of: a Civil War veteran suffering from shell shock (Ethan Hawke), a hard-drinking bombmaker (Chris Pratt), a gruff mountain man (Vincent D’Onofrio), a Chicano outlaw (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo), a Comanche archer (Martin Sensmeier), and a knife-throwing assassin (Byung-hun Lee). Don’t expect any deeply-developed characters. The movie is about the inexorable march to the big showdown when the heroes even the score — and then some. Excellent (HHHH). Rated PG-13 for intense violence, smoking, profanity, and suggestive material. Running time: 132 minutes. Distributor: Sony Pictures. —Kam Williams

LEILA JOSEFOWICZ, violin

Classical Series Edward T. Cone Concert

VIENNESE REFLECTIONS Sunday October 9 Richardson Auditorium, Princeton University 3pm Pre-Concert Talk / 4pm Concert

ROSSEN MILANOV Music Director

ROSSEN MILANOV, conductor LEILA JOSEFOWICZ, violin; JULIAN GRANT, guest composer JULIAN GRANT / Is it enough? Perhaps it is…*, After J.R. AHLE and J.S. BACH ALBAN BERG / Violin Concerto, “To the Memory of an Angel” FRANZ SCHUBERT / Symphony No. 9 in C Major, D. 944, “Great” *World premiere, commissioned by the Princeton Symphony Orchestra

princetonsymphony.org or 609 /497-0020 Dates, times, artists, and programs subject to change. This program is funded in part by the NJ State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts.

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HERE WE COME TO SAVE THE DAY: Sam Chisholm (Denzel Washington, third from right) has assembled a crew of six associates to save the town of Rose Creek from the evil Bartholomew Bogue (Peter Sarsgaard, not shown) and his gang who have been terrorizing the inhabitants of the town.

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The Beatles: Eight Days a Week (Unrated). Ron Howard directed this retrospective featuring found footage from interviews and concert performances by the Fab Four recorded between 1963 and 1966. Including commentary by Whoopi Goldberg, Sigourney Weaver, and Elvis Costello. Blair Witch (R for profanity, terror, and disturbing images). Horror sequel about a college student (James Allen McCune) who leads a group of classmates deep into a Maryland forest in search of the long-lost sister who disappeared during a similar expedition. Ensemble cast includes Callie Hernandez, Corbin Reid, Brandon Scott, Wes Robinson, and Valorie Curry. Bridget Jones’ Baby (R for nudity, profanity, and sexual references). RenÊe Zellweger reprises the title role in this dramatic comedy where the British bachelorette is pregnant but uncertain as to whether the father is her ex (Colin Firth) or her new lover (Patrick Dempsey). With Jim Broadbent, Gemma Jones, and Sally Phillips. Deepwater Horizon (PG-13 for intense action sequences, disturbing images, and brief profanity). A movie recreating the real-life events surrounding the 2010 explosion of the offshore oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico which claimed the lives of 11 crewmen and led to the worst crude oil spill in U.S. history. Co-starring Mark Wahlberg, Kate Hudson, Kurt Russell, and John Malkovich. Don’t Breathe (R for terror, violence, profanity, sexual references, and disturbing content). Suspense thriller about members of a gang (Jane Levy, Dylan Minnette, and Daniel Zovatto) who get more than they bargained for after burglarizing the home of a rich blind man (Stephen Lang) whom they thought would be an easy target. With Emma Bercovici, Franciska Torocsik, and Christian Zagia. Don’t Think Twice (R for profanity and drug use). Dramatic comedy about the emotional fallout that occurs to a fledgling, improv comedy troupe when one of its members (Keegan Michael-Key) gets a big break on a Saturday Night Live-type TV show. Cast members include Gllian Jacobs, Chris Gethard, Kate Micucci, Tami Sagher, and the film’s writer/director Mike Birbiglia. Florence Foster Jenkins (PG-13 for brief suggestive material). Meryl Streep has the title role in this biopic about a New York City socialite tone deaf opera star who, despite singing off key, accumulated a loyal following. Cast includes Hugh Grant, Simon Helberg, and Christian McKay. Hell or High Water (R for graphic violence, pervasive profanity, and brief sexuality). Modern Western about two sibling bank robbers (Chris Pine and Ben Foster) who are pursued by an aging Texas Ranger (Jeff Bridges) and his half-breed partner (Gil Birmingham). Featuring Kevin Rankin, Katy Mixon and Dale Dickey.

The Hollars (PG-13 for brief profanity and mature themes). John Krasinski directed and stars in this dramatic comedy as a struggling, New York City artist who moves back home to the midwest with his pregnant girlfriend (Anna Kendrick) to help care for his ailing mother (Margo Martindale). With Richard Jenkins, Sharlto Copley, Randall Park, and Josh Groban. Indignation (R for sexuality and profanity). Adaptation of Philip Roth’s novel, set in 1951, about a Jewish boy (Logan Lerman) from Newark, New Jersey’s adjustment to life on the campus of a conservative college in Ohio. With Sarah Gadon, Tracy Letts, and Ben Rosenfield. —Kam Williams

HARLEM ON MY MIND: A one-of-a-kind musician, Grammy Award-winner Catherine Russell brings her unique style to the Berlind Stage at McCarter Theatre Center on Saturday, October 22 at 8 p.m. Russell will perform “Harlem on My Mind: Songs from the Great African American Songbook,� as written or performed by Duke Ellington, Fats Waller, Alberta Hunter, Billie Holiday, Bessie Smith, Mary Lou Williams, and a host of others. Tickets can be purchased by phone at (609) 258-2787 or online at www.mccarter.org.

Starting Friday The Light Between Oceans (PG-13) Continuing The Beatles: Eight Days a Week – The Touring Years (NR) Hell or High Water (R) Ends Thursday Don’t Think Twice (R) Special Program Theeb (2014) Thu, September 29 7:30pm Globe Theatre The Merchant of Venice (NR) Sun, October 2 12:30pm National Theatre Live The Threepenny Opera (NR) Mon, October 3 7:30pm Special Program Idiocracy (2006) Tue, October 4 10:00pm Prof Picks Ex Machina (R) Wed, October 5 7:30pm Showtimes change daily Visit or call for showtimes. Hotline: 609-279-1999 PrincetonGardenTheatre.org

Fri. 09/30/16 to Thurs. 10/06/16 ****Starting Friday, Sep 30****

www.princeton.edu/richardson

This Month at Richardson Auditorium • Augustin Hadelich and Pablo Sainz Villegas Presented by Princeton University Concerts September 29, 6 pm & 9 pm • Capitol Steps Presented by the Princeton Senior Resource Center September 30, 7:30 pm • Rosh Hashanah Service Hosted by Center for Jewish Life October 2, 6:30 pm • October 3, 9 am • October 4, 9 am • Jamie Barton and James Ballieu Presented by Princeton University Concerts; October 6, 8 pm Free pre-concert lecture for ticket holders at 7 pm • New Jersey Symphony Orchestra with Stewart Goodyear, piano October 7, 8 pm Free pre-concert lecture for ticket holders at 7 pm • Princeton Symphony Orchestra with Leila Josefowicz, violin October 9, 4 pm Free pre-concert lecture for ticket holders at 3 pm • Yom Kippur Service Hosted by Center for Jewish Life October 11, 6 pm • October 12, 9:30 am • October 12, 4:30 pm

Queen of Katwe

• Belcea String Quartet Presented by Princeton University Concerts; October 13, 8 pm Free pre-concert lecture for ticket holders at 7 pm

The Dressmaker

• Richardson Chamber Players “Melting Potâ€? October 16, 3 pm

Friday - Saturday: 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 10:00 (PG) Sunday - Thursday: 1:45, 4:30, 7:15 Friday - Saturday: 1:50, 4:30, 7:10, 9:50 (R) Sunday - Thursday: 1:50, 4:30, 7:10 ****Continuing****

Snowden

Friday - Saturday: 1:35, 4:25, 7:15, 10:05 (R) Sunday - Thursday: 1:35, 4:25, 7:15

The Hollars

Friday - Saturday: 4:55, 9:40 (PG-13) Sunday - Thursday: 4:55

The Light Between Oceans Friday - Saturday: 4:25, 9:45 (PG-13) Sunday - Thursday: 4:25

Hell Or High Water

Friday - Saturday: 2:25, 4:50, 7:15, 9:40 (R) Sunday - Thursday: 2:25, 4:50, 7:15

Indignation

• The Football Concert—Harvard visits Princeton October 21, 7:30 pm • Princeton University Orchestra October 22, 7:30 pm • October 23, 3 pm • Sergei Babayan and Daniil Trifonov Presented by Princeton University Concerts; October 27, 8 pm Free pre-concert lecture for ticket holders at 7 pm • New Jersey Symphony Orchestra October 28, 8 pm • Princeton Pro Musica October 30, 4 pm Free pre-concert lecture for ticket holders at 3 pm All events are subject to change. Visit the Richardson Auditorium website for updates.

Friday - Thursday: 2:10, 7:05 (R)

Florence Foster Jenkins

Friday - Thursday: 1:55, 7:15 (PG-13)

TICKET SALES & INFORMATION Online: www.princeton.edu/utickets

Phone: 609.258.9220

NOW ON SALE

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2016 @ 7:30PM

A Benefit Concert with the Philly Pops and guest artist Michael Cavanaugh.

Patriots Theater at the Trenton War Memorial Tickets are $35-90 and can be purchased by calling 215-893-1999 or www.ticketphiladelphia.org.

For information about patron tickets or sponsorships, please call 609-896-9500, ext.2215 or email jmillner@slrc.org Proceeds benefit the patients and residents of St. Lawrence Rehabilitation Center and Morris Hall.

27 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

AT THE CINEMA


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 28

S ports

PU Field Hockey Tops Dartmouth in Ivy Opener As Senior Star Caro Comes Up Big With 2 Goals

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at Caro played her heart out for the Princeton University field hockey team as it fell 2-1 to powerful Maryland last week. The senior midfielder/ striker scored the lone goal for 13th-ranked Princeton against the 6th-ranked Terps and made her presence felt from end to end. As Caro hit the field last Saturday when Princeton started its Ivy League campaign by hosting Dartmouth, she was looking to build on her performance against Maryland. “I felt that,” said Caro, reflecting on the impact of the Maryland game. “I was feeding off of my teammates and starting to play with everyone’s energy. It is just playing, not thinking, and having fun.” Having won 11 straight Ivy crowns and 21 in the last 22 years, Princeton was primed to start it league campaign. “It is always an exciting part of the season,” said the 5’5 Caro, a native of nearby Bridgewater, N.J. “That was our goal, to feed off the energy we had with Maryland; playing hard and playing to win.” The Tigers played hard from the outset against the Big Green as Caro got Princeton on the board with a goal at the 9:11 mark.

“It was a great ball from Lotta (freshman Carlotta van Gierke); I was at the right place at the right time,” said Caro. “She played it to me and I just shot it.” Sparked by Caro’s tally, Princeton added goals by Ryan McCarthy and Jane Donio-Enscoe to build a 3-0 lead by halftime. “When anyone scores, there is that initial momentum,” noted Caro. “It could have been my goal, it could have been Jane’s goal.” In the second half, Caro helped Princeton keep up that momentum, scoring with 31:24 left in the half to make it a 4-0 game. Caro’s strike was the last goal of the contest as Princeton won by that margin. “That was a great ball from Krista Hoffman,” said Caro, in assessing her second tally. “I just shot it in, it is all good.” Helping new head coach Carla Tagliente earn her first Ivy win made it a good day all around for the Tigers. “Overall the transition has been really, really smooth so we are really, really lucky,” said Caro. “Both of our new coaches (head coach Tagliente and assistant Dina Rizzo) are awesome. They were great players so they naturally know the game so well. They are great leaders, ev-

eryone respects them and loves them. I think all of that together has really made the transition smooth. They really want the best for us and they don’t want us to feel like we missed anything or lost anything with the new coaches.” Princeton head coach Tagliente, for her part, was excited for her Ivy debut. “You circle that date and you are looking forward to it, we have had a challenging schedule so far,” said Tagliente. “We have had some good wins and some tough losses and had some really good competition. We talked in the locker room today about the significance of starting Ivy League play. We are the target in the conference. There is an expectation that we are always going to win and I asked them to knock that out of their heads. The expectation right now should be increasing the gap between themselves and everyone else in the Ivies and focusing on dominating game by game.” The Tigers responded with a dominant performance, outshooting Dartmouth 33-2 and building an 11-3 edge in penalty corners. “Today we got off to a good start, we ended up with 33 shots,” said Tagliente. “We need to put a lot more in but we also went

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deep into the bench. When we needed it, we scored and some of the stuff we did was really good.” Tagliente credited Caro with producing some really good plays in the win over the Big Green. “The last game was a real breakout game for Cat, she had one goal but playing the whole game was outstanding,” asserted Tagliente. “She has really been focusing on paying attention to small details and I think you can see it. It has been great to see her improve game by game. She looked good in this game and I am happy that she broke out early. I think we will continue to see that from her. I don’t think she is trying to do too much. We are just trying to get her to play within herself because she has a good group around her. She doesn’t need to do everything.” A number of Tigers produced good efforts against Dartmouth. “We had good scoring balance, I think Jane Donio-Ensco e has been playing great and she finally popped one in,” said Tagliente. “I think she did a really nice job. Maddie Bacskai gets overlooked because she doesn’t score goals but she has been really a rock back there at sweeper. For a freshman to play in that position, her value on the field is really tremendous. Elise Wong has been doing great. Nicole Catalino has been playing great. Krista Hoffman is a freshman who has been really adding a lot.” At the defensive end, Princeton did a nice job, keeping calm as it stifled the Big Green. “They did a good job, it is not an easy team to play against,” said Tagliente, whose team edged American 2-1 on Sunday improve to 5-3 overall and plays at Yale on October 1 and at No. 4 Penn State on October 2. “They really play so differently than most teams we play against; you see them tip and redirect balls a lot. That is not the norm and it is challenging to play against. I am happy with how the defense handled some chaotic situations. Caro, for her part, is handling her final college season by keeping in the moment. “It is last one, best one; leaving it all out there and whatever happens, happens,” said Caro, who now has five goals on the season and 23 in her Princeton career. “Whatever is in front of us, that is what we focus on. We don’t look ahead to the last game.” —Bill Alden

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COOL CAT: Princeton University field hockey player Cat Caro controls the ball in a 2015 game. Last Saturday, senior star Caro scored two goals to help 13th-ranked Princeton defeat Dartmouth 4-0 in the Ivy League opener for both teams. A day later, Caro and the Tigers edged American 2-1 to improve to 5-3 overall. Princeton plays at Yale on October 1 and at No. 4 Penn State on October 2. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski)

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Playing at Lehigh last Saturday, the Princeton University football team’s offense was clicking, moving effectively on the ground and through the air. The Tigers rolled up 199 yards rushing and 243 yards passing, putting 28 points on the scoreboard. But Pr inceton couldn’t slow down the Lehigh offense as its quarterback, Nick

