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Festival of Trees, Salute to Vienna, and more holiday offerings, page 6. U.S. 1 Takes Its Winter Break — Next Issue Wednesday, January 5.

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Helping Hands 2021

SAY CHEESE! Dr. Nicole McGrath Barnes and the KinderSmile Foundation bring happy, healthy smiles to Trenton kids. Page 10.


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U.S. 1

DECEMBER 22, 2021

U.S. 1 Is in Print & Online MANAGING EDITOR Sara Hastings ARTS EDITOR Dan Aubrey DIRECTOR OF DIGITAL INITIATIVES Joe Emanski ADMINISTRATIVE COORDINATOR

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U.S. 1

DECEMBER 22, 2021

Christmas Worship Services

SURVIVAL GUIDE

Princeton University Chapel

Christmas Eve - Friday, Dec 24, 8pm Christmas Day - Saturday, Dec 25, 11am Must be fully vaccinated against Covid-19, if over age 12. Face coverings must be worn at all times by everyone over age 2. Inperson registration will be available, but lines may be long. We strongly recommend that visitors register for free tickets through University Ticketing - tickets.princeton.edu or scan QR code. PUID holders may prox in.

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chapel.princeton.edu


DECEMBER 22, 2021

ART

FILM

LITERATURE

U.S. 1

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DANCE DRAMA MUSIC

PREV I E W DAY-BY-DAY, DECEMBER 22 TO JANUARY 5

EVeNT LisTiNGs: E-Mail events@princetoninfo.com While many venues have returned to hosting in-person events, others are still taking place online. Event descriptions specify if an event is being held virtually or in a hybrid format. To include your virtual or in-person event in this section email events@princetoninfo.com.

Wednesday December 22 Live Music Blues Night and Jam, Cooper’s Riverview Event Complex, 50 Riverview Plaza, Trenton, 609393-7300. www.coopersnj.com. Featuring classic blues standards and blues influenced rock tunes hosted by the house band: Lance Reichert, guitar; Jerry Monk, bass; and Joe Falcey, drums. Sign up to sit in with the band starts at 7 p.m. Amps provided. Vocalist please bring a mic. No cover charge. 7 to 10 p.m.

Art

Festival of Trees, Morven Museum & Garden, 55 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609-924-8144. www.morven.org. Annual juried collection of ornamental trees and mantels displayed throughout the museum’s galleries. On view through January 9, 2022. Register for timed entry. $10. 10 a.m.

Health

Blood Drive, New Jersey Blood Services, Hightstown American Legion, 895 Route 130 North, East Windsor. www.nybloodcenter.org. Register. 1 to 7 p.m.

For Seniors

Planes, Trains, and Automobiles, Princeton Senior Resource Center. www.princetonsenior.org. Virtual tour of the Autostadt, the Volkswagen Group’s museum, which is adjacent to the company’s Wolfsburg, Germany, factory. Register. $10. 10 a.m.

Thursday December 23 Farm Markets Princeton Farmers Market, Franklin Avenue Lot, Princeton. www.princetonfarmersmarket. com. Vendors sell fresh produce, meats, baked goods, and artisanal products. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

For Families

Festival of Trees Virtual Pajama Storytimes & Crafts, Morven Museum & Garden. www.morven.org. Morven Docent and former Teacher Mollie Brod reads a

OVeR THe RiVeR Watch the reenactment of George Washington’s Delaware River crossing on Christmas Day at Washington Crossing Historic Park. holiday story reflecting what might have been read during one of the eras when children lived at Morven. Curator Debra Lampert-Rudman will share a make-at-home craft activity to go along with each story. Week 3: “The Mitten “ and coloring and knitting craft. Via Zoom. Register. $10. 5:30 p.m.

Friday December 24 Classical Music Christmas Eve Carols, Palmer Square, Princeton. Come sing along to Christmas favorites with a live brass band. 5 p.m.

Faith

Christmas Eve Candlelight Service and Carol singing, Hopewell United Methodist Church, 20 Blackwell Avenue, Hopewell. www.hopewellmethodist.org. 5:30 p.m.

Saturday December 25 Christmas Day.

Jazz & Blues Matt Davis, Candlelight Lounge, 24 Passaic Street, Trenton. www. jazztrenton.com. Performance by Trenton-born Grammy Awardnominated pianist, bandleader, and producer Orrin Evans. Free buffet. $20 cover, $10 bar minimum. 3:30 to 7:30 p.m.

Wellness

Sandy K’s Ha-Ha-Holidays Ther-

apeutic Laughter Yoga, Hopewell United Methodist Church, 20 Blackwell Avenue, Hopewell, 609-516-0215. With a certified instructor. Chairs, refreshments, and prizes provided. Wear comfortable clothing. Masks optional. $20 suggested donation. 10 to 11:15 a.m. and noon to 1:15 p.m.

History

George Washington’s Delaware River Crossing, Washington Crossing Historic Park, 1112 River Road, Washington Crossing, PA. www.washingtoncrossingpark.org. Reenactment of the Christmas 1776 crossing. Free. Noon to 3 p.m.

Sunday December 26 Classical Music Festival of Christmas Lessons & Carols, , Princeton University Chapel. chapel.princeton.edu. Featuring Trinity Church and Choirs. Free. 11 a.m. Trenton Brass Quintet, State Museum Auditorium, 205 West State Street, Trenton. www. nj.gov/state/museum. Mix of sacred and secular holiday music from the group co-founded in 1973 by pianist and tubaist Karl Megules. Free. 3 p.m.

Live Music

HVV Jazz Band, Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-737-4465. www. hopewellvalleyvineyards.com. 1:30 to 4:30 p.m.

On Stage

The Sermon: A “Pray” on Words

from 1770, Patriots Week, St. Michael’s Episcopal Church, 140 North Warren Street, Trenton. www.patriotsweek.com. A theatrical presentation with music followed by a tour that includes spooky graves, handwritings lost and found, a tunnel, and stained glass windows. 1 p.m.

Family Theater

The Trouble with Trenton, Patriots Week, Warren Street Plaza, 101 North Warren Street, Trenton. www.patriotsweek.com. A “mini” historical look at some amazing American history presented with marionettes and rod puppets and lots of help from the audience! The show includes live music, large puppets and props, and plenty of “revolting” action. Free. Held at First Presbyterian Church on East State Street in case of inclement weather. 12:30 and 2 p.m.

Film

Holiday Film Fest: Gremlins, Hopewell Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-1964. www.hopewelltheater.com. $12.50. 2 p.m. Holiday Film Fest: Planes, Trains, and Automobiles, Hopewell Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-1964. www.hopewelltheater.com. $12.50. 4:30 p.m.

