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Trenton Health Team, Mindy Fullilove, and ‘How Spaces Shape Us,’ page 4; Author and physician Madi Sinha’s ‘White Coat Diaries,’ 6.

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Go Falcons!

The King of Sports Goes Jersey Meet Rocky Pribell and his red-tailed hawks, page 9.


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FEBRUaRy 10, 2021

To the Editor: Thank You from PNS

which provides nutritious meals for the weekend. The continued outpouring of support for PNS is a testament to how much our donors and friends value and recognize the need for afn February 6 members of fordable early childhood education our community came together for a and hunger prevention right in the virtual fundraiser to support the Princeton-area community. PNS Princeton Nursery School (PNS). helps families break the cycle of A Starry Starry Evening included poverty by making child care and an informative and lively discus- year-round preschool education an sion between CNBC’s Brian Sulli- affordable option for them. van and the school’s executive diPNS and its board of trustees rector, Rosanda Wong, detailing would again like to send a sincere the nonprofit’s mission and the thank you to all of our generous dochallenges it and its nors and corporate sponfamilies continue to face sors including NFP, Between PNC Bank, Bryn Mawr due to the pandemic. In addition, attendees were Trust, and Callaway The treated to a soulful, live Henderson Sotheby’s Lines performance by singer/ International Realty. songwriter and PrinceMore information ton’s own, Carly King. about PNS can be found at www. The event raised much needed princetonnurseryschool.org. funds to benefit the nationally acDanielle Bentsen, MD credited early education program President, Board of Trustees and hunger prevention program at Princeton Nursery School PNS and also to provide scholar-

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.

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MaNaGING EDITOR Sara Hastings aRTS EDITOR Dan Aubrey DIRECTOR OF DIGITaL INITIaTIVES Joe Emanski aDMINISTRaTIVE COORDINaTOR

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PRODUCTION MaNaGER Stacey Micallef SENIOR aCCOUNT EXECUTIVE

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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

ships for children of families in need. PNS is located on Leigh Avenue and was founded in 1929 to provide working families with affordable care. Along with a quality preschool education, the school also provides support services for economically disadvantaged students and their working parents. The school’s hunger prevention program includes breakfast, hot lunch, and snack and also participates in the Send Hunger Packing program,

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HomeFront Presents a ‘Week of Hope’

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awrence-based nonprofit HomeFront’s “Week of Hope” invites people to participate from February 14 through 21 and spread the Valentines spirit of caring to local homeless families. Sunday, February 14 — Kick off HomeFront’s Week of Hope with their “Share The Love” Virtual Art Event, noon to 1:30 p.m. Participants will decorate hearts and adorn them with poetry and inspirational quotes that will ultimately be displayed at HomeFront’s Family Campus, a temporary shelter for 38 local homeless families.

Monday, February 15 (President’s Day) — Attend one of HomeFront’s “Week of Hope” virtual learning forums about local homelessness and hunger, solutions and how to get involved. “Welcome to HomeFront” Orientation (11 a.m. to noon) and a virtual tour of HomeFront’s pantry, FreeStore, ArtSpace, and Furnish the Future program (1 to 2 p.m.). Tuesday, February 16 — Join HomeFront for a Virtual Snack & Activity Bag “Packing Event.” Community members can shop for, pack up, and deliver snack and activity bags for local homeless families. Tune in to Zoom from 10 a.m. to noon or 2 to 3 p.m. as you pack your activity bags to learn more about HomeFront, the local situation, and how to get involved. Wednesday, February 17 — Attend HomeFront’s “Week of Hope” Virtual Lunch & Learn with CEO Connie Mercer and COO Sarah Steward. Learn and join in on a discussion about local homelessness and hunger, solutions and how to get involved (noon to 1:30 p.m.).

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Thursday, February 18 — HomeFront and Princeton Public Library will co-host a virtual panel discussion as part of HomeFront’s “Week of Hope” at 6 p.m.: Homelessness and Hunger in the Time of COVID-19. Moderated by Connie Mercer, CEO of HomeFront, with panelists Bernie Flynn, CEO of Mercer Street Friends; Emily Lemmerman of Princeton University’s Eviction Lab; Crystol Thompson-Dyous, Trenton School District Parent Liaison and former HomeFront client; Sarah Steward, chief of operations at Homefront; and Gregory Stankiewicz, statewide coordinator of the NJ Community Schools Coalition. Friday, February 19 — Take part in HomeFront’s “Week of Hope” with a Zoom tour from 10 to 11 a.m. of HomeFront’s headquarters, including its food pantry, FreeStore, Furnish the Future program, and ArtSpace. HomeFront’s mission is to end homelessness in Central New Jersey and provide families the tools they need to become self-sufficient. Saturday, February 20 — Take part in HomeFront’s “Week of Hope” by volunteering on-site in our Diaper Resource Center, which benefits local families in need, at the HomeFront Family Campus, 101 Celia Way in Ewing (10 a.m. to noon). Sunday, February 21 — Join HomeFront during their “Week of Hope” with a viewing of a short film created by Force for Good about the Tiny House project and homelessness (7 p.m.). A panel discussion, in which HomeFront will take part, will follow the film. All programs are free. Register for events individually online at www.homefrontnj.org.

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FEBRuary 10, 2021

BioPartnering for Biotech Success

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Survival Guide Wednesday, February 17

The Spaces That Shape Us

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any factors play into shaping a person’s behaviors and experiences, but chief among them is the place where they live. Is their neighborhood safe? Are the schools good? Is there easy access to healthcare and fresh foods? The Trenton Health Team — a nonprofit that addresses that issue head-on through partnerships with hospitals and community groups to improve access to quality healthcare, food, housing, and other resources — hosts an upcoming series of free online discussions on “How Spaces Shape Us.” The first of three events takes place Wednesday, February 17, at 6 p.m. on Zoom. The event can also be viewed live on Trenton Health Team’s Facebook page, and a recording will be posted online at www.trentonhealthteam.org. The first discussion features Mindy Fullilove, a social psychiatrist and author who grew up in Orange, New Jersey. The daughter of a Black labor organizer father and white union hall secretary mother who campaigned for the desegregation of schools in Orange, Fullilove earned a bachelor’s degree in history from Bryn Mawr and a master’s in nutrition from Columbia before earning her medical degree from Columbia in 1978. She is a professor of urban policy and health at the New School in New

Left, Mindy Fullilove, the first speaker in Trenton Health Team’s ‘How Space Shape Us’ series. Right, THT Executive Director Gregory Paulson. York and co-founder of the University of Orange, a free people’s urbanism school to build public capacity to create more equitable cities. Her most recent book, “Main Street: How a City’s Heart Connects Us All,” was published by New Village Press in 2020. In the introduction, she describes the socioeconomic and psychological factors at work in cases of “urban renewal”: “At the level of the neighborhood, the processes of urban re-

‘How we grow up, what our neighborhood looks like and where we live have long-term effects on our lives.’ newal, deindustrialization, and planned shrinkage are centrifugal: They are pulling us apart from one another. In my book ‘Root Shock,’ I described the ways in which the centrifugal processes tear at people’s places and their lives. I asked the question, ‘When the center falls, what will hold?’ “The answer in the short term is that people take on the work of

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place in order to keep their lives together. They band together in groups defined by ‘strong ties,’ the ties of family, religion, and tribe. Yet these ties partition society. In the aftermath of urban renewal and planned shrinkage, the reformation of society around strong ties fed antagonism and intergroup hostilities: The solution became part of the problem, triggering a reinforcing, exhausting, and dangerous downward spiral. “At the next level of scale, the effects of neighborhood destruction on the larger embedding society are very serious. This point is often overlooked, because, as I’ve described here, the neighborhoods that are destroyed are those of poor and minority people. The larger society is thought of as ‘white’ and ‘middle-class,’ and therefore comprised of people whose lives and fates are quite different and even insulated from the problems of the disadvantaged.” Future speakers in the series include Endia Beal, a North Carolina artist, educator and author, who uses photography to reveal the often overlooked and unappreciated experiences unique to people of color, on Saturday, March 13; and Bryan C. Lee, who grew up in Trenton and is now an architect, educator, writer, and design justice advocate in New Orleans, on a date to be determined. “We recognize health and wellbeing depend on more than just access to medical care,” Trenton Health Team Executive Director Gregory Paulson said in a statement. “How we grow up, what our

he keys to success in the crowded field of biotech include hard work, persistence — and finding the right connections and partnerships to help your company grow. For those seeking a leg up on the networking side of the equation, save the date for Hamilton-based biotechnology trade group BioNJ’s 11th annual BioPartnering Conference, scheduled to be held virtually on Tuesday and Wednesday, May 18 and 19. Applications are open from now through Friday, March 19, for companies and earlystage startups seeking to present their research and innovations at the conference. Presentations at the conference will be divided into two categories: 10-minute slots will be allotted to companies with a U.S. neighborhood looks like and where we live have long-term effects on our lives. We want to bring these issues to light, discuss what is happening and then collaborate with our neighbors to improve outcomes in our city.”