Shafnisky, passed for 461 yards and four touchdowns to lead the Mountain Hawks to a 42-28 win before 5,493 at Goodman Stadium. W h i l e P r i n c e ton h e a d coach Bob Surace acknowledged that Shafnisky is a special player, he noted that the Lehigh offense was hardly a one-man show. “He is terrific but they have a very good offensive

FAST TRACK: Princeton University football player Charlie Volker eludes a foe in recent action. Last Saturday at Lehigh, sophomore running back Volker, an Ivy League champion sprinter, rushed for a career-high 82 yards on 13 carries for three touchdowns but it wasn’t enough as Princeton fell 42-28 to the Mountain Hawks. The Tigers, now 1-1, will look to get back on the winning track when they play at Columbia on October 1 in the Ivy League opener for both teams. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski)

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line and five skilled guys on the field at all times that are really good; that presents a lot of problems,” said Surace. “When there are just one or two guys you can game plan that. You just can’t sit on one thing all game because they have too many weapons. It becomes a little bit of a cat and mouse game that way. We wanted to mix things up and a couple of times they caught us in situations where their call was probably better than the call we called. The hard part is that we had some breakdowns in responsibilities and against a team like that, they are not going to miss.” Despite moving the ball c o n s i s t e n t l y, P r i n c e t o n made things harder on itself by throwing three interceptions. “We can’t turn the ball over three times, that is first and foremost,” said Surace. “It is not just one guy when those things happen. We had protection breakdowns and they happened on all three of the turnovers, that is not good. Those are tough learning moments to happen on the field.” The Tigers found themselves in a tough position from the outset as Lehigh took the opening kickoff and marched 75 yards in 11 plays, taking a 7-0 lead after a Shafnisky 7-yard touchdown pass to Derek Knott. Princeton answered back later in the quarter as it put together a 71-yard scoring drive that culminated with an 8-yard touchdown run by Charlie Volker to make it a 7-7 game. After falling behind 21-7 with 4:17 left in the first half, Princeton narrowed the gap to 21-14 at halftime as Volker, the 2016 Ivy League 60-meter champion, scampered 22 yards for a touchdown with 1:39 left in the second quarter. A pivotal sequence took place in the third quarter as Princeton blocked a field goal attempt and then squandered that break with a penalty and an interception. Lehigh proceeded to march 36 yards in a drive that

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culminated with a Shafnisky TD pass as the Mountain Hawks took a 28-14 lead and never looked back. “We get really good field position and we throw a pass where we wind up with a first down and we make a really poor decision on a penalty that should not have happened, it was behind the play,” lamented Surace. “Instead of having first down and being down seven points, we are backed up to the 45 and then we throw an interception two plays later. Those are the type of things that we have to get out of.” A bright spot for Princeton is the production it is getting from its running game as sophomore Volker rushed for a career-high 82 yards on 13 carries with three touchdowns while junior star John Lovett gained 75 yards on five carries and senior tri-captain Joe Rhattigan chipped in 45 yards on 12 attempts. “We have a lot of good running backs, Charlie and

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1, Surace knows his team needs to be sharper in all phases of the game as he expects a slugfest in the contest against the Lions. “We have a lot of corrections; we have to do a better job of getting through to the guys on exactly what we want and we have to get it executed that way,” said Surace. “I said the good news is that we open league play and that is where the trophy is. We have to come out and play a much better game. They are going to be a physical team. Last year it was one of the most brutal rainstorms ever when we played them. It was a heavyweight bout and the teams were just slugging it out. There weren’t a lot of yards. Just judging from their statistics in the first two games, I think they gave up 170 yards in their last game and they have given up 30 points in two games. That is a pretty awesome defense.” —Bill Alden

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Joey are getting the bulk of carries and John Lovett continues to get the ball as many times as we can get it to him,” said Surace. “He is good in every facet. Charlie had a little more space this week when he got his opportunities. He caught the ball very well when we threw it to him. His overall game continues to improve.” The Tigers, though, must tighten up the pass defense. “We have to get better; I have to figure out ways to get us to be more detailed and more precise,” said Surace. “For us to not affect the QB and disrupt him more is disappointing. It was a little harder this week because he is talented with his feet as well, he is very mobile. We did not do a good job of generating pressure and that compounded some of these things.” With Princeton starting Ivy League action by playing at Columbia (0-2) on October

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29 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

PU Football Hurt by Breakdowns in Loss to Lehigh, Needs to Sharpen Up as It Opens Ivy Play at Columbia


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 30

Seifert’s Move to Forward Paying Big Dividends As PU Men’s Soccer Tops FDU for 4th Straight Win Greg Seifert distinguished himself as a dependable, r ugged defender for the Princeton University men’s soccer team in his first three seasons with the program. Seifert played in 43 games for Princeton from 20132015, making 23 starts, including 13 last season. But the 5’11, 185-pound native of Woodland Park, N.J. has been harboring a

desire to get a shot at forward for the Tigers. “I have played a little bit in practice,” said Seifert. “I have always been in coach’s (Jim Barlow) ear to put me up top. I have asked him a couple of times.” With Princeton starting the 2016 season with two straight losses and locked in a scoreless draw at halftime with No. 22 Rider on

enter

September 13, Seifert got rest of the half, tying the his chance to play up top as game 17 seconds later and Barlow moved him to for- generating some other opward for the second half. portunities as the team were Making the most of his op- locked in a 1-1 stalemate at portunity, Seifert scored two intermission. goals to help Princeton pre“We let up a fr ustratvail 3-1 over the Broncs and ing goal right after we had break into the win column. s cored ; we jus t needed “That was our first win, it to bring it back together, was just really good to get buckle down and get going the win for the team,” said again,” said Seifert. Seifert. “That was a huge “At halftime we came toboost for us.” gether and everyone was Princeton hasn’t lost since, on the same page. We knew topping Boston University we needed to pick it up and 2-1 on September 16 and bring more energy into the beating Drexel 2-0 on Sep- game and just turn the game tember 20 before defeating back around in our favor. Fairleigh Dickinson 3-1 last We just worked hard and did well.” Saturday. Seifert helped energize “We feel like we have jelled a little bit more,” said the Tigers after the break, Seifert, reflecting on Prince- heading the ball off a corton’s recent surge. “We are ner kick that senior defender just grinding out games with Patrick Barba converted into heart recently and it has a goal with 12:55 remaining in regulation. been going well.” “I just went up for it and In the win over FDU, Seifert kept things going offen- got a piece of it and then we sively, scoring Princeton’s ended up putting it away,” first goal and then assisting recalled Seifert. “We were definitely pretty happy to on the second. “I just do my best when get the result on that one.” With Princeton starting they put me up there, I try to bring a lot of energy and am Ivy League play by hosting happy to get some looks,” Dartmouth on October 1, said Seifert, who now has Seifert and his fellow seniors three goals and an assist on are looking to spark the Tithe season to tie him with gers to a title run after some freshman Benjamin Martin recent near misses. as the team’s top scorer. “So “We have a chip on our far, so good.” shoulder, we know what it On his first tally against is like to be so close the past the Knights, Seifert benefit- two years and it has been reed by some good work by ally frustrating for us,” said senior defender Mark Ro- Seifert. manowski. Care & Rehabilitation Center “I think we have helped “It was just a corner kick, instill that attitude to the Romo got his head on it and younger guys and it is carknocked it down and I was rying over well so far.” just in the right place at the —Bill Alden right time,” said Seifert. FDU, though gave Princeton a hard time over the

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FORWARD PROGRESS: Princeton University men’s soccer player Greg Seifert tracks down a ball in a game last season. Senior star Seifert, who was recently moved to forward from defense, tallied a goal and an assist to help Princeton defeat Fairleigh Dickinson 3-1 last Saturday for its fourth straight win. The Tigers, now 4-2, play at Villanova on September 28 before hosting Dartmouth on October 1 in the Ivy League opener for both teams. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski)

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PU Sports Roundup

Princeton Women’s Soccer Ties Yale to Open Ivy Play

Abby Givens scored a first half goal to help the Princeton University women’s soccer team earn a 1-1 tie at Yale last Saturday in the Ivy League opener for both teams. Freshman forward Givens scored in the 19th minute to put Princeton up 1-0. Yale’s Aerial Chevarin had a takeaway in the 74th minute and scored to tie it at 1-1 and neither team tallied again through the rest of regulation and two overtimes. Princeton, now 7-1-1 overall and 0-0-1 Ivy, hosts Dartmouth on October 1 before playing at Lehigh on October 4.

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Brittany Ptak led the way as the Princeton University women’s volleyball defeated Penn 3-2 last Saturday in the Ivy League opener for both teams. Senior star Ptak had 21 kills to help the Tigers prevail 21-25, 25-11, 25-15, 22-25, 13-5. Princeton, now 7-3 overall and 1-0 Ivy, hosts Harvard on September 30 and Dartmouth on October 1. ———

Princeton Men’s Golf 6th At Windon Memorial

Marc Hedrick starred as the Princeton Universit y men’s golf team took sixth of 14 teams at Northwestern’s Windon Memor ial which wrapped up last Monday at the North Shore Country Club in Glenview, Ill. Junior Hedrick posted a score of two-over 218 for the three-round even to tie for 12th individually for the Tigers. In the team standings, Florida was first at -3 with Princeton ending up at +21 in taking sixth. The Tigers are next in action when they compete in the MacDonald Cup from October 1-2 at New Haven, Conn. ———

Princeton Women’s Golf 2nd in Fossum Invitational

Alison Chang and Jordan Lippetz came up big as the Princeton University women’s golf team placed second of 12 teams at Michigan State’s Mary Fossum Invitational last weekend. Fr e s h m a n C h a n g a n d senior Lippetz, co-led the team, t y ing for sevent h

In the team standings, the University of Miami placed first at -4 with Princeton next at +36. The Tigers are next in action when they host their annual Princeton Invitational from October 1-2 at the Springdale Golf Club. ———

PU Men’s Water Polo Goes 1-3 at California Event

Matt Payne had a strong performance in a losing cause as the 11th-ranked Princeton University men’s water polo team fell 11-10 to Air Force last Sunday in the final day of action at the Mountain Pacific Invitational in Walnut Creek, Calif. Sophomore Payne tallied two goals and two assists as the Tigers moved to 7-5 on the season. In earlier action at the event, Princeton fell 12-11 in 3OT to No. 6 UC-Santa Barbara, defeated Whittier College 15-9, and lost 13-9 to UC-Davis. Princeton hosts St. Francis-Brooklyn on September 28, Iona on September 30, Brown on October 1, and Harvard and MIT on October 2.

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Even though the Princeton High field hockey team trailed Notre Dame 1-0 at halftime last Wednesday, Avery Peterson was confident that they could right the ship. “We had problems in the beginning working together, we weren’t really communicating,” said PHS senior star forward Peterson. “I think we tried during

halftime to bring back the intensity. We always talk about how our game is a passing game; we really tried to have that in the second half.” Over the final 30 minutes of the contest, Peterson brought her game, scoring a pair of goals in sparking PHS to a come-from-behind 2-1 win over the Irish. “It started clicking more as the game went on, we worked

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through it,” said Peterson. Peterson’s first tally came with 23:54 remaining in regulation as she battled through a scrum in the circle to get the ball past the Notre Dame goalie. “It was definitely a joint effort, everyone was trying to get in really, really badly,” recalled Peterson. “Kennedy Corrado and Mariana Lopez-Ona were all trying to get it in. Everyone was working so hard from Jamaica Ponder, Maddie Deutsch, and Kate Wenzler in the back all the way up. Georgia McLean and Jordyn Cane, our midfielders, were working hard and transferring the ball. It was all like a scramble and then I saw the ball and I just kept trying to hit it in and finally I got it in.” For Peterson, getting that goal was special on many levels as it pushed her past the 100-point mark in her PHS career. “For this to get me over 100 points in this game really means a lot,” said Peterson. “Notre Dame is a tough opponent for us, it is such an equal game.” Pe te r s o n s h o w e d h e r toughness in the circle on t he game -w in n ing goal, once again fighting through a logjam of players to score with 28.4 seconds remaining in regulation. “It was a hard ball in from Mariana and Anna Cincotta brought it into the circle; she was working really hard to get it in,” said Peterson. “Then it came in and it went out wide and I turned around and hit it in. It was going out, I reached and luckily I was able to get it in.” In Peterson‘s view, pulling out the win over Notre Dame was the product of PHS keeping its nose to the grindstone. “We have worked really hard to get here through our scrimmages and preseason,” said Peterson, who is planning to play field hockey at the next level for Haverford College. “We really wanted it, this really means a lot to us. We have had such a good season so far. It is still really early but we are working in the right direction, it is awesome.” PHS head coach Heather Serverson was relieved to see her team overcome its

shaky start against Notre Dame. “I just told then to calm down and start some positive communication to get the team feel back on the field and make sure you are passing stick to stick because we kept giving them the ball,” said Serverson, reflecting on her halftime message. “They did everything they were supposed to do. Finally we started connecting. We were actually moving the ball and weaving the ball down so we weren’t going straight through the defenders.” In Serverson’s view, Peterson is a positive force driving the Little Tigers. “Aver y is obviously an awesome role model, she is a great leader,” said Serverson. “She is really steady and even keeled and the girls feed off of that. Avery is never really super excited or super down, even if she feels differently inside. That rubs off on the rest of the girls. They don’t get flustered, it is let’s get the next one.” Senior midfielder Georgia McLean has emerged as another great leader for PHS. “I don’t think Georgia gets enough credit for what she

does in the midfield,” said Serverson. “That girl is a hustler, she is at both ends when you need her. She really wants it, she gets them motivated. She is one of her captains too so it is part of her job but it is who she is. She is always ready to be a competitor.” The team’s competitive fire and capacity for improvement has Serverson looking forward to the rest of the fall. “I am glad it worked out today; I am happy that we are learning from the games,” said Serverson, whose team defeated Nottingham 8-0 last Monday to improve to 5-0-1 and plays at WW/PN on September 28 before hosting Hamilton on September 30 and Burlington Township on October 4.