History

Musket Demonstration, Patriots Week, Old Barracks Museum, 101 Barrack Street, Trenton. www.patriotsweek.com. Soldiers of the British Army drill and fire their muskets on the parade ground of the museum. $5 suggested museum admission. 1:30 p.m. Walking Tour, Historical Society of Princeton, 1 Monument Drive, Princeton, 609-921-6748. www.

princetonhistory.org. Enjoy a 90+ minute walk around downtown Princeton and the University campus as you learn about historic sites in the area, including Nassau Hall, the University Chapel and Palmer Square. Hear some of the classic history and lessorknown stories of Princeton’s diverse past. Register. $10. 2 p.m. My Brave Fellows, Patriots Week, Old Barracks Museum, 101 Barrack Street, Trenton. www.patriotsweek.com. With enlistments about to end, Washington’s officers compel the Soldiers of the Continental Army to stay on six more weeks beyond the end of their enlistments. 2:30 p.m. What’s in the Pack?, Patriots Week, Old Barracks Museum, 101 Barrack Street, Trenton. www.patriotsweek.com. A soldier of the Continental Army will open his pack and explain the importance of the different items he has burdened himself with. 3:30 p.m. Musket Demonstration, Patriots Week, Mill Hill Park, Trenton. www.patriotsweek.com. Soldiers of the Continental Army drill and fire their muskets. 4:30 p.m. Assunpink Firewalk and “The American Crisis”, Patriots Week, Mill Hill Park, Trenton. www.patriotsweek.com. Join Mayor Reed Gusciora on the Iron Bridge in Mill Hill Park and a colorful cast to usher in a new holiday tradition in the city of Trenton. As darkness fall, watch Continental Soldiers light 13 torches along the south bank and hear a dramatic reading of Thomas Paine’s “The American Crisis”. Free. 5 p.m.

Socials

Hogmanay, Patriots Week, 1719 William Trenton House, 15 Market Street, Trenton. www.patriotsweek.com. Celebrate the new year the Scottish way. Hear bagpipes, learn about Hogmanay traditions, and eat Scottish meat pasties and other seasonal treats. 3 to 4 p.m.

Monday December 27 History Trenton Battlefield Walking Tour, Patriots Week, Starbucks, 102 South Warren Street, Trenton. www.patriotsweek.com. This 10-block interpretive walk brings to life the events of the two battles of Trenton. Broad and Warren streets turn back to Queen and King streets as Washington’s shivering troops approach from two directions to strike the German regiments with shock and awe (and artillery). Q&A session over coffee at 9 a.m. The tour begins at 10 and includes the historic Trenton Battle Monument, ending up along Assunpink Creek in Mill Hill Park. Ralph Siegel of Trenton Battlefield Tours leads the walk with block-by-block, minuteby-minute narrative. Free. 10 a.m. to noon. A Revolutionary Conversation: Whose history and whose freedom, anyway?, Patriots Week, Continued on page 7


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U.S. 1

DECEMBER 22, 2021

Organizations Giving the Gift of Holiday Attractions

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ooking for some family holiday-time togetherness, places to join friends or take visitors, or just wanting to get out of the house? The region’s cultural organizations are on hand to provide some lights, action, and camera-ready one-of-a-kind opportunities that can fit the bill — as the following handy schedule of events shows. We’ll start with the attraction on view into 2022:

Festival of Trees

Morven Museum & Garden’s annual event is decking the halls and rooms of the historic home of Declaration of Independence signer Richard Stockton and poet Annais Stockton, thanks to area and state garden and social clubs that include the Princeton Public Library, Stony Brook Garden Club, Garden Club of Princeton, Present Day Club, and West Trenton Garden Club. $8 to $10. Wednesday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., through Sunday, January 9. Morven Museum & Garden, 55 Stockton Street, Princeton. 609924-8144 or www.morven.org

Night Forms: dreamloop

Ground For Sculpture’s afterhours multimedia event gives a new twist to using light to brighten the winter night by using an immersive light, animation, and sound event that transforms the grounds and sculptures into another universe. Created by the Philadelphiabased Klip Collective, Night Forms will be on view through February. $14 to $28, Thursdays through Sundays, with viewing sessions from 5 to 9:30 p.m. Grounds For Sculpture, 126 Sculptors Way, Hamilton. 609586-0616 or www.groundsforsculpture.org

Season of Light

The New Jersey State Museum’s planetarium show explores the human impulse to light up the world during the December holiday season as well as look at the meanings behind seasonal traditions and stories, such as the “Star of Bethlehem.” Other planetarium offerings include “One World, One Sky,” a celestial tour featuring Sesame Street’s Big Bird, Elmo, and Hu Hu Zhu, and the annual “Laser Holiday Magic!,” a show mixing music and images made in light. $5 to $10. December 26, 28, 29, 30. Shows scheduled from noon to 3 p.m. New Jersey State Museum, 205 West State Street, Trenton. 609292-6464 or www.nj.gov/state/ museum

Palmer Square

Hit the ice in downtown Princeton with the pool-sized outdoor skating rink behind the Nassau Inn. Hours are Thursday and Friday, 4 to 7 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday, noon to 3 p.m. and 4 to 7 p.m. The $10 cash or $12 credit card fee includes the skate rentals, although skaters can bring their own skates. For more information, visit www.palmersquare.com.

T

he one and only regional Christmas Day only event:

Washington Crossing the Delaware

The annual reenactment of General Washington’s historic Revolutionary War river crossing to take Trenton and Princeton from the British takes place at the very spot the event happened. The one-of-a-

by Dan Aubrey

kind attraction’s main event is at 1 p.m., but visitors can arrive early and march with the troops, tour buildings, and join fellow festival lovers waiting for the cannon shot to signal the launching of the boats. And take warning: An early arrival also helps to secure a parking place or a good viewing spot. Washington Crossing Historic Park, Routes 32 and 532, Washington Crossing, Pennsylvania. 215493-4076 or www.ushistory.org/ washingtoncrossing/index.htm

