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Jean Louise Friedmann Jean Louise ( Mulvey) Friedmann died on July 25, 2016, in Princeton after a brief illness. Born in Lawrence, Massachusetts in 1927, Jean was the daughter of the late Joseph and Leona (Buckley) Mulvey. She grew up in Andover, Mass., attending local schools and then Abbot Academy, now Phillips Academy, in Andover. She graduated from Wellesley College in 1949 with a Bachelor of Arts in history and worked for several years as an editor for The MacMillan Company Publishers in New York City. In later years, using the pen name of Emily Vincent, she became a free-lance book reviewer for The Houston Chronicle, Best Sellers, and other publications as well as serving as a long-time editor of The Wellesley Magazine book review section. I n 1956, she mar r ie d John Friedmann in New York City. They raised their three children in New York City, Hastings on Hudson, N.Y., and Houston, Tex., retiring to Princeton in 1984. Jean continued her editing and free-lance writing, volunteered for Literacy Volunteers of America and the Princeton Public Library, and served as an officer of the local Wellesley College clubs in Houston and Princeton. Jean was a familiar figure around town, attending many town and university events, and riding her bicycle and swimming. She and John also traveled extensively until his death in 2009. Jean is survived by her children, Pamela Lowe, and her husband Russell; Andrew Friedmann, and his wife Darcy (Davis) Friedmann; and Thomas Friedmann. and his wife, Amy Anderson; grandchildren Brian (Hillary Anderson) Lowe, Peter Lowe, and David (Heather Pratt) Lowe, Michael and Christopher Friedmann, Charlotte and John Friedmann; g re at- g ra nd s on, S aw yer Anderson Lowe; her sister, Susan Mulvey Rattray, and her husband Bret; sister-inlaw, Nancy Mumford Mulvey; cousin, Joanne Marlatt Otto; nephews and nieces Steven Mulvey, Kathryn (Patricia Lambert) Mulvey, Will (Heather Malin) Swarts, Hilary Swarts; and great-nephew Noah Malin Swarts. She was predeceased by her loving brother, Donald Mulvey. She deeply loved and respected, and was loved and respected by, her entire extended family and friends. A memorial service will be held at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Princ-
Memorial Service Elizabeth S. Ettinghausen Elizabeth S. Ettinghausen, passed away on June 12, 2016. Her friends are invited to a service in her remembrance on Saturday, October 22, 2016 at 6:30 p.m. at the Princeton University Chapel. A reception will follow the service. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation in her memory to her favorite env ironmental charities — the Audubon Society, the Wilderness Society, or the Environmental Defense Fund.
eton on October 8 th in the afternoon to which friends and family are cordially invited. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be sent to the Princeton Public Library, Wellesley College, Phillips Academy (Abbott) A ndover, or the donor’s choice of charity.
Jean C. Murphy J e a n C. M u r p h y, 9 0, the former Jean Elizabeth Campbell, was born in Philadelphia, May 18, 1926. She grew up and lived in Wynnewood, Pa. before moving to Princeton in 1961. In 1950 she married John S. Murphy of Philadelphia and they were happily married for 60 years. She received a Bachelor of Science degree from Drexel University in 1948. She received a graduate degree in elementary education from The College of New Jersey. She taught in the Princeton Regional Schools for several years in the field of special education and as a substitute teacher in the elementary grades. She was the daughter of the late Robert and Lillian Campbell and was predeceased by her husband, John Slaughter Mur phy. She is survived by her sister Catherine Richie; daughter and son-in-law Susan and Ted Strempack; son Robert Murphy; grandchildren Kymberly Clark and Guy Strempack; great granddaughters Taylor and Camy Clark, Mia Strempack; and nieces and nephews. She was a volunteer at the University Medical Center of Princeton for many years and a member of the Women’s College Club of Princeton. She was an avid reader and gardener and loved to travel with her husband. A graveside service will be held Thursday, September 22, 2016 at 11 a.m. at Trinity-All Saints’ Cemetery, 16 All Saints Road, Princeton, NJ. Donations in her memory may be made to All Saints’ Church at the above address. Arrangements are under the direction of The MatherHodge Funeral Home, Princeton.