“We are really analyzing what the flaws are in our game and specifically what we are going to practice. The girls have responded really well to that so if we can keep that going, there are good things ahead.” Peterson, for her part, is hoping to go out in a blaze of glory in her final campaign. “We have eight returning seniors; we have really been working together and working up to something big here,” said Peterson. “Last year, we were in the MCT semifinals but we didn’t end up winning. This year we are going to come and try to hit it hard. We are definitely trying to go for the county title.” —Bill Alden

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31 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

PHS Field Hockey Rallies to Win over Notre Dame As Peterson Hits the 100-point Mark in Her Career


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 32

Sparked by Goldsmith’s Production in Midfield, PHS Boys’ Soccer Edges Big Red in Moving to 6-1 It didn’t take long for Andrew Goldsmith to face a moment of truth as the Princeton High boys’ soccer team played at the Lawrenceville School last Saturday. Just 1:30 into the contest, PHS was awarded a penalty kick and senior midfielder and team co-captain Goldsmith stepped up to the spot and coolly rifled the ball into the lower corner to give the Little Tigers a 1-0 lead. Utilizing his considerable experience helped Goldsmith bury his chance. “When I was younger, I used to just try and put it in one corner or the other and have that in my mind,” said Goldsmith. “But as you get older and play bet ter goalies, you have to react to what they do. I saw he moved to his left early so that was really simple and I just put it in the other side.” PHS made things look simple in the early stages of the game against the Big Red, scoring two more goals in a 6:34 span as T.J. Korsah and Alex Ratzan found the back of the net for the Little Tigers to make it 3-0 with 31:56 remaining in the first half. “We just came out of the gates blazing,” said Goldsmith. “That is ideally what we should be doing every game.” T h e g a m e , h o w e v e r, turned into a nail-biter with PHS having to hold on for a 4-3 win as the Big Red scored once in the first half and then tallied twice in the second half after PHS senior

star Sam Serxner had given the Little Tigers a 4-1 lead. “Credit to them for coming back at us strong; we just need to learn to persevere,” said Goldsmith. “If we give up one goal, we can’t give up a second goal and let them keep coming back into the game. We have just got to stay strong and if that means not pressing the whole game and sitting back to get our shape, that is what we have to do. We will talk it over, we will figure it out.” In the wake of falling 3-1 to Robbinsville last Thursday to suffer its first defeat after starting the season with five straight wins, the Little Tigers were primed for a strong effort against Lawrenceville. “We just really wanted to get after it,” said Goldsmith. “We realized that is in the past now and we have to keep moving forward after that game. We realize that this could be a big turning point and a big learning aspect because we know what we need to work on. With 16 new guys who hadn’t experienced a loss, it is good to get it out of their system before the big games and the tournaments come.” Knowing the PHS sys tem has helped Goldsmith emerge as a key weapon for the Little Tigers, who improved to 6-1 with the victory over the Big Red. “I am used to our playing style; my main role is really getting into the attack, supporting the forwards when we play those big balls in

and just helping out,” said Goldsmith. “I am playing the balls wide and getting into the box, and really just creating; focusing on being a playmaker and being able to switch the ball.” With three goals in PHS’s first seven games, Goldsmith is confident he can have a big final campaign for the Little Tigers. “I just think it is really your mindset more than anything, it has always been a mind over matter type of thing,” said Goldsmith. “Once you get over that hump and you get focused on just soccer and prove to

other players what you can be, the game becomes so much easier. You just have to break through it once and then it becomes simple.” PHS head coach Wayne Sutcliffe likes what he is seeing from Goldsmith. “Andrew is making strong strides in his game; he is winning more battles defensively, he is winning more of the balls in the air,” said Sutcliffe. “On the attacking end, he is giving us some quality; that is his third goal of the year. He is much better than last year but we all have miles to go.” In Sutcliffe’s view, PHS will be better down the road from having survived the battle with Lawrenceville. “We were in good shape with the 3-0 lead but give

credit to Lawrenceville, they were a different team in the second half,” said Sutcliffe. “It had a lot of elements, I think both teams will take a lot from it. We are finding ourselves in different periods of the match. Last year we were never behind in a game except for the MCT semis and the sectional semis. These are moments that give us experience.” Sutcliffe is hoping that his squad will find itself contending for titles at the end of the fall. “Clean sheets are preferred but the wins are the ultimate goal,” said Sutcliffe. “I love the team, the personalities, the chemistry, their work rate, and their honesty. They are a great group. We only have seven

seniors with 13 juniors and two sophomores. It is a young group but they are not an inexperienced group; they are all full-time players and we worked hard all summer.” Goldsmith, for his part, has been energized by getting the chance to help the infusion of new talent blend into the mix for PHS. “I have been looking forward to the year, maybe more than any other, because I have always loved being a leader,” said Goldsmith. “Being able to take 16 new guys under my wing is truly an honor. It will be a great experience, making building blocks in the future. They are great players so with a little communication, we can be a great team.” —Bill Alden

GOLD STANDARD: Princeton High boys’ soccer player Andrew Goldsmith, right, battles for the ball in recent action. Last Saturday, senior midfielder Goldsmith contributed a goal as PHS edged Lawrenceville 4-3. The Little Tigers, now 6-1, host Nottingham on September 29 before playing at Hightstown on October 1. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski)

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Coming into its game last Friday night at W W/P-N, the Princeton High football team was concentrating on slowing down the high-powered offense of the Northern Knights. Getting an early test when WW/P-N got the ball at the PHS 14-yard line in its first possession, the Little Tiger defense passed with flying colors, stopping the Northern Knights on downs. In the view of PHS head coach Charlie Gallagher, that early stand gave PHS

a boost. “We had some momentum going in our direction,� said Gallagher. T he PHS offense kept things going in the right direction as it marched 86 yards and took a 7-0 lead after sophomore running back Christian Giles bulled into the end zone for a three-yard touchdown run with 5:01 left in the first quarter. But the Little Tigers shot themselves in the foot after that, making a number of miscues, including some key

COMING THROUGH: Princeton High running back Carson Giles heads through a hole in recent action. Last Friday at WW/P-N, sophomore Giles rushed for 36 yards and touchdown in a losing cause as PHS fell 28-10 to the Northern Knights. The Little Tigers, now 1-2, host Lawrence High (3-0) on October 1. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski)

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penalties, two fumbles, and two interceptions as WW/ P-N built a 15-7 lead. PHS answered with a 25-yard field goal by Jakob Green to narrow the gap to 15-10 at halftime. Green’s boot turned out to be the high water mark for the Little Tigers, however, as the Northern Knights reeled off 13 unanswered points in the second half to pull away to a 28-10 win. “It just fell apart here in the second half,� lamented G a l l a g h e r, w h o s e te a m dropped to 1-2 with the setback. “We didn’t do what we wanted to do. It is t he amount of mistakes, it is the turnovers, it is just a slew of things that we don’t really see in practice. We had our opportunities to be in the game, we just didn’t get it done.� Gallagher was proud of how his team kept fighting, particularly in the wake of losing sophomore star receiver Isaac Webb, who was injured early in the fourth quarter, and was taken off the field in a stretcher and left the stadium in an ambulance. “We were a little bit out of the game at the end but we were still down inside their 10 twice,� noted Gallagher. “We could have put some points on the board and make it look more respectable. At the same time, you get in there, you never know, you get an onside kick or something like that. There are good things that can happen.� Despite the loss, Gallagher believes his team can do plenty of good things this fall. “We have a great bunch of guys; I really do love this team,� asserted Gallagher. “They do work real hard; it is a matter of youth. They do everything they can to get a win. It is a little bit of ironman football. We have to persevere and get the job done and we just didn’t do it today.� With PHS hosting undefeated Lawrence High on October 1, Gallagher will have no trouble getting his players to work hard for that challenge. “It will be more motivation for our guys to knock off a team that is 3-0,� said Gallagher. “We were there at one time a few years ago and teams were trying to knock us off so we are excited for them to come in undefeated.� —Bill Alden

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Emphasizing Upbeat Approach, Team Unity PDS Boys’ Soccer Produces 5-2-1 Start Although the Princeton Day School boys’ soccer team seized control of its game against visiting Solebury School (Pa.) by scoring three unanswered goals in the first 20 minutes of action, things remained lively on the PDS bench. With new Panther head coach Ollie Hilliker inserting reserves into the game, the starting players cheered on the subs, encouraging their efforts, and generally yukking it up with each other as PDS rolled to a 5-0 victory. In the view of senior defender and co-captain Coby Gibson, the display of camaraderie is a reflection of the upbeat mood around the program sparked by the arrival of Hilliker. “You could see it on the sidelines here, we were having a good time,� said Gibson. “Obviously it is not going to be like that every game but there is a sense of that, just making sure that people are connected and feel like a team. Even in the hallways, we are more together.� In addition to bringing a team feeling to PDS, Hilliker has lifted his players’ selfbelief as well. “He has definitely been making sure that we are working our hardest, he made an emphasis on conditioning in the preseason,� said Gibson of Hilliker who is succeeding longtime head coach Malcolm Murphy. “We knew that we wanted to have a winning season. Coach came in and said I

have never not had a winning season and I want to make sure that we have another one here. You guys have the skill and if you guys work hard enough you can do it. It really gave us a boost of confidence. We have tried to be positive with each other.� In the win over Solebury, PDS worked together well, controlling possession to stifle the Spartans. “Yesterday we were working in practice on passing the ball with pace, making sure we were keeping the ball moving, looking for long balls and that is what we tried to do today,� said Gibson. “We wanted to make sure that we kept it in their half and passed the ball around. We weren’t afraid of recovering the ball and getting it to the back line.� The Panthers, who improved to 5-2-1 with a 3-1 win over South Hunterdon last Monday, have learned from their losses. “It is making sure that we come back stronger and what our mistakes were and we can improve on them,� said Gibson, noting that the Panthers battled undefeated Pennington hard in a 5-2 defeat on September 12 that saw them trailing 2-1 at halftime. “We are just looking forward to having a good season.� A key factor in the team’s success this fall is the partnership bet ween Gibson and classmate and fellow captain Jack Amaral on the back line.

“Jack and I have gone to school together for the past 13 years ; we have been friends for a long time,� said Gibson. “He has played center back for a long time now, I have been shifting on and off. With Malcolm, I was playing more offense but I played defense in middle school. Jack and I work well together, we are both captains. We have talked about that and have tried to make sure that we are leading this team as best we can.� In Gibson’s view, the PDS players need to focus on themselves and not their foes to keep going in the right direction. “We are trying to go in with a similar mindset to this game, where we are trying to play our best and not worrying about the opponents,� said Gibson, who will look to keep the Panthers on the winning track as they play at Lawrenceville on October 1. “We played that way in the first half against Pennington when the defense just moved together well, we communicated, and we passed the ball like we know we can.� —Bill Alden

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33 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

PHS Football Falls 28-10 to WW/P-N, Derailed by Critical Turnovers, Penalties


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 34

With Senior Engel Hustling From End to End, Stuart Field Hockey Showing Improvement

Izy Engel was all over the place as the Stuart Country Day School field hockey team hosted Hightstown last Thursday afternoon. Starting the game at midfield, senior Engel helped the Stuart defense hold the fort as Hightstown pressed forward in the first half, generating several scoring chances.

With the game knotted at 0-0 heading into the second half, Engel focused on getting the Tartans untracked offensively, making a number of forays upfield and sending the ball into the circle area. While Stuart ended up yielding a goal in the last minute of the contest to fall 1-0, Engel liked the way the

Tartans battled to the end. “We were hustling hard, we still have some things that we have got to work on in practice but I am proud of the effort we put in, especially in the second half,” said Engel. In Engel’s view, it is essential for her to hustle at both ends of the field. “I am tr ying to set up

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plays and trying to defend the middle of the field,” explained Engel. “It depends on the game too. I have played attack in the last couple of games. I played left midfield for part of this game and center mid too. I will go wherever coach (Missy) Bruvik needs me.” As a battle-tested senior, Engel is also looking to set a good example for her younger teammates. “I am really trying to encourage them and try to make sure that they keep up the hard work,” added Engel. “The skills will come. I know how hard it is to play varsity freshman year. I am proud that they are going to the ball and hustling.” Coming off a disappointing 1-0 defeat to the George School (Pa.) on September 20, Stuart showed progress against Hightstown. “We definitely played a lot better than we did last game,” said Engel. “Hightstown is a tough team and we have a lot of underclassmen on our team. It has definitely been a growing year.” Stuart head coach Bruvik likewise saw improvement in her squad as it battled the Rams. “I thought we gave a much better fight today, going to the ball,” said Bruvik. “Sometimes the kids get nervous and we have got to get rid of that nervousness and play the game. Good things will happen if you go after the ball and challenge.” Bruvik credits Engel with making good things happen for the Tartans. “Izy is a good leader, she is one of those players who finds the ball,” said Bruvik. “We had played her on attack against George the other day but we needed to have her back on the midfield against Hightstown because she is able to stop the ball and she creates the transition. She is instinctive on the ball and where the ball needs to go.” Sophomore Bey- Shana Clark filled a big need for Stuart, making her debut at goalie with senior starter

Alexxa Newman sidelined by injury. “The first time Bey had pads on was yesterday,” noted Bruvik. “We knew at some point we had to ask somebody to be a backup goalie; you never know and it happened so quickly. You have to have a kid who is willing to do it and she made some nice saves.” Playing at sweeper in front of Clark, junior Ali Hannah produced a nice per formance against Hightstown. “Ali did a good job in the backfield, she talks back there which is really important,” said Bruvik, also citing the play of sophomore Priscilla Francois and Breasia Williams. “She works very hard on making it constructive for her teammates. Ali is the kind of player we could put in multiple positions. She steps up to the ball and she worked hard over the offseason.”

The Tartans need to work on their finishing to get on the winning track. “Sometimes we are a little too unselfish and we are trying to make that extra pass in the circle,” said Bruvik, whose team tied Lawrence 0-0 last Monday in moving to 0-4-2 and will be playing at South Hunterdon on September 29 before hosting Country Day School of the Sacred Heart ( Pa.) on October 1 and Solebury School. (Pa.) on October 4. “We need that initial shot once we hit the circle, that has been our challenge. We have not had enough shots or penalty corners.” Engel, for her par t, is confident that the goals will come. “We have the opportunities, we just aren’t taking the shots,” said Engel. “We definitely have the skill to do it and the hustle is there. We just have to bring it together and I think it is starting to come.” —Bill Alden

ON THE BALL: Stuart Country Day field hockey player Izy Engel brings the ball up the field last Thursday in a game against visiting Hightstown. Senior midfielder Engel played valiantly in a losing cause as Stuart fell 1-0 to the Rams. The Tartans, who moved to 0-4-2 with a 0-0 tie against Lawrence High last Monday, play at South Hunterdon on September 29 before hosting Country Day School of the Sacred Heart (Pa.) on October 1 and Solebury School. (Pa.) on October 4. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski)

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Field Hockey: Julia Lach starred as PDS defeated Blair Ac ademy 6 -1 las t Saturday. Freshman Lach scored two goals to help the Panthers improve to 7-0. PDS plays at Lawrenceville on October 1. ——— G i r l s’ S o c c e r : Reb e c ca Ku zmicz and Brooke Smukler scored goals as PDS

quarterfinals at first singles as did Touria Salvati at third singles. Both players got knocked out at the stage of the competition. The MCT semis and finals are slated for September 28 at Mercer County Park.

