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Liberty Island gets a tiger makeover. Meet architect Nicholas Garrison, page 8.

Flower Power

New Traditions

Health & Fitness

Vaseful, the new flower shop on Witherspoon Street, offers employment opportunities for people with disabilities. Page 18

After her daughter’s prom, columnist Pia de Jong gains a new appreciation for American traditions she did not grow up with. Page 22

Area experts weigh in with timely advice to help you spring into summer and stay healthy all year. Special Section


2 Princeton Echo | July 2019


VOLUNTEER MAKE A DIFFERENCE

Helping The Youth In Your Community Thanks to a funding provided by the Princeton Area Community Foundation’s All Kids Thrive Initiative, the Princeton Family YMCA, together with the Princeton Public Schools, Corner House and the Bonner Foundation, has launched an exciting collaboration that is designed to support qualifying boys enrolled at Princeton High School who are most at risk of missing critical school days. Each student will be paired with a group of volunteers who are dedicated to his success - assuring that he is attending school and classes regularly, and feeling engaged and connected with the larger community to achieve his potential. For more information on the program or how you can get involved, please contact Michael Roseborough at mroseborough@princetonymca.org.

The goal of the All Kids Thrive program is to strengthen and insulate the educational pipeline so All Kids Thrive , from ages zero to 25. PRINCETON FAMILY YMCA 59 Paul Robeson Place Princeton, NJ 08540

609-497-9622 | www.princetonymca.org

July 2019 | Princeton Echo3


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ECHO 5 Candidates, Community TV, and Council

An incumbent loses in Council primary; supporters continue to rally for Princeton Community Television; the state tries an ‘exclusive pedestrian phase’ at Nassau and Vandeventer; tour busses get a new parking spot.

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The New House and the Old Trees

A Hawthorne Avenue resident spent months fighting the town and a real estate developer over damage to her century-old maple trees. The new house next door is now for sale while the trees fight to survive.

8

Liberty Island’s Tiger Makeover

Princeton resident Nicholas Garrison is the architect behind the new Statue of Liberty Museum, designed with respect for history, an eye toward the future, and the goal of creating a joyful experience for all. By Aliza Alperin Sheriff

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Vaseful Blossoms on Witherspoon Street

Community Options has opened a new flower shop that employs people with disabilities to help them build job skills and engage with the community. By Philip Sean Curran

Bon Appetit, Biryani, and Burgers

The Nassau Street restaurant landscape seems to change on a daily basis. Among the new additions: a Bon Appetit kiosk, Spice Grill Indian restaurant, and burger joint Diesel and Duke.

Real Estate Notes..................................................................................... 7 What’s Happening................................................................................... 12 Food for Thought..................................................................................... 20 Parting Shot with Pia de Jong ................................................................. 22 At Your Service/Classified........................................................................ 23 Phone: (609) 396-1511 Fax: (609) 844-0180 Website: communitynews.org Metro Editor Sara Hastings Arts Editor Dan Aubrey EVENTS Editor Samantha Sciarrotta BUSINESS EDITOR Diccon Hyatt Photographer Suzette J. Lucas

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4 Princeton Echo | July 2019

Contributing WriterS Aliza Alperin-Sheriff, Philip Sean Curran Contributing COLUMNIST Pia de Jong Production Manager Stacey Micallef (Ext. 131) Graphic Artists Vaughan Burton AD TRAFFIC COORDINATOR Stephanie Jeronis Sales Director Thomas Fritts (Ext. 110) Senior Account Executive Jennifer Steffen Account Executives Deanna Herrington, Rahul Kumar, Mark Nebbia Administrative Advertising assistant Gina Carillo, Maria Morales

Co-Publishers Jamie Griswold and Tom Valeri Administrative COordinator Megan Durelli Šâ€Ż2019 by Community News Service, LLC. All rights reserved. News news@communitynews.org Events events@communitynews.org Letters to the Editor hastings@princetoninfo.com The Princeton Echo welcomes letters to the editor of reasonable length and tone. Writers should include their name, address and phone number. Addresses and phone numbers will not be published. 14,000 copies of the Princeton Echo are mailed or bulk-distributed to the residences and businesses of Princeton 12 times a year. Detailed sales kits available upon request.

To advertise

send e-mail to advertise@communitynews.org or call (609) 396-1511, Ext. 111. A Community News Service, LLC publication 15 Princess Rd., Suite K, Lawrence, NJ 08648


LEADING OFF

Updates: candidates, community TV & council

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mid the ongoing controversy over Princeton Community Television and the municipality’s decision to stop using cable franchise fees to fund the station, one immediate change has been that PCTV no longer provides video of municipal meetings. In early June councilman David Cohen told the Echo’s sister paper, U.S. 1, that the municipality was now doing its own videography at

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PCTV still in limbo

been a long time coming. After a pedestrian fatality there in October, 2017, improvements were undertaken at the intersection, but those led only to more confusion as a person looking to cross in any direction at the intersection is now forced to press a button in order to generate a walk sign. Previous attempts to use the EPP format there have been denied by the state DOT — which has jurisdiction over Nassau Street because it is a state highway, Route 27 — citing concerns about increased traffic congestion. But in June the state finally said yes, and large posters at the intersection instructed pedestrians to push a button to trigger the EPP. Pedestrians then had 39 seconds to make it through the intersection. At the June 10 Princeton Council meeting there was more good news for the downtown scene. Just in time for the onslaught of summer visitors and tour groups, Council passed an ordinance regulating parking for tour busses, which have for years been an eyesore and traffic nuisance as they idled on Nassau Street awaiting their passengers’ return. No more: tour busses now must park on designated parts of Alexander Street between University Place and the southernmost entrance to the Dinky train station, at a rate of $20 per hour. Fines for parking outside of this zone are up to $2,000.