Business Meetings

presence that are privately held and have already secured Series A funding or are seeking more than $5 million in Series A funding; or micro to mid-cap publicly held companies. The companies must be “directly impacting life sciences innovation” in the fields of devices, diagnostics, digital medicine/medtech technologies, health IT (artificial intelligence, big data, bioinformatics, machine learning), research and development discovery and enabling technologies, or therapeutics. Start-up companies in the same fields that have not yet received funding and are seeking up to $5 million in Series A funding are eligible for two-minute pitch presentation slots. Registration for the conference is $295 for BioNJ members or $425 for future members. There is no additional cost to be a presenter at the conference. For more information or to apply, visit www.bionj.org.

Friday, February 12

JobSeekers, Professional Service Group of Mercer County. www.psgofmercercounty.org. Veteran marketer Mark Beal shares his experiences of strategically and proactively seeking out and winning new business opportunities and demonstrates how you can do the same to win your next job. 9:45 a.m. to noon.

Wednesday, February 10 Tuesday, February 16 Converting Connections and Content to Conversations with LinkedIn, Princeton SCORE. princeton.score.org. Brynne Tillman, the LinkedIn Whisperer and CEO of Social Sales Link, covers what it takes from positioning your profile to engaging with existing connections, warm market prospecting, sharing, and engaging content with the objective of scheduling more sales calls. Register. Free. 6:30 p.m.

Thursday, February 11

Circle of Achievement Virtual Awards Gala, African American Chamber of Commerce of New Jersey. www.aaccnj.com. Featuring keynote talk by Bob Kendrick, president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum. Register. $100, $75 members. 6 p.m.

How To Conduct Market & Competitive Research In Your Industry, Princeton SCORE. princeton.score.org. Joan Divor, an expert in research and planning tools, reviews key concepts, activities, resources, and tools for market and competitive research. Register. Free. 6:30 p.m. 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.

Wednesday, February 17

Business Before Business Virtual Networking, Princeton Mercer Regional Chamber of Commerce. www.princetonmercerchamber.org. Networking, followed by a presentation. Register. $25; $15 members. 8:30 a.m.

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FEBRuaRy 10, 2021

ART

FILM

LITERATURE

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DANCE DRAMA MUSIC

PREV I E W DAY-BY-DAY EVENTS, FEBRUARY 10 TO 17

head of addressing sexual violence, ICRC; Noel Kututwa, senior women protection advisor; and Anna Crowe, assistant director, International Human Rights Clinic, Harvard Law School. Via Zoom. Register. Free. Noon. Virtual Scholar in Residence Program, Beth El Synagogue of East Windsor, 609-443-4454. www.bethel.net. Rabbi Shai Held discusses “’Love Your Neighbor As Yourself’: What Are We Really Being Asked For?” Register for Zoom access. 7:30 p.m.

EVent Listings: E-Mail events@princetoninfo.com 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.

Schools

Demystify Montessori, Princeton Montessori School. www. princetonmontessori.org. Catherine McTamaney, associate professor at Vanderbilt University and the award-winning author of “The Tao of Montessori: Reflections on Compassionate Teaching,” discusses the value of a Montessori education, what truly distinguishes the Montessori method from traditional education, and how aligned Montessori philosophy is with 21st-century skill-development of our future adults. Email tbaskin@pmonts. org for the Zoom link. Free. 7 p.m.

Wednesday February 10 Literati The Coming age of Reform: What Does Real Change Look Like?, School of Public & International affairs, Princeton University. spia.princeton.edu. Featuring Anand Giridharadas, editorat-large for TIME, New York Times best-selling author, and MSNBC political analyst; Miguel Centeno, vice dean, School of Public and International Affairs and professor of sociology, Princeton University. Register for Zoom access. Free. 12:15 p.m.

History

The Same Principle Lives in Us: People of african Descent in the american Revolution, Princeton Public Library. www. princetonlibrary.org. American Revolutionaries struggled with a key question: Would the words of the Declaration of Independence, that “all men are created equal,” apply to all people? From the outbreak of the Revolution, people of African descent asked and answered this question through their words and actions. In this talk, offered by the Museum of the American Revolution, hear the stories and explore the objects used at the Museum to help imagine what the Revolution was like for Phillis Wheatley, Elizabeth Freeman, James Forten, Harry Washington and others. Register. 7 p.m.

For Teens

Stress, anxiety, and School: Does your Teen Need a New Environment?, Princeton Learning Cooperative. www. princetonlearningcooperative.org. Zoom-based panel discussion featuring in which a young person, their parent, and a mental health professional talk about their experiences with mental health and school, and how selfdirected education supports young people’s well-being and growth. Q&A to follow. Register. 7 p.m.

Lectures

Lunchtime Gallery Series, West Windsor arts Council & Princeton university art Museum, 609-716-1931. www.westwindsorarts.org. PUAM Docent Laura Berlik discusses Sumerian, Egyptian, Chinese, and Mayan reasons for developing a written

Be My CraZy Valentine Drag comedian and singer Pissi Myles hosts a 50-question multiplechoice trivia game held online via Zoom on Wednesday, February 10, and organized by the State Theater in New Brunswick. word. Register. $10; free for WWAC members. 1 p.m.

Singles

Winter Wednesday Social, Professional and Business Social Network. www.pbsninfo.com. Mix, mingle, and chat with new friends. Everyone is invited to enjoy their own food and beverage. Via Zoom. Register on EventBrite. $15 to $20. 6:15 to 8:45 p.m.

Socials

Library Drawing Party, Mercer County Library. www.facebook. com/mclsnj. Follow along for a librarian-led drawing lesson, then share your finished work. For all ages. 7 p.m. Online Trivia Night, State Theater of New Jersey, 732-2467469. www.stnj.org/trivia. Be My Crazy Valentine Trivia hosted by drag comedian and singer Pissi Myles. 50 question multiplechoice game held online via Zoom and the Kahoot app. Register. $5 minimum donation. 7 p.m.

For Seniors

This Old House, Princeton Senior Resource Center. www. princetonsenior.org. Last in a PSRC exploring five notable American homes. Mount Vernon: Former Virginia plantation of George Washington, the first President of the United States and his wife, Martha Washington. Register. $10 per session; $45 for the series. 1 p.m.

Thursday February 11 In Person: Outdoor Action Thursday afternoon aerobic Hikes, Washington Crossing State Park, 335 Washington Crossing Pennington Road, Titusville, 609-737-0609. 2-3.5 mi. brisk guided hikes on selected trails in the state park. Bring a water bottle and wear hiking shoes. Weather permitting. Register. 1 p.m.

Film

Queen of Hearts: audrey Flack, Rutgers Jewish Film Festival. bildnercenter.rutgers.edu. Worldrenowned artist and feminist trailblazer Audrey Flack is the subject of a new documentary that explores her life and art. Watch the film Queen of Hearts: Audrey Flack from home through the Princeton Garden Theatre virtual cinema. Then join the conversation about the film with Academy Award-winning director Deborah Shaffer and Audrey Flack herself. Register. 4 p.m.

Good Causes

Virtual Information Session, CaSa for Children of Mercer & Burlington Counties. www. casamb.org. Information on the non-profit organization that recruits, trains, and supervises community volunteers who speak

up in Family Court for the best interests of children that have been removed from their families due to abuse and/or neglect and placed in the foster care system. Register by email to jduffy@casamercer. org. 11 a.m. Cooking with CaSa, CaSa for Children Mercer Burlington. www.casamb.org. Chef Robert Bennett leads featuring desserts using chocolate. Part of a series of virtual cooking classes with renowned chefs to support CASA’s mission and work with children in foster care. Register. $25. 6 to 8 p.m.

