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Dan Aubrey explores Bucks County’s covered bridges, page 10; Hal English named CEO of the Princeton Mercer Chamber, 17.

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609-452-7000 • PrinCetonInfo.Com

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Nell Flanders, Princeton Symphony Orchestra’s new assistant conductor, sets the tempo for reaching future music lovers. Dan Aubrey reports, page 16.

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NOVEMbEr 11, 2020

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MANAGING EDITOr Sara Hastings ArTS EDITOr Dan Aubrey DIrECTOr OF DIGITAL INITIATIVES Joe Emanski ADMINISTrATIVE COOrDINATOr

Megan Durelli

PrODUCTION MANAGEr Stacey Micallef SENIOr ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE

Jennifer Steffen

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE

Mark Nebbia

ADMINISTrATIVE ADVErTISING ASSISTANT

Gina Carillo

CO-PUbLISHErS Jamie Griswold, Tom Valeri ASSOCIATE PUbLISHEr Thomas Fritts FOUNDING EDITOr Richard K. Rein, 1984-2019

For editorial inquiries: 609-452-7000 Display Advertising: tfritts@communitynews.org 609-396-1511 x110 Classified Advertising: class@princetoninfo.com 609-396-1511 x105 Mail: 15 Princess Road, Suite K, Lawrenceville 08648. E-Mail: Events: events@princetoninfo.com News: hastings@princetoninfo.com Home page: www.princetoninfo.com Subscribe to our E-Mail Newsletters: tinyurl.com/us1newsletter

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ast week Dan Aubrey introduced readers to Elizabeth Sheldon, the Princeton-based founder of Juno Films, whose documentary, “Radium Girls,” is premiering through the Garden Theater’s virtual screening program on Friday, November 13. It is not the only film with regional connections making its debut that evening. At 7 p.m. the theater offers a livestream on its website of “Voices: The Eden Story — 45 Years of Family,” a new documentary celebrating the 45th anniversary of Eden Autism Services in Plainsboro. The documentary explores Eden’s origins as well as the evolution of autism services. In 1975 a small group of parents came together in search of a better education for their children with autism. The film chronicles how a class held in a Princeton church basement grew into a leading provider of autism services. Together with the Princeton community, Eden’s founding families and staff helped advance autism services beyond education into employment opportunities and residential services. The film, funded by a grant from a generous donor, was created by Tony Stewart of StewartFilms, who collected 35 hours of interviews and archival footage, and scanned and digitized more than 2,000 photos, slides, and documents. The livestream is free and is followed by a question-and-answer U.S. 1 WELCOMES letters to the editor, corrections, and criticisms of our stories and columns. E-mail your thoughts directly to our editor: hastings@princetoninfo. com.

U.S. 1 Is in Print & Online U.S. 1 has resumed print publication. Distribution is to news boxes located in downtown Princeton and Trenton, at train stations, and in other high-traffic outdoor areas. Additionally, it is now possible to browse full PDFs of recent issues on U.S. 1’s website, www.princetoninfo.com. Click on “Read This Week’s Digital U.S. 1 E-Edition Here.” A full digital edition of U.S. 1 is also distributed by e-mail every Wednesday. Subscribe at tinyurl.com/us1newsletter.

from local and HomeFront artists, to benefit homeless families. Please visit: www.artjamnj.org. Sunday, November 15: Stop by HomeFront’s “Pop Up” Information & Donation Drop Off Center from noon to 5 p.m. at 63 Palmer Square, Princeton. HomeFront welcomes the community to stop in and learn more about local situation, how between the awrence-based to help, and will be acHomeFront has ancepting donated nonThe nounced a number of perishable food, coats, Lines events in recognition of diapers, wipes, and Hunger & Homelessness formula. Awareness Week, which runs from Thursday, November 19: November 15 through 22. The non- Princeton Public Library & Homeprofit focused on breaking the cy- Front co-host a Hunger & Homecle of poverty is offering the com- lessness Awareness Week Virtual munity four ways to learn, get in- Panel Discussion at 6 p.m. Learn volved, and have an impact. about the local situation, solutions, November 14 – December 15: and ways to get involved. The Buy holiday art online, or by ap- event is free. pointment, at HomeFront Friday, November 20: Take a ArtSpace’s “Art For The Holidays” virtual tour of HomeFront’s headEvent. The event showcases art session featuring Eden staff and families. For more information visit www.princetongardentheatre. org/films/eden-autism.

HomeFront Raises Awareness

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quarters at 3 p.m. Learn more about the local situation, how HomeFront helps, and how to get involved. The event is free. Stop by HomeFront’s “Pop Up” Information & Donation Drop Off Center from 4 to 7 p.m. at 63 Palmer Square, Princeton. Saturday, November 21: Take a virtual tour of HomeFront’s headquarters at 11 a.m. Stop by HomeFront’s “Pop Up” Information & Donation Drop Off Center from noon to 5 p.m. at 63 Palmer Square, Princeton. Sunday, November 22: November 21: Stop by HomeFront’s “Pop Up” Information & Donation Drop Off Center from noon to 5p.m. at 63 Palmer Square, Princeton. For more information and logon access to virtual events visit www.homefrontnj.org.

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NOVEMbEr 11, 2020

get a taste of real community

New Jersey Adds New Safety Mandates for Workplaces

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n executive order issued by Governor Phil Murphy on October 28 created a new set of safety rules for workplaces operating amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The new restrictions took effect November 6. Murphy cited federal inaction as the impetus for issuing the new order, saying in a statement, “The federal government has failed to provide all workers the proper standards and protections that they deserve. Today’s executive order closes that gap to help ensure the health and safety of our workforce during this unprecedented time.” The mandates apply to every business, nonprofit, or government or educational entity in the state that requires its workers to be physically present in a workspace. The requirements, with limited exceptions, are: • Require workers and customers to maintain at least six feet of distance from one another, to the maximum extent possible; • Require everyone to wear face masks, except when an employee is at their workstation at least six feet from others, or is alone in a walled space such as an office. Employers

may be authorized to prevent individuals who refuse to wear a mask from entering the worksite. • Provide face masks for their employees; • Provide approved sanitization materials for employees and visitors at no cost to those individuals; • Ensure that employees practice hand hygiene and provide employees with sufficient break time for that purpose; • Routinely clean and disinfect all high-touch areas in accordance with DOH and CDC guidelines; • Prior to each shift, conduct daily health checks, such as temperature screenings, visual symptom checking, self-assessment checklists, and/or health questionnaires, consistent with CDC guidance; • Do not allow sick employees to enter workplace and follow requirements of applicable leave laws; and • Promptly notify employees of any known exposure to COVID-19 at the worksite. The order met with swift resistance from state business advocacy groups. In a statement, New Jersey Business and Industry Association president and CEO Michele Siekerka noted the heavy burden the new order places on businesses already operating in a difficult environment. “While we have always shared the governor’s priority to establish workplaces that follow federal safety guidelines, today’s directive again makes New Jersey an outlier in terms of mandates — without any balance whatsoever for the concerns of employers. “Our policymakers must strike a better balance toward trying to help our employers by prioritizing legislation for liability protections

supporting those businesses that are doing the right thing already — in addition to bringing them more sorely needed resources. “Sadly, we heard no such balance from the governor today. We only heard about applying more financial burdens on the same job creators who simultaneously have many of the greatest capacity restrictions in the nation. “Further, most businesses already have protective safeguards in place and are critically concerned about safeguarding their workforce and their workplaces. Mechanisms already exist to call out bad actors and hold them accountable. There is no need to now mandate additional costs on the good actors through unnecessary policy. In fact, more resources should be “We once again urge the governor and our policymakers to put a pause on any further mandates, recognizing that New Jersey’s business climate was already consistently ranked amongst the worst in the nation pre-COVID because of the excessive cost of doing business. Further mandates only exacerbate that.”

Business Meetings Wednesday, November 11

Women’s Leadership Summit, College of New Jersey, 609771-2567. wls.tcnj.edu. Day-long conference featuring talks by local business owners, community members, TCNJ students, faculty, staff, and more. Keynote speaker is Harvard Business School professor Laura Huang, whose research examines interpersonal relationships and implicit bias in entrepreneurship and the workplace. Register. $50 benefits an Economic Assistance Fund to help support students who have been impacted by COVID-19. 9 a.m.

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veryone is welcome in the House of High End – from shoppers and creative entrepreneurs to business owners and networking groups.

The House of High End Boutique The House of High End is also a great is best known for its “fun, fierce place to pop in for a pop-up. “We fashion” for women but also carries like to showcase local businesses menswear, hair extensions and and emerging brands by having popnts. accessories for just about everyone. up stores and networking events “We cater to a diverse audience right in the store. It gives them ctions if we hear from you by_________________________. and carry a little bit of everything. more exposure and is great for the d will run as We is.are a one-stop show,” says community. We also open the store to owner Nazir Hampton. networking events,“ Hampton says.

-452-7000 • FAX: 609-452-0033

Hampton, a Trenton born and raised store owner, whose grandfather had his own boutique in the city, is committed to doing what he can to help the community while expanding his own business. “Fashion is what I do. It’s my passion.”

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NOVEMbEr 11, 2020

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Now Available

LEXAN SHIELDS FOR COVID

Among the speakers at the College of New Jersey’s Women’s Leadership Summit on Wednesday, November 11, will be TCNJ president Kathryn Foster, left, Tamara Ibezim, vice president in the Global Risk Management Organization at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, and keynote speaker Laura Huang, a professor at Harvard Business School and author of ‘EDGE: Turning Adversity into Advantage.’ Deciding to Keep or Exit Your business, Princeton SCOrE. princeton.score.org. Webinar presented by Ray Lee to help you determine your business’ value, identify an appropriate succession plan, plan for your own retirement, and leave a legacy for generations to come. Register. Free. 6:30 p.m.

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early 15 years13 Friday, November

JobSeekers, Professional Service Group of Mercer County. www.psgofmercercounty.org. Career development coach Bill Amirault motivates you to jump start your job search and expand your options to find your next job or career quickly. 9:45 a.m. to noon.

Tuesday, November 17

We’ve moved out of downtown. Now even closer!

JobSeekers. sites.google.com/ site/njjobseekers. Virtual meeting for those seeking employment. Visit website for GoTo Meeting link. 7:30 to 8:30 p.m.