rinceton Community TV (PCTV) is another of Princeton’s jewels in jeopardy. It broadcasts on Comcast Channel 30 and Verizon FIOS Channel 45. Many people don’t fully appreciate its importance. When cablevision was set up, in return for the use of the public right-of-way for hanging its cable, it was agreed that cable television would pay a “rental fee,” and that free public and governmental access channels would be supported by this fee. When cablevision came into its own I was very aware of all this because my dad, Bill Cherry, was a physicist at RCA Good news in the CBD here was some good news in June who had worked on the color TV, and for the often maligned downtown he was also a member of Township Committee. He was chosen to become intersection of Nassau Street, Washchair of the cable TV committee and to ington Road, and Vandeventer Avenue. negotiate an agreement for free public After multiple rejections in the past access, which has been in place ever several years, the state Department of since. Over the dinner table my dad Transportation finally agreed to test would talk about the importance of an “Exclusive Pedestrian Phase,” or public access as a source of freedom of EPP, at the intersection. During an EPP speech and discourse about all kinds of all drivers have a red light, allowing issues. pedestrians to cross the street in any When I returned to Princeton in direction, including diagonally. Front 2000, I was very impressed with the The trial, which started June 10, has amount of programming and creativity HERE’S HERE’S HERE’S YOUR PROOF for at PCTV, YOUR and forPROOF the opportunity HERE’S OCTOBER 5, 2019 7:30PM YOUR PROOF YOUR citizens to be heard. AtPROOF that timeHERE’S there SATURDAY, 60075 SATURDAY, • 7:30PM SAVEOCTOBER THE DATE5, •2019 60075 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2019 • 7:30PM 60075 YOUR PROOF STD Card were around 200 taped per year. STDshows Card 60075 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2019 • 7:30PM STD Card PATRIOTS THEATER AT x 6”h Now PCTV tapes 6509”windividual 9”w xabout 6”h THE FOUNDATION OF MORRIS HALL / ST. LAWRENCE, INC. STD9”w Card x 6”h THE TRENTON WAR THE FOUNDATION OF MORRIS HALL / ST. LAWRENCE, INC. TBD TBD THE FOUNDATION MORRIS HALL / ST. LAWRENCE, INC. presentsOF a benefit concert shows per year on all sorts of topics. 9”wTBD x 6”h presents benefit concert THE FOUNDATION OF aMORRIS HALL / ST. LAWRENCE,MEMORIAL INC. presents a benefit concert St Law St Law Most are interview programs, but the TBDSt Law GENERAL ADMISSION presents a benefit concert wildest is the popular StZombie Etiquette Law It is very important that is very important that TICKET PRICES Program, Ityou where is“high-functioning very you important that review thisIt proof’s review this proof’s February11,201911:08AM RANGE $35-$90 you review this proof’s content for accuracy. content forcomment accuracy. zombies” wearing make-up content for accuracy. Motown's Greatest Hits with vocal quartet Spectrum not responsible We are notthat responsible It is veryof important Call 215-893-1999 or visit cogently onWeaforare variety topics. We are not any errors after forresponsible any errors after you review this proof’s www.ticketphiladelphia.org for any errors after proof approval. proof approval. Over the yearscontent I myself have been for accuracy. to purchase proof approval. This PDF isPlease Note: This PDF is interviewedPlease onNote: several topics by differPlease Note: PDF We are responsible proof quality andnot may For more information proofThis quality andismay quality and may not be suitable for print for proof anyI errors not beafter suitable for printeach about patron tickets or ent moderators. And remember not be suitable for print reproduction. reproduction. proof approval. sponsorships, please reproduction. time being impressed with NOTES the people NOTES contact Jane Millner at Please Note:NOTES This PDF is 609-896-9500, ext 2215 waiting inDotted the “Green Room” for their proof quality andoutline may outline Dotted or jmillner@slrc.org. outline indicates not the Dotted edge and be suitable for print taping. I remember local pastors and indicates the edge and the edge and will not print.indicates will not print.of CounThe concert will benefit the rabbis; mayors andwillreproduction. members not print. patients and residents of NOTES cil, not just from Princeton but from St. Lawrence Rehabilitation Center and Morris Hall. Dotted outline movie critsurrounding communities; B

ongratulations to all the candidates who participated in the Princeton Council Democratic Primary this June. As an independent Democratic candidate for Princeton Council, I look forward to the general election in November when all Princeton voters get to decide who will represent them. We need a fresh, unaligned, and not a conflicted voice concerning municipal issues. An independent will bring competency, transparency, and the urgent need to make Princeton affordable. Competence for municipal projects, transparency for all public undertakings, and the fiscal determination to make Princeton livable for all people are my goals. Someone is needed who will question past practices that do not advance the welfare and stature of Princeton. My priorities shall be schools, safety, taxes, and housing. Too often there is inaction by Council members. We need to send them a message in November. Adam Bierman

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ics, and citizens with a wide varieties of expertise and perspectives. Popular shows have included “Back Story with Joan Goldstein,” “Perdidos in America”, “Education Roundtable”, “Breezing with Bierman,” and many others. And PCTV has easy-to-use cameras to lend out, along with camera training, editing, lighting and sound production; there are many opportunities for those interested in videography. With consolidation PCTV was asked to pay rent out of its cable income and then to become a 501(c)(3). Then Council indicated that it wanted to redirect some of the cable fees to the town treasury, and then all the fees. I hope that the current impasse can be resolved and that our town will continue to support PCTV’s free public access by passing through much of the cable fees as originally intended. The fact is that if we don’t continue to direct cable fees to support public access, the cable industry has begun to say that, then, maybe the industry should stop paying these fees. Let’s not shut the door on one of the key avenues of community discourse, but instead expand and promote its programming. I urge Princeton Council to continue working on an agreement with PCTV. Kip Cherry Dempsey Avenue

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To the editor: PCTV is still best use of franchise fees

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To the editor: An independent voice for Princeton Council

a much lower cost than what the town paid for PCTV’s services. But dedicated viewers of town council meetings, planning board proceedings, and the like may have noticed in recent weeks that no videos had been posted online since the May 28 council meeting — despite verbiage on the town website that videos would be posted within 10 days of each meeting. The reason? The audio equipment wasn’t working. Meanwhile, letters from PCTV’s supporters have continued to roll in. For more, visit the Echo online at www. communitynews.org and on U.S. 1’s website, www.princetoninfo.com.

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ne thing is certain: Princeton Council will have two new members after the November 5 election. Tim Quinn, the lone incumbent seeking re-election, was the lowest vote-getter in the June 4 Democratic primary with 1,318 votes. Newcomer Mia Sacks received the most votes with 1,814, followed by Michelle Pirone Lambros, who ran unsuccessfully for council in 2018, with 1,469 votes. There are no Republicans in the race, but Sacks and Lambros are not guaranteed spots on Council come November. They will be joined on the general election ballot by Adam Bierman, who ran last year as a Democrat but this year has entered the race as an independent. The winners will replace Quinn and current Council president Jenny Crumiller, who did not seek re-election. Following the primary Bierman submitted the following letter:

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July 2019 | Princeton Echo5


Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner •

REAL ESTATE

On Hawthorne Avenue, the house is built, but the trees may go

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ne year ago the Echo was chronicling the struggles of Hawthorne Avenue resident Galina Chernaya, whose prized century-old maple trees faced an uncertain future after developers at the adjacent property disregarded ordinances related to tree protection during demolition (The Echo, July 2018). An investigation last summer by Princeton’s Shade Tree Commission found the developer at 260 Hawthorne, Roman Barsky, to be in violation of the tree protection ordinance and concluded that construction workers had excavated far closer to the property line than called for in the building plan, damaging the roots of Chernaya’s trees at 258 Hawthorne. A year later Chernaya’s trees still stand — for now — and the home next door went on the market for $1,549,000 in May, listed by Ingela Kostenbader of Weichert Realtors. But the struggle is not over for the maples. “We were

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The new home constructed by R.B. Homes at 260 Hawthorne Avenue is now on the market for $1,549,000. The 4,012-square-foot house has a two-car garage, five bedrooms, and four bathrooms.