Food & Dining

What’s In your Grocery Cart?, The Suppers Programs. www. thesuppersprograms.org. Webinar led by Marion Reinson to answer questions including: What are the good fats? What is a slow carb? Why is it important to “eat the rainbow” and have fewer ingredients listed on a nutrition label? Register. Donation requested. 10 a.m.

Lectures

Conflict-Related Sexual Violence in Detention: Putting Principles in action, School of Public & International affairs, Princeton University. spia.princeton.edu. Panel discussion featuring Barbara Buckinx of the Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination; Christian Wenaweser permanent representative of Liechenstein to the UN; Mona Juul, permanent representative of Norway; Virginia Gamba, under secretary general; Sophie Sutrich,

Socials

Black History Month Bingo, Princeton Family yMCa. www. princetonymca.org. Held over Zoom. All ages welcome. Theme for the week is Musicians. Register. 6 to 7 p.m. Virtual art Making: Illustrating Horses, arts Council of Princeton & Princeton University art Museum. artmuseum.princeton. edu. Artist Barbara DiLorenzo teaches via Zoom. Inspired by Frederic Remington’s “Coming through the Rye.” Register. Free. 8 p.m.

Friday February 12 In Person: Socials Friday with Friends, yWCa Princeton area Newcomers, Pavilion, 59 Paul Robeson Place, Princeton. www.ywcaprinceton. org/newcomers. “Living & Laughing by the Chopsticks-Fork Principle.” 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.

Food & Dining

Valentine’s Wine & Chocolate Virtual Tasting, Terhune Orchards. www.terhuneorchards. com. Pairing of Harvest Blues and Rooster Red wines with homemade chocolate led by Terhune’s winemaker. Register. 7 p.m. Continued on following page

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FEBRuary 10, 2021

Off the Presses: ‘The White Coat Diaries’

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by Dan Aubrey

adi Sinha’s first novel deals with a young Indian doctor struggling through her medical residency. Sinha was born in Princeton and raised and schooled in West Windsor, where her father worked at RCA/Sarnoff and Lucent technologies. Now a resident of Moorestown, the writer and practicing physician attended Villanova and Hahnemann Medical School. She completed her own medical residency at Thomas Jefferson Hospital in Philadelphia and captures that world in the following excerpt from the novel:

The Dryden Ensemble presents ‘Leycester Lyra Viol Lessons,’ a Zoom-based lecture and concert by Lisa Terry, on Sunday, February 14.

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printing up the stairs would be easier if my white coat didn’t weigh 15 pounds. Senior residents like to joke that interns carry their lives around in their pockets. Mine are filled with two miniature textbooks, three pens, a stethoscope, a reflex hammer, a hospital ID badge, a penlight, a laminated map of the hospital, and a protein bar. A wearable emergency preparedness kit. Unlike the embarrassingly short medical student’s white coat, which projects nothing but bewilderment and the deflection of responsibility (Me? Oh no, I’m not the doctor I’m a student. I’m just here to observe. Although once they let me catch a baby as it came shooting out of a woman’s birth canal. It was beautiful experience), the long doctor’s coat radiates confidence and capability: “Throw anything at me, I’m ready.” In a code blue, the first doctor to arrive at the beside gets to “run” the code — be the leader and make treatment decisions — at least until the senior resident or attending arrives. I’ve seen codes run before, but this is my first opportunity to be at the helm. This is my chance, finally, to prove my abilities. The first thing I lose from my coat pockets is a miniature pharmacopeia, a medication reference book. It bounces away down the stairwell, but I keep going, taking the stairwell, but I keep taking the stairs two at a time I’ll be damned if I can’t beat Stuart Ness from Harvard Medical School to room 512. If I can’t compete with him academically, I’m determined to at least outrun him. I’ve met people like Stuart. There was always one in every class in college and medical school, someone for whom everything seemingly came easy, the curve-breaker, the guy who thought organic chemistry would be great if only it were a little more challenging. Which is why I’m not entirely surprised when I see a blur of brown, perfectly groomed hair and green scrubs flash past me somewhere between room 485 and room 502. I arrive — perspiring excessively and panting — to see a breathless, ruddy-cheeked nurse standing over an elderly male patient. The nurse chews her lip and adjusts and re-adjusts her reading glasses, while Stuart, at her elbow, stares at the heart monitor above the bed. The tracing shows a heart rate dangerously fast and erratic, and the words “Critical Value” blink angrily on the screen The patient, his skin pale and clammy, his eyes wide with panic, speaks in a soft whimper. “What’s happening?” “Your heart is beating too fast,” the nurse says, fiddling with the wires taped to the man’s chest. Her movements are confident, but worry ripples through her voice. “He’s in A-fib,” Stuart announces, anxiously clutching his stethoscope with both hands. “Unstable

February 12 Continued from preceding page

A-fib. Maybe we should try a medFormer West Windsor resident Madi Sinha’s first ication? Maybe diltiazem?” novel is ‘The White Coat Diaries.’ The patient’s blood pressure is falling due to his heart arrhythmia. If his heart rate isn’t slowed down, thing like Valium before shocking right now, he’ll go into cardiac ar- away from me!” I’m taken aback. Maybe he’s them, because having your heart rest. Every cardiology textbook I’ve read clearly outlines the appro- confused. After all, he’s just had a electrocuted while you’re awake is priate next steps for this exact sce- near-death experience. Then I probably as unpleasant as being catch Stuart’s eyes. He’s gawking a unexpectedly struck by lightning, nario. but — Why are they just standing me, his mouth agape. “The intern did what?” Terry’s A dozen residents and medical around? A crash cart with a defibrillator students have crowded into the voice becomes increasingly shrill is next to the bed. I grab the electri- doorway, craning their necks this like a teakettle coming to a boil. He cal paddles as the heart monitor way and that to peer over one an- turns to me menacingly. “What do emits an ear-splitting alarm. The other’s shoulders like a flock of cu- you think you’re doing?” My heart pounds against my ribs patient’s blood pressure reads 80 rious, wide-eyed birds. Among over 35 and is falling by the second. them is (her medical school friend) as I drop the paddles and cross my The nurse, the patient, and Stuart Clark, holding a steaming cup of arms over my chest. “His heart rhythm was irregular,” I say, uncoffee. all turn to me and speak at once. “What’s happening? What’d able to quell the tremor in my voice. “Maybe let’s wait for the resiyou guys do?” “And his blood pressure —” dent,” Stuart “Are you incompetent?” he asks. says. “He was unstable —” Stuart turns to The patient’s limbs “Are you sure “This is my patient!” Terry pacstare at him, his that’s what you jerk and waggle; then mouth still es back and forth, seething. “You want to do?” the he is still, and the hanging open. don’t do anything to my patient! nurse says. “Dude. You What department are you from?” heart monitor is si“What are stopped for cof- He grabs my arm and twists it those for, Doc?” lent. No one moves. forcefully — not enough to hurt, fee?” the patient says The nurse clutches A gangly man but enough to knock me slightly off his voice barely with a ponytail balance — to look at my coat her chest, steading a whisper. His wearing a long, sleeve, where the words Internal eyes drift closed. herself against a tattered white Medicine House Staff are embroiI shock him. chair. coat, his lips dered in blue thread near the shoulThe sound is like pursed as if he’s der. “Internal Medicine! Who’s a candle being Oh my god. What just tasted some- your senior resident?” extinguished. have I done? That I open my mouth but can’t form thing rancid, “Clear!” I resqueezes into any coherent words. Humiliation member to should have worked. the room, shout- pricks at the corner of my eyes. shout, moments Why didn’t it work? ing, “You people Don’t cry in front of the patient. too late. “That’s me.” A young man in his need to move, The patient’s late twenties with a rakish smile now! I need to limbs jerk and waggle; then he is still, and the get in here.” He is followed by a pe- and tousled brown hair saunters heart monitor is silent. No one tite young woman in scrubs who past the crowd at the door. Ethan moves. The nurse clutches her has secured her hair around a pen- Cantor, a senior resident. I rememchest, steading herself against a cil. Their name badges identify ber him from orientation; he was disarmingly friendly and not nearly them as general surgery residents. chair. “Terry! Thank goodness!” The as intimidating as he senior resiOh my god. What have I done? dents I’d worked with on clinical That should have worked. Why nurse seizes the man’s arm. rotations in medical school. Terry pushes his wired glasses didn’t it work? The patient’s eyes snap open. up the bridge of his nose while “What’s the problem, Terrance?” “WHHHAAAAAAT THE drawing in a deep breath, the whis- Ethan asks casually. “You need to supervise your inFUUUUUUCK!!!” He tries to tling sound produced hinting that he likely has either a chronic sinus terns, Ethan!” Terry says. “This gecrawl out of the bed. The nurse struggles to restrain obstruction or really, really tiny na- nius just shocked my patient! Withhim. “Mr. Leeds, I’m very sorry sal passages. “Tell me what’s going out sedating him!” I nod nervously. “His blood on,” he says. about that, I —” pressure was really low, eighty Mr. Leeds clutches the bed rails. It occurs to me that I should have warned him, said something to pre- “These people are trying to kill over thirty-five.” “Sir, sorry we had to do that to pare him, probably, before shock- me!” “That intern just defibrillated you.” Ethan places his hand on Mr. ing him. But, with the heart monitor now beeping a jaunty, steady the patient.” The nurse’s tone is ac- Lee’s shoulder. “But the young doctor here probably just saved rhythm, I’m giddy with relief. cusatory. “He was wide awake.” Honestly, I can’t understand your life.” “Look, Mr. Leeds, you’re not in I lift my chin righteously but atrial fibrillation anymore!” I smile what she’s so upset about. The paavoid making eye contact with Tertient was moments away from at him triumphantly. I saved you. I pulled you back from the brink of death, and now he’s alert and talk- ry. ing. Full of vim and vigor, in fact. death. The White Coat Diaries by Mr. Leeds has a wild look in his Yes, technically, you’re supposed Madi Sinha, 368 pages, $16, Berkeyes. “Get away from me! Get her to sedate the patient with some- ley/Penguin Random House.