Hun

Football: Josh Henderson, John Str ycharz, and Ian Franzoni each rushed for a touchdown as Hun defeated Capital Magnet Prep School (Conn.) 55-13 last Saturday. Thomas Bahr also caught a 35-yard TD pass from Pat Holly in the contest to help the Raiders improve to 2-0. Hun, which has now won 15 straight games, plays at Friendship Collegiate Academy (D.C.) on October 1. ——— Field Hockey: Kate Davis had a big game in a losing cause as Hun fell 5-4 to Montgomery High last Saturday. Senior Davis tallied a goal and three assists as the Raiders moved to 0-4. Hun hosts WW/P-N on September 30 and WW/P-S on October 1. ——— Boys’ Soccer: Patrick Nally scored the lone goal for Hun as it fell 5-1 to Germantown Academy (Pa.) last Saturday. Michael Campbell picked up an assist on the tally for the Raiders, who moved to 1-3. Hun plays at Pingry on September 29 before hosting George School (Pa.) on October 1 and Life Center Academy on October 4. ——— ______________ G i r l s’ S _______________ Date & Time: ______________________ o c c e r : N i c o l e Apuzzi and Julia Salerno our ad, scheduled to run ___________________. each scored goals as Hun tied East Brunswick 2-2 last oughly and pay special attention to the following: Friday. Goalie Leah Sutphen ill tell us it’s okay) recorded eight saves as the Raiders moved to 0-3-2. Hun � Fax number � Address � Expiration Datehosts Pingry on September 29, the George School (Pa.) on October 1, and Girard College (Pa.) on October 4. ——— G irl s’ Te n n i s : Chelsea MAKING STRIDES: Princeton High boys’ distance running B r a i t h w a i te pr ov i d e d a star Alex Roth heads to the finish line in 2015 action. Last highlight as Hun competed Saturday, senior Roth placed fifth individually as PHS took third of 20 teams in the Varsity 2 race at the Bowdoin Cross Country Classic at Wappingers Falls, N.Y. Roth covered the 5,000-meter course in 16:19.30. Junior William Hare took sixth in 16:34.00 while junior Alex Ackerman placed 30th in a time of 17:27.90. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski)

in the first day of action at the Mercer County Tournament. Braithwaite advanced to the quarterfinals at second singles before falling to Sahithi Muthyala of Hightstown The Raiders are tied for sixth in the team standing of the event which will conclude with the semis and finals on September 28 at Mercer County Park.

Lawrenceville Football: Campbell Garrett starred as Lawrenceville fell 42-14 to Choate Rosemary Hall (Conn.) last Saturday. Quarterback Garrett threw for 261 yards and two touchdow ns for the Big Red, who dropped to 0-2. Lawrenceville hosts Penn Charter (Pa.) on October 1. ——— G irls’ Soccer. : Isabelle Huang scored a goal but it wasn’t enough as Lawrenceville fell 3-1 to the Baldwin School ( Pa.) last Saturday. The Big Red, now 0 - 4, host Princeton Day School on October 1 before playing at Notre Dame on October 3.

PHS G irls’ Soccer: Zoe Tesone scored a goal in a losing cause as PHS fell 4-1 to Hunterdon Central last Saturday. Colette Marciano assisted on the tally as the Little Tigers moved to 2-4. PHS plays at Nottingham on September 29 before hosting Hightstown on October 1. ——— Girls’ Tennis: Producing a superb performance on the opening day of the Mercer County Tournament, PHS advanced to the semis in four flights. Freshman Samantha Singer made it to the semis in first singles as did senior Elise Gerdes at second singles and freshman Spencer Watts at third singles. The second doubles pair of senior Brinda Suppiah and sophomore Adriana Todorova also advanced to the semis. PHS ended up placing fourth in the team standings after the first day of action. The MCT semis and finals are slated for September 28 at Mercer County Park. ———

Girls’ Cross Country: Chloe Taylor led the way as PHS placed second of 13 teams in the Varsity 2 race at the Bowdoin Cross Country Classic at Wappingers Falls, N.Y. last Saturday. Junior standout Taylor finished seventh individually, posting a time of 20:26.20 over the 5,000-meter course. Senior Anne Walker came in 12th in 20:56.00 while senior Annefleur Hartmanshenn took 17th in 21:17.90.

Pennington Football: Nyshere Woodson led the ground attack as Pennington defeated Morristown-Beard 34-16 last Saturday. Woodson rushed for 210 yards and three touchdowns as the Red Raiders improved to 3-1. Pennington hosts Rye Country Day (N.Y.) on October 1. ——— Boys’ Soccer: Ibrahima Diop triggered the offense to help Pennington defeat Germantown Academy (Pa.) 4-0 last Friday. Diop tallied two goals and an assist as the Red Raiders improved to 8-0. Pennington hosts St. Benedict’s on September 28.

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35 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

PDS

defeated Blair Academy 2-0 last Saturday. Junior goalie Grace Barbara made five saves to earn the shutout to help the Panthers improve to 7-0. PDS hosts Montgomery on September 29 before playing at Lawrenceville on October 1. ——— Girls’ Tennis: Competing in the opening rounds of action at the Mercer County Tournament last Monday, PDS ended the day tied for sixth in the team standings. Sydney Vine advanced to the


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 36

Local Sports Stuart Country Day Offering Goalie Clinic

Stuart Country Day School will be hosting a clinic for field hockey goalies on Sundays, beginning on September 25 and running through October 23.

The clinic will run from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m., rain or shine. The program will be coached by Gia Fruscione, a former field hockey goalkeeper for Stuart Country, Princeton University, and USA Field Hockey, who has coached in-season and at camps for Stuart, Princeton, and a number of club programs in the past. The t wo -hour sessions

will be limited to six goalies and will cover the basics of positioning, movement in the goal, field management, clearing the ball with feet, legs and hands, and advanced skills. The cost is $75 and those interested can contact Stuart Director of Athletics Justin Leith at Jleith@stuartschool. org for more information. ———

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Register online by log- a touchdown from Charlie Recreation Department ging onto www.ultracamp. Hogshire. The Narragansett Holding Platform Tennis Programs

The Princeton Recreation Department is offering a series of free platform tennis refresher clinics designed for both newcomers to the sport, as well as veteran players. The clinics will be held on Ocotber 10 at noon, October 15 at 10 a.m. and October 18 at 11 a.m. Interested players can sign up for more than one clinic if they desire. The clinics are free of charge, but registration is required by contacting Vikki Caines at vcaines@princetonnj.gov or by phone at (609) 921-9480. In addition, fall /winter platform tennis leagues are also forming for both men and women. For more information, contact Ms. Caines or visit www.princetonrecreation.com. ———

Stuart Country Day Hosting Field Hockey Clinic

Stuart Country Day School will be holding a field hockey clinic for girls in grades 3-6 this fall. The girls will have the opportunity to participate in weekend field hockey sessions led by Stuart’s varsity field hockey coaches every Sunday afternoon starting at 1:30 p.m. The program begins on September 25 and runs through October 23. Players will receive a jersey and a mouth guard, and must bring sneakers, a field hockey stick, and shin guards. ( Borrowed sticks will be available on a first come, first serve basis). The cost is $100.

com/info/sessionDetail.as px?idCamp=473&idSessio n=129658&campCode=sd s. Contact Stuart Director of Athletics Justin Leith at Jleith@stuartschool.org for more information. ———

Princeton Junior Football Opening Day Results

In opening day action last Sunday in the Princeton Junior Football League’s (PJFL) senior division (ages 11-14), the Bai Jets defeated the Chubb Insurance Saints 26-12. Marshall Borham led the Bai Jets with two touchdowns with Drew Pianka and Henri Maman each adding a T D. T he Saints got one touchdown on a kickoff return by Will Doran. The Petrone Associates Seahawks beat the Pure Insurance Panthers 25-12 as James Petrone scored two touchdowns for the victors. Ryan Cruser and Sanjay Suryanarayan also contributed one TD each. The Panthers got touchdowns from Nino Cucchi and Sean Vogel. Gabe Majeski led the way as The Majeski Foundation Texans defeated Teresa’s Caffe 33-19. Majeski had three three touchdowns in the win with Jaxon Petrone throwing two TD passes. As for Teresa’s, Will Brandt scored two touchdowns in a losing cause. In the junior division (ages 8 -10 ) , G r ayly n D e s ig n s Fighting Irish defeated the Trattoria Procaccini Bulldogs 26-8. George Sullivan, John Olivi and Sammy Lee scored touchdowns for the Fighting Irish. The Bulldogs got on the scoreboard with

Bay Spartans edged the AIG Tar Heels 14-12. Patrick Suryanarayan and Ellington Hinds scored for the Spartans while the Tar Heels got TDs from Brooks CahillSanidas and Isaiah Potocny. The Princeton PBA 130 Hawkeyes cruised to a 26-0 win over the AYCO Ducks 26-0. Travis Petrone led the way for the Hawkeyes with with two touchdowns, the first coming on an interception. Corey Woodson ran in another and James TziarrisOver scored as well. In the rookie division (ages 6-7), the University Orthopaedic Black Jaguars beat Christine’s Hope 1 14-0. Ezra Lerman and Gus Shapiro scored the touchdowns for the Black Jaguars.University Orthopaedic 2 defeated Christine’s Hope 2 21-7. Orthopaedic 2 was led by Carter Price, Ryan Von Roemer and Alan Li while Jacob Reece scored the lone touchdown for Christine’s Hope 2. In other action, Christine’s Hope 3 beat University Orthopaedic 147. Lila Casto scored two TDs to help lead her squad to victory while Courtney Whitest scored for University Orthopaedic 3.

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Samuel D. Lenox Jr. The Honorable Samuel David Lenox Jr. died on Tuesday, August 16, 2016 at Robert Wood Johnson Hospital Hospice in Hamilton, New Jersey. Bor n in Trenton on February 8, 1925, he resided in Princeton since 1974 with his beloved wife, Jacqueline; his devoted daughter, Linda Fair Lenox; his sister Barbara Miller of Dover, Del.; niece Barbara Geraght y, and her husband Joseph of West Chester, Pa.; as well as nephews and nieces. He was predeceased by his sister, Jean Lenox Toddie. Judge Lenox was a graduate of Trenton High School and Bucknell University, where he was a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. He graduated from Dickinson Law School and enjoyed a legal career that spanned more than five decades. He was admitted to practice before the United States Court of Appeals and the United States Supreme Court. Judge Lenox served as a judge for almost 40 years and then on recall for 10 years after retirement. He was appointed to the County Court by Governor Richard J. Hughes in 1966 and was later elevated to the Superior Court. In 1976, he became an Assignment Judge. In that capacity, at various times, he super vised all judges and judicial personnel in the counties of Mercer, Hunterdon, Somerset, Burlington, and Ocean. While he served on many Supreme Court committees, he was most proud of serving as chairman on the Management Structure Committee which resulted in the complete reorganization of the judiciary into its modern structure of four divisions: Civil, Criminal, Family, and Chancery. He also delighted in overseeing adoptions and officiating weddings for loved ones and friends. He loved the study of the law as well as his judicial service. He was a tireless worker and was regularly found in his chambers late at night and on weekends preparing his opinions. A judge of impeccable professional integrity, he was a meticulous and devoted scholar of the law who found immense satisfaction and pride in his work, always striving to provide justice to the litigants and lawyers who appeared before his bench. A veteran of World War II, Judge Lenox enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1943, rose to rank of First Lieutenant and continued in the reserves after the war ended. As a youth, he was active in the Trenton Jaycees. He was a licensed amateur radio operator broadcasting on his own station, W3JND. He was an avid skier and qualified for the National Ski Patrol. He loved dogs, especially Golden Retrievers. He always had one or two dogs and took daily walks in the country with his dogs by his side. He had a lifelong interest in horses since childhood when he was a member of the only Boy Scout Mounted Troop in the United States. Before becoming a judge, he owned harness horses, which

ing the advance of the butterfly from caterpillar and cocoon. C ont r ibut ion s i n Mr s. Ford’s memory can be made to: The Foundation Fighting Blindness, 7168 Columbia Gateway Drive, Suite 100, Columbia MD 21046, www. fightblindness.org. A memor ial ser v ice is planned at The Princeton University Chapel on Monday, November 21st at 10 a.m. Arrangements are under the direction of The MatherHodge Funeral Home, Princeton. ———

Helen Martha Crossley

Helen Martha Crossley, 95, of Princeton, passed away peacefully on September 25, 2016. Exceptionally bright and intellectually curious, Helen devoted her life to developing and improving techniques in public opinion research. She was a founding member of both the American Association for Public Opinion Research (AAPOR) and the World Association for Public Opinion Research (WAPOR), and served as WAPOR’s first female president from 196062. Through a philanthropic gift in 2012, she established the Crossley Center for Public Opinion Research at the University of Denver’s Josef Korbel School of International Studies. In tribute, the late George Gallup Jr. said of her: “Helen has always retained a fascination with research methodology, and also with the potential of survey research to make new discoveries about humankind, and to bring about positive change in societies around the world.” Helen was born in Germantown, Pa., on September 8, 1921, the daughter of pioneer pollster Archibald M. Crossley and Dorothy Fox Crossley. The family moved to Princeton in 1923, and spent summers in Woods Hole, Mass., on Cape Cod, where Helen developed her lifelong love of sailing and swimming. Woods Hole remained a cherished place in Helen’s heart, and she returned there every summer until 2015. In 1938, Helen graduated from Miss Fine’s School (now Princeton Day School), where she received t he Woman’s College Scholarship Prize. She then attended Radcliffe College, her mother’s alma mater, graduating in 1942. While a student, she and nine of her dorm mates set up a Round Robin letter-writing group that continued for six decades. A dedicated archivist, Helen arranged to have the letters donated to Radcliffe’s Schlesinger Library. Immediately following her college graduation, Helen went to Washington, D.C., to work for the Office of War Information and the War Food Administration during World War II. She

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earned a master’s degree in 1948 from the University of Denver’s Opinion Research Center, working under mentor Don Cahalan. In the early 1950s, Helen worked in Germany for the Armed Forces Information and Education Division, ending as chief of its research branch. In 1955 she began her long association with the U.S. Information Agency (USIA), working with Leo P. Crespi to establish coordinated research surveys in many countries of Europe, Asia, and Latin America. These sur veys measured foreign publics’ awareness of attitudes toward U.S. policies and culture, and were in effect the “Ear of America.” Following a two-year evaluation assignment with the aid program in South Korea from 1960-62, Helen became a freelance consultant, serving academic, commercial, and government clients. She also worked for her father’s firm, ArchCross Associates, and collaborated (through Political Surveys and Analyses Inc.) on several surveys for Governor Nelson Rockefeller and other political figures. In 1979 she returned to USIA where she was instrumental in arranging for USIA survey data to be released for public use via the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research and the National Archives. She retired in 1992 with the Agency’s Career Achievement Award. After her retirement, she took up full-time residence in Princeton and spent several years cataloguing her father’s papers, which she donated to the Roper Center. An avid traveler, Helen embarked on her first overseas trip to Germany at age 16, and she continued her globe trekking until well into her 80s. Family and friends remember her ever-present camera, w ith which she chronicled birthdays, weddings, trips, meetings, and much more. She loved music, and participated in choral groups throughout her life. She took great pleasure in the small beauties of nature — colorful autumn leaves, unusual cloud formations, the sunset over Penzance Point in Woods Hole. Extraordinarily thoughtful and generous, Helen had an impact on individuals and institutions that will live on after her death. In addition to her charitable gift establishing the Crossley Center at the University of Denver, she was a major benefactor in the restoration of the historic White Hill Mansion in Fieldsboro, N.J., her father’s birthplace. Helen is survived by her sister, Dorothy I. Crossley; Nancy Crossley, the widow of her late brother Joseph; nephews Peter Crossley and Lawrence Crossley and their families; the family of her late nephew Robert Crossley Sr.; cousins Kevin Birch,