9,000-square-foot lot includes a backyard with access to Ewing Street. After noting that several other trees were damaged or removed during the construction process, Chernaya points out the great irony she sees in the listing for 260 Hawthorne: “On a quiet tree-lined street a brand new home has been constructed with amazing thought to detail.”

ance to permit construction of a pool enclosure. 20 Bayard Lane, Peacock Operations of Princeton, applicant. Minor site plan with variances for outdoor seating and sheds. 49 Wiggins Street, Alexander Mogilever, trustee of MOG 401K Trust, owner and applicant. C1/C2 variances to permit conversion of an existing sinZoning Board updates gle-family home to a two-family home The Zoning Board was scheduled to in exception to the required minimum hear the following applications at its lot area, lot width, impervious coverJune 26 meeting, after the Echo went to age, and parking setbacks. press. Its July meeting is scheduled for 6 James Court, Jonathan Levy and Wednesday, July 24. Jill Nussbaum, owners and applicants. 321 Brooks Bend, Li trust-A Annie D4 variance to permit the construction YY and Frank Ming, owners and appliPRINCETON FALL 2019of a covered porch in exception to ordicants. A D4 (floor area ratio) vari- nance requirements.

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anxiously waiting for spring to see the extent of the construction damage,” Chernaya says. “While all trees showed a delay in leafing out one of the five impacted maples has been showing signs of serious decline. As a result the municipal arborist authorized removal of three dead limbs from that tree. Fortunately we didn’t have to pay for it since last year’s legal action against RB Homes resulted in a court order to post a $5,000 performance bond for 24 months. It is likely that this tree will not survive another winter and we will have to cut it down next spring.” Next door the brand new house boasts four bedrooms and five bathrooms in its 4,012 square feet. It includes a two-car garage and finished basement with storage space. The main level features open spaces, and the kitchen has stainless steel appliPrinceton Soup &office Sandwich ances. A first-floor could be converted to an additional bedroom. The

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Recent transactions

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he following listings of residential home sales are based on public records and tax files. The number in parentheses after the closing price indicates the amount it was above or below the original listing price. 102 Cherry Hill Road. Seller: Elisabetta Sclapari. Buyer: Camillo De Lellis. Two-story Colonial. 4 bedrooms, 4 baths. $1,370,000 (-$230,000). 14 Wheatsheaf Lane. Seller: James and Marina Tribble. Buyer: Xuan Hu. Two-story Contemporary. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 half baths. $789,000. 11 Bank Street. Seller: Bank Street Properties. Buyer: Francoise and Anton Nelessen. Two-story Craftsman semi-detached home within one block of Nassau Street. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. $550,000. 362 Dodds Lane. Seller: Robert and Eileen Garber. Buyer: Ian and Kelsey Costello. Two-story Colonial in Littlebrook. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. $760,000 (-$28,000). 89 Castle Howard Court. Seller: Christine and Joseph Glazer. Buyer: David Orr and Karen Bennett. Twostory Colonial in Riverside. 5 bedrooms, 4 baths. $1,212,500. 32 Snowden Lane. Seller: Laura Nash and Patricia Hart. Buyer: Peter Hand and Allison Barrier. Two-story Cape Cod in Littlebrook. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. $724,000 ($125,000). 289 Jefferson Road. Seller: Ziad and Nada Hadaya. Buyer: Garden Princeton LLC. Single-family ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. $849,500. 52 Governors Lane. Seller: John Clearwater. Buyer: Daniel Van Abs and Janet Wulster. Townhouse in Governors Lane. 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. $950,000 (-$18,000). 286 Christopher Drive. Seller: Kevin and Susan Taylor. Buyer: Wenyang Wang and Yuchen Lyu. Two-story Colonial in Ettl Farm. 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths. $1,450,000 (-$49,000). 108 Clover Lane. Seller: Rafael Sharon. Buyer: Murphy Pitts Family Trust. Ranch in Littlebrook. 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. $1,100,000 ($100). 48 Dorann Avenue. Seller: Nathalie and Jean-Marie Bruey. Buyer: Eitan and Victoria Leger. Two-story contemporary in Littlebrook. 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. $1,138,000 (-$10,000). 36 Moore Street #16. Seller: Sarah Dobson and Salvatore Fischetti. Buyer: Arturo and Neri Silva. Townhouse close to downtown. 1 bedrooms, 1 bath. $428,000 (-$2,000). 137 Philip Drive. Seller: Hugh and Charlotte Glen. Buyer: Xinhong Luo and Jingying Xu. Two-story Colonial in Riverside. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. $969,000 (-$10,000).

253 Hawthorne Avenue. Seller: Lori and Vincent LaPosta. Buyer: Sarah Dobson and Salvatore Fischetti. Condo walking distance from downtown. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. $731,000 ($32,000). 12 Stonewall Circle. Seller: John and Marian Dorazio. Buyer: Qingsong Yang. Twin/semi-detached in Northridge. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. $825,000 (-$24,500). 610 Snowden Lane. Seller: Mary Longstreth Bayer Trust. Buyer: Charles and Bernice Carr. Single-family home in Herrontown Woods. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. $765,000 (-$84,900). 7 Kimberly Court. Seller: Hans Fiuczynski Estate. Buyer: Bernardo and Heloisa Tavares. Two-story Contemporary in The Glen off Mountain Avenue. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. $1,002,806 (-$16,194). 661 Lawrenceville Road. Seller: Huntington National Bank. Buyer: Amir Rizvi and Naheed Bano. Twostory Colonial near TPC Jasna Polana. 5 bedrooms, 4 baths. $875,000 (-$475,000). 65 Birch Avenue. Seller: Susan Rhoda Agreement Trust. Buyer: Desert Lion LLC. Two-story Traditional in Abbott Commons. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath. $515,000 (-$35,000). 1 Markham Road #2E. Seller: Susan Whyman. Buyer: Wenjie Wang and Qingqing Wei. Condo. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. $555,000 (-$15,000). 200 South Harrison Street. Seller: Julie Cole. Buyer: Robert and Marta Kiszka. Ranch near Princeton Shopping Center. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath. $470,000 (-$83,200). 22 Pelham Street. Seller: Grosso Homes. Buyer: Guangbo Xu and Ning Lin. Two-story Colonial in Riverside. 4 bedrooms, 4 baths. $1,100,000 (-$149,000). 428 Mount Lucas Road. Seller: D&P Private Lending. Buyer: Denny Kim and Irene Hahn. Single-family Colonial. 5 bedrooms, 4.5 baths. $1,480,500 ($30,500). 76 Herrontown Road. Seller: Christopher Nowers and Daniela Matson. Buyer: Pakwai Choi and Wai Ng. Twostory Colonial, Dutch in Littlebrook. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. $910,000 (-$190,000). 945 Great Road. Seller: Seth and Heather Adler. Buyer: Zhaowei Liang and Xiaowei Li. Two-story Contemporary near Stuart Country Day School. 5 bedrooms, 4.5 baths. $1,100,000 (-$395,000). 109 Littlebrook Road. Seller: Ulrich and Mette Otte. Buyer: Bank America and Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems. Two-story Colonial in Carnassa Park. 5 bedrooms, 6.5 baths. $2,175,000 (-$320,000).