For Seniors FYI Seminar, Princeton Senior Resource Center. www.princetonsenior.org. Nany Sobin, owner of Professional Paperwork Services, presents “Your Most Important Documents: What to Keep, What to Toss.” Register. 11:45 a.m. Perspectives on Church and Race, Princeton Senior Resource Center. www.princetonsenior.org. Discussion with Sushama Austin-Connor, the founding director of the Black Theology and Leadership Institute at Princeton Theological Seminary. Register. 1 p.m.

Saturday February 13 In Person: Outdoor Action Love Your Park Day, Friends of Princeton Open Space, Billy Johnson Mountain Lakes Nature Preserve, Mountain Avenue, Princeton. www.fopos.org. Volunteer stewards work under the guidance of our Natural Resource Manager using pruners, loppers, and hand saws to remove invasive vines and shrubs from the woodland habitat that borders the park entrance. Register via EventBrite. Bring your own mask, water bottle, and work gloves. Email info@fopos.org for more information. 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m.

In Person: For Families

Old Fashioned Valentine’s Day, Howell Living History Farm, 101 Hunter Road, Titusville, 609-7373299. www.howellfarm.org. Couples can take a romantic spin in a two-seater sleigh or carriage pulled by a team of light workhorses. Families can ride in a bobsled or hay wagon pulled by a handsome team of drafts. At the farmhouse there will be soup on the stove, and a children’s craft program from 11 to 3 p.m. for a small materials fee. Register. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Film

Saturday Night at the Movies: Young Mr. Lincoln, 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.

Food & Dining

Valentine’s Wine & Chocolate Virtual Tasting, Terhune Or-


FEBRuary 10, 2021

The Trenton City Museum at Ellarslie presents a Meet the Artists weekend for its exhibition, ‘Women Artists, Trenton Style,’ February 12 to 14. Exhibiting artists including Tamara Torres, right, participate in socially distanced observed sessions. For details or to reserve a time slot, visit www.ellarslie.org. chards. www.terhuneorchards.com. Pairing of Harvest Blues and Rooster Red wines with homemade chocolate led by Terhune’s winemaker. Register. 3 p.m.

For Families

Family Photography Workshop, Grounds For Sculpture, 80 Sculptors Way, Hamilton. www.groundsforsculpture.org. Introduction to foundational photography principles of color, line, shape, unity, balance, and contrast using a smartphone. Included will be digital scavenger hunt of art and nature to complete on your self-guided visit to GFS. Designed for families with children ages 5 to 12. Register. $20 adults; $5 kids. 10 a.m.

Lectures

What’s in a Name?, Princeton Public Library. www.princetonlibrary.org. Students and teachers from Princeton University and Princeton Public Schools discuss their experiences advocating for the renamings of buildings at both schools. Register for Zoom link. 3 p.m.

Science Lectures

Science On Saturday Lecture Series, Princeton Plasma Physics Lab. www. pppl.gov. “Virus Host-Shifting: Insights from Laboratory Experimental Evolution” with Siobain Duffy of Rutgers University. Held via Zoom. Register. 9:30 a.m.

Sunday February 14 Valentine’s Day.

Grants Available

on Social Media, Beth El Synagogue of East Windsor, 609-443-4454. www.bethel. net. Speakers from the organization StandWithUs will discuss how children are given confidence and tools needed to both stand up against antisemitism and to educate their peers in a proactive and positive manner. Register for Zoom access. 7 p.m.

Lectures

Sex, Science and the Way We Bird Today, Washington Crossing Audubon Society. www.washingtoncrossingaudubon.org. Rick Wright discusses how a century ago, “we” made the decision to transform birdwatching from a broad natural historical pursuit into a much more narrow exercise of classification, part of an effort to remasculinize bird study, which some feared had degenerated into an activity suitable only for women and children. Register by email to contact.wcas@gmail.com for Zoom access. Free. 8 p.m.

Singles

Trivia Night, Professional and Business Social Network. www.pbsninfo.com. Questions from a broad range of categories including sports, TV/movies, science, politics, food, music, technology, law, history, theater/arts, nature, and more. Via Zoom. Register on EventBrite. $15 to $20. 6:45 to 8:55 p.m.

Tuesday February 16 Lectures

Leycester Lyra Viol Lessons, Dryden Ensemble, 609-466-8541. www.drydenensemble.org. Lecture/recital by Lisa Terry held via Zoom. The program includes typical baroque dance movements like allemandes, courantes and sarabandes, a few settings of folk songs, and some engaging character pieces. Register. $10 to $50. 4 p.m.

Black History Month Tribute to Frank Johnson’s Music, Morven Museum & Garden. www.morven.org. Colonialism and its legacies including slavery were a part of the lives of several generations of the Stockton family at Morven. For Black History month, scholar John Burkhalter and pianist Sheldon Eldridge explore the link between Robert Field Stockton (1795-1866) the “Commodore,” and the free black composer Francis “Frank” Johnson. Virtual program with live Q&A. Register. $10. Noon.

Valentine’s Wine & Chocolate Virtual Tasting, Terhune Orchards. www.terhuneorchards.com. Pairing of Harvest Blues and Rooster Red wines with homemade chocolate led by Terhune’s winemaker. Register. 3 p.m.

Gardens

Winter Lecture Series, Bowman’s Hill Wildflower Preserve, New Hope, Pennsylvania. www.bhwp.org. Series of guest lectures via Zoom. “Native Plants: Spreading the Word Beyond the Choir” presented by Mary Anne Borge. Register. $15. 2 to 3 p.m.

Lectures

Working with Eclipses and the Natal Chart, Astrological Society of Princeton. www.aspnj.org. Presented by Bill Meridian. Register. $20. 2 p.m.

Monday February 15 Presidents’ Day. Bank and postal holiday.

History

Bands of Music During the American War of Independence, Old Barracks Museum. www.barracks.org. Learn about the origins, instruments, music, and musicians that made up these bands of music in the Continental and British armies. Register via Zoom or EventBrite. Free. 2:30 p.m.

For Parents

Teens Facing Antisemitism in School and

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Opportunities

Classical Music

Food & Dining

U.S. 1

Wednesday February 17 Lectures Myanmar Coup: How Should the Biden Administration and Other Allies Respond, School of Public & International Affairs. spia.princeton.edu. Talk by Ambassador Derek Mitchell, first U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of the Union of Myanmar (Burma) from 2012-2016 and president of the National Democratic Institute. Via Zoom. Register. Free. Noon.