Wendy Ketchum, Carolyn Mulliken, and Sara Piccini; and her devoted caregiver, Sandra Mingo. A graveside service will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday, October 1, in Princeton Cemetery, with a memorial service in Princeton to follow at a later date. Helen’s family and friends will gather for a service at the Church of the Messiah in Woods Hole at 3 p.m. on Saturday, October 15. In lieu of flowers, donations in honor of Helen’s generous spirit can be made to The Friends of White Hill Mansion, c /o Fieldsboro Clerk, 204 Washington St., Fieldsboro, NJ 08505. Arrangements are under the direction of The MatherHodge Funeral Home, Princeton, NJ. ———

Mimi Ballard Mimi Ballard of Lexington, Mass., who lived previously for 35 years in Princeton, passed away on September 8, 2016. Wife of Richard Ballard for over 51 years; mother of R. Brian Ballard and his wife Patricia of Belmont, Mass.; and of Lisa Ballard and her husband David Fitzsimmons of Marlborough, Mass. Her husband and children were with her at the time of her passing. Mimi is also survived by her two grandsons, Andrew and Thomas of Belmont. At the time of her passing, Mimi was executive director of the Research Institute for Learning Development, Lexington, Mass. This organization provides assistance to children with learning problems. She was treasurer of Friends of Cary Memorial Library, Lexington, and was co-president of Non-Profit-Network, an organization of non-profit groups in the Boston area. In her years in Princeton, Mimi was executive director of Family and Children’s Services of Central New Jersey (“FACS”). FACS provided a variety of assistance programs to families and children with needs. FACS also raised special funds to provide needed back-to-school items such as backpacks and school supplies to children facing hard times. She was president of The Riverside School PTO and, later, of the John Witherspoon Middle School PTO. She was a founder and president of the Princeton Soccer Association which had over 1,000 youth soccer players during her time as president. She was president of the New Jersey Family Services Association, she received the “Woman of the Year” award from the Princeton YMCA/ YWCA, she was active in the Young Audiences organization, in McCarter Theatre, and in the Princeton Regional Scholarship Fund. Anyone interested in making a donation in Mimi’s memory can do so to: Friends of Cary Memorial Library, 1874 Massachusetts Avenue, Lexington, MA 02420. Continued on Next Page

37 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

Obituaries

raced at tracks along the East Coast. This activity discontinued when he became a judge but he still enjoyed horses at his daughter’s New Jersey horse farm. He was an emeritus member of the Princeton Old Guard and the Princeton Officers Society. He worshipped with his wife at Nassau Presbyterian Church. He loved to fish in Barnegat Bay and in the ocean with friends and his daughter. Funeral services were private. Memorial contributions may be made to Shaggy Dog Rescue, 1337 Banks Street, Elizabeth Stewardson Ford Houston, TX 77006 or onE l i z a b e t h S te w a r d s o n line: www.houstonshaggyFord, a 57-year resident of dogrescue.org. Princeton, died with family present on Saturday, September 24, 2016 at 80 years of age. Born Elizabeth Masland Dana in Philadelphia on December 13, 1935, and known as Betsy, she was raised in Villanova, Pennsylvania, a daughter of Andrew Crawford and Ellen Masland Dana. She was elected head of student government her senior year at The Baldwin School where she graduated in 1954. As a young woman, she and her sister, Sally, were both junior champions at Merion Golf Club where she had her Joan Folinsbee Cook first hole in one at age 16 playing with her father. J o a n Fo l i n s b e e C o o k After Mrs. Ford graduated passed away peacefully at from Mt. Holyoke in 1958, her home in Kingston, on September 24. She was she worked as a librarian 97. Bor n in New Hope, at Haverford College. The Pa., she was the daughter following year she married of Ruth Baldwin Folinsbee her childhood sweetheart, and John Fulton Folinsbee, William Emlyn Stewardson. a well-known Pennsylva- They settled in Princeton nian/American Impression- where she worked at Miss ist painter. She went to Fine’s School and helped her Miss Holmquist’s School in husband form the real estate Solebury, Pa. and attended brokerage firm bearing his Smith College for one year name. They were the loving and, in 1938, married Pe- parents of three children: ter G. Cook, an artist who a son, Dana Stewardson of studied with John Folinsbee. Haverford, Pa.; two daughThey were happily married ters, Elizabeth Connolly until Peter Cook’s death in (Kevin) of Lexington, Mass.; and Caroline Thornewill 1992. (Luke) of Nantucket, Mass. Joan was very active in the In December 1972, Mr. Princeton community as a member of the Stony Brook Stewardson died suddenly. Garden Club, an actor in the On March 1, 1975 she marCommunity Players at Mc- ried Jeremiah Ford who was Carter Theater, a member of a good friend of both and her Monday Group for book- the architect who had dereading, a member of an in- signed the family home. In vestment club, and a writer 1974, Mrs. Ford rejoined her of special interest articles late husband’s real estate for “Town Topics.” She was firm, Stewardson-Dougherty an avid Princeton University Real Estate Associates, Inc. Mens Ice Hockey supporter as vice president. She enjoyed travelling with and would annually have the entire freshman team to the her family and summering in house in Kingston during the Nantucket. Her many inter11 years that her husband ests included playing bridge, coached that team. Many leadership roles in the Garof those players stayed in den Club of Princeton, the touch with her for the rest Marquand Park Associaof her life. She had a wide tion, and the Mt. Holyoke circle of friends across the Alumni Association. She encountry with concentrations joyed her involvement at the around Princeton and Wool- Foundation Fighting Blindwich, Maine where she and ness, the Morris Arboretum her sister, Beth Wiggins, in Philadelphia, and The summered with their fami- Present Day Club in Princeton. In addition to Mr. Ford lies for over 70 years. She is sur vived by her and her three children she children, Peter B. Cook of is survived by stepdaughChilmark, Mass.; John F. ters, Amanda Ford of LawCook of Kingston, NJ; Dr. renceville; and Kate Ford Stephen S. Cook of Belle of Maynard, Mass.; grandMeade, NJ; Paula C. Scul- children Ashley and Rob ley of Sewickley, Pa.; 15 Stewardson of Philadelphia; grandchildren; and 17 great- Lyla and Nick Connolly of Lexington, Mass.; and Wes grandchildren. Thornew ill of Nantucket A memor ial ser v ice is Mass.; and her sister Sally planned for 1 p.m., Tues- Willson and her two sons of day, November 15 at Trin- Columbus, Ohio. ity Episcopal Church at 33 Truly adored by her family Mercer Street in Princeton with a reception to follow at she was known as “Granny B” and they will always reSpringdale Golf Club. member how she shared the Arrangements are under great joy in the beauty of the the direction of The Mather- natural world around her — Hodge Funeral Home, Princ- watching clouds, digging for eton. clams, gardening and trac———


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 38

Obituaries Continued from Preceding Page

Theodora Merrick Theodora Hulme Merrick, born May 13, 1923, died peacefully on September 20, 2016 at Stonebridge at Montgomery in Skillman. Known by friends as Terry, she lived a full and wonderful 93 years. Born in Philadelphia, she grew up in Swarthmore, attended Wilson College, and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania. She married Eldridge Gerry Merrick, III on September 16, 1950 and they were together 44 wonderful years before Gerry’s passing in 1994. Together t hey raised four daugh ters and lived for a period of time in Shaker Heights, Ohio and Rose Valley, Pa. before settling in Princeton in 1964. P r o f e s s i o n a l l y, Te r r y

908.359.8388

Route 206 • Belle Mead

worked at Lippincott Publishing, Cedar Crest College, and even as a poodle groomer (!) but made her mark as a real estate broker with N.T. Callaway in Princeton. Very athletic, she played tennis until she was 80 years old and golf into her late 80s! She was a “master” bridge player and enjoyed time with friends playing in a number of different groups throughout her life. She was a long-time member of Trinity Church Princeton’s Altar Guild and Princeton Garden Club. She also enjoyed her memberships at Springdale Golf Club, Nassau Club, and Present Day Club. Known by her family as Muzzy, she gathered her family together for many wonderful holidays at their home in Princeton and at their summer home in Stone Harbor, N.J. Holidays were marked by much laughter and delicious food (Muzzy was a very accomplished cook … just ask her sonsin-law!). Christmas, Easter, and Thanksgiving were full of treasured traditions and trips to Stone Harbor always included a cone at Springer’s. Our Muzzy will be in our hearts forever. We cherish her steadfast love of family and embrace that was her ongoing legacy and gift to us. She was predeceased by her husband Gerr y, sonin-law Charlie Estes, sister Anne Vierno, and sisterin-law Ann Hulme. She is survived by her brothers Norman A. Hulme, Br yn Mawr, Pa; and Robert D. Hulme, Princeton; and her four daughters Deborah Estes of Washington, D.C.; Laurie Winegar and her hus-

band Jeffrey of Pennington; Joan Schneeweiss and her husband Chris of Orleans, Mass.; and Anne Kellstrom and her husband Todd of Wurtsboro, N.Y.; and all of her grandchildren: Alison Baenen, Peter Estes, Courtney Fagan and her husband Padraig, Wells ; Winegar; Berit Schneeweiss; William ( Bill) Schneeweiss, Melanie Kellstrom; and a great granddaughter Merrick Fagan. A graveside service will be held at a later date. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Alzheimer’s Association at www.alz.org/ join_the_cause_donate.asp. Arrangements are under the direction of The MatherHodge Funeral Home, Princeton. ———

years was a computer systems project manager for IBM. She retired in 2008 and she and Michael relocated to Skillman where she audited courses and, as a volunteer, managed the computer lab at the Princeton Senior Resources Center. Everyone Barbara touched remembers her as gentle, understanding, reassuring, and generous. Sought after for her practical intelligence and experience as related to home and work, she was a beautiful human being.

Memorial Service Fr i e n d s of C a rol i n e Moseley are invited to join her family in a celebration of her life on Monday, October 10 at 2 p.m. in the Princeton University Chapel. A reception at Chancellor Green w ill follow the service. Memorial contributions may be made in Caroline’s name to the Princeton Public Library.

Barbara Lundy Barbara Lundy, née Blum, died on September 17, 2016 following a five-month illness. She was survived by her husband of 47 years Michael Lundy; her daughters and their spouses, Sharon and Sean Baartmans; Lisa and Dr. Kenneth Rieger; four grandchildren, Raymond and Mira Baartmans, and Liam and Mabel Rieger; and brother Martin and Carolyn Blum. Barbara was born in Brooklyn, New York, and graduated from Baldw in High School (Long Island). She earned a BA from the University of Bridgeport. While raising her children at home in Livingston, New Jersey, Barbara was active in volunteer work with Women’s American ORT. Barbara became a computer programmer and for many

Memorial Service A celebration of the life of Jean M. Friedmann, who died on July 25, 2016, will be held on Saturday, October 8, 2016 at 3 p.m. at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Princeton. Friends and family are cordially invited to attend. A reception will follow the service at the Nassau Club of Princeton. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be sent to the Princeton Public Library, Wellesley College, Phillips Academy (Abbot) Andover, or to a charity of the donor’s choice.

DIRECTORY DIRECTORY OF RELIGIOUS OF RELIGIOUS SERVICES SERVICES

St. Paul’s Catholic Church 214 Nassau Street, Princeton Msgr. Joseph Rosie, Msgr. Walter Nolan,Pastor Pastor St. Paul’s Catholic Church

Saturday Vigil Mass:Princeton 5:30 p.m. 214 Nassau Street, Sunday: 7:00, 8:30, 10:00, 11:30 and 5:00 p.m. Msgr. Joseph Rosie, Msgr. Walter Nolan,Pastor Pastor Mass in Spanish: Sunday at 7:00 p.m. Saturday Vigil Mass: 5:30 p.m. Sunday: 7:00, 8:30, 10:00, 11:30 and 5:00 p.m. Mass in Spanish: Sunday at 7:00 p.m. AN EPISCOPAL PARISH AN EPISCOPAL PARISH

SundayHoly Week Trinity Church 8:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist, Rite I & Schedule 9:00Easter a.m. Holy Eucharist, Rite II

10:00 a.m. Sunday School for All Ages 11:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist, Wednesday, MarchRite 23II 5:00 p.m. Holy Eucharist Holy Eucharist, Rite II, 12:00 pm Tuesday Holy Eucharist, Rite II with Prayers for Healing, 5:30 pm 12:00 p.m. Holy Eucharist, Rite I Tenebrae Service, 7:00 pm Wednesday 5:30 p.m. Holy Eucharist with Healing Prayers

Thursday March 24

The. Rector The. Rev. Rev. Paul Paul Jeanes Jeanes III, Rector Holy Eucharist, Rite II,III,12:00 pm Director ofof Music The The Rev. Rev. Nancy Nancy J. J. Hagner, Hagner, Associate Associate •• Mr. Mr. Tom Tom Whittemore, Whittemore, Director Music

Eucharist with Foot Washing and 33 Princeton 609-924-2277 www.trinityprinceton.org 33 Mercer Mercer St. St.Holy Princeton 609-924-2277 www.trinityprinceton.org Stripping of the Altar, 7:00 pm Keeping Watch, 8:00 pm – Mar. 25, 7:00 am

Friday, March 25

Princeton United Methodist Church SUNDAY

Fellowship

TUESDAY

Lenten Meditation Noon-12:30

WEDNESDAY

Cornerstone Community Kitchen

5-6:30 pm ALL ARE WELCOME

You’re Always Welcome! ...at the Christian

IN THE PRINCETON

UNIVERSITY CHAPEL

Guest Preaching this Sunday

Rev. Dr. Gerald Liu

Associate Professor of Preaching and Worship Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton, NJ

Sunday Oct 2, 2016 11:00 a.m.

Music performed by

The Princeton University Chapel Choir

with Penna Rose, Director of Chapel Music and Eric Plutz, University Organist

CHRIST CONGREGATION

50 Walnut Lane•Princeton•Jeffrey Mays, Pastor•921-6253

Trinity Episcopal Church Affiliated with the United Church of Christ and the American Baptist Churches, USA

Worship Service at 10 a.m.