Religion “Taste of Italy” Event to Benefit Senior Care Ministry
The Senior Care Ministry of Princeton (SCM) will celebrate 30-plus years of community service with A Taste of Italy, a dinner and wine-tasting at Tre Piani Restaurant, Thursday, November 3, 6 to 9 p.m. This year’s event will honor Ray Wadsworth, Carol Olivieri, a n d D or ot h e a’s H o u s e. The Master of Ceremonies will be Tom Murray, one of
Pope Francis’s pilots during his 2016 U.S. tour. Proceeds from the evening will go toward supporting the work of the SCM. The Senior Care Ministry, first established in 1984 under the aegis of St. Paul Church, Pr inceton, now serves the wider community as an independent non-denominational organization. A pioneer in the “aging in place” movement, the SCM helps seniors remain safely in the comfort of their own homes as long as possible by providing “simple neighborly acts of kindness.” The SCM organizes a network of some 50 volunteers to assist approximately 70 clients with rides to healthcare related appointments, er r a n d s, s hoppi ng, a n d friendly visits. Former Mayor of Princeton Township Jim Floyd has observed that the SCM is “a true friend that I rely on …. I sincerely appreciate the kindness and concern demonstrated by staff and volunteers alike.” The SCM’s services are offered free of charge. T he honorees for t his year’s Taste of Italy exemplify service to the community. Ray Wadsworth is a community advocate, volunteer, businessman, and chair and co-founder of the Spirit of Princeton organization. Under the leadership of Carol Olivieri, executive director of SCM from 1993-2013, the organization flourished, tripling the number of volunteers and clients served. Dorothea’s House, founded in 1913 to minister to the needs of Italian immigrants in Princeton, is now an Italian-American cultural institution offering a wide range of programs open to all. For information on sponsorships and tickets to A Taste of Italy, email info@ seniorcareministry.org, or call ( 609 ) 921- 8888. Funded almost entirely by private donations, the SCM is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization.
SENIOR CARE MINISTRY: Captain Tom Murray (pictured with Pope Francis) will be the Master of Ceremonies at the Senior Care Ministry’s “Taste of Italy” event at Tre Piani Restaurant on Thursday, November 3 from 6 to 9 p.m. Murray served as one of Pope Francis’s pilots during his 2016 U.S. tour. Additional honorees include Ray Wadsworth, Carol Olivieri, and Dorothea’s House. For ticketing information, call (609) 921-8888 or email info@seniorcareministry.org. (1518, 1520) as Experiments in Ecumencial Conversation” (Wengert) on Tuesday, October 4, 7 p.m. Lecture IV: “Reflecting on From Conflict to Communion and the Healing of Memories” (Thönissen) on Wednesday, October 5, 7 p.m. Lecture V: “Commemorating the 500th Anniversary of the Reformation Together” (Thönissen and Wengert) on Thursday, October 6, 7 p.m. (a mini choral concert featuring the Princeton Seminary Singers under the direction of Martin Tel, director of music, will precede the lecture). Lectures I–IV will be held in the Daniel J. Theron Assembly Room in the Princeton Theological Seminary Library, 25 Library Place in Princeton. Lecture V will be held in Miller Chapel on the
A1 Limo Acorn Glen Acura
Seminary Commemorates Martin Luther’s 95 Theses
Dr. Wolfgang Thönissen, a Roman Catholic scholar, and Dr. Timothy J. Wengert, a Lutheran scholar, will jointly deliver the prestigious Levi P. Stone Lecture Series at Princeton Theological Seminary on “Martin Luther, the 95 Theses and Church Unity after 500 Years.” The schedule for the lectures is as follows: Lecture I: “Indulgences and the Development of a Medieval Practice” (Thönissen) on Monday, October 3, 7 p.m. Lecture II : “Martin Luther’s Disputation Clarifying the Power of Indulgences (the 95 Theses) as an Ecumenical Document?” (Wengert) on Tuesday, October 4, 3 p.m. Lecture III: “Martin Luther’s Letters to Pope Leo X
Duke University in 1984 and taught on Philadelphia’s faculty from 1989–2013. He has written many scholarly books and articles on the Reformation, was coeditor of the English edition of The Book of Concord: The Confessions of the Evangelical Lutheran Church (Fortress Press, 2000) and translated Luther’s Small Catechism, which is widely used throughout the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. The Stone Lectures were created in 1871 by Levi P. Stone, Esquire, of Orange, New Jersey, a director and also a trustee of the Seminary, who sought to see the best theological minds featured in the series. For m or e i n for m at ion about the lecture series, visit pstem.edu/events.
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Dr. Wolfgang Thönissen
Seminary’s main campus. The lecture series is free and open to the public. Thönissen is professor of ecumenical theology at Theologische Fakultät Paderborn in Germany, and director of Johann-AdamMöhler-Institut für Ökumenik in Paderborn. He is also counselor of the Papal Council for Promoting Christian Unity, counselor to the German Bishops Conference, and counselor to the international Lutheran-Roman-Catholic Commission on Unity. Wengert is Emeritus Ministerium of Pennsylvania Professor of Church History at Lutheran Theological Seminary in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A parish pastor for seven years in Minnesota and Wisconsin, he received his doctorate from
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