Patriots Week

This other one-of-its-kind popular event comes fighting back after surrendering to the pandemic last year with the following series of events held from December 26 to 31 to commemorate the Revolutionary War battle that turned the tide of the revolution to the colonists. The Old Barracks Museum, the historic building that housed the Hessian soldiers defeated by Washington’s forces, will be open throughout Patriots Week. The puppet show “The Trouble with Trenton” offers a “mini” historical look at some amazing American history presented with marionettes, rod puppets, and help from the audience in the Warren Street Plaza (corner of West Warren and Hanover streets). Free. Sunday, December 26, 12:30 to 1 p.m. and 2 to 2:30 p.m. In “The Sermon: A ‘Pray’ on Words from 1770, professional actors provide a theater-inspired presentation with music followed by a tour that includes graves, handwriting mysteries, a tunnel, and stained glass windows. There will also be a non-typical buffet for visitors in the Parish Hall (donations requested). St. Michael’s Episcopal Church, 140 North Warren Street. Sunday, December 26, 1 to 2 p.m. Soldiers of the British Army will drill and fire their muskets on the parade ground of the Old Barracks Museum. Old Barracks Museum, 12:30 to 1 p.m., December 26, noon to 1 p.m., December 27, and noon to 1 p.m. , December 28, and at Mill Hill Park, 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m., December 26 and 2 to 3 p.m. December 27. “My Brave Fellows” is a program that examines Washington and his officers’ need to compel the soldiers of the Continental Army to stay on six more weeks beyond the end of their enlistments. Old Barracks Museum, 101 Barrack Street. Sunday, December 26, 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. The 1719 William Trent House presents Hogamanay, a traditional Scottish New Year ceremony that includes the traditional ritualized burning of the past year, bagpipes, Scottish meat pasties, and other seasonal treats. 1719 William Trent House, 115 Market Street, Trenton. Sunday, December 26, 3 to 4 p.m. The Trenton Brass Quintet present a concert of sacred and secular holiday favorites. Free. Masks required for all attendees over the age of 2. New Jersey State Museum Auditorium. Sunday, December 26, 3 p.m. “What’s in My Pack?” invites you to join a Continental Army solider as he opens his pack and discusses the different items that he has chosen to burden himself during his battle of independence from England. Old Barracks Museum. Sunday, December 26, 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Trenton Mayor Reed Gusciora and a cast of citizens and Continen-

tal soldiers usher in the Assunpink firewalk, a recently created city holiday tradition that features the evening lighting of torches representing the 13 original colonies along the south bank and the dramatic reading of influential Revolutionary War essayist — and Bordentown resident — Thomas Paine’s “The American Crisis.” Free. Iron Bridge at Mill Hill Park, 165 East Front Street. Sunday, December 26, 5 to 7 p.m. The 10-block interpretive Trenton battlefield walking tour brings to life the events of the two battles of Trenton in which Washington’s ragtag and tired troops struck the world class Hessian troops and turned the tide of a Revolution that seemed doomed. While participants can meet at the Trenton Starbucks at 9 a.m. for a question-andanswer session over coffee, the actual tour begins at 10 a.m. Tour stops include the historic Trenton Battle Monument and the Assunpink Creek in Mill Hill Park. Ralph Siegel of Trenton Battlefield Tours provides the minute-by-minute narrative. Free. Starbucks Community Store, 102 South Warren Street (corner of Front Street). Monday, December 27, 10 a.m. Students from Sprout U School of the Arts present “A Revolutionary Conversation: ‘Whose History and Whose Freedom, Anyway?’” to take visitors through an experiential interpretation of Revolutionary War history from an AfricanAmerican perspective. Also participating is Los Angeles-based author Gretchen Woelfle, whose book “Answering the Cry for Freedom” focuses on the lives of 13 African fighting for the rights promised in the Declaration of Independence. Free. Trenton Free Public Library, 120 Academy Street. Monday, December 27, 3 to 5 p.m. Flag historian David Martin and New Jersey State Museum curator Nicholas Ciotola lead a gallery talk and ceremony involving a rotation of historic flags from the NJ Civil War Flag Collection, one of the largest collections of its kind in the nation. Free. New Jersey State Museum, 205 West State Street. Tuesday, December 28, 10 to 11 a.m. The New Jersey State Library presents an online talk titled “George Washington, New Jersey, and the Revolutionary War” with historian Joel Farkas that follows George Washington’s career from a 21-year-old Virginia Militia major to numerous battles in New Jersey, and to his personal life, including his wife, Martha, and his interest in song. Free. Tuesday, December 28, noon to 1 p.m. The commemoration of the historical battles ends with the annual vigil for peace organized by the Society of Friends in an actual building that felt the Battle of Trenton

The New Jersey Capital Philharmonic performs its traditional New Year’s Eve concert at the Trenton War Memorial on Friday, December 31. cannon fire and has born witness to American history for three centuries. Quaker Meeting House, 142 East Hanover. Friday, December 31, 5 to 6 p.m. More information: www.patriotsweek.com.

N

ew Year’s Eve plans still being weighed? Perhaps the following symphonic presentations will lighten the choices:

New Jersey Capital Philharmonic The annual New Year’s Eve concert returns with a preview organ presentation by celebrated regional organ master Brett Miller and the main event symphony program featuring the lively music of Johann Strauss, Richard Rodgers, George Gershwin, and others. WWFM radio host David Osenberg hosts the Trenton tradition. $45 to $75. Friday, December 31, 8 p.m. War Memorial Building, 1 Memorial Drive, Trenton. www.capitalphilharmonic.org

State Theater

The New Brunswick Theater offers the region the opportunity to waltz into the new year with its traditional “Salute to Vienna” New Year’s Eve concert. The program led by the Strauss Symphony of America includes selections from the Strauss family of composers’ operettas, dances, overtures, and the Blue Danube Waltz. $39 to $125. Friday, December 31, 4 p.m. State Theater, 15 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick. 732-2467469 or www.stnj.org

N

ew Year’s Day arrives with the following events that can provide an opportunity for those wanting to start 2022 on the right foot — or start following that different drummer:

Princeton Nursery Lands First Day Hike

Head to the D&R Canal / Mapleton Preserve to get a healthy start to the new year. Part of the national First Day Hike efforts to help people get out and exercise — especially after a week of feasting and celebration — the 1.5-mile loop hike through the preserve is also designed to be kind and starts at noon and continues until walkers get to the final station for hot cocoa. Free. Saturday, Janary 1, noon.