Crescent Ave.,Fellowship Rocky Hill, N.J. • 921-8971 (Office) at 11 a.m Education HourRimassa, at 11:15 a.m Father Paul Vicar

School: 9:45 a.m. TrinitySunday Episcopal Sunday Services: Church Crescent Ave., Rocky at Hill, N.J.a.m. • 921-8971 Holy Eurcharist 8:00 & 10 (Office) a.m. Father Paul Rimassa, Vicar

“All Are Welcome” Sunday School: 9:45 a.m. Sunday Services: Witherspoon Street Presbyterian Church Holy Eurcharist at 8:00 a.m. & 10 a.m. 124 Witherspoon Princeton, NJ “All AreStreet, Welcome” 10:00 a.m. Worship Service 124 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, NJ 9:00 a.m.M. Sunday for Adults Reverend MurielSchool Burrows, Pastor

The friendly church on the corner of Nassau at Vandeventer 609-924-2613 • www.princetonumc.org 9:30: Worship and Classes for all ages 10:30 Fellowship 11 am Worship 9:30-12 Nursery care 5 pm Youth Choir and

WORSHIP SERVICE

Reverend M. Muriel Burrows, Pastor Witherspoon Street Presbyterian Church

Mother of God Orthodox Church

904 Cherry Hill Road, Princeton, NJ 08540 703-615-9617 V. Rev. Peter Baktis, Rector www.mogoca.org Sunday, 10:00 am: Divine Liturgy Sunday, 11:00 am: Church School Saturday, 5:00 pm: Adult Education Classes Saturday, 6:00 pm: Vespers

ECUMENICAL

Science Church

Feel God’s healing love for you Discover your Christlike identity Find peace and truth in our weekly Bible Lesson First Church of Christ, Scientist 16 Bayard Lane, Princeton ~ 609-924-5801 ~ www.csprinceton.org Sunday Church Service, Sunday School, and Nursery at 10:30am Wednesday Testimony Meeting and Nursery at 7:30pm Christian Science Reading Room 178 Nassau Street, Princeton 609-924-0919 ~ Open Mon.-Sat. 10-4

10:00 a.m. Sunday for Children 1st-12th Grade 10:00 School a.m. Worship Service Nursery 9:00 Provided Ramp Entrance onAdults Quarry Street a.m.•Sunday School for 10:00 a.m. Sunday School for Children 1st-12th Grade (A multi-ethnic congregation) Nursery Provided • Ramp Entrance on Quarry Street 609-924-1666 • Fax 609-924-0365 (A multi-ethnic congregation) 609-924-1666 • Fax 609-924-0365

Tired of being your own god? Join us at the

LUTHERAN CHURCH OF THE MESSIAH LUTHERAN CHURCH OFLane, THEPrinceton MESSIAH 407 Nassau St. at Cedar 407 Nassau St. K. at Erhardt, Cedar Pastor Lane, Princeton Martin

Martin K. Erhardt,Education Pastor Sunday 9:00am Christian Sunday9:00am 10:30amChristian WorshipEducation with Holy Communion Sunday Wednesdays in Lentwith (February 10 - March 16) Sunday 10:30am Worship Holy Communion 7:00pm Evening Service Call or visit our website for current and special service information. Church Office: 609-924-3642 www. princetonlutheranchurch.org An An Anglican/Episcopal Anglican/Episcopal Parish Parish www.allsaintsprinceton.org www.allsaintsprinceton.org 16 16 All All Saints’ Saints’ Road Road Princeton Princeton 609-921-2420 609-921-2420

Follow Follow us us on: on: SUNDAY SUNDAY Holy Holy Eucharist Eucharist 88 AM AM & & 10:15 10:15 AM* AM* *Sunday *Sunday School; School; childcare childcare provided provided Christian Christian Formation Formation for for Children, Children, Youth Youth & & Adults Adults 9:00 9:00 AM AM WEDNESDAY WEDNESDAY Holy Holy Eucharist Eucharist 9:30 9:30 AM AM The The Rev. Rev. Dr. Dr. Hugh Hugh E. E. Brown, Brown, III, III, Rector Rector Thomas Thomas Colao, Colao, Music Music Director Director and and Organist Organist Hillary Hillary Pearson, Pearson, Christian Christian Formation Formation Director Director located located N. N. of of the the Princeton Princeton Shopping Shopping Center, Center, off off Terhune/VanDyke Terhune/VanDyke Rds. Rds.


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EXCELLENT BABYSITTER: With references, available in the Princeton area. (609) 216-5000 tf HOME HEALTH AIDE: 25 years of experience. Available mornings to take care of your loved one, transport to appointments, run errands. I am well known in Princeton. Top care, excellent references. The best, cell (609) 356-2951; or (609) 751-1396.

LAWRENCEVILLE TOWNHOUSE: FOR RENT. Corner unit. 2 bedroom, 2.5 bath. Pool/Tennis. All appliances available. Call (609) 216-0092. $1,495/mo. plus utilities & CC fee. 09-28-2t

ESTATE LIQUIDATION SERVICE: I will clean out attics, basements, garages & houses. Single items to entire estates. No job too big or small. In business over 35 years, serving all of Mercer County. Call (609) 306-0613. 08-10-17

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MUSIC LESSONS: Voice, piano, guitar, drums, trumpet, flute, clarinet, violin, cello, saxophone, banjo, mandolin, uke & more. One-on-one. $32/ half hour. Ongoing music camps. CALL TODAY! FARRINGTON’S MUSIC, Montgomery (609) 9248282; West Windsor (609) 897-0032, www.farringtonsmusic.com 07-13-17

HIC #13VH07549500

Property Maintenance and Specialty Jobs

Commercial/Residential Irene Lee, Classified Manager Over 30 Years of Experience

WANTED IMMEDIATELY: Live •Fully Insured •Free Consultations 924-9184. • Deadline: 2pm Tuesday • Payment: All ads must pre-paid, Cash,SUPERIOR credit card, or check. in personbe to keep large Princeton (609) 924-2200 ext 10 HANDYMAN Email: joeslandscapingprinceton@ 09-28 home in Western Section clean & SERVICES: • 25 words 09-28 or less: $15.00 • each add’l word 15 cents • Surcharge: $15.00 for ads greater than 60 words ingmail.com length. tidy 3 hours each weekday morning. Remainder of day is yours. Location HOUSECLEANING: Experienced, Experienced in all residential home • 3 weeks: $40.00 • 4 weeks: $50.00 • 6 weeks: $72.00 • 6 month and annual discount rates available. Text (only) (609) 638-6846 98TH PRINCETON HOSPITAL English speaking, great references, is walk to everything; no car needed. repairs. Free Estimate/References/ Office (609) 216-7936 Large 2-room suite has beautiful priRUMMAGE SALE: tf • Ads with line spacing: $20.00/inch • all bold face type: $10.00/week Insured. (908) 966-0662 or www. reliable with own transportation. vate bathroom, free WIFI & cable.

Saturday (October 1) 9-3 & Sunday (October 2) 10-2, at Princeton Airport, 41 Airpark Road, off Route 206, Princeton. Rain or Shine!!!! Tons of furniture, linen, art, bric-a-brac, small appliances, lamps, boutique, jewelry, toys, holiday, men’s, women’s, children’s clothing, garden, etc.! Something for everyone!!!! Sponsored by University Medical Center of Princeton at Plainsboro. 09-28

Weekly & bi-weekly cleaning. Green cleaning available. Susan, (732) 8733168. 08-10-8t CLEANING, IRONING, LAUNDRY: by Polish women with a lot of experience. Excellent references, own transportation. Please call Inga at (609) 530-1169, leave message. 08-24-6t

PRINCETON ESTATE SALE: 11 Lexington Court, Friday September 30th & Saturday October 1st, 9-3. Furniture, artwork, jewelry, rugs, designer clothing, purses & accessories. Books, patio furniture, holiday & household items. www. EstateSalesByOlga.com

For houses, apartments, offices, daycare, banks, schools & much more. Has good English, own transportation. 20 years of experience. Cleaning license. References. Please call (609) 751-2188 or (609) 610-2485.

09-28

09-07-25t

1965 CHEVROLET CORVETTE Convertible L75 327ci/300HP manual 4 speed, blue/black, $16,500. Contact lailahaxton@gmail.com; (609) 303-2302.

TIRED OF AN OFFICE PARK? Office space available in historic building overlooking Carnegie Lake. Princeton address. Furnished or unfurnished. Newly renovated. Free parking. Conference room, kitchenette, receptionist included. Friendly, professional atmosphere. Contact Liz: (609) 514-0514; ez@zuckfish.com

09-28 JEWELRY SAFE FOR SALE: Attractive, 1 owner, 8 years old, 47”x25”x27”. 1 ton, digital combination, cream colored safe with 10 lined wood jewelry drawers. Manufactured by Brown. Original price $16K, asking only $4K. Purchaser responsible for move from Princeton, NJ address. Contact (609) 577-5495.

ROSA’S CLEANING SERVICE:

09-07-26t LAWN MAINTENANCE: Prune shrubs, mulch, cut grass, weed, leaf clean up and removal. Call (609) 9541810. 09-07-13t

09-28 GRAND BOSTON PIANO: Made by Steinway, 5’10”, lacquered ebony, excellent condition. $9,000 or best offer. Call (609) 203-6802. 09-28 ‘86 BUICK REGAL PARTS FOR SALE: Call (609) 393-8547, anytime.

PRINCETON: Large, private, onebedroom apartment on Princeton estate. Magnificent gardens. Bright, elegant, newly redone. 18 windows, expansive views. New luxury kitchen, granite countertops. Washer-dryer, recessed spotlights, large closets, AC, Italian tile floors. Parking. (609) 924-4332. tf CARPENTRY: General Contracting in Princeton area since 1972. No job too small. Licensed and insured. Call Julius Sesztak (609) 466-0732. tf LOLIO’S WINDOW WASHING & POWER WASHING: Free estimate. Next day service. Fully insured. Gutter cleaning available. References available upon request. 30 years experience. (609) 271-8860. tf GROWING YOUNG FAMILY LOOKING FOR A HOME TO CHERISH and not a tear down turned ‘McMansion’. Min 3 beds/2 baths in Princeton boro/township, understand some work may need to be put into the house. Negotiable up to $600,000. Please email NeedPrincetonHome@gmail.com or call Town Topics (609) 924-2200 to leave contact info.

HANDYMAN: General duties at your service! High skill levels in indoor/outdoor painting, sheet rock, deck work, power washing & general on the spot fix up. Carpentry, tile installation, moulding, etc. EPA certified. T/A “Elegant Remodeling”, www.elegantdesignhandyman.com Call Roeland (609) 933-9240 or roelandvan@gmail.com

ONE DAY HAULING & HOME IMPROVEMENT: We service all of your cleaning & removal needs. Attics, basements, yards, debris & demolition clean up, concrete, junk cars & more. The best for less! Call (609) 743-6065.

tf

09-28

09-28

tf

Please send background & contact info to: domesticsearch@gmail.com 09-28-2t

6 BEDROOM RUSTIC HOME: 10 minutes north of Princeton, in the small village of Blawenburg, Skillman, $3500 discounted monthly rent. Details: http://princetonrentals. homestead.com or (609) 333-6932. 09-21-3t HOUSE CLEANING: By experienced Polish lady. Good prices. References available. Own transportation. Honest, reliable, excellent job. Free estimate. Please call Magda, (609) 372-6927. 09-14-4t MACK’S WINDOW CLEANING: Windows & storm windows. Inside & out. $8 each window. Fully insured. All work guaranteed. Call (609) 9241404 or (609) 393-2122. 09-21-3t TOTAL HOUSECLEANING SERVICES: Experts on all phases inside. Services include, housecleaning, laundry, babysitting. Own transportation. English speaking, great references. Call Annie for estimate (609) 439-6996. 09-28-4t ELDERCARE AVAILABLE: I can also clean, cook, shop and run errands. References available. Call Natalea (732) 925-0641. 09-28-4t TOWN TOPICS CLASSIFIEDS GETS TOP RESULTS! Whether it’s selling furniture, finding a lost pet, or having a garage sale, TOWN TOPICS is the way to go! We deliver to ALL of Princeton as well as surrounding areas, so your ad is sure to be read. Call (609) 924-2200 ext. 10 for more details. tf

•Green Company 05-04-17 HOME REPAIR SPECIALIST: Interior/exterior repairs, carpentry, trim, rotted wood, power washing, painting, deck work, sheet rock/ spackle, gutter & roofing repairs. Punch list is my specialty. 40 years experience. Licensed & insured. Call Creative Woodcraft (609) 586-2130

I BUY ALL KINDS of Old or Pretty Things: China, glass, silver, pottery, costume jewelry, evening bags, fancy linens, paintings, small furniture, etc. Local woman buyer. (609) 9217469. 08-17-17 253 NASSAU-PRINCETON LUXURY RENTALS: 2 Bedrooms, 2 Bathrooms. All Amenities, Parking included, 253Nassau. com Weinberg Management (609) 731-1630. 07-13-tf

06-22-17 PRINCETON OFFICE/ RETAIL FOR LEASE: 220 Alexander Road. Approx. 1,000 SF, High Profile Location, On Site Parking. $2,500 includes all utilities. Weinberg Management, (609) 9248535. 04-27-tf NEED SOMETHING DONE?

5 BR, 1 BATH HOUSE FOR LEASE: 25 Madison, Princeton. Central Location. $3,260 plus utilities. Weinberg Management, (609) 731-1630. 07-13-tf

General contractor. Seminary Degree, 18 years experience in Princeton. Bath renovations, decks, tile, window/door installations, masonry, carpentry & painting. Licensed & insured. References available. (609) 477-9261.

BUYING: Antiques, paintings, Oriental rugs, coins, clocks, furniture, old toys, military, books, cameras, silver, costume & fine jewelry. Guitars & musical instruments. I buy single items to entire estates. Free appraisals. (609) 306-0613. 08-10-17

03-09-17

THE MAID PROFESSIONALS: Leslie & Nora, cleaning experts. Residential & commercial. Free estimates. References upon request. (609) 2182279, (609) 323-7404. 04-06/09-28

AWARD WINNING SLIPCOVERS Custom fitted in your home. Pillows, cushions, table linens, window treatments, and bedding. Fabrics and hardware. Fran Fox (609) 577-6654 windhamstitches.com 04-06-17

STOCKTON REAL ESTATE… A Princeton Tradition 7 CHORES FOR YOUR FALL TO-DO LIST Is your home ready for winter? Spending a weekend or two taking care of some important coolweather chores can go a long way toward preventing costly winter damage. Here’s what to put on your to-do list: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.