Benefit Galas

Benefit Evening, People & Stories/Gente y Cuentos. www.peopleandstories.org. Danielle Allen, professor and director of Harvard’s Edmond J.Safra Center for Ethics, and David Kidd, project director of Humanities and Liberal Arts Assessment at Harvard Graduate School of Education’s Project Zero and the chief assessment scientist for the Democratic Knowledge Project at the Safra Center, discuss “Seeds of Transformation: Reinvigorating Civic Education for the Nation.” Via Zoom. Register. $75 and up. 6 to 7:30 p.m.

Lectures

Money and War — An American Conversation, Princeton University Public Lectures. lectures.princeton.edu. Conversation with the Pulitzer Prize-winning author Ayad Akhtar, renowned historian of India Faisal Devji, and novelist and scholar Sadia Abbas. The speakers consider Akhtar’s cel-

Grant applications for the Fiserv Back2Business Grants for Small Business Program, which will award up to $10,000 to minority-owned businesses that have been impacted by COVID-19 and social unrest, are now open for eligible small businesses in New Jersey. The application deadline is Friday, February 26. The Back2Business Grant is a part of a larger Fiserv initiative to equip minorityowned small businesses with vital education, coaching and capital to fuel community growth, creating sustainable business and shared value for all. In addition to the grant, the program includes opportunities for mentorship and access to technology solutions that enable revenue generation. Applicants can find more information and apply for the grant at https://aeoworks. org/fiserv.

Call for Volunteers The teens at Princeton Learning Cooperative are always on the lookout for ebrated new novel, “Homeland Elegies,” as a new kind of American novel, neither diasporic nor postcolonial, a 9/11 novel without being about 9/11, and a major work of fiction about the Trump presidency and its prehistory. Register. Free. 5 p.m. How Spaces Shape Us, Trenton Health Team. www.trentonhealthteam.org. Free online discussion with urban activist Mindy Fullilove exploring how our neighborhoods influence our lives, behaviors, and well-being. Via Zoom. Free. 6 p.m.

Politics

NJ Government & Politics: What You Want & Need to Know, Lawrence League of Women Voters, 609-301-0401. www. lwvlt.org. Guest speaker Ingrid Reed, chair of the NJTV Community Advisory Board

interesting, dedicated people who are willing to share their knowledge and skills. Generally a one-hour-a-week commitment, PLC volunteers tutor one-on-one, lead small-group classes, or offer a onetime workshop in a wide range of topics. This year, our volunteers are able to choose between in-person work at our center (with masks and social distancing) and remote teaching/tutoring. Subjects where volunteers are needed include math, writing, test prep, animal behavior, nature, geography, astronomy, U.S./world history, people’s history, economics/investing, American Sign Language, public speaking, history of video games, computers/electronics/robotics, hacking/modding/video game design, engineering, computer programming (C, C++, Assembly), video-editing, animation, photo-editing, anime, digital art, sculpture, pottery, voice, basic auto mechanics, sewing, woodworking, dog training, business, and criminology. For more information, visit PLC’s Volunteer page or be in touch with Alison at alison@princetonlearningcooperative.org or 609-851-2522. and a former director of the New Jersey Project at Rutgers’ Eagleton Institute of Politics, discusses ways to participate in New Jersey government and politics. Submit questions to LWVof­Lawrence@gmail.com. 7 to 8 p.m.

Socials

Library Drawing Party, Mercer County Library. www.facebook.com/mclsnj. Follow along for a librarian-led drawing lesson, then share your finished work. For all ages. 7 p.m.

Daily updates on Facebook @US1Newspaper


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ART

FEBRuary 10, 2021

FILM

LITERATURE

DANCE DRAMA MUSIC

PREV I E W

Off the Presses: ‘Bob Dylan: How the Songs Work’

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by Dan Aubrey

n 2020 Princeton University Press (PUP) launched a new marketing, sales, and distribution partnership with Zone Books, a New York City-based independent, nonprofit publisher of arts, humanities, and social science titles. The book on the music of Bob Dylan is one of joint venture’s first titles — and a book that Princeton University professor and noted music scholar and musician Nigel Smith calls a “study that sets a gold standard.” In the following excerpt, Timothy Hampton, a professor of comparative literature and French at the University of California, Berkeley, puts Dylan’s work into an era’s historic and artistic context:

I

t is fair to say that Dylan’s work reveals a complexity and compaction not seen in the work of most other popular artist. That is, Dylan’s work feels “denser” or “deeper” (in an almost tactile sense, not necessarily in any philosophical sense) than that of most of his contemporaries. The American writer Ezra Pound emphasized that the poet is someone who makes language think, who condenses it — as the German word for poet, Dichter, comes from the word for “Thicken.” As a master of citation, a combiner, a collagist, a paster, a thickener, Dylan is able to lend a new density to song. His singing personal functions as a kind of medium or vehicle through which the listener can glimpse or hear the sonic landscape of some other moment or territory where “Bob Dylan,” the composer, seems to roam. This sense of density — what we might call the “Dylanesque” feature of his work — is achieved through a mastery of the art of combination or collage. The multilayer density of Dylan’s songs and the metamorphic energy of the lyrics brings us to yet another sense of style, which links up the modern idea of “fashion” or “mode” — the contentions that dominate a particular moment but are soon set aside as “old fashioned” and rejected. This dynamic is, of course, the dynamic of mass production and of the modern culture industry. Dylan’s work consistently exploits the way fashion is transformed by the passage of time. He turns again and again to the relationship between the “now” and the “future,” one the one hand, and, on the other hand, the archaic, the premodern, the quaint. To a degree unrivaled by any modern popular artist Dylan is a miner of old forms, an expeditionary heading back to the hoary world of the predigital modes of expression — old songs, old sentences, old images, old chords. Dylan’s constant reflection on the “old” and the “new,” on what the poet Rimbaud called the “absolutely modern,” will help us to locate the songs in a history of forms. Dylan’s work takes shape in the post-World War II moment, the moment of television and the automobile. Thus, the most pertinent historical context for understanding

his work may be less that of rock music, or of “the Sixties,” than of artistic modernism more generally. By “modernism,” I have in mind that current of artistic experimentation that expands from the French Impressionists in the 19th century through the “geniuses” of the early 20th (Woolf, Stravinsky, Eliot, Eisenstein, Ellington, Picasso) and on to the emergence of a later “modernist” style after World War II (Pollock, Nabokov, Henry Moore, Charlie Parker, Orson Welles). Dylan comes of age at the moment at which “modernism” first becomes recognized as a kind of international style in art and at which it begins to reach a mass audience, spreading beyond the world of the avant-gardes. Yet more pertinent than the history, for our purposes, are the technical discoveries of modern art: the focus on formal integrity as the response to historical chaos, the importation of “low” culture into “high” culture (and vice versa), the fragmentation of time and space, the continual vexed worrying about the past, about tradition and originality, the idea of culture as a ruin, the emphasis on artificial or invented objects and moments as bearers of peak or authentic experience within an increasingly unreal “real world.” Modernist art privileges the moment, an absolute contemporaneity that simultaneously seeks to break with history and take stock of its own relationship to what has been lost. It struggles to come to terms with a world that has been stripped of its religious magic by the logic of capitalism, what Max Weber called “the disenchantment of the world” Dylan’s reformulation, “It’s easy to see without looking too far that not much is really sacred,” from 1964’s “It’s Alright Ma (I’m Only Bleeding)” offers a later articulation of the same idea, written from the swirl of postwar industrial expansion and 1960s media culture. Dylan differs from several of his contemporaries who went on to develop influential bodies of work as particularly “dense” or “poetic” songwriters. For example, Leonard

Cohen’s voice and songs seem to come from a bounded place of unusual concentration — at the intersection of the erotic and the spiritual — out of which he generates powerful insights about desire and regret. It is no accident that this type of intensity requires a deep focus on the frailty of the self (which we might see paralleled, biographically, in Cohen’s interest in Buddhism and Jewish mysticism). It results in a closely circumscribed though forceful, poetic vision.