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rein@princetoninfo.com ago I spent a few days in Central NJ Young Professionals Princeton SCOrE. princeton. Memphis, Tennessee, taking in the Virtual Summit, Princeton Merscore.org. Webinar presented by King Museum and asked him if he town’s major Chamber tourist attractions, cer regional of ComJustin Deal, VP at IPayDay Payroll ever been No, he said, merce. Resources Inc.,there. and Greg Shereach of www.princetonmercerwhich turned out to be had chamber.org.inKeynote address by but bon,heconsultant for CFO on De-the could easily imagine memorable surprising ways. Jennifer Willey on building confimand. Deal shares the imporlunch counter display — he had Graceland was not only a shrine to dence and connections; breakout tance of networking and building helped integrate them. Elvis but also a testament to the sessions on leadership developrelationships. Sherbon demonThe the protests in business Savannah, he marketing genius of his and widow, ment with Marc Celentana strate need for ownsaid, had been nonviolent, but Priscilla. Mud Island — a scale volunteering with Jodi O’Donnellers to be flexible in how they manwas still tensiongrows. in theRegair. Ames re-creation and David E. age as their business model ofMunshine; the Mississip- there closing on speaking ister. Free. 6:30 p.m. at the white he was sitting piand River — keynote was a geography les- While as aunlike leader.any Register. $15had. section of a lunch counter, he had a son other $20, I have members. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The Sun Studio tour was a revela- glass of cold ice tea poured onto his tion: how still pictures, sound, and lap by an angry woman. “I’m proud I was involved in it,” an informed, theatrical presenter could bring an entire musical era to Colbert said of the civil rights life in a space no bigger than the movement. “The very thought that you could be told you couldn’t sit average Princeton living room. Then there was the Martin in a particular place” was galling. Luther King Jr. Museum, housed in “My parents’ generation hoped it the very motel where King was as- would end. Ours is the generation sassinated on April 4, 1968. I re- that saw it end.” After the studying at Savannah member a replica of a segregated lunch counter and an audio visual State College, Colbert joined the exhibit capturing the exchange be- admission office at the University tween President John F. Kennedy of Georgia, by then under orders to and the governor of Mississippi, integrate its student body. “Here it Ross Barnett, as he attempted to was in the late 1960s and the unithwart the integration of the state’s versity had about 50 black students university. Kennedy’s voice had a out of an enrollment of 18,000.” The admissions job there led to steel edge as he told the governor the school would be integrated and the College Board and ETS and his that federal troops would be used to relocation to Princeton. He and his wife, Deborah Raikes-Colbert, the enforce that decision. I am reminded of the Sun Studio tour and the Martin Luther King Jr. Museum often as I contemplate efforts to leverage some of Princeton’s historical assets into study centers that would attract ordinary tourists and serious scholars. So when I heard that the birthplace of Paul Robeson was being opened to the public for a few hours last Sunday, the day after the 113th anniversary of Robeson’s birth on April 9, 1898, I charged over to visit the house at 110 Witherspoon Street, just across Green Street from the Arts Council’s Paul Robeson Center. The occasion was organized by the Witherspoon Street Presbyterian Church, located just a few doors away and where Robeson’s father had been minister when the future scholar-All American athlete-singer-actor-human rights activist was born. Sometime after the Robeson family left the house, it fell into private ownership and was 4:30 p.m. residenvia Zoom broken down into various tial configurations. For more the information about the event and Zoom link, Recognizing historical significance of the property, the fis.princeton.edu church quietly repurchased the Fund for lrish Studies is generously supported by the Durkin Family Trust and the James J. Kerrigan, Jr. ’45 houseThe in 2005 and set in motion a and Margaret M. Kerrigan Fund for lrish Studies. nonprofit organization that would oversee the building’s renovation and conversion into a community meeting place, an interpretive gallery illuminating the achieve-

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director of human 18 reWednesday, November

Richard K. Rein Monday, November 16

609-924-2880

nelsonglassprinceton.com

at Drew UniverCentral NJsources Nonprofit Council: sity, have two sons. Pandemic Partnerships, PrincWhen the boys were eton Mercer regional Chamber of Commerce. www.princetonyounger Colbert sought mercerchamber.org. Panel dis-exout a church that would help cussion between area business pose them to the spiritual side of and nonprofit leaders to learn life. Hehow recalled fondly the about businesses andPresbynonterian church that was a cornerprofits have come together during stone of his community Savanthe pandemic in new andinunique ways. 1 to 2:30 p.m. nah andRegister. found similarities with the

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NOVEMber 11, 2020

ART

FILM

LITERATURE

DANCE DRAMA MUSIC

PREV I E W DAY-BY-DAY EVENTS, NOVEMBER 11 TO 18

of virtual cooking classes with renowned chefs to support CASA’s mission and work with children in foster care. Register. $25. 7 to 8 p.m.

Event Listings: E-mail events@princetoninfo.com

Faith

Events for each day are divided into two categories: socially distanced, in-person gatherings, and virtual gatherings taking place online. Visit venue websites for information about how to access the events. To include your event in this section email events@princetoninfo.com.

Two Prophets Speak Truth to Power, Jewish Center of Princeton. www.thejewishcenter.org. First in a two-session Zoom course with Rabbi Eric Wisnia showing how Natan and Eliyahu speak truth to power. Register. Free. 7:30 p.m.

History

In Person

Memory and the Woman Suffragists of New Jersey, Princeton Public Library & Historical Society of Princeton. www. princetonlibrary.org. Anne Gordon, history professor emerita at Rutgers, speaks on the historical memory of the years from 1776 to 1807, when New Jersey women had the right to vote. Register. 6 p.m.

Food & Dining

Lectures

Wednesday November 11 Veterans’ Day. Bank and postal holiday.

Corks & Cookies, Firkin Tavern, 1400 Parkway Avenue, Ewing. www.firkintavern.com. Socially distanced “adult beverage” cookie class to learn fun decorating tricks and go home with three decorated cookies. Includes two drinks from the bar. Register. $45. 6 to 7 p.m.

Virtual

Lectures

Lunchtime Gallery Series, West Windsor Arts Council & Princeton University Art Museum, , 609-716-1931. www.westwindsorarts.org. After World War II, the creations of a group of artists who became known as Abstract Expressionists made New York City the world focal point of contemporary art. Docent Rob Coghan discusses key examples in the museum collection in a talk titled “ABEX, the genesis of the Abstract Expressionist Movement.” Register. $10; free for WWAC members. 1 p.m. Autumn Evening Series, New Jersey State Museum. www. statemuseum.nj.gov. Virtual conversations between museum curators and staff on a range of topics. Each program features a thematic drink creation, spirited dialogue, and a round of trivia via Zoom. Topic: Contested Debates. Register. Free. 8 p.m.

Politics

What Do the Election Results Mean for New Jersey?, Princeton Public Library. www.princetonlibrary.org. New Jersey political analyst Ingrid Reed hosts the third in a three session series. Ben Dworkin of Rowan University; John Weingart, associate director of the Eagleton Institute of Politics and host of “The Morning After,” Jeannine LaRue, 100 Black Women; Jack Ciatterelli, first declared Republican candidate for governor and Ev Liebman, advocacy director for AARP join the discussion. Register. 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.

Socials

Meeting, Union Toastmasters. www.tmclub6520.org. Learn how

AtJam for the Holidays HomeFront’s ArtJam for the Holidays has been reimagined in response to the current times to be held November 14 through December 12. HomeFront’s ArtJam for the Holidays will feature the work of more than 50 local and regional artists and ArtSpace and SewingSpace artists, available for sale online and by appointment at the HomeFront Family campus in Ewing. Proceeds will help support the artists and ArtSpace programs. to be a powerful presenter and achieve mastery in the art and science of public speaking. Email secretary@tmclub6520.org for link to join online meeting. 6 p.m. Broadway Online Trivia Night, State Theater of New Jersey. www.stnj.org/trivia. “The Color Purple” actor Brandon A. Wright hosts a trivia challenge covering new and classic musicals, composers, and stars. The trivia will be composed of 50 multiple choice questions. Register. Minimum $5 donation supports the theater’s community education programs. 7 p.m.

For Seniors

An Overview of Late Life Depression, Princeton Senior Resource Center. www.princetonsenior.org. Danielle Micale discusses severity of depression, symptoms suggesting depression, risk factors, suicide risk, and treatment options for older adults. Via Zoom. Register. Free. 11 a.m.

Thursday November 12 In Person Live Music

Music and Vino, Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-737-4465. www. hopewellvalleyvineyards.com. Rick Winow with pop/rock. 5 to 8 p.m.

Art

Mural Unveiling, Trenton Downtown Association, Perry and North Broad streets, Trenton. www.trenton-downtown.org. Muralist Leon Rainbow, TDA staff, and community leaders honor everyday heroes with the unveiling of his “We Are Survivors” mural. 11 a.m.

Farm Markets

Princeton Farmers Market, Franklin Avenue Lot, Princeton. www.princetonfarmersmarket. com. Vendors sell fresh produce, meats, baked goods, and artisanal products. Masks required. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Virtual

Good Causes

Cocktails for a Cause, Dress for Success Central NJ. centralnj. dressforsuccess.org. Virtual gathering includes messages from clients, entertainment, and a silent auction in celebration of over 13 years of empowering women to achieve economic independence. Register. $25. 6:30 p.m. Cooking with CASA, CASA for Children Mercer Burlington. www.casamb.org. Chef Robert Bennett leads a Thanksgiving dessert class. Second in a series

Queer Politics Webinar, Princeton School of Public and International Affairs. spia.princeton. edu. Jen Jack Gieseking of the University of Kentucky speaks on “A Queer New York: Geographies of Lesbians, Dykes, and Queers.” Register for Zoom presentation. Free. 1 p.m. Conversation with Composer Pamela Z, Department of Music, Princeton University. music.princeton.edu. Pamela Z is a composer/performer and media artist working with voice, live electronic processing, sampled sound, and video. Part of the Composition Colloquium series. Join via Zoom. 4:30 to 6 p.m. Artist Talk, Princeton University Art Museum. artmuseum.princeton.edu. Photographer Vik Muniz, best known for his recreations of seminal artworks in history using everyday materials, discusses his career as well as his creative process and his latest production. Free via Zoom. 5:30 p.m. Games for your Mind: The History and Future of Logic Puzzles, Princeton Public Library. www. princetonlibrary.org. Jason Rosenhouse, professor of mathematics at James Madison University, discusses his recently published book as well as the history and future of logic puzzles. Register. 7 p.m. Sourland ‘Train Station’ Seminar Series, Sourland Conservancy. www.sourland.org. “How Many Wildflowers Can You Grow in a Sourland Mountain Garden?” with Juanita Hummel. Register at tiny. cc/SC2020Train. 7 p.m.

Socials

Virtual Happy Hour, D&R Greenway Land Trust. www.drgreenway.org. Presentations by preservation landowners Dr. Elisabeth Kloner, celebrating new acres preserved in East Amwell, and Otto Zizak, farm-to-table restaurateur. Register to rsvp@drgreenway.org. 5 p.m. Art Making: Drawing from the Collections, Arts Council of Princeton & Princeton University Art Museum. artmuseum. princeton.edu. Artist Barbara DiLorenzo teaches via Zoom. Free. 8 p.m.


NOVEMber 11, 2020

In Person

Almost Harvest

Live Music

cold light radiant in cornfields turning the looped leaves molten, frost in the wings

Music and Vino, Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-737-4465. www. hopewellvalleyvineyards.com. Just Us with rock. 5 to 8 p.m.

rays caught, then deflected along thin ridges of audible cornleaves

On Stage

Comedy

Standup Comedy, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, Pennsylvania. www.bcptheater.org. Headliner Chris Coccia with Irwin Loring. Seating is assigned by the theater to conform to social distancing rules. Masks are required. Register. $20. 8 p.m.

Outdoor Action

An Evening With Owls Session 2, Bowman’s Hill Wildflower Preserve, 1635 River Road, New Hope, PA. www.bhwp.org. Live demonstration of ongoing research on the Northern saw-whet owls, Pennsylvania’s smallest owl. Portion of proceeds benefit the Wild Bird Research Group. Register. $35. 7:30 to 9 p.m.

Socials

Friday with Friends, YWCA Princeton Area Newcomers, Pavilion, 59 Paul Robeson Place, Princeton. www.ywcaprinceton. org/newcomers. Princeton history virtual tour with Eve Mantel. Each person is required to bring her own food and drink, to wear a mask, and practice social distancing. Registration required to newcomersmembership@ywcaprinceton.org. Noon to 2 p.m.

Virtual

Classical Music

PSO Festival of Music, Princeton Symphony Orchestra, WWFM, the Classical Network. Curated performances from the PSO archives spanning orchestral music from the Classical and Romantic to Modern and Contemporary periods, broadcast on WWFM. Listeners gain insights into the music and get to know the PSO Music Director Rossen Milanov as he introduces each program with radio host David Osenberg. 8 to 10 p.m. Program features Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture and Ludwig van Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 (with the Westminster Symphonic Choir).