Mapleton Preserve/D&R Canal State Park Headquarters, 145 Mapleton Road, Kingston. www.fpnl. org

O

r get on the train to one or both of two nearby New Year’s Day one-of-a-kind events: The annual Mummers Parade — the oldest folk art event in the nation — returns after a 2020 COVID hiatus and starts at 9 a.m. at Philadelphia’s City Hall, at the intersection of Broad and Market streets. It then follows a 1.1-mile path down South Broad Street. Rooted in ancient European traditions, the event is based on the art of “mummery” (silent performances) and features lavish costumes, strumming and strutting, and a spectacle of color — with bands and groups stopping along the way to perform and play. The free festivities continue to 6 p.m. Public transportation from Trenton to Philadelphia’s Suburban Station is a good idea, but brave drivers should be able to find free parking. www.phlvisitorcenter.com/Mummers. The 48th annual January 1 New Year’s Day Marathon Reading at the Poetry Project of Saint Marks Church in New York City features more than 150 readers, making it one of the biggest events of its kind in the nation. It’s also a major fundraiser for the nationally known poetry center and a way to catch the newest voices in American poetry. This year’s hybrid event runs from 11 a.m. to midnight and includes live and pre-recorded video readings. Something also new is the pricing: $20 for live hour segments, a $50 afternoon pass, a $100 evening pass, and a $200 all day pass. Or just stream for free. St. Mark’s Church, 131 East 10th Street (at 2nd Avenue). 212674-0910 or www.poetryproject. org.

A

nd, finally, those looking for more action:

The Battle of Princeton

The 245th anniversary commemoration at Princeton Battlefield State Park, features a talk with regional Revolutionary War historian and author Larry Kidder, British and American war re-enactors, tours of the historic Thomas Clark House, and free coffee and chocolate, Princeton Battlefield State Park, 500 Mercer Road, Princeton. Free. Sunday, January 2, 8:30 a.m. Together all of the above send out the message, “Happy holidays and New Year!”


DECEMBER 22, 2021

December 27

Tuesday December 28 Art Princeton Daruma Workshop, Arts Council of Princeton, 102 Witherspoon Street, Princeton. www.artscouncilofprinceton.org. The Daruma is a traditional symbol of perseverance, achievement, and good fortune. It is an iconic symbol that is found all over Japan in businesses, schools, and homes. Most popular around the new year, the Daruma is made with 2 white circles for eyes. Once a goal is set or a wish is made, the owner colors in one eye. The other eye is colored in only after the goal is achieved or the wish comes true. The Daruma begins as a plain white, blank canvas. During this workshop, local artist Minako Ota leads you to gather ideas and encouragement to customize your Daruma anyway you like - paint, decoupage, Sharpie, etc. Register. $10. 1 to 2 p.m.

Health

Blood Drive, New Jersey Blood Services, Pennington Road Fire Company, 1666 Pennington Road, Ewing. www.nybloodcenter.org. Register. 1 to 7 p.m.

History

Civil War Flag Unveiling, Patriots Week, NJ State Museum, 205 West State Street, Trenton. www. patriotsweek.com. Enjoy a gallery talk and ceremony unveiling with flag historian David Martin and State Museum Curator Nicholas Ciotola. This is the latest rotation of historic flags from the NJ Civil War Flag Collection, one of the largest collections of its kind in the nation. 10 to 11 a.m. George Washington, New Jersey, and the Revolutionary War, Patriots Week. www.patriotsweek.com. The New Jersey State Library presents an online author talk with author, lecturer, and historian Joel Farkas. In his lecture meet a 21-year-old Virginia Militia Major named George Washington and follow him through a timeline of events including his time in New Jersey. Register. Noon to 1 p.m.

Wednesday December 29 Art Festival of Trees, Morven Museum & Garden, 55 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609-924-8144. www.morven.org. Annual juried collection of ornamental trees and mantels displayed throughout the museum’s galleries. On view through January 9, 2022. Register for timed entry. $10. 10 a.m.

Film

Holiday Film Fest: Elf, Hopewell Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-1964. www.hopewelltheater.com. $12.50. 7 p.m.

7

This Father’s Day, Give Dad

Continued from page 5

Trenton Free Public Library, 120 Academy Street, Trenton. www. patriotsweek.com. Hear stories of African Americans living during the Revolutionary War — as continental soldiers, loyalists, slaves, and citizens — and discuss how our community can interpret our shared history in ways that respect our shared ideals of equality. Students from Sprout U School of the Arts present a “living museum” providing visitors an experiential interpretation of Revolutionary War history from an AfricanAmerican perspective. Special guest is author Gretchen Woelfle, whose book “Answering the Cry for Freedom” provides the stories being shared. 3 to 5 p.m.

U.S. 1

Learn to Fly at the Princeton Flying School

‘The Trouble With Trenton’ puppet show takes place Sunday, December 26, in Trenton as part of Patriots Week festivities.

Thursday December 30

Sunday January 2

Film

Dance

Holiday Film Fest: National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, Hopewell Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-1964. www.hopewelltheater.com. $12.50. 7 p.m.

The Hip Hop Nutcracker, State Theater New Jersey, 15 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732246-7469. www.statetheatrenj. org. Directed and choreographed by Jennifer Weber, this contemporary dance spectacle is set to Tchaikovsky’s timeless music and features a cast of all-star dancers; a DJ; a violinist; and hip hop’s founding father, MC Kurtis Blow. 2 p.m.

Friday December 31 New Year’s Eve.

Classical Music Salute to Vienna, State Theatre New Jersey, 15 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732-2467469. www.stnj.org. Performance evoking a golden age of Viennese music, with operettas, dances, overtures, and the Blue Danube Waltz. 4 p.m. New Year’s Eve Concert, New Jersey Capital Philharmonic Orchestra, War Memorial, 1 Memorial Drive, Trenton. www.capitalphilharmonic.org. Pre-concert organ presentation by Brett Miller and program featuring the music of Johann Strauss, Richard Rodgers, George Gershwin, and others. WWFM radio’s David Osenberg hosts. 8 p.m.

Pop Music

Well-Strung, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, PA, 215-8622121. www.buckscountyplayhouse.org. String quartet fuses pop and classical music from Madonna to Beethoven. Featuring Edmund Bagnell (violin), Christopher Marchant (violin), Daniel Shevlin (cello), and Trevor Wadleigh (violin). $55 performance only. $95 includes premium seating and pre-show party with cash bar. 7 p.m.

History

Real Time Tour of the Battle of Princeton, Princeton Battlefield Society, Clarke House, 500 Mercer Street, Princeton, 609-3895657. www.pbs1777.org. Presentation by history and author Larry Kidder followed by a narrated reenactment with British and American reenactors, including artillery, and a wreath laying ceremony at the Memorial Grove. Clarke House tours also available. Register. 8:30 a.m.

Monday January 3 History

Saturday January 1 New Year’s Day.

Wellness

Sandy K’s Ha-Ha-Holidays Therapeutic Laughter Yoga, Hopewell United Methodist Church, 20 Blackwell Avenue, Hopewell, 609-516-0215. With a certified instructor. Chairs, refreshments, and prizes provided. Wear comfortable clothing. Masks optional. $20 suggested donation. 10 to 11:15 a.m. and noon to 1:15 p.m.