PRINCETON Cynthia S Weshnak $600,000 MLS# NJME278184

PRINCETON Norman T Callaway, Jr $1,475,000 MLS# NJME267164

PRINCETON Maura Mills $695,000 MLS# NJME279150

PRINCETON Cleveland Lane $1,595,000 MLS# NJME278532

PRINCETON Aniko Molnar Szakolczai $750,000 MLS# NJME280134

PRINCETON Susan A Cook $1,995,000 MLS# NJME279476

PRINCETON Barbara Blackwell $1,200,000 MLS# NJME277146

PRINCETON Library Place $2,795,000 MLS# NJME266054

PRINCETON Janet Stefandl $1,375,000 MLS# NJME278680

PRINCETON Laura A Huntsman $3,950,000 MLS# NJME268754

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July 2019 | Princeton Echo7


Liberty Island gets a tiger makeover By Aliza Alperin-Sheriff

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fter September 11, 2001, most visitors to Liberty Island found themselves without much to do. Due to security concerns, visitors were no longer allowed to enter the Statue of Liberty’s pedestal, much less climb up into the statue’s iconic crown. Although both the pedestal and the crown have since been reopened to the public, access remains limited and people must make reservations in advance to acquire one of the small number of tickets to visit either the pedestal or the crown. As a result, millions of people who travelled to the island each year left disappointed. Nicholas Garrison, the lead architect of the Statue of Liberty Museum, which opened in May, hopes the new museum will change that. Garrison, a Princeton resident, said, “It was our idea to add to the experience of the island in addition to making a museum — that people would have a better day and experience as part of our project.” Garrison grew up in a large Catholic family in Seattle. His father worked for Boeing as an efficiency expert and his mother stayed home and raised the family’s eight children. He described

Princeton resident Nicholas Garrison, an architect with New York City-based FXCollaborative, led the team that designed the recently opened Statue of Liberty Museum on Liberty Island.

his mother as having “great connections to the Lord above,” that is to say, a very religious woman who kept the family together and his father as “a larger than life person who loved people and kids.” In addition to his day job,

the elder Garrison was an inventor who designed several patented mechanical devices, an amateur biologist who planted 150 fruit and nut trees, and an artist who drew large cartoons on the basement walls of the family’s house.

Garrison inherited his father’s artistic streak. As a child he loved drawing, painting, and making things with his hands. He decided to find a career that would integrate his love for drawing after a visit to an uncle’s law office where he decided that he never wanted to do something so boring. At first he wanted to be a mapmaker. The family had a National Geographic atlas that he loved to look at, and he even tried drawing his own maps. He was disappointed to learn that mapmaking, to the extent that it still existed, was all done by computer and that there was no career in creating beautiful hand-drawn maps. Next, Garrison considered becoming a graphic artist. However, after meeting a few commercial artists and discovering that it was not a particularly lucrative career, he needed a new plan. “They looked starving,” he said, “And it turned out that they were.” Garrison’s next idea was to pursue architecture and the third time, it turned out, was the charm. Working as an architect appealed to Garrison because at the time it was still all done by hand, not by computer. He loved the physicality of the work and the fact that it provided both intellectual and creative fulfillment. He

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also loved that it gave him a chance to surround himself with things that he loved, like the smell of freshly sharpened pencils. Architecture is also what originally brought Garrison to Princeton as a college student. He chose the university because it would give him a chance to explore architecture, but study something else if he found out that he didn’t like it. After graduating in 1980 and working at a few architecture firms, Garrison returned to Princeton University to earn a master of architecture degree in 1983. Next, Garrison moved to Montreal where he joined Peter Rose architecture firm. One of the projects he worked on was designing the Canadian Centre for Architecture, a museum and research institution founded by Phyllis Lambert, scion of the Bronfman family, who owned the Seagram Company. At age 27 Lambert became the project architect for the Seagram Building in New York City — her father’s new corporate offices. She spent her life collecting artifacts related to the subject of architecture and urbanism and eventually created the Canadian Centre for Architecture to display her collection. While working on this project, Garrison spent five years traveling around the country learning museum best practices for lighting, storage, display cases, and more. In the 1990s, as a result of a collapsing world economy and rising separat-

A rendering shows the museum’s rooftop garden, which serves environmental purposes in addition to providing activities for visitors.

ist sentiments in Quebec, Garrison decided to leave Canada. In Canada Garrison had also met and married his wife, Helene Lemieux, who works as a content analyst at Dow Jones in its data strategy division. They moved to Princeton in 1993, when a former professor invited Garrison to work at Hillier Architecture. Garrison was the head of educational design, which involved working on projects for colleges, universities, and libraries. Among the projects that Garrison worked on was the new

Princeton Public Library building that opened in 2004. In 2007 Hillier was sold to the Scottish firm RMJM, which had a total of 1,200 employees before the merger and 1,600 after. Garrison did not feel like he fit into the culture of such a large firm, and in 2009 he joined FXCollaborative, the New York City based firm where, he continues to work. Thanks to his experience working on the Canadian Centre for Architecture and some projects he did during his time at Hillier, Garrison had an

informed background in museum design. After beginning at FXCollaborative, he interviewed for the opportunity to work on the Metropolitan Museum of Art and although he came in second place, he met a lot of people in the city connected to museums. As a result, the head of Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation’s architectural committee invited Garrison’s firm and 12 others to submit museum proposals for a new Statue of Liberty Museum. While in the process of applying, Garrison went to Liberty Island and met with then-superintendent David Luchsinger. Luchsinger explained that the idea for the museum originated when he got tired of visitors yelling at park employees because they couldn’t go up into the statue or otherwise have the experience that they had envisioned. Luchsinger also told Garrison that many people who get off the boat at Liberty Island immediately get on their hands and knees and kiss the ground. This story moved Garrison and impressed upon him the important symbolism of the island and the fact that it was a sacred space. He wanted to create a joyous experience for visitors and an antidote to the frustration that so many people had coming to the island. Garrison believes he was chosen to design the museum over firms that specialize in museums based on the strength of See LIBERTY, Page 10

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their ideas that originated with this key concept. Typically, an exhibit designer for a new museum is hired before the architect and the two work together to try to fit the building to the exhibit that will be housed there. However, the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation put off hiring an exhibit designer until they secured the approval of the numerous entities that needed to sign off on the project to make it a reality. These included both the New Jersey and New York State preservation offices, several Native American communities who had owned the land before the arrival of European settlers, and the National Parks Service. The Foundation also sought approval from the city of New York, even though it wasn’t technically needed, because they wanted to build consensus for the project and avoid potential backlash later on. In order to gain this approval, the Foundation needed a concept design. Therefore, Garrison’s team began to design the building with little knowledge of the exhibit that would eventually be inside. However, even from the beginning, Garrison and his team knew three artifacts that would be part of the museum. The first two were full-scale renderings of the Statue of Liberty’s foot and face made from copper. The foot and face are extremely important artifacts that