Film

Voices: The Eden Story - 45 Years of Family, Princeton Garden Theater. www.princetongardentheatre.org/films/eden-autism. Livestream of new documentary that explores Eden Autism’s origins as well as the evolution of autism services as a whole. Following screening a panel featuring Eden staff and families host a digital Q&A session with the audience. Free. 7 p.m.

Mental Health

Intro to Positive Psychology, Well Beyond Partners. www. wellbeyondpartners.com. Explore the foundational model for wellbeing based on research by psychologist Dr. Martin Seligman. In this model, the letters of the acronym PERMA represent positive emotion, engagement, relationships, meaning and accomplishment, which interact to create a fulfilling life. Register via EventBrite. Free. 3 to 5 p.m.

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Fall Fiction

Friday November 13

The Importance of Being Earnest, Music Mountain Theater, 1483 State Route 179, Lambertville. www.musicmountaintheatre. org. Oscar Wilde farce. Socially distanced seating for 50 patrons and 20 drive-in spots for vehicles. Virtual viewing available for home audience. 8 p.m.

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Lectures

COVID-19 Webinar Series, Princeton School of Public and International Affairs. spia.princeton. edu. “Fiscal, Monetary, and Health Policy Responses and Implications for the Economic Outlook” presented by economics professor Alan Blinder; Bill Dudley, former president of the New York Fed; and Jessica Metcalf, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology; moderated by Bill Frist, former U.S. senate majority leader. Register. Free. 1 p.m. One Flea Spare and the Works of Naomi Wallace in the Time of COVID-19, Lewis Center for the Arts, Princeton University. arts. princeton.edu. A conversation between playwright Naomi Wallace, designer Riccardo Hernández, historian Robin D. G. Kelley, theater director and Princeton lecturer in theater Elena Araoz, and Georgetown associate professor Maya E. Roth. Via Zoom. Register. Free. 1:30 p.m. Clarice Lispector, 100 Years, Brazil LAB, Princeton University. arts.princeton.edu. Conference in tribute to the life and work of acclaimed Brazilian novelist and short story writer Clarice Lispector. Hear conversations with Lispector’s translators, including lecturer in creative writing Idra Novey, and a keynote address by Program in Creative Writing director Jhumpa Lahiri. Via Zoom. Register. Free. 2 p.m. Displaced, Erased, Unseen: Representations of Latinx Bodies in Contemporary Art, Princeton University Art Museum. artmuseum.princeton.edu. Webinar roundtable fconsidering the strategies used by Latinx artists to combat the social and political forces that obscure the lived experiences of marginalized communities. 2 p.m. Symposium on “The 175th Anniversary of Frederick Douglass’s Tour of Ireland”, Fund for Irish Studies, Princeton University. fis.princeton.edu. Quinnipiac University history professor Christine Kinealy; Colum McCann, author of “TransAtlantic”; and Princeton assistant professor of English and African American studies Autumn Womack lead a symposium moderated by Paul Muldoon exploring the four months that American social reformer and abolitionist Douglass spent in Ireland in 1845. Via Zoom. Register. Free. 4:30 p.m.

For Seniors

FYI Seminar, Princeton Senior Resource Center. www.princetonsenior.org. “Making Choices for Improving Physical and Emotional Health” presented by Dr. Cynthia Clayton via Zoom. Register. Free. 11:45 a.m.

Saturday November 14 In Person On Stage

The Importance of Being Earnest, Music Mountain Theater, 1483 State Route 179, Lambertville. www.musicmountaintheatre. org. Oscar Wilde farce. Socially distanced seating for 50 patrons. Virtual viewing available for home audience. 3 p.m.

The State Theater in New Brunswick presents singer-songwriter Joanie Leeds’ original children’s music via video on Saturday, November 14.

Comedy

Standup Comedy, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, Pennsylvania. www.bcptheater.org. Headliner Chris Coccia with Irwin Loring. Seating is assigned by the theater to maximize social distancing. Masks are required. Register. $20. 8 p.m.

Farm Markets

Pennington Farmers Market, Rosedale Mills, 101 Route 31, Pennington. www.penningtonfarmersmarket.org. Face masks required for everyone over age 2. Social distancing measures in place. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. West Windsor Community Farmers’ Market, Vaughn Drive Lot, Princeton Junction Train Station. www.westwindsorfarmersmarket. org. Vendors sell fresh produce, meats, baked goods, and more. Yes We Can! food drive ongoing. Face masks required. Bring your own bags. Limit of two shoppers per family. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Outdoor Action

Saturday Morning Walking Club, Lawrence Hopewell Trail, Mount Rose Preserve, 355 Carter Road, Hopewell. www.lhtrail.org. Socially distanced two-mile round-trip walk through the Mount Rose Distillery segment of the LHT. Walkers will be divided into groups of 20 or fewer and must wear masks. 9:30 a.m.

Shopping News

Sauce for the Goose Holiday Market, Arts Council of Princeton, Princeton Shopping Center, 301 North Harrison Street, Princeton. www.artscouncilofprinceton. org. 27th annual holiday market offers opportunity to purchase handmade gifts directly from local artisans and crafters. Held outdoors in the courtyard. Essie performs from noon to 3 p.m. 10 a.m. Grand Opening, French Flair Femme Pop-Up Shop, Princeton Shopping Center, 301 North Harrison Street, Princeton. www.etsy. com/shop/FrenchFlairFerme. Grand opening for shop featuring vintage French items for the home. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. ArtJam for the Holidays, HomeFront, Blue Garage, HomeFront Family Campus, 101 Celia Way Ewing. www.artjamnj.org. Exhibit and sale of work of more than 50 local and regional artists, ArtSpace and SewingSpace artists. Gallery open by appointment. Register online. Through December 12. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Off the Wall Holiday Art Market, West Windsor Arts Council, 952 Alexander Road, Princeton Junction, 609-716-1931. www.westwindsorarts.org. Explore handcrafted items by local artisans in the areas of apothecary, ceramics/potter, fiber/textile, glass items, jewelry, journals/note cards, and more. The juried show features almost 50 artists with work priced at $400 or less. Reg-

light spilling fragrance spice along the tongue pungent familiar/new light of the first day answering that intonation Let there be… — Carolyn Foote Edelmann Co-founder of Princeton’s Cool Women Poets, Carolyn Foote Edelmann was the first member of the Princeton community accepted into Princeton University’s Creative Writing Program. She studied with Ted Weiss, Galway Kinnel, and Stanley Plumly. Carolyn has photographed and written on nature/travel/history for The Times of Trenton, U.S. 1 Newspaper, The Packet Publications, and Jersey Sierran and New Jersey Countryside magazines. Carolyn’s roles at D&R Greenway Land Trust include publicity, community relations, managing Willing Hands; as well as serving as curator of the Olivia Rainbow Children’s Art Gallery. If she were to have an epitaph, it would read, “I’D RATHER BE BIRDING!” ister via EventBrite for entry time. Weekday viewing available by appointment. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Virtual

Classical Music

Violin Masterclass, Department of Music, Princeton University. music.princeton.edu. Violinists Harumi Rhodes and Edward Dusinberre of the Takacs Quartet work with student violinists. Register for Zoom access. 4 p.m.

On Stage

The Work of Adrienne Kennedy: Inspiration & Influence, McCarter Theater. www.mccarter. org. Virtual premiere of “He Brought Her Heart Back in a Box,” the first theatrical release in a four-part series honoring the noted American playwright. The play set in 1941 is a heartbreaking collage of family memories, historical specters, and theatrical allusions. Register. $15. Recording available through February 21, 2021.

Family Theater

Milk & Cookies, State Theater New Jersey. www.stnj.org. Singer-songwriter Joanie Leeds shares her original children’s music via video. Recording available online through February 14, 2021. 10 a.m.

Film

Saturday Night at the Movies: Life Is Beautiful, Mercer County Library. www.mcl.org. Borrow the featured title from the Hoopla catalog with a Mercer County Library card and watch it in the virtual company of your community. 8 p.m.

Good Causes

Harvest Celebration, Isles Inc.. www.isles.org. Celebration broadcast from Mill One via Zoom features highlights of Isles’ work throughout the year, and a panel discussion in which new CEO Sean Jackson and founder Marty Johnson answer questions about the nonprofit’s past, present, and future. Register. $100 recommended donation. 6 p.m.

Health

Deep Brain Stimulation, RWJ University Hospital Hamilton. www.rwjbh.org/hamilton. Virtual seminar to learn more about Deep Brain Stimulation for Parkinson’s Disease and other neurologic

conditions. Presented by neurologist Jill Farmer, and neurosurgeon Atom Sarkar. Register for Zoom session. Free. 10 a.m.

Mental Health

Surviving Drug-Induced Psychosis: A Teenager’s Second Chance at Life Through Psychotherapy, American College of Orgonomy, , 732-821-1146. www.adifferentkindofpsychiatry. org. Free webinar featuring a presentation by Susan Marcel, D.O., followed by a discussion with Dale Rosin, D.O. Hosted by Chris Burritt, D.O. Available via Zoom. Free. Register. 4 to 5 p.m.

History

The Art of the Historical Poster, William Trent House, , 609-9893027. www.williamtrenthouse.org. Illustrated, virtual talk by urbanologist David Bosted titled “The Washington-Rochambeau Route through Mercer County to Victory at Yorktown, 1781,” addressing the role of the Trent House and how posters can help tell the story. Register. 1 p.m.

Sunday November 15 In Person Live Music

Sunday Afternoon Music and Vino, Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609737-4465. www.hopewellvalleyvineyards.com. 2 to 5 p.m.

On Stage

The Importance of Being Earnest, Music Mountain Theater, 1483 State Route 179, Lambertville. www.musicmountaintheatre. org. Oscar Wilde farce. Socially distanced seating for 50 patrons. Virtual viewing available for home audience. 3 p.m.

Farm Markets

Hopewell Farmers Market, , 62 East Broad Street, Hopewell. www.fairgrownfarm.com/ hopewell-farmers-market. Locally produced foods, plants, wines, and more. Masks and social distancing required. 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Continued on following page


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NOVEMber 11, 2020

PUAM Presents Zoom Talk on Photo Artist Vik Muniz

T

by Dan Aubrey

he Princeton University Art Museum will present a Zoom talk with artist Vik Muniz on Thursday, November 12, at 5:30 p.m. An artist and photographer known for his recreations of familiar artworks blended with common place objects and realized in various approaches, Muniz is also the creator of the “Postcard from Nowhere” series. A book version published by the noted nonprofit Aperture, a foundation for advancing photography, is currently being released. The program, which is part of PUAM’s Late Thursdays, will be introduced by museum director James Steward. Muniz previously shared some of his thoughts on his art and approach in interviews with Linda Benedict-Jones, director of the Silver Eye Center for Photography in Pittsburgh, and television writer/ producer Mark Magill for the online arts magazine Bomb. Here are some excerpted comments that can serve as a preview of the Muniz’s upcoming talk:

P

rocess enters my work as a form of narrative. When people look at one of my pictures, I don’t want them to actually see something represented. I prefer for them to see how something gets to represent something else. Sometimes it starts with a subject and then I search to find the most suitable process to make that subject and then, sometimes, I just go backwards from there. Other times, I find a different process for making an image and I go looking for subjects, but either choice is based on the relationship between one another. Starting with the subject or ending up with a subject is pretty irrelevant. I’m more interested in how pictures get conveyed. What’s the language of the thing I’m photographing and how do I learn about it? How does a photograph bring to mind somebody, and how can I photograph them? I’m interested in the linguistics of an image. I want to see where the verb is, and the subject. Is there an article? What’s the object? It’s like when you go to have your picture taken and the photographer says, ‘Smile.’ You know, you are not really smiling. You are just answering to a command of some sort. I try to break images down like

that and analyze them. So, in a way, it’s a very analytical approach, but I try to make it seamless. I don’t want the images to look conceptual because the moment it looks like I’m trying to come up with some idea or some intellectual scheme, it will scare people away and they’ll become defensive. I want the pictures to be beautiful and I want them to be easy to look at and have a residual effect. I also want them to be intelligent. I want to keep that edge to them, but I don’t want people to know that. As images become more eloquent than words — because they are much more powerful than words — words seem to be just an excuse to have a very powerful image. As you are reading something underneath an image, you are being totally overtaken by what you are looking at without knowing it. My Brazilian education is more of an education of the senses, not names and biographical and historical elements — not that they are not there — it’s just that I go beyond their names. It all becomes kind of a sensual thing. I am a Brazilian person rather than a Brazilian artist. I grew up in the ’70s in Brazil and that has had a profound impact on what I do, and it has had a profound impact on the art that I really like. Music that was done during the ’70s was done under a climate of extreme repression by the government. Artists resorted

‘Art is just as important as science because it completes it; one is about phenomenon while the other is about mind. One thing is totally dependent on the other.’ to metaphors because, although they had things to say, they couldn’t just say them. You became aware that there were many ways to say the same thing — that there are many techniques and mechanisms and that these contraptions are inside every single image, every single statement, every single song. Instead of screaming some kind of truth, somebody comes and just sings a beautiful song, but that song tells you things on a secondary lev-

November 15 Continued from preceding page

Outdoor Action

Shelter Building Wilderness Survival, Washington Crossing State Park, 335 Washington Crossing Pennington Road, Titusville, 609-737-0609. Fundamentals pertaining to survival when lost in the wild. Participants construct a weatherproof shelter from native materials. For ages 6 through adult. Register. Free. 1:30 to 3 p.m.

Classical Music

Literati

Little Books and Big Ideas in the 17th Century, Friends of Princeton University

originality is just a mere excuse for copying. We can trace this development because the introduction of a new medium does not destroy the existing ones, it simply forces them to adapt to a new reality. I am a very traditional artist, as a draftsman as well as a photographer, but the unlikely encounter of these two media is what gives my work a contemporary character. On the whole, I prefer to work on a very low-tech level. There’s something redeeming in using the barest mechanics to produce an image. I don’t want to amaze you with my powers to fool you. I want to make you aware of how much you want to believe in the image — to be conscious of the measure of your own belief, rather than of my capacity to fool you. You see it, but at the same time you see how it works. A photograph is never the same the second time you look at it. I make photographs to be placed on a wall, because I want people to have a physical relationship to an image that’s not limited by the length of their arms. I’m not an editorial type of artist. I would like people to walk toward a picture, to see how it changes as they walk. Pictures

mean different things at different distances. When photography came about, it released painting from factuality. Artists had to step back to reconfigure the painting project in order for it to continue. Some went to a childlike perception. Some started looking into the images and realizing what those marks were, like the Impressionists. There was a retrograde movement with painting in response to photography. Now the ghost of painting has come back to haunt photography in the form of digital media. And we’ve liberated photography from factuality. The greatest thing about being a photographer today is that photography is not a believable substance anymore, it doesn’t prove anything. The greatest reason for doing something artistically is that you don’t need to do it in any other way; you do it because you want to. We’re talking about pleasure. Photography no longer holds the claim on reality that it once did; it’s time to stop and try to understand it a little better. Vik Muniz, Princeton University Art Museum. Thursday, November 12, 5:30 p.m. on Zoom. Free. Register. artmuseum.princeton.edu.

Monday November 16 Virtual

Literati

el, and it is much more effective. That’s why I don’t like shocking images. I prefer images to be like love songs, to be easy, you know, so you open yourself to them. Art is just as important as science because it completes it; one is about phenomenon while the other is about mind. One thing is totally dependent on the other; that’s why I am very drawn to cognitive science. How many artists spend their entire lives making visual objects and never pick up a book to study how the eye works? Vision is a form of intelligence, even more so than hearing. Our human eyes are not nearly as good as birds’ eyes or many other animals’. Instead, we have a huge visual cortex devoted just to analyzing visual stimuli. That is our true eye. Plato thought the eyes sent out a beam and sort of hit something. Platonic vision is interesting; it’s not the way it physically happens, but it’s the way it mentally happens. You see things the way you want to see them. Recognition is a kind of comfort. It confirms your capacity for looking at something and analyzing it, but it also reinforces your familiarity. What is good, however, is to be able to produce that warm feeling where you recognize something and at the same time you’re able to subvert that recognition. Art is primarily a copy. I don’t believe in originality as much as I believe in individuality. We have improved our copying skills through technologies and it is through these developmental implements that we see how we have evolved; the subject in its aura of

Library. libcal.princeton.edu/events. Jennifer Larson, professor of classics at Kent State University, discusses the types of books 17th-century printers considered suitable for miniature and small formats and their relationship to the greater intellectual currents of the century. Open to all. Register for Zoom link. 4 p.m.

Virtual

Virtual Concerts: Your Orchestra, Your Home, Princeton Symphony Orchestra. www.princetonsymphony.org. Andante moderato from Florence Price’s String Quartet in G Major and Edvard Grieg’s Holberg Suite, conducted by PSO Assistant Conductor Nell Flanders. Finnish violinist Elina Vahala will perform her own solo selection. Register. $15 per device. 4 p.m.

Artist Vik Muniz, above, and his 1997 work ‘Action Photo, after Hans Namuth’ based on a 1950 photograph of Jackson Pollock.

The Deliberate Destruction of Knowledge, Friends of Princeton University Library. libcal.princeton.edu/events. Richard Ovenden, Bodley’s Librarian at the University of Oxford, presents an exploration of the deliberate destruction of knowledge – especially of libraries and archives through history, from the ancient libraries and archives of Mesopotamia, through the Great Library of Alexandria, the European Reformation of the 16th century, through to more recent attacks, including the Holocaust, Bosnia in the 1990s, and Iraq in the 2000s. Open to all. Register for Zoom link. 1 p.m.

The Arts Council of Princeton hosts its Sauce for the Goose holiday art sale on Saturday, November 14, in the courtyard at Princeton Shopping Center.

For Teens

Outcomes for Self-Directed Learners, Princeton Learning Cooperative. www. princetonlearningcooperative.org. Zoombased presentation by Ken Danford, executive director of North Star: Self-Directed

Learning for Teens, who summarizes his research on the outcomes for nearly 600 North Star alumni and shares their stories. Register. Free. 7:30 p.m. Continued on page 13


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NOVEMber 11, 2020

No Bridge Too Far With Area Covered Bridge Tour

F

by Dan Aubrey

or those looking for a pandemic outing that offers a healthy dose of social distancing, we’ve got you covered with your own self-guided covered bridge tour. It’s generally easy, as I recently discovered when I took advantage of Visit Bucks County’s online covered bridge tour guide. With a quick printout and a full tank of gas, my wife, Liz, and I were on our way through fall foliage on a trek we’ve talked about for years. We were also thinking aloud about the original purpose of a covered bridge and why there were so many in Bucks County. The purpose is simple. The covering protects the wood of the bridge from weather deterioration, collapse, and rebuilding. Bucks County seems to have benefited from its location relative to the first documented American covered bridge built in Philadelphia.

Political leaders started a push in the early 1700s for a covered span on Market Street — then known as High Street — to cross the Schuylkill River. But action was slow even though prominent Philadelphia designers had offered designs. Those offering ideas included Robert Smith, who created Nassau Hall in Princeton, and Charles Willson Peale, the artist who painted the Washington at Princeton painting at the Princeton University Art Museum. City leaders eventually crossed their own metaphorical bridge at the dawn of the 19th century when Newburyport, Massachusetts, architect Timothy Palmer was selected to create of the nation’s first documented covered bridge. That was 1805. The next year saw the first covered bridge connecting two states — with the Lower Ferry Bridge in Trenton connecting Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Then they kept coming, aided by such innovations as Connecticut

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architect Ithiel Town’s patented safe and affordable “Town Lattice” ur first stop is the Van design, which is represented in all Sandt Bridge situated over the the bridges on the tour. Pidcock Creek on the appropriately Flash forward 100 years to when named Covered Bridge Road in Pennsylvania boasted more than Solebury — not too far from Bow1,500 covered bridges, the most in man’s Tower — and near where our the nation, and Bucks had an esti- guide directions started at Washmated 50. ington Crossing Then flash Historic Park. forward again, Van Sandt and the 20th cenwas built in With a quick printout tury’s need for 1875 after counand a full tank of gas, improved bridgty commissionmy wife and I were on es and a thirst for ers called for modernization such a bridge to our way through fall reduced the be built over the foliage on a trek number of covcreek near Edwe’ve talked about for ward ered bridges. Van Now, 21st Sandt’s farm. years —thanks to century PennsylLike others Bucks County’s onvania has an estibuilt during the line covered bridge mated 213 and same time periBucks County od, the 86-foottour guide. just 12 — with long span was seven owned by built with a the county, four combination of owned by the state, and one owned white oak and white pine and had a by an historic group. hemlock roof. It also happens to have the sig-

nature paint style — a mixture of barn red and bright white — seen on most of the bridges on the tour. After parking on the shoulder of the road, we took a stroll through and over the bridge unaware of something I discovered later — the bridge was supposedly haunted. According to several sources, the bridge is allegedly a “cry baby bridge” where a young woman killed her child and then herself. Local legend says people still can hear her. But perhaps they’re hearing the victim of the one known fatal accident on the bridge. That happened on April 3, 1918, when the span collapsed under Edward C. Lewis and Charles Armstrong’s seven-ton trailer and water tank. Lewis saved himself by clinging to the bridge’s siding, but Armstrong died in the wreckage. Back in the car we consulted our guide and headed towards Loux Covered Bridge. And although the bridge was approximately nine miles away, we clocked more mileage thanks to poor road signage,

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Clockwise from opposite left: The Van Sandt Bridge; Loux Covered Bridge; Cabin Run Covered Bridge; Frankenfield Bridge; Erwinna Covered Bridge; Uhlerstown Covered Bridge; and Knecht’s Covered Bridge, all located within easy driving distance of each other in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. some ambiguity in the directions, and the labeling of the bridge. While its full name is John A. Loux’s Cabin Run Covered Bridge, a marker calls it Cabin Run Covered Bridge, which made us think we missed our destination and backtracked to find one with the name “Loux” highlighted (it isn’t). The printout guide’s reference to “for foot traffic only” also confused us because we drove through twice. Eventually we figured it out and got some background on the completely white-colored bridge. Loux’s was built in 1874 over Cabin Run Creek, is 60 feet long, and is built of hemlock. Its namesake had operated a mill near the spot and had the distinction of being Bucks County’s longest-tenured justice of the peace. Thanks to the 1996 state renovations uncovering a couple’s initials carved in the frame decades before, the bridge was also classified as “A

Kissing Bridge” — the romantic spot where couples would go undercover to profess their love and seal it with a kiss. Back on the road and confused about two bridges with the same name spanning the same creek, we spun our wheels until we arrived at

cabins and stone houses that stood near the creek. Local lore says that a notorious gang of Revolutionary War-era outlaws, the Doane Boys, lived nearby and that a UFO hovered near the bridge in 1959. Based on my visit to this bridge, I would not be surprised that aliens would make a visit this picturesque beauty spanning a rocky stream on a bucolic back road. Our next stop, about four miles away, was Frankenfield Bridge, a 130-foot span built in 1872 that reaches over the Tinicum Creek in Tinicum Township. The bridge is named after the Frankenfields, an established family in the area — with speculation that it honored influential carpenter and contractor Henry Frankenfield. However, historians are intrigued by the fact that the original announcement to build a bridge called it Hillpot’s Bridge, after another prominent area family.