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Tuesday January 4

Socials

Annual New Year’s Eve Peace Vigil, Patriots Week, Quaker Meeting House, 142 East Hanover Street, Trenton. www.patriotsweek.com. 5 to 6 p.m.

Father’s Day Is June 20, 2021

Schools

17

…A Lifestyle

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8

U.S. 1

DECEMBER 22, 2021

Five Points Trenton: Where History & Art Are Entwined in Time

P

by Dan Aubrey

atriots Week in Trenton is the annual December 26 through 31 reenactment of the Trenton Revolutionary War winter battles that gave the Americans their first major victories against the British. One of the important Trenton locales of the wars is “Five Points,” the intersection of North Broad Street, Warren Street, and Princeton, Pennington, and Brunswick avenues. It is here on December 26, 1776, that American forces led by General George Washington placed their artillery and contained the Hessian Troops garrisoned at the Barracks building just a few blocks away. During the battle, which included Alexander Hamilton ordering the cannons to fire, Hessian commander Colonel Johann Rahl (also Rall and Rhall) was mortally wounded and the Hessians captured. It is here that Washington’s strategic decision to surprise the British forces in Trenton boosted the morale of the Continental forces and put them on the path to victory. And it is here that passersby can easily overlook the details of the stately monument created by one of the prominent designers of its day and featuring artwork by one of America’s most prominent artists. The designer is John H. Duncan, who also created Grant’s Tomb. As the New Jersey Department of Parks and Recreation, which has authority over the 148-foot-high triumphal column of granite, reports, the design is “considered to be an early example of the Beaux Arts style, it is a Roman Doric column with a large base decorated with acanthus leaves. The capital has a ring of stars crowned by an observation platform with a railing. Above the platform is a circle of 13 electric lights, representing the 13

Thompson Management

original colonies. The column is surmounted by a small round pavilion that features a pedestal with a statue of George Washington, right arm outstretched, pointing toward the site of his victory.”

T

he artist is Thomas Eakins, a 19th century Philadelphia painter who studied in Paris and returned to create masterful scenes of American realism, including scenes of medical school surgeons performing operations and athletic activities. Eakins was involved with the project for at least two reasons. He was (and continues to be) regarded as one of the most highly accomplished American artists of his day. Nevertheless, the monument designers knew he was in financial straits after his academic career was jettisoned by his insistence that female art students participate in classes that used nude male models. Eakins was commissioned to create two plaque reliefs at the base of the monument to show Washing-

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ton’s army crossing the Delaware River and the opening of the Battle of Trenton (a third relief showing the surrender of the Hessians was created by New York sculptor Karl H. Niehaus). While the original plaques were removed and can be seen at the New Jersey State Museum, the faithfully reproduced replicas now on the monument show Eakins’ approach to relief making and his belief that a “relief holds a place between a painting or drawing on a flat surface and a piece of full sculpture.”

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n the 1993 publication “The Trenton Battle Monument: Eakins Bronzes,” New Jersey State Museum curators Zolton Buki and Suzanne Crilley put the Eakins reliefs in perspective by comparing them with the famous “George Washington Crossing the Delaware” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York: “Due to Eakins’ almost exclusive interest in relief — even if at times very high relief — sculpture, the quality of his work in this medium often seems painterly. This is perhaps nowhere more apparent than in the bronzes of the Trenton battle Monument. “Emanuel Gottleib Leutze painted Washington Crossing the Delaware some 40 years before Eakins received the commission to treat the same theme and other related subjects in sculptural form. “Outside the obvious differences of size and medium between the works of Leutze and Eakins there is also a strange reversal: pictorial three-dimensionality in one and sculptural two-dimensionality in the other. “Leutze’s intention to capture ‘the spirit of a great leader and the importance of a great event’ is achieved by sharp value contrasts and silhouette-like harshness of the contours — neither of which is possible in quite the same way in a low relief. These devices successfully, and excessively, isolate the foreground from the background; the visual sensation is not unlike viewing a sculptural group against an early morning eastern sky… “In Eakins’ version of the theme, enlarged in scope to memorialize

An image of Thomas Eakins’ bronze reliefs of American soldiers during the Revolutionary War, above left, and Eakins’ self-portrait, left. Above is a painting of the Trenton Battle Monument by the late artist Tom Malloy. The Continental Army Crossing the Delaware… the concept is pictorial, treated in an almost impressionistic manner. The composition suggests a snapshot effect, as it were, a visual record made by a participant in the quiet drama of the actual event.” Notes from the undated minutes from a Battle Monument Association meeting add some additional thoughts regarding Eakins’ and Leutze’s depictions. According the minutes, Eakins’ crossing corrects the one by Leutze that is “so faulty in its delineation of the direction of the passage of the boats, in the kind of boats used, in the representation of the ice, and of the flag carried by the American Army.”

At Trenton’s five points passersby can easily overlook the details of the stately monument created by one of the prominent designers of its day and featuring artwork by one of America’s most prominent artists. However, in the Eakins design “the Durham boats which General Washington directed to be collected from the upper waters of the Delaware during his march through the Jerseys appear as they were used in transporting the horses and artillery. In the immediate foreground is William Washington and the lieutenant of his company, James Monroe, afterward president of the United States. Both of these officers were wounded in the battle of Trenton. With them, evidently alarmed at some noise on the New Jersey shore, is Colonel Ed-

ward Hand, and the Pennsylvania regiment of sharpshooters, commanded by that gallant officer… The little boat in the foreground contains General Washington and Colonel Knox the artillerist and a Jersey farmer is rowing them over the river. “On the south side is the relief showing ‘The Opening of the Fight.’ The battery of Captain (Alexander) Hamilton is represented as about to fire the first shot at the enemy on King Street. The mounted figure of this brave soldier, who afterward became gifted statesman, is conspicuous in the foreground. This officer was then only nineteen years of age and his company of New York artillerists were all young men, but it was said to have been a model of discipline.”

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lso involved with the creation of the memorial was 19th century sculptor William O’Donovan. In addition to the statue of Washington on top of the monument, as the minutes note, “Donovan created the two bronze statues of the Continental soldier at the monument’s entrance. The soldiers are two who fought in the Battle of Trenton: Private John Russell of the 14th Regiment from Massachusetts and Private Blair McClenachan, Philadelphia Troop of Light Horse.” The two — along with Washington at the top of the monument and Eakins’ depictions of the action on the river and the street — will be there during Patriots Week to do what they do every day: stand witness to one of the most important battles in the Revolutionary War. More information on the Trenton Battle Monument: www. njparksandforests.org/historic/ Trentonbattlemonument. More information on Patriots Week: www.patriotsweek.com.