O

r, to take another example, we could recall the works of Joni Mitchell, which generates much of its energy out of Mitchell’s selfdramatizing and romantic recreations of her own adventures in love and art. This might be linked to her pioneering status, along with Laura Nyro, as one of the first great female singer-songwriters. Lacking the ready-made paradigms of desire and amorous conquest available to their male colleagues, she generated her own counter stories by showcasing her escapades, triumphs, and foibles. This is reflected in Mitchell’s insistence on herself as “original” and an “artist.” Dylan, by contrast, offered an album called “Self Portrait” that consisted of sons by other people. Quite unlike both Cohen and Mitchell, Dylan radiates

outworld in his work, and his interest lies in absorbing into his singing persona all of the material of the culture around him. To study Dylan’s art and its combinatory power, we need to take into his account the different ways in which he uses the “I” who appears in his compositions. This “I” is, of course, a fiction, just as the “I” of Shakespeare’s sonnets is a fiction and the “I” of Marty Robbin’s 1959 border ballad “El Paso” is a fiction. It is a character that Dylan invites anew for each song. Sometimes that character knows many things. Sometimes it knows little. Sometimes it thinks it knows more that it does. Sometimes it says more that it knows. Moreover, like many selfinvented artists, Dylan seems to locate his persona in relationship to various exemplary figures, both real and fictional (Woody Guthrie, Arthur Rimbaud, Jack Kerouac, Jay Gatsby, Billy the Kid, Rett Butler, Jack London). Yet, what I important about these figures is not their role in the development of personal identity — they will change — but rather the literary and musical resources they free up. In what follows I will be speaking interchangeability of the “hero” or “protagonist” or “narrator” of Dylan’s songs. This question of the “I” poses interesting problems when we consider Dylan’s own location in his songs. Just as he is often most “po-

Dylan’s work consistently exploits the way fashion is transformed by the passage of time. He turns again and again to the relationship between the ‘now’ and the ‘future,’ one the one hand, and, on the other hand, the archaic, the premodern, the quaint.

Decades of album covers visually trace Bob Dylan’s career, while Timothy Hampton, lower left, explores the musician’s artistic development in a new book. litical” when least political, so may his hand be felt most clearly in songs that cannot be linked in any narrative way to “Bob Dylan.” We can think, in this context, of a song like 1995’s “Dignity.” The song recounts the adventures of an “I” who appears to be a private detective, much in the mold of Raymond Chandler’s Philip Marlowe, who crisscrosses a nocturnal cityscape that feels like Los Angeles, in search of someone or something called “Dignity.” We watch as the hero goes from scene to scene: a tattoo parlor, a fancy party, a cheap bar, and abandoned apartment, “asking the cops wherever I go, ‘Have you seen Dignity?’” The literary trick of leaving the identity or nature of “Dignity” vague makes the song particularly powerful, as it yokes a seedy crime story to a grand philosophical quest. (Indeed, where can one find something like dignity at the end of the 1980s, the decade of arbitrageurs, Teflon presidents, and Spandex?) Bob Dylan: How the Songs Work by Timothy Hampton, 288 pages, $21.95 paperback, Zone Books in cooperation with Princeton University Press.


FEBRuary 10, 2021

9

Falconry Flying High and Under the Radar in NJ

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by Dan Aubrey

inter doesn’t seem the best time of the year to connect with the nature — unless you’re one of the fewer than 50 or so New Jersey master falconers permitted and licensed to hunt through March. “It is winter time, so we use small game hunting rules,” says Hugh Pribell on his farm in Columbus, New Jersey. Generally known as Rocky, Pribell is a master falconer who says his interest in the ancient practice goes back to two experiences. “My family was difficult,” he says about growing up in Moores­ town, New Jersey. “I remember reading a book in grade school, ‘My Side of the Mountain.’ It was published in 1959, the year I was born. The story had a kid who ran away from home, like I did.” Pribell says he connected with the character’s emotional plight and was then captivated by the boy’s success of trapping a falcon to help get food. “I knew at some point I would be a falconer,” he says, adding that the possibility seemed more real after he saw advertisements for buying hawks in a Boy’s Life Magazine — before current state laws and regulations limited that practice. “The idea stuck with me, but life got in the way,” he says. In the 1990s the married UPS worker with three sons struck up a friendship with a few falconers who invited him to go on a hunt — one where the handlers release birds to hunt prey. There was one problem. “I had hurt my foot and was in a cast, but I said I was going. I was on crutches in a foot-and-a half of snow to hang out with falconers and watch them fly their birds.” He says his earnestness impressed one of his friends so much that he offered to help Pribell become a falconer and started him on the lengthy and involved state-regulated process. New Jersey master falconer Hugh ‘Rocky’ Pribell displays a red-tailed hawk, As Pribell explains it, “You one of several raptors he keeps on his Columbus farm. work with an apprentice two years to be trained with a proper ethic and to understand that this is a wild bird An historic timeline elsewhere bird. In New Jersey, falconers can you are responsible for. The pro- sport. The biggest difference beon the site says a circa 722-705 BC fly a variety of falcons and hawks, tween falconry with hunters and cess is two years to weed out people who are looking for a pet. These fishers is they’re concerned how Assyrian bas-relief of hunters with however, apprentices are restricted birds don’t make good pets. They many points on the rack or how birds is the earliest indication of to red tailed hawks.” To become a permit-holding falmany pounds on the bass. But falconry. The timeline follows with don’t like you back.” What you get instead is “gaining we’re concerned with the beauty of 610 B.C. Chinese records describ- coner, here are some of the steps found on both the NJFC and New the trust of a wild raptor and letting the bird and getting out in nature. It ing the practice. Now an everyday sport for ev- Jersey Fish and Game Division you be allowed to partner with it. is natural history.” It is also part of world history, as eryday people, NJFC adds that websites: One, learn the biology of You get to see their world up close the New Jersey Falconry Club “falconers train birds of prey to the bird and falconry practices and personal and see their beautiful, free flights when they fly to get notes, “Falconry is the ancient art hunt with them, responding to through books and online resourcof hunting with birds of prey. His- whistles and specific calls. Com- es and by studying state regulaDatea&rabbit.” Time: ______________________ He then focuses on the reality torically, it was restricted to the mon game includes rabbits, squir- tions. Two, contact the state for a ___________________. that the list of raptors included in noble class and considered a status rels, and ducks, amongst other falconry permit application. Three, _____________ small animals, depending on the find a licensed falconer to be a theto state regulations “eat meat. symbol.” ttention the following: _____________ Date & Time: ______________________ They’re not vegetarian. We’re Date & Time: ______________________ flushing rabbit and game out of a r ad, scheduled to run ___________________. run ___________________. field and producing an opportunity ❑ Address ❑ Expiration Date ughly and special attention to the ‘It is all about the bird. You put your heart and soul into its care so you __ or apay ‘slip’ bird to take thefollowing: cial attention to for thethe following: tell usgame it’sDate okay) __ Time: ______________________ can share into its life for a short time. At some point you have to trust and&eat.” While it involves small game d to run ___________________. your relationship and unclip the bird. It then has a choice. And when ❑ Fax number AddressPribell ❑ Expiration Date and seemstoakin to❑hunting, special attention the following: ❑makes Address ❑ Expiration Date it chooses to come back to your glove, it is wonderfully satisfying.’ a distinction. “Most falcony) APRIL 13, 2011 U.S. 1 47 ers agree with me that it is not a

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U.S. 1

❑ Address

Expiration Date director❑of human resources at Drew University, have two sons. ✦ Experience When the boys were aily Updates on Events and More: m younger Colbert sought ✦ Honesty Follow on help exout a PrincetonInfo church that would f he pose them to the spiritual side of ✦ Integrity aid, life. HeFor recalled fondly the PresbyFor Daily Updates on Events and More: Daily Updates the terian church that a cornerorUpdates Become a Fan onwas on Events and More: Follow PrincetonInfo on or Daily on Events and More: Sales & Rentals had stone of his community in SavanFollow PrincetonInfo on For Daily Follow UpdatesPrincetonInfo on Events and More: on nah and found similarities with the he Follow congregation. PrincetonInfo on Witherspoon STOCKTON REAL ESTATE but or Become The Paul Robeson House mis- a Fan on air. ...A Princeton Tradition sion includes a “role as aon residenororBecome aaFan Become Fan on hite or Become a Fan on tial ‘safe house,’ especially sensi32 Chambers Street • Princeton, NJ 08542 ad a tive to the needs of low-income 1-800-763-1416 • 609-924-1416 his African-American youngsters and immigrants.” I hope that my idea of it,” utilizing part of the space as essenghts tially a tourist attraction celebrathat ing the life and times and struggles