One of Garrison’s goals in designing the museum was not to obstruct the view of the Manhattan skyline visitors get when they disembark from the ferry. Construction took two years, and the project cost more than $100 million, most of which was raised through small private donors.

allow visitors to understand the scale solid gold leaf. Then someone got the of the statue and to see how thin the idea to make the flame into an actual copper is and how source of light for the pieces of the New York Harbor, statue were put Three artifacts were key and it was transtogether. But the formed from a third artifact, the to Garrison’s planning: mostly solid obstatue’s original to one made two full-scale renderings ject torch, turned out mostly of glass. to be indispens- of the statue’s foot and The torch corrodable to the museed over the years, um that Garrison face, and the statue’s and when the ended up design- original torch. statue was renoing. vated in the 1980s The original the conservators design for the Statue of Liberty called said that there was no way for them to for the torch to be constructed from restore the torch. It was replaced by a

new, solid torch that resembled the original plans. Garrison and his team considered the torch to be the most significant artifact in the collection both because it had actually been part of the statue and because the torch plays a crucial role in the statue’s symbolic metaphor of liberty enlightening the world. One of the museum’s three galleries was designed to display the torch and therefore specifications like the height of the building and the angling of the glass were chosen to contain the torch, show it off, and make it visible from different locations including outside. When visitors arrive at Liberty Island they get off the boat, come through the arrival pier, and reach an access area that ends in a spectacular view of Manhattan. The view shows the entire skyline — every major monument and tall building. Garrison said that his task in designing the museum was not to spoil this view. He added that the view is especially poignant because it is directly across from the site where the World Trade Center’s Twin Towers once stood. Garrison wanted to honor that view and the profundity of something being missing directly across from the world’s most famous monument to liberty. As a result, visitors turn to the interior of the island in order to see the museum. Building on the island turned out to be harder than Garrison and his team

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thought. First, the existing service dock wasn’t strong enough to carry a concrete truck or a pallet of stone. Because of this, the team had to spend $1 million building their own service dock next to the construction site. Even with their own dock, the logistics of transporting construction materials to the island were not simple. Garrison said that a typical concrete truck can transport between five to eight loads of concrete per day. However, getting the trucks to Liberty Island had unique challenges like waiting for favorable tides and security inspections by park police and K9 and in the end it would take eight hours to make a single delivery. “Our concrete was eight times expensive than anybody else’s concrete” even though there was nothing particularly special about it, Garrison said. Some of the materials that Garrison and his team used for museum pay homage to the statue itself. The granite used in the museum is from the very same quarry that was used to create the base of the statue’s pedestal. Garrison noted that the granite used in the museum was sawcut by machine while the granite in the base had been hand-cut using chisels. “Our granite is the same, but different,” he said. “We are looking both backwards and forwards.” The new museum also incorporates a lot of copper — the material used to create the statue itself. Garrison said that while the cop-

per will eventually turn green, the team In addition to being strong, the glass hopes that it will stay brown as long has a dot pattern designed in conjuncas possible so as to respect the unique tion with ornithologists and the Audugreen patina of the statue. bon Society so birds can identify the Concerns about climate and sustain- surface and not fly into it. The dot patability also played a significant role in tern is subtle, but effective. In the 11 the museum’s design. After Hurricane months it has been up so far there have Sandy, there was apprehension about been no bird deaths, even though the how the building would fare in a simi- island is on a migratory bird path. lar potentially catastrophic event. In The entire roof of the building is order to make sure the building would planted with a meadow of native grassbe safe from es. The plants abstorm surges and sorb water as it rising sea levels, The new museum hits the roof and Garrison and his slows it down and team consulted mixes historic touches filters it so that it with the National — granite from the can be released Parks Services, into the system which looked at same quarry used for in an environthe worst case mentally safe way. scenario for what the original base — The roof has the sea levels will and forward-thinking added benefit of look like in 2100 super-insulating and then built the planning, like protection the building so museum another against future flooding that it never gets two feet above too cold or hot that. or hurricane conditions. and energy costs Additionally, are kept down. the museum’s Garrison’s team base has slats that allow water to go designed the museum to accommodate in and out during an extreme weather the clothing that visitors show up in, event without flooding and therefore so it will be a bit cooler in the winter harming artifacts. The museum was when visitors come in wearing their also built to withstand 130-mile-an- coats and other winter gear, but slightly hour winds, and the glass is so strong warmer in the summer when visitors that it should hold even if a tree gets show up in t-shirts and shorts. This blown into it. does not harm artifacts that need to be

in specific environmental conditions because they are contained in climatecontrolled display cases. Inside the museum, there is an immersive theater with a program that tells the history of the statue. There is also a gallery where visitors can learn about how the statue was made and view a collection of objects that Garrison refers to as propaganda. Namely, these are objects that use the image of the Statue of Liberty to make some sort of political or cultural point. Far from the one-sided narrative someone might expect from the word propaganda, these object show how the statue’s image has been used to bolster all kinds of viewpoints, ideologies, and causes. This underscores the statue’s role as a universally known symbol. In addition to the being environmentally friendly, the museum’s rooftop garden gives visitors more things to do on the island. It is a place where people can enjoy themselves by going for a walk, having a picnic, and exploring the habitat created by native plants and animals living together. The garden harkens back to Garrison’s guiding principle — to make visiting Liberty Island into a joyous experience. Liberty Island is open daily from 8:30 to 5:30 p.m. Access is by ferry only, $18.50 for adults. Museum entry is free. Reservations required for statue access. www.liber tyellisfoundation.org/ statueoflibertymuseum.

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Monday July 1 Master Class with David Paul, Westminster Choir College, Robert L. Annis Playhouse, 101 Walnut Lane, Princeton. www.rider.edu/wcc. Class with the director of opera, theater, and film as part of the CoOPERAtive program. Free. 7:30 p.m.

Tuesday July 2

Tuesday International Folk Dancing, Princeton Folk Dance, Princeton YWCA, 59 Paul Robeson Place, Princeton, 609-9211702. www.princetonfolkdance.org. Dances ity of many countries with original music. No 58- partner needed. Beginners of all ages wel- 7/1 • David Paul Master Class Summer Courtyard Concert Series, Arts come. Lesson followed by dance. $5. Weekly Council of Princeton, Princeton Shopping on Tuesdays. 7:30 p.m. Center, 301 North Harrison Street, 609-924NY Brass Arts Trio, Princeton Universi8777. www.artscouncilofprinceton.org. Big ty Summer Chamber Concerts, Richardson Country & the Finger Pick’n Good Band. Bring Auditorium, Princeton University, 609-570a lawn chair. 6 to 8 p.m. 8404. www.princetonsummberchamberconDeathtrap, Princeton Summer Theater, certs.org. Free. 7:30 p.m. Hamilton Murray Theater, Princeton UniverWednesday July 3 sity, 732-997-0205. www.princetonsummerTea and Tour, Morven Museum, 55 theater.org. Follow Sidney Bruhl, a washedStockton Street, Princeton, 609-924-8144. up playwright on a descent into murder and www.morven.org. A docent-led tour of intrigue as he stops at nothing in his quest for the museum followed by tea and refresh- success. $29.50. Also July 5, 6, 7, 11, 12, 13, 14, ments. Registration required. $22. Weekly on 17, 18, 19, 20, and 21. 8 p.m. Wednesdays. 1 p.m.