Cabin Run lore says a band of Revolutionary War outlaws lived nearby, and that a UFO hovered near that bridge in 1959. the other Cabin Run Covered Bridge. Just about four miles downstream from Loux in Plumstead Township, the 82-foot span was built in 1871 and named for the log

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Now with several bridges behind us, my wife and I felt warmed

up for the challenge and started running down the list. About five miles away is the 1832 Erwinna Covered Bridge. At only 56 feet long, it is the shortest of Bucks’ covered bridges. The bridge takes its name from the town Erwinna, named after Continental Army Colonel Arthur Erwin, who owned most of the land

in Tinicum Township and, upon George Washington’s request, rallied his militia to take part in the 1776 Delaware River crossing. Uhlerstown Covered Bridge is next on the list. About three miles away, the oak wood bridge has the distinction of being the only one that crosses the Delaware Canal. While historians agree that its Continued on following page


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NOVEMber 11, 2020

Covered Bridges Continued from preceding page

length comes in at around 101 feet, there is a disagreement about the bridge’s birth year. Although signage says it went up in 1832, historical records and newspaper articles say it was built in 1856 and names the carpenter, Mahlon Lear. No matter the date, the bridge deviates from others already seen on the tour. It has two sets of windows at mid-span that lighten the inside and makes it seem lighter from the outside. It is also close to a cluster of old dwellings that conjure the town’s heyday when entrepreneur Michael Uhler set up businesses that included stores, grist mills, hay presses, and lime kilns. Knecht’s Covered Bridge — named after a local county commissioner — is a 110-foot-long bridge over Crossing Crooks Creek in Springfield Township, about 10 miles from Uhlerstown. The hemlock wood structure built in 1873 sits pretty amid farms and is said to be part on the route of the infamous Walking Purchase of 1737 — where fast-footed ringers were recruited to outmaneuver Native Americans in claiming territory by walking. Sheard’s Mill is one of Bucks’ longest bridges at 130 feet. Located on another Covered Bridge Road, it spans the Tohickon Creek near Lake Nockamixon in East Rockhill and Haycock townships. The name comes from Levi Sheard, who purchased the property and an existing mill in 1844 that still stands. With a camp ground and parking area adjacent to the bridge and its quintessential red and white look, the bridge seems to be a hotspot for romantic photo taking — as indicated by a photographer posing a couple who recreated their own

Clockwise from top left: Sheard’s Mill; Moods Bridge; South Perkasie Covered Bridge; Pine Valley Bridge; and Schofield Ford Bridge in Bucks County; and the Green Sergeant’s Covered Bridge in Hunterdon County. kissing bridge. Moods Bridge — 6.5 miles away from Sheard’s Mill — combines past and current interest in covered bridge building. That’s because it uses beams and the original tress salvaged from a 2004 arson fire as part of its current incarnation. Located just outside Perkasie, the original bridge was built in 1874 to span the northeast branch of the Perkiomen Creek. Its name comes from the nearby farm owned by Samuel Mood, who had gone west as part of the 1849 Gold Rush,

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worked on the Union Pacific Railroad, and ended up being one of Bucks County’s wealthiest citizens. Today the bridge is noted as being the busiest bridge in Bucks County. lated to the popular Covered Bridge The South Perkasie Covered Park next to the bridge. Bridge can be found just two miles The park provides a great place away but not on any water. to park away from the road and find One of the nation and county’s a lovely and safe view of the hemoldest existing covered bridges, it lock and pine bridge away from the was built in 1832 and originally road. There is also a picnic area and spanned the Pleasant Spring Creek seasonally operated restrooms. in the town of Perkasie. The final bridge is Schofield But by the mid-1900s the bridge Ford Bridge about 16 miles away had already raised concerns rein Tyler State Park near Newtown. garding traffic and was relegated to The 170-foot bridge over the foot passage. Neshaminy Creek is the longest So in 1956 the township asked covered bridge in the county. Yet the county to remove the bridge as like Moods, it is a reincarnation of a traffic hazard while the local hisan 1873 original destroyed by artorical society sonists in 1991. began a successThe original ful campaign to bridge located at New Jersey’s only resave the bridge a place known as by having it maining covered both Schofield moved to a park bridge, in Hunterdon Ford and Twinnext to the river. ing Ford — after County, fell into disreToday it two prominent serves as a mupair in the 1960s but farming families seum with a was rebuilt using — was publicly small outdoor used until the original materials display showing land on which it photos of the thanks to the lobbystood was purbridge’s historic ing efforts of local chased by move and a sign wealthy Philaresidents. over its portal delphians that warns, George and Stel“$5.00 fine for la Elkins Tyler any person riding or driving over for their estate. this bridge faster than a walk or This current bridge was built by smoking a segar.” 800 volunteers who used the origiPine Valley Bridge, six miles nal abutments and piers and built away in New Britain, is the second the structure from nearby native oldest in the county, built in 1842. hemlock and white oak. The 81-foot length extends over The bridge is distinct from the the Pine Run Creek, obviously others in several ways. It is the only named for area trees. Pennsylvania bridge using a queen Pine Valley is also connected to post truss system. That design uses heavy road traffic, with some re- two side posts situated a third of the

way from the end rather a central support post. It is the only unpainted weathered wood bridge in the county. And it can only be seen by walking to it — with the shortest route from the northernmost lot near Bucks County Community College. We arrived at sunset and were able to take a few photos before the light diminished, then stood quietly looking at the bridge, the water, and the fall background.

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nd while I’d like to say it was the end of our regional covered bridge tour — it wasn’t. We had also thrown in a quick visit to New Jersey’s only remaining 19th-century covered bridge, the Green Sergeant’s Covered Bridge in Hunterdon County. Approximately 12 miles from where we began our trip, the 84-foot bridge is named for local mill operator Richard Green Sergeant and was built in 1872 to cross the Wickecheoke Creek. The one-lane light gray structure had fallen into disrepair in the mid1960s and was dismantled to create a new passage. But the lobbying efforts of area residents saw the state initiate a project that used the original bridge materials to rebuild and strengthen the bridge. It now serves as one-lane of a two-lane road (the other portion is uncovered) and — along with the bridges of Bucks County — provides us with a bridge to our past — and an easy and safe outing during a challenging time.


NOVEMber 11, 2020

November 16

Impacts of Deer and Invasive Plant Species on Forest Understories in New Jersey, Washington Crossing Audubon Society. www.washingtoncrossingaudubon.org. Jay F. Kelly, associate professor of biology and environmental science at Raritan Valley Community College, discusses his research on the impact of overabundant deer and invasive plant species since the mid20th century on 250 forests in central-northern NJ and the effectiveness of different tools for forest restoration. The goals are to provide research opportunities for students and to equip local communities with information to understand these important issues and what can be done to address them. Free. Email contact.wcas@ gmail.com for Zoom link. 8 p.m.

Tuesday November 17 Virtual Lectures

Research Your Roots - Capturing Your Family History, Princeton Public Library. www.princetonlibrary.org. The Historical Society of Princeton offers guidance and tips to help you use today’s readily available technology to preserve and share your family’s history. Register. 7 p.m.

Schools

Call for Volunteers United Way of Greater Mercer County is seeking volunteers to be a part of its free tax preparation program. The program serves working families and individuals who make less than $65,000 a year in Mercer County. No prior tax experience is required. Free IRS training begins in December (virtual and in-person option). Tax returns may be prepared virtually. College students can earn course credits and tax professionals can earn Continuing Education Credits. An information session takes place Tuesday, November 17, at 1 or 6 p.m. To register, email Carrie Pabreza at carrie.pabreza@uwgmc.org or call 609-896-1912.

actingnaturally.com. The deadline for submissions is December 12. Those interested in Directing a One Act should email wendy@ actingnaturally.com with availability for Zoom-based and inperson rehearsal availability on weekday evenings and weekends. Shows will be recorded and made available to audiences through online viewing. Adult actors interested in auditions for the One Acts should email wendy@actingnaturally. com. Character breakdowns and sides will be available prior to auditions. Auditions are scheduled for January 4 through 7, 2021, either virtually or in person. Performances take place March 11 through 13, 2021.

Call for Plays

Theater at Home

Acting Naturally is seeking One Act Play submissions for A Night of One Acts! Playwrights, ages teen through adult are encouraged to submit a maximum of two plays. Plays should be no longer than 20 minutes with four characters maximum and simple set requirements. Please include your name, email, phone number and title of play on the cover page. Email your PDF play to wendy@

Wednesday November 18

Virtual Discovery Day, Stuart Country Day School of the Sacred Heart. www.stuartschool. org/openhouse. Learn about the private pre-K through 12 school for girls. Register. 6 p.m.

In Person

For Seniors

Art

Medicare Information Session, Mercer County Library. www. mcl.org. Cathy Forbes of New Jersey State Health Insurance Program (SHIP) covers Medicare basics including eligibility, enrolling, Medicare Parts A, B, C, Medicare prescription drug coverage and costs. Register to hopeprogs@mcl.org for GoTo Meeting link. 10:30 a.m.

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Festival of Trees, Morven Museum & Garden, 55 Stockton Street, Princeton. www.morven. org. Annual showcase of a juried collection of trees and mantles displayed throughout the museum’s galleries in addition to outdoor displays and lights. Free with museum admission. Continues daily through January 10, 2021. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

State Theatre New Jersey in New Brunswick presents Sugar Skull! “A Virtual Día de Muertos Adventure” through Sunday, November 15. A minimum donation of $15 gives patrons access to this virtual show. Proceeds raised support State Theatre’s Family programs. To donate and watch Sugar Skull, go to www.stnj.org. “Sugar Skull! A Virtual Día de Muertos Adventure” is a theatrical performance for children and

Virtual Literati

Svetlana Alpers and Katherine Bussard, Labyrinth Books. www.labyrinthbooks.com. Svetlana Alpers, professor emerita of history of art at UC Berkeley, discusses her book, “Walker Evans,” about the American photographic artist, with Katherine Bussard, photography curator at the Princeton University Art Museum. Register. 6 p.m.

Lectures

families that elaborates on traditional Mexican stories, music and celebrations pertaining to the Day of the Dead.

Call for Students Business-minded high school students can win a full, four-year tuition scholarship to Rider University in the 2021 Norm Brodsky Business Concept Competition. The annual competition challenges high school seniors, juniors, and sophomores to develop an innovative business idea and present it in front of a panel of judges. Seniors will compete for the grand prize of a full, four-year tuition scholarship, while juniors and sophomores will compete for cash prizes and the chance to automatically be entered into the senior competition when eligible. Entrants must submit a 400-word description of their Princeton Public Library. www. princetonlibrary.org. Joshua Kotin, director of the Shakespeare and Company Project, and Keri Walsh, editor of “The Letters of Sylvia Beach,” discuss the Lost Generation and the books they loved. Register. 7 p.m.

Socials

Library Drawing Party, Mercer County Library. www.facebook. com/mclsnj. Follow along for a librarian-led drawing lesson, then

product or service at www.rider. edu/BrodskyCompetition by Sunday, November 15. High school seniors must also apply to Rider to be eligible for the scholarship. The top five finalists from each group will present their ideas in front of a panel of judges virtually, and the winner will be announced on January 30, 2021.

Book for a Cause Christine’s Hope for Kids, the Ewing-based nonprofit that aims to help area children in need, has launched a children’s book, “Always Better Together,” written by Linda Martin, a board member and owner of Flutter Boutique in Hopewell. The 40-page hardcover book is a story about friendship and is available for $24.95. For more information or to order the book, visit www.christineshope. org. share your finished work. For all ages. 7 p.m.