DECEMBER 22, 2021

ART

FILM

LITERATURE

U.S. 1

9

DANCE DRAMA MUSIC

PREV I E W

Digital Traditions are Merry, Varied, and Artificially Bright

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hose looking for some regional holiday traditions without leaving the comfort of home can easily find them with a flick of a switch. Broadcast and digital technology and cultural innovation have developed hand and hand to allow one to celebrate with anything that can present a live audio or video stream — including two live holiday radio marathons from Princeton University’s 103.3 WPRB radio station First up is Jon Solomon’s 25-hour Christmas Day marathon — a regional holiday tradition since 1988. As one of our CNS reporters noted, Solomon was hosting a 10 p.m.-til-morning slot that just happened to be on Christmas Eve and came across an empty shift sign-up sheet after most of the station’s student hosts had gone home for winter break. “Solomon, who is Jewish, didn’t have any plans, so he took the slot and played nothing but Christmas music until the morning. Twelveish hours became 24 hours the next year. He added an extra hour to the show to celebrate its 25th anniversary in 2014, and that has stuck since then.” Solomon readily says the content of his marathon continues to mutate and can include everything and anything from a 42-minute version of “Little Drummer Boy,” a block of Ramones-style Christmas songs, and the 45-minute “Snaildartha: The Story of Jerry the Christmas Snail — A Soul Jazz Extravaganza.” “It’s always very important to me that the program not kind of rest on its laurels from year to year,” Solomon, a Princeton native, says in the interview. “I know people don’t always listen at the same point or at the same time. I want to make sure there’s an infusion of as much new material as possible every year.” That includes new pieces he finds through blogs, SoundCloud, listeners, and friends. He also puts out calls asking for recordings of holiday stories from friends, family, musicians, comedians, and others to be played on the show — with some becoming traditional favorites. And when in doubt, he invites the family to participate, as his wife, Nicole, and their daughter, Maggie, do annually. And generally Solomon says he has to be prepared to improvise, as when in 2006 James Brown died during Solomon’s Christmas Day broadcast and inspired the marathon host to pull out every James Brown Christmas song in his collection and play a block. The fun with Solomon starts on Friday, December 24, at 5 p.m.

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hen listen up when long time radio host and pianist Marvin Rosen brings his annual 24-hour holiday season marathon of new music — “Viva 21st Century” — to

by Dan Aubrey the WPRB Radio airwaves and internet on Thursday and Friday, December 30 and 31. Rosen first went on the air in 1997. The university’s academic year was winding down, students were leaving, and WPRB needed on-air hosts/DJs to cover the summer shifts. As U.S. 1 writer Susan Van Dongen reports in a profile, “The bottom line with Marvin Rosen is that he really, really loves music and wants to share it, especially new music from little-known composers in far-flung regions of the world. As Rosen himself says, “Every week I’m playing mostly 21st-century classical music, and playing it from places where people may not even know that classical music is being created. The more I do this, the more I think, ‘why aren’t these musicians and composers more well-known? Composers are writing in so many styles, too — it’s endless. But you have to have the desire to listen.” “If I get a new recording from a composer I’ve never heard of, from an obscure country, I think to myself, ‘this will be on the show next week,’” Rosen says. “That’s why having my show on WPRB is priceless. This is my joy.” Born in Englewood in May, 1953, then raised in Kendall Park and Princeton, Rosen first discovered the joy of radio and music in 1962 when he got a transistor radio, tuning into pop music giant WABC in New York. Rosen says buying records became an obsession, and he spent afternoons and a good chuck of his paychecks buying records in the Princeton University Store. That grew into an interest in 20th century Post War avant-garde and desire to study music — obtaining a BA from Trenton State College, an MA from Manhattan School of Music, and doctorate in music education from Columbia University’s Teachers College. He has been a full-time member of the piano faculty at Westminster Conservatory of Music in Princeton since 1999. “The diversity of styles is limitless in the work of our living composers,” says Rosen. “Many of them will be influenced by rock, hip hop, jazz, electronic music. There is a lot of avant-garde and a lot of composers writing middleof-the-road music — elements of everything.” He says he is also finding a growing audience of young listeners. “The music of today speaks to young people because the influences are so vast. It comes from the music they’re familiar with if they’re from another ethnic background. And it is all coming from their lifetimes. It is their experience. That’s the main thing.” The “Viva 21st Century” music marathon begins Thursday, December 30, at 10 a.m. While both Solomon and Rosen’s may seem extreme and

WPIX’s Yule Log, above, burns Christmas morning. At right, Marvin Rosen, top, and Jon Solomon entertain WPRB listeners with Christmas season music marathons. offbeat, they’re actually something of the spirit of WPRB which was started not by a university-driven agenda but by a student who created a signal from a makeshift studio at the university and created in the words of a university radio historian “a sanctuary for the imagination.” For more on WPRB, visit www. wprb.com.

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n addition to the area’s annual holiday radio programs, there is also a regional television tradition that has been warming the eyes off and on for 55-years: WPIX’s The Yule Log. The televised image of a burning log in a fireplace hit the airwaves on Saturday, December 24, 1966, at 9:30 a.m. and glowed on through the night. It now glows for a few hours on Christmas morning. The Yule Log was the brainchild of Fred Thrower, the former television ad executive who eventually became the president of WPIX. He came up with the idea when he had to fill three hours of empty airtime on the Christmas Eve schedule. A chance viewing of a CocaCola commercial with Santa and a fireplace inspired him to create a simple video loop of a crackling fire with music and broadcast it with no commercial interruptions. As strange as the idea was (and still is), the television turned fireplace — without the heat, scent, or glow — became, in the words of an NPR commentator, “one of the most widely recognized holiday television programs.” The Yule Log nearly was extin-

guished in the 1990s when ratings dropped and WPIX cancelled it. However, executives decided to bring it back after the World Trade Center attacks in 2001, and its ratings rebounded to the millions. As NPR noted years later, “There’s something very special about the fact that you’re watching the same burning fireplace that someone else is. I think it was a statement beyond just a burning fireplace on TV, of us being a connected society.” Since the tradition of watching the Yule Log had become part of people’s lives, it was inevitable that someone would use new technologies to recreate the DVD version of

the video hearth to warm up one’s computer and their own wallets. Nevertheless, according to TheYuleLog.com, “That famous and glorious 7-minute film loop of that roaring, happy, mesmerizing fire inside that festively decorated mantelpiece complemented by the majesty of some of the greatest classic Christmas music ever recorded is indeed the one and only WPIX Yule Log. It has often been imitated, but never duplicated.” The WPIX Yule Log is scheduled for Christmas Day, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. For more information, go to www.pix11.com/about-us/tv-listing.