Friday July 5

Learning to Love, Fellowship in Prayer, Garden Tours, Morven Museum, 55 291 Witherspoon Street, Princeton. www. Stockton Street, Princeton, 609-924-8144. philapathwork.org. Free discussion group www.morven.org. 45-minute tour of what’s based on the spiritual teachings of Pathwork. in bloom in the gardens. $10. Register. WeekRegister to adpathwork@gmail.com. 7 p.m. ly through October 4. 11 a.m. Operatic Arias Concert, Westminster Tiffany Window Tours, Princeton Choir College, Bristol Chapel, 101 Walnut United Methodist Church, 7 Vandeventer Lane, Princeton. www.rider.edu/wcc. ParticiAvenue, Princeton, 609-924-2613. www. pants in the CoOPERAtive program perform princetonumc.org. See Saint George and the arias from familiar and not-as-well-known Dragon and other stained glass windows. Apoperas. Free. 7:30 p.m. pointments also available. Free tours every 15 minutes. Weekly on Fridays and Sundays. Thursday July 4 Noon to 2 p.m. Independence Day. Folk Dance, Princeton Folk Dance, SuFourth of July Jubilee, Morven Muse- zanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, um, 55 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609-924- Princeton, 609-912-1272. www.princeton8144. www.morven.org. Meet Annis Boudi- folkdance.org. Beginners welcome. Lesson not Stockton, Revolutionary photo booth, followed by dance. No partner needed. $5. 8 sign the Declaration of Independence, games to 11 p.m. and prizes, bluegrass music, food, tours of Morven, and more. Free. Noon to 3 p.m.

7/2 • NY Brass Arts Trio, Princeton University Summer Chamber Concerts eton, 609-924-7108. www.princetonsenior. org. Hilary Murray presents “senior living Art for Families, Princeton University housing options.” Register. Free. 1 p.m. Art Museum, Princeton University. artmuMinding the Gap, Princeton Public Liseum.princeton.edu. Gallery activities folbrary, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, lowed by a related art project. All ages. Free. 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Every Saturday. 10:30 a.m. A coming-of-age documentary about three Summer Stage, Green at Palmer skateboarding friends in their industrial MidSquare, Princeton, www.palmersquare.com. west hometown. Free. 6:30 p.m. Strictly 60s. Free. Noon to 2 p.m. Meetings, PFLAG Princeton, Trinity Church, 33 Mercer Street, Princeton. www. Sunday July 7 pflagprinceton.org. Support group for famiSummer Carillon Series, Princeton lies and friends of lesbian, gay, bisexual, University Carillon, 88 College Road West, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) individuals. Princeton, 609-258-7989. Liesbeth Janssens, Peer-facilitated discussion and information Belgium. Free. 1 p.m. sharing in a safe, confidential, non-judgmenHistoric Princeton Walking Tour, Bain- tal setting. 7 p.m. bridge House, 158 Nassau Street, Princeton. www.princetonhistory.org. $7. Register. Tuesday July 9 Weekly on Sundays. 2 p.m. Four Rabbis at Lunch: Candid Conversations among American Clergy, PrincMonday July 8 eton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, FYI Seminar, Princeton Senior Re- Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonliSee EVENTS, Page 13 source Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princ-

Saturday July 6

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APPENING 7/6 • Strictly 60s on the green at Palmer Square

Wednesday July 10

Thursday July 11

One Giant Leap: The Impossible Mission that Flew Us to the Moon, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 7/4 • Annis Boudinot Stockton at Morven’s July 4 Jubilee Princeton, 609-924-9529. Author Charles Mindful Prayer/Meditation Mincha, Fishman discusses and signs copies of his EVENTS, continued from page 12 The Jewish Center Princeton, 435 Nassau book. Free. 7 p.m. brary.org. Rabbi Dov Peretz Elkins discusses Street, Princeton, 609-921-0100. PsycholoContra Dance, Princeton Country Danchis novel, which chronicles the weekly lun- gist Ruth Goldston leads a mindfulness ses- ers, Suzanne Patterson Center, 1 Monument cheons of an Orthodox rabbi, two Conserva- sion that focuses on words, texts, and ideas Drive, Princeton. Instruction at 7:30 p.m. $10. tive rabbis, and a Reformed rabbi who meet associated with the Shabbat afternoon or Also July 17, 24, and 31. 8 p.m. for lunch once a week. Free. 7 p.m. weekday evening services. 7:30 p.m.

Princeton Farmers Market, Princeton Public Library, Hinds Plaza, 55 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonfarmersmarket.com. Fresh produce, live music, community organizations, and more. Weekly on Thursdays. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Princeton Mercer Chamber, Princeton Marriott, 609-924-1776. Christopher K. Stangl of the FBI on countering economic espionage. $75, $50 members. 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.

See EVENTS, Page 14

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7/9 • Rabbi Dov Peretz Elkins

7/11 • Rock singer Essie

Black Voices Book Group, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Summer Courtyard Concert Series, Arts Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonliCouncil of Princeton, Princeton Shopping brary.org. “Stamped from the Beginning: The Center, 301 North Harrison Street, 609-924- Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America” 8777. www.artscouncilofprinceton.org. Essie by Ibram X. Kendi. Free. 7:15 p.m. with rock/blues. Bring a lawn chair. 6 to 8 Argentine Tango, Viva Tango, Suzanne p.m. Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, PrincDueling Pianos, Green at Palmer eton, 609-948-4448. www.vivatango.org. Square, Princeton, www.palmersquare.com. No partner necessary. Beginners welcome. Two pianists perform an all-request sing- $15. 8 p.m. along in the green. Happy hour on the green from 5 to 9 p.m. Picnic-style meals available Friday July 12 from Olsson’s and Princeton Soup & SandWhat Does It Mean To Be An Ameriwich. 6 to 8 p.m. can?, Morven Museum and Garden, 55

EVENTS, continued from page 13

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7/12 • Rolston String Quartet, Princeton University Summer Chamber Concerts Stockton Street, Princeton. www.morven. org. Dr. Heather Casey of University and Morven curator Debra Lampert-Rudman facilitate a conversation on what it means to be American. Free. Noon. Shabbat Under the Stars, The Jewish Center, 435 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609921-0100. www.thejewishcenter.org. Outdoor summer kabbalat shabbat services followed by a potluck dinner. Bring a dairy side dish or dessert. 6:30 p.m.