For Seniors

Regardez L’Art, Princeton Senior Resource Center. www. princetonsenior.org. Brigitte Aflalo-Calderon introduces a different level of French vocabulary through the discussion of paintings. One-time course is intended for those with a good knowledge of the French language. Via Zoom. Register. 10 a.m.

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NOVEMber 11, 2020

Off the Presses: ‘Walker Evans: Starting from Scratch’

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by Dan Aubrey

he Institute of ContemIn the following excerpt, Alpers porary Photography calls Walker writes about the photographer’s Evans “one of the leading photog- early years and his voyage to raphers in the history of American France: documentary.” He is known for his work for the Farm Security Administration, the alker Evans III was born 1941 book “Let Us Now Praise Fa- on November 3, 1903, in St. Louis, mous Men,” photographic illustra- Missouri. His father was an advertions of Hart Crane’s poem “The tising executive, his, mother a Bridge,” and numerous exhibitions homemaker, as it was then called. and magazine images that shared An older sister, Jane, had been born his “precisely composed, intricate- in February 1902. ly detailed, spare photographs” In 1905, his father transferred to with the general public. Chicago, and the family settled into He is also the subject of a new Kenilworth, a new, model village Princeton University Press book, just south of the city. The idyll end“Walker Evans: Starting from ed in 1914 when his father moved Scratch,” by art historian and U.C. job to Toledo, where Evans was Berkeley emerita professor Svetla- sent to a public high school. na Alpers. In 1918, his father moved out to Alpers will talk about her book live with a married woman he had and Evans durfallen in love ing a virtual conwith. In 1919, Alpers’ examination versation with his mother Princeton Unimoved to New explores how French versity Art MuYork City, takliterary figures — esseum curator ing the children pecially the novelist Katherine Buswith her. sard coordinated Walker Evans Gustave Flaubert and by Labyrinth was sent to Loopoet Charles BaudeBooks and the mis, a private laire — influenced a Princeton Public boys’ school in Library. Connecticut. photographer who The free That did not has become synonyevent is set for work out. In Janmous with images of Wednesday, Nouary 1921, he vember 18, at 6 was sent to Merthe United States. p.m. Visit www. cersberg Acadelabyrinthbooks. my, in Pennsylcom to register for the livestream. vania. Again, no success. Alpers’ examination explores In fall 1921, he was enrolled for how French literary figures — es- his final high school year at Phillips pecially the novelist Gustave Flau- Andover Academy in Massachubert and poet Charles Baudelaire setts. A number of lifelong friends (who saw the spirit of his times date back to that good year. contained in mundane objects) — Turned away from Yale (where influenced a photographer who has he mistakenly thought he was adbecome synonymous with images mitted), he enrolled in Williams of the United States, especially College. Evens spent the 1922-’23 during the Depression, and how he year reading in the college library. learned to combine the eye search- After one year, he dropped out and ing for feeling with the cold power went to live in New York, heading of the camera as a machine. to the New York Public Library,

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Svetlana Alpers discusses her book on Walker Evans in a virtual event on Wednesday, November 18. where he eventually worked in the Map Room. His father was finally persuaded that financing a year in Paris would be a substitute for college that was not to be. On April 6, 1926, he sailed for Cherbourg on the RMS Orduna. Photographs show him traveling with friends. He made snapshots — of himself, of a few places, of his friends. The striking one of Georgette Maury, taken near Grasse towards the end of his time there in April 1927, is a premature case of something that caught his attentive eye and was taken in to make a distinctive image. It is a suggestion of things to come. Along with other French photographs, he held on to that one right through his life, and it ended up with everything else he held on to in his archive at the Met (copyright laws do not allow public reproductions, but readers can see the image online at www.metmuseum.org/ art/collection/search/282368). Years later, when asked why he went to Paris, the brief answer was

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that he just sensed that “that was the was directed not only against incandescent center, the place to be. It isn’t now. It America but against his parents. Different things come out in difwas then. Figure out what was going on, who was alive. Proust was ferent later interviews. He admits just dead. Gide was alive . . . I was that he was “very poor and quite intensely a Frenchman by that time unhappy and lonely.” Incandescent and determined not to speak Eng- it may have been, but “it wasn’t lish. I dressed like a Frenchman what most people think Paris in the golden age was. Not for me.” even.” It is telling that it was only a few This remark, together with the papers he wrote in French, clearly years later, in 1931, back in New shows he knew the language before York . . . that Evans found his place he arrived in Paris. He is on record in a bohemian salon. He did not as having taken a French class photograph his fellow guests but (graded C) at Andover, and he chose instead to capture the leavseems to have been doing transla- ings when a party was over. What is striking, when one looks tions from French when he was working at the New York Public through his written papers from his French stay, is that his ideas and Library in 1924-’25. His Frenchness was partly as- temperament were already so sumed to enable him to avoid the French. How quickly he learned and took a style. The style lasted. American set in Paris: But what is important is that “I felt very much outside of all of that because I was a nobody. And I Flaubert, Baudelaire, and (the photographer) Atwasn’t doing get were basic, anything. I was so Evans absorbing it all. ‘I felt very much outclaimed, to the The thing that side of all of that bemaking and the kept me from cause I was a nobody. style of this knowing Ameriphotographs: “I cans was that I And I wasn’t doing think mine was was anti-Amerianything. I was abthe first generacan. I was not sorbing it all. The tion that went to fleeing them, but Europe and inI disdained the thing that kept me stead of studyfrivolous superfrom knowing Ameriing European ficial American . cans was that I was art and coming . . like Scott back and imitatFitzgerald, I anti-American. I was ing it, went to wouldn’t have not fleeing them, but I Europe and paid any attendisdained the frivotook a European tion to him at all technique and however famous lous superficial applied it to and successful a American.’ America. Got a writer he was beperspective and cause he a technique. wouldn’t speak French and had materialistic val- And that’s why I am talking about ues. Also they were older, too, I Baudelaire and Flaubert.” Evans specifies a perspective mean Hemingway was five years and technique that he learned in older. That was a lot at that age.” In fact, Hemingway, born in France for use on America. But 1899, was only four years older. there is something else: “I wasn’t very conscious of it But the big divide between Hemingway and Evans was World then, but I know now that FlauWar I: like many older American bert’s aesthetic is absolutely mine. writers-to-be, Hemingway had Flaubert’s method I think I incorserved in the ambulance services porated almost unconsciously, but during the war. It is striking that anyhow used in two ways: his realEvans never mentions the war. (In- ism and naturalism both, and his deed, I believe he also never men- objectivity of treatment; the nontions Word War II). One must keep appearance of the author, the nonin mind that he was too young to subjectivity. That is literally applihave had experienced it in the way cable to the way I want to use the other Americans in France had. He camera and I do. But spiritually, was born too late to be one of what however, it is Baudelaire who is the came to be called “the lost genera- influence on me. tion.” Svetlana Alpers and KatherThere is a curious mixture of ine Bussard, Labyrinth Books. passivity (he was a nobody, doing Livestream discussion of Alpers’ nothing while absorbing it all) and “Walker Evans: Starting from aggression in the way he speaks Scratch.” Wednesday, November about his time in France years later. 18, 6 p.m. Register. Free. www. As often with Evans, the anger labyrinthbooks.com.


NOVEMber 11, 2020

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NOVEMber 11, 2020

FILM

LITERATURE

DANCE DRAMA MUSIC

PREV I E W

PSO Conductor Grooves and Streams Online

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by Dan Aubrey

ell Flanders seems more of a dancer than conductor on her website’s video of her leading the Princeton Symphony Orchestra in Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7 — dubbed “The Dance Symphony.” Her active style promises to continue when she, the PSO, and video come together again on Sunday, November 15. That’s when Flanders, the recently named the PSO Georg and Joyce Albers-Schonberg Assistant Conductor, and the orchestra present a program with guest violinist Elina Vahala. The program includes Florence Price’s String Quartet in G Major’s “Andante moderato,” Johann Sebastian Bach’s “Chaconne” from Partita No. 2 in D Minor, Edvard Grieg’s “Holberg Suite,” and work for solo violin to be announced. But this time, the video will be the main event — rather than a useful follow up — and part of the orchestra’s effort to maintain its presence in the community during the pandemic — without missing a beat. “It’s a very safe way the orchestra gets together,” says Flanders during a recent interview. The safety for the series that started in October involves a reduced orchestra that makes it more possible for the musicians to keep socially and healthily distant. “They are separated by six feet. They wear a mask. And I wear a mask,” she says. Flanders adds that after spending months unable to bring musicians together to perform that the recent performance series “was wonderful.” She also says — despite the asking concertgoers to spend more time in front of a screen — virtual performances are a new and different experience that the orchestra is learning to use. One interesting element, she says, involves the camera angles that allow audience members to see the performers differently and focus on the instrumentation. While she says it is vastly different from their regular concert venue, the acousticsrich Richardson Auditorium on the Princeton University campus, “you hear things differently.” Another new PSO activity she appreciates is the socially distanced chamber series developed in cooperation with Morven Museum and Garden in Princeton that started in September. “It was meaningful to share music with audience members,” she says, adding that listeners sat in distanced sections of pods and faced an equally distanced and masked orchestra using the museum’s education center as its performance stage. She says another benefit was that the informal setting attracted families whose children could experience the music without feeling constrained. And while the above efforts were design to deal with a public health problem, Flanders muses that orchestras will continue doing more virtual and small group concerts, and there will be unanticipated “things that work and that we’ll continue to do.” Flanders, who is also a violinist and pianist, joined the PSO in the fall of 2018, when an endowment was established to support the position of assistant conductor. The endowment honors the late Princeton area businesswoman, investor, and biochemist Joyce Albers-Schonberg and her husband, inventor and Merck & Company research scientist Georg, both music lovers and PSO supporters. In addition to presenting PSO concerts, such as “Holiday Pops!” program, the PSO

Elina Vahala, left, is the guest soloist in the Princeton Symphony Orchestra’s virtual concert on Sunday, November 15, conducted by Nell Flanders, right.

assistant conductor is also the principal conductor for the Youth Orchestra of Central Jersey. The PSO entered a partnership with the West Windsor-based YOCJ in August — highlighting the PSO’s interest in fostering new talent and a shared history: Both organizations were founded by the late Portia Sonnenfeld. Noting on her website that she is “deeply committed to educating the next generation of musicians and music lovers,” Flanders says that it continues her work of conducting youth orchestras in New York. That includes her work with the Precollege Symphony Orchestra at the Manhattan School of Music and the Chelsea Symphony. She says she especially appreciates the PSO’s partnership with the YOCJ. “It is a wonderful opportunity to have a home orchestra — and finding ways to involve the PSO players with youth orchestras. “It’s like having your home sports team. You get to know the players and interact directly with them. And when you go to a concert you see the person and make a connection.” While currently frustrated she is using Zoom to work with the young musicians, Flanders says, “This is beginning of the relation — it will happen over time.”