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DECEMBER 22, 2021

New Program Brings Bright Smiles to Trenton Kids

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by Dan Aubrey

e have treated bringing dental care to schools or over 3,000 children and families. community centers at no cost to You cannot imagine the need in caretakers or the school system.” Trenton,” says Nicole McGrathOthers include Special Smiles, Barnes of the dental services pro- an expansion of the OHP that provided by KinderSmile Foundation. vides dental care and oral health “We’re not a typical dental prac- education to children with develtice or Medicaid or hospital. I have opmental disabilities, the Pre and created an access to health care for Postnatal Program dental services everyone. Not just for a zip code,” and health education for pregnant she adds during a recent talk for the women and new mothers, and the Trenton Symposium. Community Service Learning ProMcGrath-Barnes’ statement re- gram that mentors and guides high flects the nonprofit’s mission to school and college students to par“provide underserved children ticipate in oral health professions. with access to comprehensive denDescribing her journey from the tal care and edudaughter of a cate children and Brooklyn Jatheir families maican immi‘I didn’t know much about the imporgrant mother to about Trenton,’ Mctance of dental dental profesGrath-Barnes says. ‘I hygiene. We ensional, Mcvision a future Grath-Barnes took a year and a half where every says she was into learn about it. And child has access spired by how in the thick of the to a dentist and her mother, with preventable denpandemic, we opened limited schooltal diseases are ing, had “taught our doors in Trenton eradicated.” herself the Britand expanded our In Trenton’s ish education KinderSmile ofsystem” and beservice to treating fice the democome a legal children and adults.’ graphics are prisecretary. marily black or In response, brown and run McGraththe gamut from immigrants to state Barnes says she decided “to eduworkers. cate myself and have a career,” McGrath-Barnes says the orga- adding that when she was 14 she nization uses several different pro- saw an advertisement for a dental grams. assistant and applied. The prime one is the group’s Although the “old Jewish docOral Health Program. According to tor” didn’t hire her, he offered to KinderSmile materials, the OHP mentor her. The girl accepted and “increases access to dental care for came to the office a few times a underserved children ages 0 to 18, week and started to learn the busiregardless of insurance status, by ness.

Later the graduate of the University of Maryland’s School of Dentistry opened a private practice in Bloomfield. After 14 years of practice, she says, “I loved the clinical aspect and relationship with my patients and felt something was missing, and after soul searching and I realized I wasn’t involved with the community that I had been part of it. I went on a search and went to Head Start in Montclair and said, ‘I’m Dr. McGrath and I want to be a program dentist.’And I said it was pro bono.” She says she started showing up on Wednesdays, “the day dentists were off,” and talking to children about oral disease prevention — which she calls the easiest disease to prevent. “I loved it. I felt a connection to the community. As things pro-

Dr. Nicole McGrath Barnes (front row, second from left) and the staff of the KinderSmile Community Oral Health Center on North Broad Street in Trenton. gressed, I noticed children had rapid decay when they smiled. Montclair is affluent, but there is a ward that is below poverty level.” The catalyst for creating a larger child-focused dental program happened when she received a call from the receptionist at her dental office about a patient waiting for her at the office. “It was a little girl. She said something about Dr. Nicole. I knew she was from Head Start.” McGrath-Barnes says the girl’s aunt brought to the office because the girl “had a swelling on the side

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her mouth the size of a golf ball. It was a nasty, ugly infection. She had it three months and it was in a primary molar. No other dentist would take her because it was Medicaid. She needed to be on antibiotics ASAP and the tooth needed to be extracted. “I went home and said something was wrong. I was led by passion and need, and here I am years later.” The KinderSmile Foundation was established in 2007. McGrathBarnes says she started first as a mobile operation where she trav-


DECEMBER 22, 2021

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Helping Hands 2021

Left: Window Genie, owned by Robin McKenna of Belle Mead, center, donated $700 to the Princeton Free Garden Project, a grassroots initiative to plant community garden beds around town. Pictured with McKenna are Ross Wishnick, left, and Kate Bech of the Princeton Family YMCA. Right: More than 100 volunteers participated in the fourth annual Hopewell Gives Back: MLK Day of Service. The volunteers tied 25 full-sized fleece blankets and 375 no-sew facemasks for the The Rescue Mission of Trenton, 1,000 feminine hygiene kits for I Support the Girls, decorated more than 500 paper bags for Seeds to Sew International, and assembled 625 native seed packets for the Sourland Conservancy. Pictured are organizers Sam and Gavin Fowler. eled to schools and shelters and used disposable materials. She also used her office and began a partnership with the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey in Newark. She also asked colleagues to participate but was disappointed when they said they “didn’t want ‘that’ population in my office.” Then she realized a problem. Even if she found an office, the parents refused to go. “I found out what they believed was that KinderSmile was their provider and didn’t want to go anywhere else.” She says she consulted with the foundation’s board and “we decided to open a brick and mortar spot. In 2015 we opened our first dental home. We call it home so people feel comfortable. She says after KinderSmile developed a partnership with the Boys and Girls Club in Newark, she was invited to participate in a health care program led by Tammy Murphy, the spouse of Governor Phil Murphy. Also attending the session was the director of Capital Health Institute for Urban Care, Dr. Eric Schwartz. He connected McGrathBarnes with Deborah Sands Gartenberg of the Princeton-based George H. and Estelle M. Sands Foundation. Through her involvement with other area organizations, Gartenberg was aware of the need for Trenton children to have access to affordable oral health care. After she visited the KinderSmile “home” in Newark, she asked McGrath-Barnes to expand their services to Trenton. The Sands Foundation supported the effort with $2.4 million of funding. Other funding comes from Medicaid, other grants, and individual donors. “I didn’t know much about Trenton,” McGrath-Barnes says. “I took a year and a half to learn about it. And in the thick of the pandemic, we opened our doors in Trenton and expanded our service to treating children and adults.” The organization developed a relationship with a Princeton-based oral surgeon who performs oral extractions and forged a partnership with Mercer County Community College to build a dental curriculum and hire dental assistants. She also says she is focusing on something else to help Trenton children by recognizing that “a lot of the women in Trenton are single

Catholic charities adver moms. We believe in focusing on the matriarchs” and “empower the matriarchs in our community.”