Experience ✦ Honesty ✦ Integrity 32 Chambers Street, Princeton, NJ 08542 (800) 763-1416 ✦ (609) 924-1416

Repair and paint damaged wood trim to keep water out of your home and prevent hibernating insects from taking up residence. Caulk around windows, door frames and any place wires or cables enter your home to keep heat in and cold and insects out. Clean your gutters to prevent the formation of ice dams that can wind up loosening shingles and damaging your roof. Change the furnace filter and have your furnace serviced to keep your heating bill as low as possible. Check your foundation and your chimney for cracks that need to be repaired while the weather is still relatively warm. Make sure your basement windows are in good repair and weatherstrip your garage door to keep out drafts and rodents. Clean your driveway and seal cracks so they don’t widen during freeze-thaw cycles.

Fall chores may seem daunting, but avoiding costly repairs come spring will make all your hard work worthwhile.

A CONDOMINIUM WITHIN THIS COLONIAL IS IN YOUR PRICE RANGE This charming studio is conveniently located and modest in price. Great investment in Princeton real estate. $249,000

609-921-1900 Cell: 609-577-2989 info@BeatriceBloom.com BeatriceBloom.com CLASSIFIED RATE INFO:

facebook.com/PrincetonNJRealEstate twitter.com/PrincetonHome BlogPrincetonHome.com

www.stockton-realtor.com Gina Hookey, Classified Manager

Deadline: 12 pm Tuesday • Payment: All ads must be pre-paid, Cash, credit card, or check. • 25 words or less: $23.25 • each add’l word 15 cents • Surcharge: $15.00 for ads greater than 60 words in length. • 3 weeks: $59.00 • 4 weeks: $76 • 6 weeks: $113 • 6 month and annual discount rates available. • Classifieds by the inch: $26.50/inch • Employment: $33

39 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

to place an order:


N PR EW IC E!

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11CoachLn.go2frr.com Hopewell Twp. $1,250,000 Expansive & dramatic 5+BR, 5.5BA custom built colonial is set against the bucolic backdrop of open & rolling hills of Hopewell Twp. LS# 6811958 Call (609)924-1600 Marketed by Karen Basmagy

LI NE ST W IN G!

244Russell.go2frr.com Princeton $1,575,000 5BR, 4BA renovated (2005) colonial w/beautiful custom radience that is eco-friendly & low maintenance. Close to hiking/biking trails & The Hun School. LS# 6827479 Call (609) 924-1600 Marketed by Donna M. Murray

22RuppertDr.go2frr.com Franklin Twp. $529,800 4BR, 2.5BA freshly painted & immaculately kept colonial in Wildflower Ridge. 10ft ceilings, large dining room, recently remodeled “dream kitchen”, full basement. LS# 6861622 Call (609) 924-1600 Marketed by Donna M. Murray

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E US ., HO UN 11 EN & S 0& OP AT T. 1 PM S EP –3 S 12

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3StuartLnE.go2frr.com West Windsor Twp. $639,900 Pride of ownership! This 4BR, 2.5BA colonial home features great amenities including a welcoming two story foyer that offers hardwood flooring. LS# 6785409 Call (609) 924-1600 Marketed by Annabella “Ann” Santos

1WoodfieldLn.go2frr.com

Montgomery Twp. $469,900 Pristine end-unit w/custom upgraded kitchen & baths, double story foyer, full finished walk-out basement, storage & much more. Gorgeous views of woods! LS# 6840271 Call (609) 924-1600 Marketed by Priya Khanna

Lawrence Twp. $449,000 4BR, 3BA Tudor style w/hwd floors & traditional floor plan. Entertain with ease in the large LR that opens into the FR. Study/den/studio wing w/many possibilities! LS# 6772809 Call (609) 924-1600 Marketed by Galina Peterson

N PR EW IC E!

52GrantWay.go2frr.com

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TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 40

Top BHHS Brokerage for 2015!

501MartenRd.go2frr.com

28HalsteadPl.go2frr.com

Montgomery Twp. $418,000 3BR, 2.5BA updated & freshly painted end-unit in The Manors. HWD floors, renovated kit, partial finished bsmt, deck. Move-in ready! LS# 6861640 Call (609) 924-1600 Marketed by Donna M. Murray

West Windsor Twp. $355,000 Fully renovated!!! New carpets & floors, freshly painted, 2BR, 2.5BA Yorktown Model in Windsor Heaven. LS# 6814965 Call (609) 924-1600 Marketed by Yael Zakut

Princeton Home Marketing Center 253 Nassau Street, Princeton, NJ | 609-924-1600 www.foxroach.com ©2015 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.® Equal Housing Opportunity. Information not verified or guaranteed. If your home is currently listed with a Broker, this is not intended as a solicitation.

Mortgage | Title | Insurance Everything you need. Right here. Right now.


03-30-17

WE BUY CARS Belle Mead Garage (908) 359-8131 Ask for Chris tf STORAGE SPACE: 194 Nassau St. 1227 sq. ft. Clean, dry, secure space. Please call (609) 921-6060 for details. 06-10-tf NASSAU STREET: Small Office Suites with parking. 390 sq. ft; 1467 sq. ft. Please call (609) 921-6060 for details. 06-10-tf WHAT’S A GREAT GIFT FOR A FORMER PRINCETONIAN? A Gift Subscription! We have prices for 1 or 2 years -call (609)924-2200x10 to get more info! tf

AUTUMN IS HERE! YARD SALE + TOWN TOPICS CLASSIFIED = GREAT WEEKEND! Put an ad in the TOWN TOPICS to let everyone know! (609) 924-2200 ext 10 09-28 98TH PRINCETON HOSPITAL RUMMAGE SALE: Saturday (October 1) 9-3 & Sunday (October 2) 10-2, at Princeton Airport, 41 Airpark Road, off Route 206, Princeton. Rain or Shine!!!! Tons of furniture, linen, art, bric-a-brac, small appliances, lamps, boutique, jewelry, toys, holiday, men’s, women’s, children’s clothing, garden, etc.! Something for everyone!!!! Sponsored by University Medical Center of Princeton at Plainsboro. 09-28 PRINCETON ESTATE SALE: 11 Lexington Court, Friday September 30th & Saturday October 1st, 9-3. Furniture, artwork, jewelry, rugs, designer clothing, purses & accessories. Books, patio furniture, holiday & household items. www. EstateSalesByOlga.com 09-28 1965 CHEVROLET CORVETTE Convertible L75 327ci/300HP manual 4 speed, blue/black, $16,500. Contact lailahaxton@gmail.com; (609) 303-2302. 09-28

JEWELRY SAFE FOR SALE: Attractive, 1 owner, 8 years old, 47”x25”x27”. 1 ton, digital combination, cream colored safe with 10 lined wood jewelry drawers. Manufactured by Brown. Original price $16K, asking only $4K. Purchaser responsible for move from Princeton, NJ address. Contact (609) 577-5495. 09-28 GRAND BOSTON PIANO: Made by Steinway, 5’10”, lacquered ebony, excellent condition. $9,000 or best offer. Call (609) 203-6802. 09-28

EXCELLENT BABYSITTER: With references, available in the Princeton area. (609) 216-5000 tf HOME HEALTH AIDE: 25 years of experience. Available mornings to take care of your loved one, transport to appointments, run errands. I am well known in Princeton. Top care, excellent references. The best, cell (609) 356-2951; or (609) 751-1396. tf

WURLITZER UPRIGHT PIANO: Good Condition. Recently Tuned. $900. Call (609) 924-7910. 09-28

PRINCETON: Large, private, onebedroom apartment on Princeton estate. Magnificent gardens. Bright, elegant, newly redone. 18 windows, expansive views. New luxury kitchen, granite countertops. Washer-dryer, recessed spotlights, large closets, AC, Italian tile floors. Parking. (609) 924-4332. tf

GIVING AWAY KAYAK: Folbot 2-person with boat cart. Packs to 3’4”, excellent condition. Call (609) 924-9184. 09-28

CARPENTRY: General Contracting in Princeton area since 1972. No job too small. Licensed and insured. Call Julius Sesztak (609) 466-0732. tf

‘86 BUICK REGAL PARTS FOR SALE: Call (609) 393-8547, anytime. 09-28

HOUSECLEANING: Experienced, English speaking, great references, reliable with own transportation. Weekly & bi-weekly cleaning. Green cleaning available. Susan, (732) 8733168. 08-10-8t CLEANING, IRONING, LAUNDRY: by Polish women with a lot of experience. Excellent references, own transportation. Please call Inga at (609) 530-1169, leave message. 08-24-6t

LOLIO’S WINDOW WASHING & POWER WASHING: Free estimate. Next day service. Fully insured. Gutter cleaning available. References available upon request. 30 years experience. (609) 271-8860. tf GROWING YOUNG FAMILY LOOKING FOR A HOME TO CHERISH and not a tear down turned ‘McMansion’. Min 3 beds/2 baths in Princeton boro/township, understand some work may need to be put into the house. Negotiable up to $600,000. Please email NeedPrincetonHome@gmail.com or call Town Topics (609) 924-2200 to leave contact info. tf ONE DAY HAULING & HOME IMPROVEMENT: We service all of your cleaning & removal needs. Attics, basements, yards, debris & demolition clean up, concrete, junk cars & more. The best for less! Call (609) 743-6065. 09-28

LAWRENCEVILLE TOWNHOUSE: FOR RENT. Corner unit. 2 bedroom, 2.5 bath. Pool/Tennis. All appliances available. Call (609) 216-0092. $1,495/mo. plus utilities & CC fee. 09-28-2t WANTED IMMEDIATELY: Live in person to keep large Princeton home in Western Section clean & tidy 3 hours each weekday morning. Remainder of day is yours. Location is walk to everything; no car needed. Large 2-room suite has beautiful private bathroom, free WIFI & cable. Please send background & contact info to: domesticsearch@gmail.com 09-28-2t 6 BEDROOM RUSTIC HOME: 10 minutes north of Princeton, in the small village of Blawenburg, Skillman, $3500 discounted monthly rent. Details: http://princetonrentals. homestead.com or (609) 333-6932. 09-21-3t HOUSE CLEANING: By experienced Polish lady. Good prices. References available. Own transportation. Honest, reliable, excellent job. Free estimate. Please call Magda, (609) 372-6927. 09-14-4t

MACK’S WINDOW CLEANING: Windows & storm windows. Inside & out. $8 each window. Fully insured. All work guaranteed. Call (609) 9241404 or (609) 393-2122. 09-21-3t TOTAL HOUSECLEANING SERVICES: Experts on all phases inside. Services include, housecleaning, laundry, babysitting. Own transportation. English speaking, great references. Call Annie for estimate (609) 439-6996. 09-28-4t ELDERCARE AVAILABLE: I can also clean, cook, shop and run errands. References available. Call Natalea (732) 925-0641. 09-28-4t TOWN TOPICS CLASSIFIEDS GETS TOP RESULTS! Whether it’s selling furniture, finding a lost pet, or having a garage sale, TOWN TOPICS is the way to go! We deliver to ALL of Princeton as well as surrounding areas, so your ad is sure to be read. Call (609) 924-2200 ext. 10 for more details. tf

STOCKTON REAL ESTATE… A Princeton Tradition Experience ✦ Honesty ✦ Integrity 32 Chambers Street, Princeton, NJ 08542 (800) 763-1416 ✦ (609) 924-1416

ROSA’S CLEANING SERVICE: For houses, apartments, offices, daycare, banks, schools & much more. Has good English, own transportation. 20 years of experience. Cleaning license. References. Please call (609) 751-2188 or (609) 610-2485. 09-07-25t TIRED OF AN OFFICE PARK? Office space available in historic building overlooking Carnegie Lake. Princeton address. Furnished or unfurnished. Newly renovated. Free parking. Conference room, kitchenette, receptionist included. Friendly, professional atmosphere. Contact Liz: (609) 514-0514; ez@zuckfish.com 09-07-26t LAWN MAINTENANCE: Prune shrubs, mulch, cut grass, weed, leaf clean up and removal. Call (609) 9541810. 09-07-13t HANDYMAN: General duties at your service! High skill levels in indoor/outdoor painting, sheet rock, deck work, power washing & general on the spot fix up. Carpentry, tile installation, moulding, etc. EPA certified. T/A “Elegant Remodeling”, www.elegantdesignhandyman.com Call Roeland (609) 933-9240 or roelandvan@gmail.com tf

Freelance Magazine Writers Witherspoon Media Group is seeking experienced freelance writers for Princeton Magazine and Urban Agenda Magazine.

AN OLD FASHIONED HOUSE PERFECT FOR A CONTEMPORARY BUYER Yesterday’s charm is combined with today’s amenities in the Historic Wilmot House, Circa 1830, 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, living room/parlor, new kitchen, inviting back yard and garage. A house with charm and character and a very reasonable price. In a most desirable Ewing Township neighborhood. $219,000 Virtual Tour: www.realestateshows.com/1349823

www.stockton-realtor.com

“Home, the spot of earth supremely blest, A dearer, sweeter spot than all the rest." —Robert Montgomery

The ideal candidate lives in close proximity to New Jersey and familiar with the arts, business, and academic culture of the area. Must be able to pitch story ideas and work cooperatively with copy editors and designers. Please forward a cover letter and writing clips to

Heidi Joseph Sales Associate, REALTOR® Office: 609.924.1600 Mobile: 609.613.1663 heidi.joseph@foxroach.com

Insist on … Heidi Joseph.

lynn.smith@ witherspoonmediagroup.com PRINCETON OFFICE | 253 Nassau Street | Princeton, NJ 08540

609.924.1600 | www.foxroach.com

©2013 An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate, and a franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.© Equal Housing Opportunity. lnformation not verified or guaranteed. If your home is currently listed with a Broker, this is not intended as a solicitation.

41 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

FALL CLEAN UP! Seeding, mulching, trimming, weeding, lawn mowing, planting & much more. Please call (609) 637-0550.


TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016 • 42

stockton real estate, llc current rentals *********************************

residential rentals: Montgomery – $3000/mo. 4 BR, 2.5 bath. Fully Furnished House. Available now.

We have customers waiting for houses! STOCKTON MEANS FULL SERVICE REAL ESTATE.

We list, We sell, We manage. If you have a house to sell or rent we are ready to service you! Call us for any of your real estate needs and check out our website at:

Music lessons: Voice, piano, guitar, drums, trumpet, flute, clarinet, violin, cello, saxophone, banjo, mandolin, uke & more. One-on-one. $32/ half hour. Ongoing music camps. call todaY! FarrinGton’s Music, Montgomery (609) 9248282; West Windsor (609) 897-0032, www.farringtonsmusic.com 07-13-17 i BuY all kinds of Old or Pretty Things: China, glass, silver, pottery, costume jewelry, evening bags, fancy linens, paintings, small furniture, etc. Local woman buyer. (609) 9217469. 08-17-17 253 nassau-Princeton luXurY rentals: 2 Bedrooms, 2 Bathrooms. All Amenities, Parking included, 253Nassau. com Weinberg Management (609) 731-1630. 07-13-tf

http://www.stockton-realtor.com See our display ads for our available houses for sale.