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he says her interest in working with the PSO was connected to the group’s stature. “The orchestra is known in the music world,” she says. The connection came from PSO music director and conductor Rossen Milanov who, she says, “has a strong reputation, and part of it is that musicians loved working with.” She says in addition to professionally interacting with Milanov she got to know other people connected with the orchestra. That included meeting executive director and violinist Marc Uys during a musical workshop. Flanders’ background, interests, abilities, and connection to members of the staff made her a fit. “It is like a big family,” she says about becoming part of the organization. Flanders continues the family-theme and talks about growing up in Pelham, New York,

and her subsequent evolvement in music. “I grew up in a family of amateur musicians — everyone played something. There was no escaping that. You’re going to play music,” she says. The daughter of a father who was a circuit court executive and a poet mother, Flanders says, “For a long time I didn’t want to be a professional because you have freedom being an amateur. “(But) when I graduated from high school I decided I wanted to do music. It was my primarily love, and going to Oberlin was a wonderful thing for me.” Regarding leaving her seat in the orchestra to stand on the podium, she says, “I love playing the violin, but what inspired me was conducting” — something she experienced when she created a college orchestra and then sought out community orchestras after graduating. “Conducting brought many things together in me. Many of the members of the orchestra are violinists, and I understand them.” She adds that playing the piano gave her a “larger vision” of a work — rather than one section. Flanders says she approaches conducting a musical piece by putting herself in the place of the musicians and says an important thing is “to offer professional players something that is new to them.” For the composition, she says, “There is no definitive way for a piece of music to be performed. The notation doesn’t give you all the information. Anything the composer has written should be respected. There is enough there to guide you. But even composers change their tempos. “And (the performance) depends on the concert hall you’re in. The metronome marking gives you an idea of what energy you’re playing, but you are a unique person in a unique place, and to have a performance to speak to time and space is more profound.” While she says she is willing to engage all types of music, certain works engage her more directly. “I love rhythm. I really enjoy music that has a rhythmic vitality. I think that is connected to when I was playing in a Chicago blues band,” a style where you “need a drive in the music. It made me realize that (classical composers) have that same

A virtual program presented on Sunday, November 15, featuring Finnish virtuoso Elina Vahala and conductor Nell Flanders, is part of Princeton Symphony Orchestra’s effort to maintain its presence in the community during the pandemic.

groove” — something she physically demonstrates in her website videos. She also credits her mother, American poet Jane Flanders. “My mother was a fantastic amateur pianist. She understood the rhythm of language.” “Another thing is tone color,” she continues. “I think with a tactile quality of tone. There’s texture and even smells. It isn’t a dry experience. My experience is more physical, tactile, and sensual. That’s a priority with me.” Flanders says the upcoming concert — videotaped by Brian Dixon Videography in Lawrence­ville — was developed by Milanov and designed in cooperation with Finnish violin virtuoso and soloist Vahala. “This program is good,” says Flanders, pointing out her interest in conducting the “Andante moderato” by Florence Price, an American composer of African background whose work combines the European classical tradition and African American music. “Working with (Price’s piece) has been inspiring,” she says.

F

landers says on her website and during the interview that she is interested in expanding the interest in classical concert music and has some ideas of how to accomplish it. One is perception. “We have this idea of music in different categories and the hierarchies of all these different genres. But most music has things more in common than different. “Part of what can be done is an orchestra can present music with unexpected sounds — to hear a Latin tune played by an orchestra is exciting. When we do something new stylistically, it opens us up, which is good.” She also sees value in engaging young people. “I don’t think you need any education at all to connect to music,” she says about approaching the music through education first, “When you go to a good concert you feel it. “On the other hand — education enriches your experience. And it will help you have a context for the experience.” She says providing students directly with music as an art provides a deeper connection — that includes playing an instrument or creating artwork while listening to music. Yet for now she is playing music for our current times and has some thoughts about what musicians all over are sharing. “The virtual concerts help us stay connected,” she says. “I’ve enjoyed being forced to take a more creative approach. We have our usual modus operandi, and this has pushed us out of it.” She also looks forward to seeing how concert music presentations have changed when “we come back” after the pandemic. Yet despite the current challenges and the general precariousness of being a professional musician, Flanders says, “There is nothing I wanted to do more. I love what I do.” And her Beethoven video shows it. Princeton Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Nell Flanders with guest artist Elina Vahala, Sunday, November 15, 4 p.m. $15. www.princetonsymphony.org.


NOVEMbEr 11, 2020

Life in the Fast Lane

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he City of Trenton took a blow last week as the New York Yankees announced that they were dropping the Trenton Thunder as their AA-level Minor League affiliate. The Yankees’ new AA team will be the Somerset Patriots, who play in Bridgewater. The move is part of a larger restructuring within Minor League Baseball, leaving it unclear if the Thunder will have a Major League affiliation going forward or join an independent league. The Thunder have had a Major League affiliation since 1980 and were part of the Chicago White Sox, Detroit Tigers, and Boston Red Sox organizations before becoming part of the Yankees’ farm system in 2003. In a published statement, Thunder owner Joseph Plumeri criticized the Yankees and commented on the depth of the loss for the city. “This is about more than baseball; the Thunder is a pillar of the Trenton community. My heart breaks for the thousands of stadium workers, fans, and residents of this great city,” he said. “This move by the Yankees removes a key source of income for Trenton. Despite repeated assurances that the Thunder would remain its Double-A affiliate over the last 16 months, the Yankees betrayed their partnership at the 11th hour. By doing so, the Yankees have misled and abandoned the Thunder and the taxpayers of Mercer County, who have invested millions of dollars over the years to ensure that Arm & Hammer Park remains one of the premier ballparks in America. “While this community built the Yankees organization up and set minor league baseball attendance records, it seems the Yankees were only focused on trying to cut culturally diverse Trenton down in favor of a wealthy, higher socioeconomic area in Somerset. “On behalf of my fellow owners, Joseph Caruso and Joseph Finley, I want to thank Trenton and all of the Thunder faithful, along with our sponsors and our partners. To all Thunder players past and present — we thank you for your inspiring teamwork, your community involvement, and for bringing your very best to the diamond every day. You helped Trenton make memories on and off the field.” The 2020 Minor League season was canceled due to COVID-19; no announcement has been made about plans for the 2021 season.

Management Moves WIrb Copernicus Group, 212 Carnegie Center, Suite 301, Princeton 08540. 609-9450101. Donald A. Deieso, president and CEO. www. wcgclinical.com. WIRB Copernicus Group, the Carnegie Center-based provider of regulatory and ethical review services for human research, has announced the appointment of two new members to its board of directors. The new board members are Dr. Kavita Patel, a non-resident fellow with the Brookings Institution focused on healthcare policy and a practicing physician, and Pascale Witz, a former senior pharmaceutical executive who has broad corporate board experience. She was previously executive vice president at Sanofi and president and CEO of GE Healthcare Pharmaceutical Diagnostics.

Edited by Sara Hastings

Area Arts Groups Receive Grants

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s arts organizations feel the financial strain of prolonged closures and limited operations due to COVID-19, the New Jersey State Council on the Arts has announced $16.3 million in grants awarded for the 2021 fiscal year. Numerous groups in the Princeton area received grants ranging from $10,000 to more than $600,000 for general operating support and specific projects. Princeton-based organizations receiving funding include the Arts Council of Princeton, $50,774; McCarter Theatre Center, $626,820; Princeton University Art Museum, $30,000; Princeton Pro Musica, $14,647; Princeton Symphony Orchestra, $45,592; Princeton Festival, $20,900; and Westrick Music Academy, $30,000. Young Audiences of New Jersey & Eastern PA received a total of $458,193. Trenton-based organizations awarded grants include Artworks Trenton, $14,850; Boheme Opera Company, $15,450; Mercer County Cultural & Heritage Commission Senior Citizen Art Show, $30,000, and Local Arts Program, $101,280; Passage Theatre Company, $22,092; and Trenton Circus Project, $25,764. Also in Trenton, The Children’s Home Society of New Jersey received $19,007 in general support as well as $17,800 for its TEDI Arts Education Special Initiatives. In Hamilton Grounds For Sculpture received $112,741 and the International Sculpture Center received $34,248. The Youth Orchestra of Central Jersey General received $10,000. Lawrenceville’s People & Stories/Gente y Cuentos received $18,450, and the West Windsor Arts Council received $30,000. “The situation is dire for many, and we are grateful to Governor Murphy and the legislature for recognizing the need for robust public support of the arts right now,” Council Chair Elizabeth Mattson said in a statement announcing the grants. “We’re witnessing some of the most innovative and successful adaptations of artistic engagement — necessitated by crisis and fueled by skill and passion. But passion doesn’t keep the lights on or put food on the table. New Jersey’s creative industries are at risk.” The remaining $3.3 million in the council’s 2021 budget will be allocated later in the year as part of a COVID critical needs grant program.

Expansions

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cludes classes, lectures, social events, and volunteer work, has been fully virtual since March. A capital campaign is set to launch later this year to fund the purchase of the new building. In a statement the PSRC’s executive director, Drew Dyson, explained the center’s vision “to develop a world-class, multi-site senior center serving older adults across the region. With our new facility supplementing our current space, we will have the means we need to continue helping older adults thrive.” “The board of PSRC has been engaged in conversations for many years about our need for additional space for programs and offices as well as additional parking for our programs,” PSRC board president Joan Girgus said in a statement. “This new building, coupled with our existing location at the Suzanne Patterson Building, will enable us to serve the growing population of older adults in our region for years to come.” Princeton Senior resource Center, 45 Stockton Street, Suzanne Patterson Building, Princeton 08540. 609-9247108. Drew A. Dyson, executive director. www.princetonsenior.org.

New in Town

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Hal English Named Chamber CEO

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he Princeton Mercer Regional Chamber of Commerce has named Hal English, right, as its next president and CEO, replacing Peter Crowley, who announced his retirement in June. Crowley’s last day is December 31; English officially begins his role on January 4, 2021. English, a longtime presence in the Mercer County business community, is currently the director of community development in Robbinsville, where he also lives. He has previously served as vice president and general manager of Grand Bank in Hamilton and as vice president of First Choice Bank in Robbinsville. Prior to his banking career he also worked in various capacities for Hamilton Township, where he helped oversee the successful development of the Hamilton Marketplace on Route 130. English, who holds a degree in economics from Boston College, is also the author of “Behind Ivy Walls,” a memoir that recounts his challenging, unhappy childhood in Trenton. English’s appointment follows a six-month national search led by Dennis C. Miller & Associates. “I am excited to welcome Hal as our new president and CEO,” said Brenda Ross-Dulan,

chairman of the board, in a statement. “His knowledge of the region, coupled with his extensive work with nonprofits and small businesses, make him a perfect match to follow our exiting president, Peter Crowley.” “It has been my honor to serve as the chamber’s president and CEO for these past 12 years,” Crowley said. “I’ve had the chance to work with amazing staff, amazing chamber members, and some of the leading business leaders in our region. Hal’s appointment makes me excited for the upcoming years ahead.” “I have had the honor to be a Princeton Mercer Regional Chamber member for many years and witness the tremendous growth and business impact that this organization has accomplished,” English said. “I look forward to helping continue that growth.”

by intersecting environmental cri- Search, and the State of New Jerses, Judy and Carl Ferenbach’s pas- sey, retiring from the Department sion and vision for protecting the of Labor and Industry. environment are more important Elaine Hartman Robinson, 91, than ever,” university president on November 5. She worked for the Christopher Eisgruber said in a Hibbert Group in Trenton for 35 statement. years. “Carl and Judy have helped to John E. Jackson Jr., 74, on Noguide PEI from its inception, and their support has enabled the Uni- vember 3. He retired as a vice presversity to become an innovative ident from New Jersey Manufacleader in the effort to understand turers. Joan M. O’Kane on November and protect our natural world. As CO 2. In the 1970s she was an the Institute enters a new chapter in CONS NE Onactive CO T NEW its history, it is with deep OnlyAid CONS NE member of the Twin W First Ongratitude C12N OSNTRUN W Squad in West Windsor before takl W that we recognize the Ferenbachs’ N T y Op 1 U SRUCET Only CNS R E 2 n ing a job at Princeton University, 1 O U W I TR NC many contributions by naming en U iTtRs CTW Olyp 21 UNthe edni ULC E T U S from which she retired as a depart2 n High Meadows Environmental InIO en U iTtRs CTW t e Fa s L f ment edni ULC stitute in their honor.” ll 2 e I N administrator. Fats LefTtO N 0 L. Huber, 86, on Noll 2 e !IWilliam ON f t 0 vember 1. He owned and operated 17! Huber Funeral Home in Bordentown and also served as Burlington Catherine Selma Firestone, County Medical Examiner for 30 89, on November 5. She worked for years. • 255 NASSAU General Electric, Superior Title STREET PRINCETON

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U.S. 1

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U.S. 1 Classifieds How to order

Personal services

MUSICAL

Fax or E-Mail: That’s all it takes to order a U.S. 1 Classified. Fax your ad to 609-844-0180 or E-Mail class@princetoninfo.com. We will confirm your insertion and the price. It won’t be much: Our classifieds are just 50 cents a word, with a $7 minimum. Repeats in succeeding issues are just 40 cents per word, and if your ad runs for 16 consecutive issues, it’s only 30 cents per word. Questions? Call us at 609-396-1511 ext. 105.