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sponsor and mentor for the twoyear apprenticeship. Four, review legal requirements and obtain the required gloves and related equipment and prepare a hawkhouse — aka a mews — to state specifications. Five, take the state exam and receive 80 percent or better to pass; and six, obtain a state hunting license. Mentored through the above process by Princeton-based falconer Chris Brown, Pribell says the next step is to get a falcon or hawk. And since New Jersey state regulations forbid the buying and selling of falcons and other raptors, the birds need to be trapped. “You cannot take it from their nests,” says Pribell who says that if they are taken too young they will depend on — or “imprint” — a human being as their parents and source of food. “You’re looking for an immature bird that has reached a partial age when it knows it is a falcon. At the end of the hunting season, the birds can be returned back into the wild.” However, finding an immature bird is not always easy to discern. Yet with time, Pribell says a falconer’s eyes become trained to tell the differences through eye colors, feature textures, and behavior. “Adults fly off, the immature don’t fear people,” he says. To catch a bird, he says, he uses a federally approved BC, or, according to the American Falconry Club glossary, “a Bal-chatri: a cage like trap with live bait and monofilament nooses that catch the raptor by the feet.”

P

ribell, who makes his own traps by hand, says in order to trap a falcon or hawk he first places a mouse or sparrow inside the cage to attract attention. Then, with its focus solely on its prey, the bird swoops down without considering the cover and gets its talons caught. The next step is to put the bird in the mews and work with it to build trust. That happens through a process of tethering and providing food. “They don’t understand negative relationships. It only learns through positive reinforcement, and that is through food. You have to develop a relationship with a wild animal that will always be wild,” Pribell says. Once the positive connection to a person as a benign food source becomes established, the falconer and bird are ready for the bird to be released for its first hunt — where the falcon or hawk watches the falconer walk through a field where “game sources come out in front of you — magically.” There is also the moment of truth to see if a connection with the bird has been established and it returns to the falconer’s upraised Continued on following page

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10

U.S. 1

FEBRuary 10, 2021

Pia de Jong

S

Life in the Fast Lane

uddenly they are back, like a migratory species. While waiting outside Small World for my espresso, I see a young woman being dropped off by her mom. The mom a bit frazzled from the drive, her hair plastered to her forehead. The girl wears a Princeton sweatshirt that I imagine she had gotten as a present when she learned she was accepted. She is unselfconsciously pretty, as 18-yearolds are. She reminds me of a leaf that has sprouted overnight. Bright, curious. Somewhat anxIllustration by Charlotte Dijkgraaf ious. She opens the car door to let the air in and immediately is immersed in the vibrant atmosphere of Witherspoon Street. The hel- tered over and fearlessly sat down next to los and goodbyes from people juggling their me. They acted like it was their place. In June I saw a coyote, playing close to a lattes. “Drive safely.” “Where are you roomdeer family. The campus had become like ing?” “Call me!” The mom and daughter hold each other. the peaceable paradise, before Adam and The girl cries quietly. After a little while, the Eve plucked that apple. I could have brought mom shushes her out the car, knowing that a donkey, why not? Midsummer, humans postponing any longer will only make it were outnumbered, by far. I was the intruder. harder. The girl walks a few unsteady steps September came and went, without students. At Christmas, the campus and, without looking was still empty. back, disappears to her But at last, the student future. September came and have returned, and the I feel wistful for both animals hide themselves went, without stuof them — yet, still, I again. smile. This is how it is dents. At Christmas, Even Labyrinth Booksupposed to be. It hurts the campus was still store seems back in its to move on. The pain is groove. The windows empty. But at last, the at the growing edge. the walls look I cross the street to student have returned, shine, brighter, as if they too are campus. Students all and the animals hide happy to welcome stuover are chatting loudly dents again inside. themselves again. with long-lost roomA bit later, I see the mates, dragging suitcaswistful mom again. Still es, and carrying small sitting in her car, like she refrigerators that will keep their beer cold in the years to come. needed time to take in this moment. This The air is electric again, vibrating with milestone that has played in her mind since her daughter was born. laughter. “Enjoy every moment,” they say when I had walked over to the empty campus every day since the start of the pandemic in you welcome your newborn. “It is over beMarch. It had become a different place, eerie fore you know it.” But somehow you are at night. Strangely quiet in the early morning never prepared for that day. Walking home, I keep thinking about the hours. girl. I hope to run into her in a couple of In April I saw my first fox trotting in front weeks, happily chatting with her friends in of Nassau Hall. Excited, I sent pictures to my family in Amsterdam. I had no idea that over her bright new life. Pia de Jong is a Dutch writer who lives in the months of quarantine I would encounter whole families of them. Mom and dad foxes Princeton. She can be contacted at pdewith lots of cute baby foxes that just saun- jong@ias.edu.

Falconry Continued from preceding page

gloved hand. “After putting that time, it is disappointing if a bird up and flies off. The beauty of falconry is that if you lose one, it’s only on you. The bird knows how to hunt and survive.” As for the returning bird, Pribell says the reason may be that they come back because “we aren’t pushing them” and “I think the bird enjoys it.” He says that the relationship is also healthy for the raptor, with captives seeing “their life span doubled or tripled.” That claim is also argued by the New Jersey Falconry Club in an online statement: “With respect to falconers taking their birds from the wild, studies show that an estimated 75 to 80 percent of immature raptors die each year. Every time a falconer traps a passage raptor (one less than a year old), there are at least two probable results. The first is that the particular bird trapped will be helped to transition into its second year of life, which is an accomplishment that it only has a 20 to 25 percent chance of doing on its own in the wild. “Second, one less bird has been temporarily removed from the competition for food and habitat. Since the vast majority of falconry birds are released back to the wild, usually after one or two hunting seasons falconry actually benefits

wild raptor populations. In reality, however, there are too few falconers in the United States to truly impact wild raptor populations one way or the other. The true enemy of raptor populations is destruction of habitat for both themselves and their prey.” It is also beneficial to humans. “It’ a passion. I enjoy the freedom, and I think being one with your bird lowers my blood pressure,” says Pribell, who was born in Brooklyn to two parents involved in the liquor wholesale industry who eventually moved to Moorestown.

E

xcept for a brief time as a college geology student in Pennsylvania, Pribell lived mainly in Moorestown until he met his Columbus dairy-farm raised wife and moved into a Victorian-era building down the road from her family’s farm. A lover of history — he has an intensive collection of oil lamps — and nature, Pribell operates Birds and Bees Farm. The first part of the name is obvious and relates to his mews currently housing a red tail hawk and a great horned owl — the state has limits on how many raptors can be kept. The second refers to his honey business began 15 years ago after retiring from UPS. “I love full-time beekeeping. It is the best job I have had, and I have the best boss I have ever had,” he says.

TCC Launches Artistic Advisory Board

Edited by Sara Hastings

T

he Trenton Children’s Chorus (TCC) has announced its inaugural Artistic Advisory Board in creative programming. Artistic director Vinroy D. Brown Jr. invited leaders from across the United States to actively support the organization in its mission to empower the academic, social, and spiritual lives of children through artistry in music. “Understanding that the TCC experience for all (students and myself) could only be enhanced with further collaboration, I am grateful to our Board of Trustees who have allowed for the creation of TCC’s first ever Artistic Advisory Board. I’ve called upon colleagues and mentors from literally around the country — all who are leading artists, educators, conductors and musicians of our generation — to align themselves with our mission and purpose. I am so grateful for the direct line we now have with this all-encompassing group of individuals,” Brown said in a statement. Regional members of the board include Chaequan Anderson, artistic director of the Glassbrook Vocal Ensemble in Ewing (U.S. 1, December 12, 2018), who has experience in music education with TCC as well as Princeton Girlchoir. Lynnel Joy Jenkins, artistic director at Westrick Music Academy, which houses Princeton Girlchoir and Boychoir, is also on the board. Other area members include Patricia Thel, TCC artistic director emerita; and Jason Vodicka, associate professor of music education at Westminster Choir College. “One of my hopes for my role as Artistic Director was to develop an Artistic Advisory Board. This non-voting party would be comprised of colleagues and mentors of mine from around the country. This group would serve as a ‘think tank’ for larger TCC ideas and offer them an opportunity to affiliate with us through their own organizations. I am grateful to co-presidents Jill Jackson Carr and Nora Schultz for offering their support in this endeavor,” Brown said. More information on Trenton Children’s Chorus: www.trentonchildrenschorus. org.