32 chambers street Princeton, nJ 08542 (609) 924-1416 Martha F. stockton, Broker-owner estate liQuidation serVice: I will clean out attics, basements, garages & houses. Single items to entire estates. No job too big or small. In business over 35 years, serving all of Mercer County. Call (609) 306-0613. 08-10-17 suPerior HandYMan serVices: Experienced in all residential home repairs. Free Estimate/References/ Insured. (908) 966-0662 or www. superiorhandymanservices-nj.com 09-21/12-07

5 Br, 1 BatH House For lease: 25 Madison, Princeton. Central Location. $3,260 plus utilities. Weinberg Management, (609) 731-1630. 07-13-tf BuYinG: Antiques, paintings, Oriental rugs, coins, clocks, furniture, old toys, military, books, cameras, silver, costume & fine jewelry. Guitars & musical instruments. I buy single items to entire estates. Free appraisals. (609) 306-0613. 08-10-17 tHe Maid ProFessionals: Leslie & Nora, cleaning experts. Residential & commercial. Free estimates. References upon request. (609) 2182279, (609) 323-7404. 04-06/09-28

Joes landscaPinG inc. oF Princeton

aWard WinninG sliPcoVers

Property Maintenance and Specialty Jobs

Custom fitted in your home.

Commercial/Residential Over 30 Years of Experience •Fully Insured •Free Consultations

Put an ad in the TOWN TOPICS to let everyone know!

Fabrics and hardware. Fran Fox (609) 577-6654

Email: joeslandscapingprinceton@ gmail.com

windhamstitches.com 04-06-17

Text (only) (609) 638-6846 Office (609) 216-7936 Princeton References •Green Company HIC #13VH07549500 05-04-17

Fall clean uP! Seeding, mulching, trimming, weeding, lawn mowing, planting & much more. Please call (609) 637-0550. 03-30-17

We BuY cars

HoMe rePair sPecialist: Interior/exterior repairs, carpentry, trim, rotted wood, power washing, painting, deck work, sheet rock/ spackle, gutter & roofing repairs. Punch list is my specialty. 40 years experience. Licensed & insured. Call Creative Woodcraft (609) 586-2130 06-22-17 Princeton oFFice/ retail For lease: 220 Alexander Road. Approx. 1,000 SF, High Profile Location, On Site Parking. $2,500 includes all utilities. Weinberg Management, (609) 9248535. 04-27-tf need soMetHinG done? General contractor. Seminary Degree, 18 years experience in Princeton. Bath renovations, decks, tile, window/door installations, masonry, carpentry & painting. Licensed & insured. References available. (609) 477-9261. 03-09-17

Belle Mead Garage (908) 359-8131 Ask for Chris

(609) 924-2200 ext 10 09-28 WurlitZer uPriGHt Piano: Good Condition. Recently Tuned. $900. Call (609) 924-7910. 09-28 Princeton estate sale: 11 Lexington Court, Friday September 30th & Saturday October 1st, 9-3. Furniture, artwork, jewelry, rugs, designer clothing, purses & accessories. Books, patio furniture, holiday & household items. www. EstateSalesByOlga.com 09-28

98tH Princeton HosPital ruMMaGe sale: Saturday (October 1) 9-3 & Sunday (October 2) 10-2, at Princeton Airport, 41 Airpark Road, off Route 206, Princeton. Rain or Shine!!!! Tons of furniture, linen, art, bric-a-brac, small appliances, lamps, boutique, jewelry, toys, holiday, men’s, women’s, children’s clothing, garden, etc.! Something for everyone!!!! Sponsored by University Medical Center of Princeton at Plainsboro. 09-28 1965 cHeVrolet corVette Convertible L75 327ci/300HP manual 4 speed, blue/black, $16,500. Contact lailahaxton@gmail.com; (609) 303-2302. 09-28

tf storaGe sPace: 194 Nassau St. 1227 sq. ft. Clean, dry, secure space. Please call (609) 921-6060 for details. 06-10-tf nassau street: Small Office Suites with parking. 390 sq. ft; 1467 sq. ft. Please call (609) 921-6060 for details. 06-10-tf WHat’s a Great GiFt For a ForMer Princetonian? a Gift subscription! We have prices for 1 or 2 years -call (609)924-2200x10 to get more info! tf

COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE

……..in a serene location not far from Princeton in the Princeton Walk enclave. 4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, Indoor and outdoor pools, tennis and basketball courts, fitness room, clubhouse, walking and bike paths. All this in an elegant maintenance-free home. South Brunswick Township with a Princeton address - marvelous in every way. Virtual Tour: www.realestateshows.com/1329836

www.stockton-realtor.com

Thinking about a NEW CONSTRUCTION in Princeton? Multiple projects are available ranging from $799,000 to $1,495,000, built to the highest standard with attention to the finest details! Call me to schedule a private showing. There might still be time to customize your home!

Each RE/MAX office is independently owned and operated.

= GREAT WEEKEND!

window treatments, and bedding.

Experience ✦ Honesty ✦ Integrity 32 Chambers Street, Princeton, NJ 08542 (800) 763-1416 ✦ (609) 924-1416

of PRINCETON

YARD SALE + TOWN TOPICS CLASSIFIED

Pillows, cushions, table linens,

STOCKTON REAL ESTATE… A Princeton Tradition

343 Nassau Street, Princeton, NJ 08540 609-921-9202

autuMn is Here!

Anna Shulkina

Top 1% of Realtors Nationwide NJAR Circle of Excellence 1998-2015 Platinum Level 2012-2015 Cell: 609-903-0621 Direct: 609-216-7071 ashulkina@yahoo.com

A. Pennacchi & Sons Co. Established in 1947

MASON CONTRACTORS RESTORE-PRESERVE-ALL MASONRY

Mercer County's oldest, reliable, experienced firm. We serve you for all your masonry needs.

BRICK~STONE~STUCCO NEW~RESTORED Simplest Repair to the Most Grandeur Project, our staff will accommodate your every need!

Call us as your past generations did for over 69 years!

Complete Masonry & Waterproofing Services

Paul G. Pennacchi, Sr., Historical Preservationist #5.

Support your community businesses. Princeton business since 1947.

609-584-5777

U.S. Postal Service Statement of Ownership Management and Circulation (Req. by 39 USC 3685) Name of Publication: Town Topics Publication Number: 01917056 Date of Filing: 9/28/16 Frequency of Issue: Weekly Number of Issues published Annually: 52 Annual Subscription Price: $48 Complete Mailing Address of Known Office of publication: 4438 Rte 27N. Kingston, Middlesex County, New Jersey 08528. Full Name and Complete Mailing Address of Publisher and Editor-in-Chief: Publisher/Editor-in-Chief, Lynn A. Smith, 4438 Rte 27N. Kingston, NJ 08528; Owners, Lynn A. Smith, 2 Glenbrook Court, Lawrenceville, NJ 08648; J. Robert Hillier, 190 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, NJ 08542; Mary Glazer, 212 Washington Avenue, Apt. 1007, Towson, MD 21204; Julia Gonzalez-Lavin, 34 Old Orchard Lane, Princeton, NJ 08540; Myrna Bearse, 1200 University Street, #216, Seattle, WA 98101; Jean Alison Peebles, 24 Markham Road, Princeton, NJ 08540; Michael J. Napoliello, 27 Richard Court, Princeton, NJ 08540. Known Bondholders, Mortgagees & other Security Holders owning more than one percent or more of the total amount of bonds, mortgages or securities: None. Average Number of Copies Each Issue During Preceding 12 months: A) Total Number of Copies: 15,300; B) Paid and/or Requested Distribution: 1) Outside County Paid/Requested Mail Subscriptions stated on PS Form 3541 (Include Direct Written Request from Recipient, Telemarketing, and Internet Requests from Recipient, Paid Subscriptions including Nominal Rate Subscriptions, Employer Requests, Advertiser's Proof Copies, and Exchange Copies.): 255; 2) In County Paid/Requested Mail Subscriptions stated on PS Form 3541 (Include Direct Written Request from Recipient, Telemarketing, and Internet Requests from Recipient, Paid Subscriptions including Nominal Rate Subscriptions, Employer Requests, Advertiser's Proof Copies, and Exchange Copies.): 3,730; 3) Sales Through Dealers and Carriers, Street Vendors, Counter Sales, and Other Paid or Requested Distribution Outside USPS: 11,165; 4) Requested Copies Distributed by Other Mail Classes Through the USPS: 0; C) Total Paid and/or Requested Circulation: 15,150; D) Non Requested Distribution by Mail and Outside the Mail: 1) Outside County Non Requested Copies as stated on PS Form 3541 (Include Sample Copies, Requests Over 3 Years old, Requests induced by a Premium, Bulk Sales and Requests including Association Requests, Names obtained from Business Directories, Lists and other Sources.): 0; 2) In County Non Requested Copies as stated on PS Form 3541 (include Sample Copies, Requests over 3 years old, Requests induced by a Premium, Bulk Sales and Requests including Association Requests, Names obtained from Business Directories, Lists, and other sources): 0; 3) Non Requested Copies Distributed Through the USPS by Other Classes of Mail (e.g. First-Class Mail, Nonrequestor Copies Mailed in Excess of 10% Limit Mailed at Standard Mail or Package Service Rates): 0; 4) Non Requested Copies Distributed Outside the Mail (Include Pickup Stands, Trade Shows, Showrooms and Other Sources): 0; E) Total Non Requested Distribution: 0; F) Total Distribution: 15,150; G) Copies Not Distributed: 150; H) Total: 15,300; I) Percent Paid and/or Requested Circulation: 100; Number of Copies of Single Issue Published Nearest to Filing Date: A) Total Number of Copies: 15,300; B) Paid and/or Requested Distribution: 1) Outside County Paid/Requested Mail Subscriptions stated on PS Form 3541 (Include Direct Written Request from Recipient, Telemarketing, and Internet Requests from Recipient, Paid Subscriptions including Nominal Rate Subscriptions, Employer Requests, Advertiser's Proof Copies, and Exchange Copies.): 255; 2) In County Paid/Requested Mail Subscriptions stated on PS Form 3541 (Include Direct Written Request from Recipient, Telemarketing, and Internet Requests from Recipient, Paid Subscriptions including Nominal Rate Subscriptions, Employer Requests, Advertiser's Proof Copies, and Exchange Copies.): 3,730; 3) Sales Through Dealers and Carriers, Street Vendors, Counter Sales, and Other Paid or Requested Distribution Outside USPS: 11,165; 4) Requested Copies Distributed by Other Mail Classes Through the USPS: 0; C) Total Paid and/or Requested Circulation: 15,150; D) Non Requested Distribution by Mail and Outside the Mail: 1) Outside County Non Requested Copies as stated on PS Form 3541 (Include Sample Copies, Requests Over 3 Years old, Requests induced by a Premium, Bulk Sales and Requests including Association Requests, Names obtained from Business Directories, Lists and other Sources.): 0; 2) In County Non Requested Copies as stated on PS Form 3541 (include Sample Copies, Requests over 3 years old, Requests induced by a Premium, Bulk Sales and Requests including Association Requests, Names obtained from Business Directories, Lists, and other sources): 0; 3) Non Requested Copies Distributed Through the USPS by Other Classes of Mail (e.g. First-Class Mail, Nonrequestor Copies Mailed in Excess of 10% Limit Mailed at Standard Mail or Package Service Rates): 0; 4) Non Requested Copies Distributed Outside the Mail (Include Pickup Stands, Trade Shows, Showrooms and Other Sources): 0; E) Total Non Requested Distribution: 0; F) Total Distribution: 15,150; G) Copies Not Distributed: 150; H) Total: 15,300; I) Percent Paid and/or Requested Circulation: 100. 16. Electronic Copy Distribution: NA.


NEW LISTING

43 • TOWN TOPICS, PRINCETON, N.J., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEmbER 28, 2016

Weichert

®

Real Estate Mortgages Closing Services Insurance

NEW LISTING

MONTGOMERY TWP., Townhome with expanded master BR suite, updated heating, A/C, hot water heater, stainless steel kitchen appliances, & new windows thru-out, plus rear patio. $300,000

PRINCETON, Colonial with a center hall that leads into formal rooms & kitchen with peninsula. Master suite & 3 bedrooms upstairs. Hardwood floors through-out, 2-car garage, bluestone patio. $799,000

Denise Varga 609-439-3605 (cell)

Beatrice Bloom 609-577-2989 (cell)

LITTLEBROOK SECTION OF PRINCETON

RENOVATED HOME IN PRIME LOCATION

PRINCETON, This 4 BR, 3 full BA bi-level home is located at end of a cul-de-sac in Littlebrook section, has 2-car attached garage and is close to downtown. $799,000

PRINCETON, This home has an enclosed porch that is the width of the house, kitchen w/ custom cabinets, marble herringbone backsplash, quartz counters, high-end appliances & island. $1,395,000

Ingela Kostenbader 609-902-5302 (cell)

Ingela Kostenbader 609-902-5302 (cell)

NEAR TOWN

NEW LISTING

PRINCETON, This 3-year-old Colonial is near schools, Community Park pool, Princeton Shopping center & town. Upgrades include stainless steel appliances & a fully finished basement. $1,450,000

WEST WINDSOR, This prestigious, east-facing, 3,000 sq. ft. Toll Brothers’ Colonial in Windsor Hunt w/ beautiful hardwood flooring & 1,000 sq. ft. finished basement is waiting for you. $865,000

Beatrice Bloom 609-577-2989 (cell)

Victoria Wang 609-455-1692 (cell)

Princeton Office 609-921-1900

Weichert

,

Realtors

®


NEWLY PRICED

Robin Jackson Sales Associate

NEW LISTING / NEW CONSTRUCTION

CB Princeton Town Topics 9.28.16_CB Previews 9/26/16 2:12 PM Page 1

175 Cedar Ln, Princeton 5 Beds, 3+ Baths, $1,499,000

9 Alpine Drive, Millstone Twp 5 Beds, 4.5 Baths, $1,249,000

10 Nassau Street | Princeton | 609-921-1411 www.ColdwellBankerHomes.com/Princeton

COLDWELL BANKER

404 N. Harrison Street, Princeton 4 Beds, 3.5 Baths, $1,425,000

RESIDENTIAL BROKERAGE PRINCETON

Heidi A. Hartmann Sales Associate

Fall In Love With Your New Home!

16 Findley Lane, West Windsor Twp NEWLY PRICED Donna Reilly & Ellen Calman 4 Beds, 2.5 Baths, $695,000 NEWLY REMODELED Sales Associates

©2015 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker, the Coldwell Banker Logo, Coldwell Banker Previews International, the Coldwell Banker Previews International logo and “Dedicated to Luxury Real Estate” are registered and unregistered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.

NEW LISTING / NEW CONSTRUCTION

237 Opossum Road, Montgomery Twp 3 Beds, 3.5 Baths, $485,000

Catherine O'Connell Sales Associate

Coldwell Banker Princeton

NEW LISTING


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