Professional Ghostwriter. Capture family stories or business histories for posterity. Writing your own memoir? Let me bring your memories alive. Memorialize special events with reminiscences of family and friends printed for all to share. Obituaries and eulogies are sensitively created. E. E. Whiting Literary Services. 609-462-5734 eewhiting@ live.com

INSTRUMENTS

OFFICE RENTALS

A Personal Driver seeking to transport commuters, shopping trips, etc. Modern, attractive car. References provided. Less than commercial taxi services. E-mail to gvprinter@gmail.com or call 609-331-3370.

Cash paid for World War II military items. 609-581-8290 or e-mail lenny3619@optonline.net.

MUSIC SERVICES

Elderly gentleman seeks a woman who is more concerned about the suffering occurring around the world than she is about hedonistic pleasures. Box 240346.

1 day/month/year or longer. Princeton Route 1. Flexible office space to support your business. Private or virtual offices, conference rooms, high speed internet, friendly staffed reception. Easy access 24/7. Ample parking. Call Mayette 609-514-5100. www.princeton-office.com. Ewing/Mercer County OFFICE 3,000 SF. 201-488-4000 or 609-8837900. One large office-1500 SqFt and two small offices for sublet: One 500 SqFt and one 1000 SqFt space. Quiet setting in office park along Rte 206 in Skillman with ample parking. Call Meadow Run Properties at 908-281-5374.

HOME MAINTENANCE A friendly handyman seeks small jobs. Let me help you with a variety maintenance and repairs around your home. Please call me at 609-275-6930.

BUSINESS SERVICES Professional Ghostwriter: Press releases that grab editors’ attention and robust website content that rises above the run of the mill. Have your business history written to preserve the story behind your success. E. E. Whiting Literary Services. 609-462-5734 eewhiting@live.com

TRANSPORTATION

Brass Instrument Teacher: Professional musician, University of the Arts graduate. Instruction on Trumpet, Trombone, Tuba, Baritone/Euphonium, Improvisation/Music Theory. 609-2408290. Frank.rein@yahoo.com

MERCHANDISE MART Computer problem? Or need a used computer in good condition $80? Call 609-275-6930.

GARAGE SALES YARD SALE- Sat., Nov. 14 (Rain date Sun.) 9 a.m. - 2 p.m., 222 Arlington Avenue, Yardville, NJ (behind Yardville Elementary School). Christmas decorations and collectibles (e.g. Department 56), household items, power washer, pop-up canopy tent, etc.

classified by e-mail class@princetoninfo.com

I Buy Guitars and All Musical Instruments in Any Condition: Call Rob at 609577-3337.

WANTED TO BUY Cash paid for SELMER Saxophones and other vintage models. 609-581-8290, E-mail: lenny3619@ gmail.com

MEN SEEKING WOMEN

Professional seeks a woman from 40-55 years old. I enjoy family, I like to go to movies, go to the beach, festivals, adn sometimes dine out and travel. Please send phone, email to set up meeting.Box 240245.

HOW TO RESPOND How to Respond: Place your note in an envelope, write the box number on the envelope, and mail it with $1 cash to U.S. 1 at the address below.

HOW TO ORDER Singles By Mail: To place your free ad in this section mail it to U.S. 1, 15 Princess Road, Suite K, Lawrenceville 08648, fax it to 609-844-0180, or E-mail it to class­@princetoninfo.com. Be sure to include a physical address to which we can send responses.

office rentals

office rentals

Office Space (sublet)

Up to 5900 sq. ft. office space in Lawrenceville.

(Can be subdivided into 1900 sq. ft. increments.) Please call for details: 609-577-8244 JOBS WANTED

JOBS WANTED Job Hunters: If you are looking for a full-time position, we will run a reasonably worded classified ad for you at no charge. The U.S. 1 Jobs Wanted section has helped people like you find challenging opportunities for years now. We know this because we often hear from the people we have helped. We reserve the right to edit the ads and to limit the number of times they run. If you require confidentiality, send a check for $4 with

your ad and request a U.S. 1 Response Box. Replies will be forwarded to you at no extra charge. Mail or Fax your ad to U.S. 1 Jobs Wanted, 15 Princess Road, Suite K, Lawrenceville, NJ 08648. Fax to 609-844-0180. E-mail to class@ princetoninfo.com. You must include your name, address, and phone number (for our records only).

Summer Fiction All Year Long Short Stories & Poems from the readers of U.S. 1

U .S. 1 Newspaper extends its annual invitation to all writers and poets to present original short fiction, short plays, or poetry.

This is an opportunity to have your work published in hard-copy form and to be recognized in public for your effort. To participate, submit your previously unpublished short story, play, or poem as soon as possible. Please: No more than two stories or five poems per writer. Work will be considered for publication on a rolling basis. Please submit work by e-mail to fiction@princetoninfo.com. Authors retain all rights. Preference will be given to central New Jersey writers whose work addresses a theme or place relevant to the greater Princeton business community. Submissions from children are not encouraged.

Questions?

E-mail fiction@princetoninfo.com or call 609-452-7000.

Important: Be sure to include a brief biographical summary with your submission, along with your name, address, and daytime phone number.


NOVEMbEr 11, 2020

U.S. 1

SPACE FOR LEASE RETAIL • OFFICE • MEDICAL

MANORS CORNER SHOPPING CENTER

• Individual roof mounted central A/C units with gas fired hot air heating & separately metered utilities • Tenants include Investors Bank, Udo’s Bagels, MASA 8 Sushi, Farmers Insurance & more • 139 on-site parking spaces available with handicap accessibility • Minutes from Routes 1, 206 & Interstate 295 • Close proximity to hotels, restaurants, banking, shopping & entertainment

SPACE AVAILABLE:

160 Lawrenceville-Pennington Road Lawrenceville, NJ • Mercer County

1,910 sf (+/-)

Retail • Office • Medical

PRINCESS ROAD OFFICE PARK

• Private bathroom, kitchenette & separate utilities for each suite • High-speed internet access available • 336 Parking spaces available with handicap accessibility • Two building complex totaling 47,094 sf (+/-) • On-site Day Care • 9 Acres of professionally landscaped & managed medical/office • Close proximity to hotels & restaurants in the Princeton & Trenton areas

SPACE AVAILABLE:

4 Princess Road Lawrenceville, NJ • Mercer County

Office • Medical

MONTGOMERY PROFESSIONAL CENTER

2,072 & 2,973 sf (+/-)

• Built to suit tenant spaces • Private entrance, bathroom, kitchenette and separate utilities for each suite • High-speed internet access available • 1/2 Mile from Princeton Airport and Route 206 • 210 Parking spaces with handicap accessibility • Close proximity to restaurants, banking, shopping, entertainment, hotels & more • On-site Montessori Day Care

Route 518 and Vreeland Drive Skillman, NJ • Somerset County

SPACE AVAILABLE:

Office • Medical

1,148 & 4,918 sf (+/-)

908.874.8686 • LarkenAssociates.com IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY • BROKERS PROTECTED No warranty or representation, express or implied, is made to the accuracy of the information contained herein & same is submitted subject to errors, omissions, change of price, rental or other conditions, withdrawal without notice & to any special listing conditions, imposed by our principals & clients.

19


20

U.S. 1

NOVEMbEr 11, 2020

MONTGOMERY TWP (3.25 acres) Susan Hughes $150,000 MLS# 3655718

FRENCHTOWN BORO Russell Alan Poles $579,900 MLS# 3605811

PRINCETON Susan L ‘Suzy’ DiMeglio $885,000 MLS# NJME301574

Realtor® Owned MONTGOMERY TOWNSHIP Birchwood Drive $1,175,000 MLS# NJSO112738

newly priced

HOPEWELL TWP (3.96 acres) Jennifer E Curtis $175,000 MLS# NJME303122

LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP Gina Marie Spaziano $599,999 MLS# NJME302430

HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP Applewood Drive $975,000 MLS#NJME303238

MONTGOMERY TOWNSHIP Michelle Blane $1,199,000 MLS# NJSO113858

WEST WINDSOR TOWNSHIP Denise L Shaughnessy $289,900 MLS# NJME301844

Age Restricted PLAINSBORO TOWNSHIP Merlene K Tucker $635,000 MLS# NJMX125276

NO BRUNSWICK TOWNSHIP Kathryn Baxter $980,000 MLS# NJMX124848

HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP Ira Lackey, Jr $1,450,000 MLS# NJME301862

newly priced

newly priced

newly priced

LOWER MAKEFIELD TWP Brinton H West $329,000 MLS# PABU508670

PRINCETON Jane Henderson Kenyon $699,000 MLS# NJME298986

MONTGOMERY TOWNSHIP Jennifer Dionne $999,000 MLS# NJSO113832

PRINCETON Norman T Callaway $2,225,000 MLS# NJME292578

newly priced

newly priced

introducing

LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP David M Schure $1,000,000 MLS# NJME302568

PRINCETON Amy Granato $2,300,000 MLS# NJME304256

HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP Deborah W Lane $1,100,000 MLS# NJME297860

SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP Grant Wagner $2,250,000 MLS# NJBL380830

HOPEWELL TWP (6.97 acres) TINTON FALLS BORO Norman T Callaway, Jr $350,000 Cynthia Shoemaker-Zerrer $715,000 MLS# NJME295262 MLS# NJMM110724

HOPEWELL BOROUGH Amy Granato $359,000 MLS# NJME302012

MONTGOMERY TOWNSHIP Berkley Avenue $765,000 MLS# NJSO113850

introducing

newly priced

OH

HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP Brinton H West $389,000 MLS# NJME304210

MONTGOMERY TOWNSHIP Jennifer Dionne $835,000 MLS# NJSO113814

Realtor® Owned WEST WINDSOR TOWNSHP Anne Setzer $1,100,000 MLS# NJME293496

LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP Susan L DiMeglio $4,449,000

MLS# NJME275486

auction nov 20th

Open House this weekend Call for date and time!

CallawayHenderson.com

LAMBERTVILLE 609.397.1700

MONTGOMERY 908.874.0000

PENNINGTON HILLSBOROUGH TOWNSHIP Deborah F Wierzbicki $520,000 MLS# NJSO113912

PRINCETON Clare Mackness $875,000 MLS# NJME301212

HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP Alyce Murray $1,125,000 MLS#NJME297544

DELAWARE TOWNSHIP Cynthia Shoemaker-Zerrer $5,900,000

Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated. Subject To Errors, Omissions, Prior Sale Or Withdrawal Without Notice.

MLS# 1001750775

609.737.7765

PRINCETON 609.921.1050


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