Lynnel Joy Jenkins, left, and Patricia Thel.

Sykes Foundation Gift Benefits Black Business Enterprises

T

he Red Bank-based Pascale Sykes Foundation has announced a $1 million investment in the Equitable Small Business Initiative to support Black business enterprises. The contribution, made through New Brunswick-based community development nonprofit New Jersey Community Capital and the African American Chamber of Commerce of New Jersey in Trenton, will allow for pandemic relief loans ranging from $10,000 to $75,000 and recovery loan sizes in yet-to-be-determined amounts. The funding will help Black business enterprises in New Jersey seeking access to resources and support to establish, sustain, augment, or expand business operations, as well as those economically impacted by the pandemic. “We’re honored to support initiatives like this,” Sykes Foundation president Fran Sykes said in a statement. “As sole proprietorships and family-run businesses primarily define the Black business community, they often require non-conventional loans and business guidance for sustainable growth. In collaboration with the AACCNJ and NJCC in this capacity, we can directly affect family-owned and operated businesses, be more inclusive, and positively affect a greater number of people.” “Especially as this integral segment of

Raptors, like Rocky Pribell’s red-tailed hawk, provide falconers with up close and personal encounters with wildlife. Referring back to his falconry, Pribell says he currently enjoys working with red tail hawks because they focus their attention on a smaller area and are more easily observed as they swoop. What he doesn’t enjoy is the misunderstanding the public can have regarding falconry. They confuse it with hunting, which he feels is less restrictive and less ethical. Although he doesn’t wear orange or carry a gun, he says, he sometimes gets mistaken for a hunter and has to account for himself, like the time someone suspected him of hunting eagles and reported him to the police. “There is a saying. There are a thousand and one things that could happen with falconry, and only two are good. One is catching the bird and the other is it returning.” But there are more. As Pribell says, “It’s the lifestyle you committed to. It is all about the bird. You put your heart and soul into its care so you can share into its life for a short time. “At some point you have to trust your relationship and unclip the bird. It then has a choice. And when it chooses to come back to your

glove, it is wonderfully satisfying.” For more information on New Jersey Falconry, go to the New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife at www.state.nj.us/dep/fgw or the New Jersey Falconry Club at www.

newjerseyfalconryclub.com. Hugh Pribell, Birds and Bees Farm, 24219 West Main Street, Columbus. www.birdsandbeesfarm.com.


FEBRuaRy 10, 2021

U.S. 1 Classifieds HOW TO ORDER

MUSIC SERVICES

WOMEN SEEKING MEN

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.

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

for you no matter what. My friends and family have kept me grounded and supported me after losing my hubby of knowing him 53 years and 49 years of marriage. It is 1 year Oct. 1st past he has been gone. I want companionship starting with friendship going slow and seeing where it takes us. We can text, email, eventually do facetime and once the time is right do phone calls. I do like dining out, movies, the beach, going to festivals, shopping and hanging out with friends and family. Box #240820

OFFICE RENTaLS 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. Professional office space, 1500 sq/ ft located in Montgomery Knoll office park on Rte 206 in Skillman. Five private offices, reception area, 2 baths and a kitchenette. Ample parking in quiet setting 4 miles from downtown Princeton. Call Meadow Run Properties at 908281-5374. Tired of working from home? Two small offices for sublet: One is 250 sq/ ft and one is 500 sq/ft. Quiet setting in Montgomery Knoll office park on Rte 206 in Skillman with ample parking. Call Meadow Run Properties at 908-2815374.

RETaIL SPaCE Princeton, NJ Central Business District Retail/Service Business Stores for Lease - Weinberg Management, Broker - For Confidential Conversation Text: 609-731-1630 Email: WMC@collegetown.com

COMMERCIaL SPaCE Mercer County, Ewing, NJ 14,000 SF (11,000 SF Ofc/3,000 SF Whse) FREE RENT 201-488-4000/609-8837900.

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

PERSONaL SERVICES 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

TRaNSPORTaTION 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.

MUSICaL INSTRUMENTS 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 Cash paid for World War II military items. 609-581-8290 or e-mail lenny3619@optonline.net. Wanted: Baseball, football, basketball, hockey. Cards, autographs, photos, memorabilia. Highest cash prices paid! Licensed corporation, will travel. 4thelovofcards, 908-596-0976. allstar115@verizon.net.

MEN SEEKING WOMEN Elderly gentleman seeks a woman who is more concerned about the suffering occurring around the world than she is about hedonistic pleasures. Box 240346. Hi! I’m a 65 year old educated, attractive, semi-retired male with a youthful spirit and an active lifestyle. I try to have a positive attitude, a humble spirit, and accept others for who they are. I tend to be liberal in many ways, but try to look at any situation individually. I have a wide range of interests from music (classical to soft rock), to hiking and going to the beach. I like to read but can also enjoy a good show on t.v. I love all animals and have a cat and dog. I spend my summers in the moutains of N.H. and my winters in N.J., with occasional trips down south to catch some surf and sun. I’m hoping to find a kind, outgoing woman to share friendship, good times, and eventually more with. Someone who likes to travel (once the Covid ends), sit at the shore holding hands at sunset sharing some wine, a hike in the woods, or a sail on the lake in the summer. I am a non-smoker. If this sounds interesting, please get in touch and lets see where it goes. Box #240814 Nice guy, 58, 6’ tall, owner-operator, non-smoker, non-drinker, loves kids, loves dogs, would enjoy the companionship of good natured lady over 40. please send phone number. Photo would be appreciated. Box #240816 Professional seeks a woman from 40-55 years old. I enjoy family, I like to go to movies, go to the beach, festivals, and sometimes dine out and travel. Please send phone, email to set up meeting. Box 240245.

WOMEN SEEKING MEN Woman seeking an attractive, fit, Caucasian-white male, prefer a widower, 65-75. I am a 72 young petite white, non-smoker. Drink socially, have 2 adult daughters and 2 adorable grandsons, 7 1/2 and 2 1/2. I want a nonsmoker + drinker like me. I am a caring, honest, loving, devoted person. My friends can tell you I will always be there

MEN SEEKING MEN a very attractive, clean, healthy, fit, athletic, young 61 Bi- white male. Looking to meet same discreet, sensual white or latin male. For discreet concerns, please respond with day time phone number for contact. Box #240815 I jumped off the curb yesterday to end the feeling of being alone due to Covid, but it did not help!! If this isolation is getting to you and you need a hug, conversation, or a pen pal, then write to this mature, six foot Italian in good shape with a sense of humor. What are you doing to keep your fantasies alive? Puzzles, t.v., cooking, or a couch potato? Hope to get a good response from all you animals in neverland. Box #240813

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.

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. 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).

NRG CFO Steps Down

K

irkland Andrews has stepped down as chief financial officer of Carnegie Center-based NRG Energy and has been replaced in an interim capacity by senior vice president and treasurer Gaetan Frotte, the company announced.

11

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our nation’s economy is being devastated by the pandemic, the relief this provides could not come sooner. I really believe it instills hope in so many,” AACCNJ founder, president, and CEO John E. Harmon added. More information on the Pascale Sykes Foundation: www.pascalesykesfoundation.org.

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FEBRUaRy 10, 2021

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

160 Lawrenceville-Pennington Rd. Lawrenceville, NJ • Mercer County

SPACE AVAILABLE:

1009 & 1910 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

4 Princess Rd. Lawrenceville, NJ • Mercer County

SPACE AVAILABLE:

Office • Medical

MONTGOMERY PROFESSIONAL CENTER

1625, 2072, 2973 sf (+/-)

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

Route 518 & Vreeland Dr. Skillman, NJ • Somerset County

SPACE AVAILABLE:

Office • Medical

741, 1250 up to 3418 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.


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