D

uring a quick visit the Trenton offices that opened in 2020 in a Mercer County Community College building, McGrath-Barnes moves through the suites of rooms including offices and open examination rooms. Though it was an off day with one person in the waiting room, a KinderSmile report notes, “Our Trenton office is already bridging the gap in access to oral healthcare for underserved youth and adults in Trenton. Medicaid/NJ FamilyCare insures 63 percent of Trenton’s children, yet prior to KSF’s expansion into Trenton, there was only one dental practice that accepted that form of insurance, with limited access to uninsured patients. “As of November 2021, the percentage of uninsured we serve is approximately 60 percent, nearly double our pre-opening, heavily data-driven projections. Our very successful and one-of-a-kind Perinatal Health and Wellness program provides education, prevention, and treatment solely to uninsured expectant moms and their newborns.” “Most of our patients with insurance are NJ FamilyCare state Medicaid insurance,” McGrath-Barnes says in an email exchange regarding payments, especially those without insurance. “If an uninsured

Dr. Nicole McGrath Barnes with a young patient of the KinderSmile Foundation. patient under 12 years old presents to our dental home, the initial exam, cleaning, x-rays and treatment plan is ‘free,’ she continues. “For patients 12 and older, adults, is $40. Uninsured emergency patients pay $40 as well. “For continued treatment for the uninsured population, we have extremely reduced fees. The purpose of this is to make access to oral health affordable for all. If an uninsured family or patient cannot afford treatment at all, we apply for grants to help them. Or we assist and encourage them to apply for NJ FamilyCare. No one leaves our dental home without treatment.” In a response to the establishment of KinderSmile offices in areas known to be lacking in affordable healthcare, NJ Biz newspaper named McGrath-Barnes a Heathcare Hero in October 2020 and the Princeton Mercer Chamber of Commerce’s named her a Woman of Achievement in June 2021. KinderSmile Foundation, 191 North Broad Street, Trenton. For more information on how to use or support KinderSmile resources: 973-744-7003 or www.kindersmile.org.

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DECEMBER 22, 2021

Helping Hands 2021

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DECEMBER 22, 2021 A U.S. 1 Advertising Feature

United Way of Greater Mercer County More Than 80 Years in the Community Building Strong Families

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ldie but goodie” is a term often associated with music and movies and not your local United Way. But should it be? United Way of Greater Mercer County (UWGMC) has been in the community for more than eight decades responding to the needs of individuals and families. They exist to enable Mercer County residents to be healthy, safe and have a brighter future. Your local United Way is unique and strives to be innovative and impactful. They recognize that factors like the recession, COVID-19 pandemic, and Hurricane Ida are taking a toll on hard-working families struggling

to make ends meet. How is UWGMC ensuring that those who need assistance in getting their basic needs met – food, housing, access to health, etc. – are getting it? First, they work with volunteers, schools, community organizations, government, and businesses small and large to bring resources into the community. One such example is their partnership with NRG Energy, Inc. (NRG). Employees from NRG put together Thanksgiving bags filled with mashed potatoes, stuffing, and vegetables which were distributed to 1,000 families along with a gift card to purchase their choice of turkey, ham, or a vegetarian option. A single mother was one of the recipients. Unfortunately, she and her children fell through the cracks in receiving food assistance. The Thanksgiving bag made a difference for the family, and they received additional food resources and social services. Another example is they partner with SingleCare (formerly FamilyWize) to offer a discount-

ed prescription savings program. Last year, nearly 3,000 residents in the county benefited from this resource, and there were more than $250,000 in prescription savings. Second, UWGMC works directly with those on a survival budget and fills gaps when needed. Their free tax preparation service is available to households making less than $65,000 annually. This service is vital and helps individuals and families keep more of their hard-earned dollars for basic needs. Mercer County residents can also connect with a UWGMC benefits enroller and apply for NJ Family Care, health insurance, and utilities assistance programs. UWGMC does so much more to help build strong families and a thriving community. They ensure that NJ 211, a multilingual statewide information, and referral service is available 24 hours a day/seven a week. Individuals throughout the county can get information on food pantries, housing assistance, COVID-19 vaccines, legal services, and other

vital programs. Is your local United Way an “oldie but goodie?” Absolutely! They have an amplifier effect – you walk in for one service but leave with three to five. They get people together to attack problems affecting the community in a coordinated, comprehensive way. They cannot do this work alone. They are grateful to their

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volunteers, supporters, staff, and board of directors for their passion and dedication to Mercer County. To learn about the many services UWGMC offers to respond to the needs of individuals and families or to make a donation, please visit www.uwgmc.org or email info@uwmc.org. See ad, page TK.

Helping Hands 2021

Above left: Jewish Family & Children’s Service of Greater Mercer County held its inaugural Wheels for Meals bike ride to fight hunger at Mercer County Community College. The event raised more than $95,000. More than 250 cyclists attended the event, riding on their route of choice from three miles to 32 miles. Proceeds benefit JFCS food programs, which include a brick-and-mortar food pantry, two mobile food pantry vehicles, and senior nutrition programs. Above right: Prior to Thanksgiving Amazon employees from the Robbinsville warehouse helped the Trenton Area Soup Kitchen pack and deliver more than 60 meals to community members in Trenton as part of TASK’s Thanksgiving at Home program.

Above left: United Way of Greater Mercer County kicked off its annual Strike Out Hunger Initiative at Quakerbridge Mall in Lawrenceville. Teams of sponsoring companies packed close to 32,000 meals to be distributed to local food pantries. This is the seventh consecutive year United Way has hosted the event, which brings together businesses, individuals, and advocates, working together to help reduce hunger in Mercer County. Pictured above is a team from staffing firm Robert Half. Above right: Penn Medicine Princeton Health donated a cache of personal protective equipment (PPE) and supplies to police and other first responders, social service agencies, and emergency assistance organizations stretching from New Jersey to Texas. Eight pallets of assorted items — hand sanitizer, gloves, face masks, face shields, lab coats, and isolation gowns — were delivered to the Plainsboro Police Department. A pallet stocked with raincoats went to Arm In Arm, a Trenton-based nonprofit that provides housing, employment, and food support, and two pallets went to New Jersey locations of the American Red Cross. The Secaucus collection center of Medshare, an international humanitarian aid organization, received 10 pallets containing items including face shields, lab coats, and gowns. And Princeton Health shipped 10 pallets of raincoats to United Way Disaster Services locations in Delaware, Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, and Texas.


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DECEMBER 22, 2021

Life iN THe FasT LaNe Edited by Sara Hastings

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