Summer Carillon Series, Princeton University Carillon, 88 College Road West, Princeton, 609-258-7989. The Treblemakers — Duet Carillonneurs Lisa Lonie, Princeton University, and Janet Tebbel, Philadelphia. Free. 1 p.m. Princeton Battlefield Tour, Princeton Battlefield State Park, 500 Mercer Street, Princeton. www.pbs1777.org. Learn about the Battle of Princeton, which ended the Ten Crucial Days that began with Washington’s crossing of the Delaware River. $7. 1 p.m.

Rolston String Quartet, Princeton UniShakespeare in the Park: Coriolanus, versity Summer Chamber Concerts, Richardson Auditorium, Princeton University, Amphitheater, Community Park North, 609-570-8404. www.princetonsummber- Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. The Hudson Shakespeare Comchamberconcerts.org. Free. 7:30 p.m. pany presents the tale of war, politics, honor, Folk Dance, Princeton Folk Dance, Suand revenge set in an Amazonian outpost zanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, with an all-female cast. Free. 6 p.m. Princeton, 609-912-1272. www.princetonfolkdance.org. Beginners welcome. Lesson Monday July 15 followed by dance. No partner needed. $5. 8 FYI Seminar, Princeton Senior Resource to 11 p.m. Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609924-7108. “NJ Compassionate Use Medical Saturday July 13 Marijuana Act” presented by Ken Wolski RN, Summer Stage, Green at Palmer executive director and co-founder of the CoSquare, Princeton, www.palmersquare.com. alition for Medical Marijuana-New Jersey, Inc. JB Rocks from Ewing. Free. Noon to 2 p.m. Register. Free. 1 p.m. Citizens’ Climate Lobby Meeting, Anticipating Apollo: The Military OriUnitarian Universalist Congregation of gin of American Space Science, Princeton Princeton, 50 Cherry Hill Road, Princeton, Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-240-2425. citizensclimatelobby.org/ Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonchapters/NJ_Princeton/. Nonprofit, nonlibrary.org. Space historian and Princeton partisan, grassroots advocacy organization. University postdoctoral fellow Jordan Bimm 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. presents a lecture on the military origin of the English Country Dances, Princeton United States space program. Free. 7 p.m. Country Dancers, Suzanne Patterson CenScandiDance, Princeton Country Dancter, 1 Monument Drive, Princeton. www. ers, Christ Congregation Church, 50 Walnut princetoncountrydancers.org. Instruction at Lane, Princeton. www.princetoncountry7:30 p.m. $11. 8 p.m. dancers.org. $10. 8 p.m.

Sunday July 14 Bastille Day.

Bastille Day Celebration, Alliance Francaise Princeton, Turning Basin Park, Alexander Road, Princeton. www.allianceprinceton. com. French music, games, and food. Bring a picnic lunch and a dish to share. $10. Send an email to Carla at membership@allianceprinceton.com to register. Noon.

Wednesday July 17 Princeton Mercer Chamber, Nassau Club of Princeton, 609-924-1776. www.princetonmercerchamber.org. Karl Alexander of Zagster, $40, $25 member. 7:30 to 9:30 a.m. Summer Book Group, Lutheran Church of the Messiah, 407 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-924-3642. “The Remains of the Day” by Kazuo Ishiguro. 7:30 p.m.


7/14 • Lisa Lonie on the Carillon at Princeton University

7/20 • Some Assembly Required on the green at Palmer Square

Thursday July 18

Argentine Tango, Viva Tango, Suzanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, Summer Courtyard Concert Series, Arts Princeton, 609-948-4448. www.vivatango. Council of Princeton, Princeton Shopping org. No partner necessary. Beginners welCenter, 301 North Harrison Street, 609-924- come. $15. 8 p.m. 8777. www.artscouncilofprinceton.org. The Blue Meanies Beatles tribute band. Bring a Friday July 19 lawn chair. 6 to 8 p.m. Women in Retirement, Princeton SeDueling Pianos, Green at Palmer nior Resource Center, 45 Stockton Street, Square, Princeton, www.palmersquare.com. Princeton, 609-924-7108. www.princetonTwo pianists perform an all-request sing- senior.org. Carol Rickard, LCSW, presents along in the green. Happy hour on the green “Mindfulness Made Simple.” 10:30 a.m. from 5 to 9 p.m. Picnic-style meals available Transition to Retirement, Princeton Sefrom Olsson’s and Princeton Soup & Sandnior Resource Center, 45 Stockton Street, wich. 6 to 8 p.m. Princeton, 609-924-7108. Group addresses

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University Carillon, 88 College Road West, Princeton, 609-258-7989. Gijsbert Kok, the Summer Stage, Green at Palmer Netherlands. Free. 1 p.m. Square, Princeton, www.palmersquare.com. See EVENTS, Page 16

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July 2019 | Princeton Echo15


EVENTS, continued from page 15

Monday July 22 FYI Seminar, Princeton Senior Resource Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609-924-7108. www.princetonsenior. org. “Nutritional Issues Related to Dementia” presented by Judy Brennan, RN. Register. Free. 1 p.m. Apollo 11, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-9249529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Documentary about the 1969 Apollo 11 mission, the first spacelfight to land humans on the moon. Free. 6:30 p.m. Elvis in Vegas: How the King Reinvented the Las Vegas Show, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Author Richard Zoglin challenges the conventional wisdom that Las Vegas destroyed Elvis Presley. Free. 7 p.m.

7/25 • Alborada Spanish Dance Theater at the Arts Council’s Summer Courtyard Concert Series at the Shopping Center A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Princeton Summer Theater, Hamilton Murray Theater, Princeton University, 732-997-0205. www.princetonsummertheater.org. Musical Dueling Pianos, Green at Palmer reinvention of one of Shakespeare’s bestSquare, Princeton. Two pianists perform an loved plays. $29.50. Also July 26, 27, 28, and all-request sing-along in the green. Happy 31, and August 1, 2, 3 and 4. 8 p.m. hour on the green from 5 to 9 p.m. PicnicArgentine Tango, Viva Tango, Suzanne style meals available from Olsson’s and PrincPatterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton Soup & Sandwich. 6 to 8 p.m. eton, 609-948-4448. www.vivatango.org. Twilight Walking Tours, Morven MuNo partner necessary. Beginners welcome. Summer Courtyard Concert Series, Arts seum, 55 Stockton Street, Princeton. www. $15. 8 p.m. Council of Princeton, Princeton Shopping morven.org. Travel through the grounds of Center, 301 North Harrison Street, 609- the museum to explore architecture, garden, 924-8777. www.artscouncilofprinceton.org. and buildings. $10. 7 p.m.

Street, Princeton. www.morven.org. Celebrate the 50th anniversary of the moon landing with a story and craft. For children ages Tuesday July 23 3 to 6. $10 for two adults with up to three SoSi Concert, Princeton Public Library, children. Register. 11 a.m. 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924Princeton Mercer Chamber, Make-A9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Performers Wish New Jersey, 1347 Perrineville Road, from the So Percussion’s Summer Institute Monroe, 609-924-1776. www.princetonmerpresent new and classic percussion pieces. cerchamber.org. Networking. $25, $15 memFree. 7 p.m. bers. 5 to 7 p.m.

Thursday July 25 America’s Space Hero: Buzz Aldrin Storytime, Morven Museum, 55 Stockton

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If you’re like millions of other family caregivers, you want the best care for your aging loved one. But getting that care can be frustrating. You know what it’s like to drive your loved one to different appointments. You know managing medications and coordinating care between doctors can be challenging. And you struggle with leaving your loved one at home alone during the day. It doesn’t have to be this way. LIFE St. Francis can coordinate all the care and services your loved one needs, so you don’t have to place them in a nursing home.

The LIFE team will: • Make a special healthcare plan for and with each participant. • Manage all healthcare services for participants. • Help participants to live safely in the community. Participants receive all healthcare services from LIFE St. Francis. Other than emergency care, all services must be authorized by the care team. A provider within the LIFE network must deliver these services. Participants may be liable for the payment of unauthorized or out-of-network services. Call LIFE St. Francis at 609-599-LIFE (5433) The LIFE Center is an important part of this program. It is located at 7500 Kevin Johnson to see if you or your family member is eligible. Boulevard in Bordentown. Here, seniors Or visit us at www.stfrancismedical.org/LIFE. receive health care, nutritious meals, and participate in activities with others so they may remain active, socialize and make new friends. The LIFE Center provides one location where doctors, nurses and other healthcare professionals can provide treatment and monitor changes in an individual’s health. Transportation to the Center is included.

Alborada Spanish Dance Theater with Spanish music and flamenco dance. Bring a lawn chair. 6 to 8 p.m.

Are you55 55years years Are you or older and live in Mercer or older and live or in Burlington County? Princeton? You may qualify for LIFE ST. FRANCIS. LIFE St. Francis is a health care solution for seniors to help them continue to live at home as long as possible. LIFE provides: • Comprehensive and coordinated medical and nursing care • Socialization and caregiver support • Home and personal care • Physical, occupational and recreation therapy • Transportation to and from all medical appointments • Prescription coverage and more!

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16 Princeton Echo | July 2019


of Westmins

7/27 • Blue Jersey Band at Halo Pub

7/29 • ‘First Man’ Apollo 11 film screening at Princeton Public Library

Summer Stage, Green at Palmer No partner necessary. Beginners welcome. Square, Princeton, www.palmersquare.com. $15. 11 a.m. Folk Dance, Princeton Folk Dance, Su- Big Valley Bluegrass from Lehigh Valley. Free. Princeton Battlefield Tour, Princeton zanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, Noon to 2 p.m. Battlefield State Park, 500 Mercer Street, Princeton, 609-912-1272. www.princetonBlue Jersey Band, Halo Pub, 9 Hulfish Princeton. www.pbs1777.org. Learn about the folkdance.org. Beginners welcome. Lesson Street, Princeton. www.bluejerseyband.com. Battle of Princeton, which ended the camfollowed by dance. No partner needed. $5. 8 Performing swing, gypsy jazz, bluegrass, and paigns of the Ten Crucial Days that began to 11 p.m. blues. Free. 6 p.m. with Washington’s crossing of the Delaware River. $7. 1 p.m. Saturday July 27

Monday July 29

Summer Carillon Series, Princeton Victorian Pressed Flower Workshop, Brunch Milonga, Viva Tango, Suzanne University Carillon, 88 College Road West, Morven Museum, 55 Stockton Street, PrincPatterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princ- Princeton, 609-258-7989. Jan Verheyen, Beleton, 609-924-8144. Curator Debra Lameton, 609-948-4448. www.vivatango.org. gium. Free. 1 p.m. pert-Rudman teaches how to create pressed Argentine tango dancing. Brunch included. flower art. $25. Register. 11 a.m.

Afternoons with Austen: Pride and Prejudice, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-9249529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Screening of the 2005 film, plus refreshments. Free. 3 p.m.

Friday July 26

Sunday July 28

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First Man, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-9529. Biographical drama following the years leading up to the Apollo 11 mission to the moon in 1969. Directed by Princeton High School alumnus Damien Chazelle. Free. 6:30 p.m.

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July 2019 | Princeton Echo17


RETAIL SCENE

At Princeton’s newest flower shop, community blossoms By Philip Sean Curran

I

n a building where Town Topics newspaper was once produced, Aakash Kanjani does a little bit of everything at his job in a flower shop at 305 Witherspoon Street. The doors opened in early June to Vaseful Flowers and Gifts, a store with flowers as one-of-a-kind as the people who work there. Beyond the scent of roses or the appealing glass exterior that lets passersby see inside, Vaseful has a mission to give work to people with disabilities. The business was started by Community Options, a West Windsorbased nonprofit that provides jobs and housing to the disabled in New Jersey and 10 other states. Founded in 1989, the organization today has about 6,000 employees, serves 3,500 people, and operates with a budget of roughly $200 million. This Vaseful store is the second that Community Options has opened in the state. The first was in New Brunswick, in 1999, but it subsequently relocated to Edison on Route 1. Like with any business, Vaseful seeks to provide employees with the right jobs matching their abilities. “When you look at the actual job itself of flowers, there’s a multitude of tasks that can be broken down that can fit the individual’s needs,” said Robert Stack, president and CEO of Community Options and a Princeton resident. “So let’s just say you have a person that happens to be high on the autistic scale and he can’t speak, maybe he can wash the refrigeration units down. Maybe he wants to count the vases and do inventory.” The aim is eventually to hire 12 employees with disabilities at the store, all under the watchful eye of a program manager, Nicole Young, and a professional florist, Kathleen Angelinovich. Kanjani works at the shop five days a week, from Monday to Friday, as a floral trainee. He called working there “pretty good” and said his duties include feeding the flowers, putting them in vases, and sweeping the floors. Jose Saez, another employee, felt it was exciting to be a part of a new business. Employees work part-time, 20 hours a week, and get paid at the state minimum wage. Their tasks run the gamut, like working the cash register, keeping the store clean, and making deliveries — all intended to build job skills that they can take to their next employer. “This is a stepping stone for them, so we’re looking for them to gain competitive employment outside of here,” Young said. “So this is their training ground. This is where it all gets started. This is where they get the taste of what employment is.”

18 Princeton Echo | July 2019

Top, Community Options CEO Robert Stack speaks at Vaseful’s ribbon cutting. Above, employees at work in the store, which plans to hire a total of 12 employees with disabilities.

They work with the flowers too, said and loves her job at a daycare center. In Angelinovich, who has spent 30 years 2018 the unemployment rate nationally in the flower business. Before this job, for the disabled was 8 percent, comshe was a floral manager for a ShopRite pared to 3.7 percent for those without in Neptune. a disability, the federal government re“They’re learning about processing ported earlier this year. the flowers, cutting them, hydrating “Giving people with disabilities them, the different names, different va- an opportunity to gain employment rieties,” she said. “I think for me walk- matters a great deal because people ing into this, it was with disabilities a flower shop, but it have the ability was so much more. ‘What we try to do is to work,” he said. It was just so much “Really looking create relationships more of an opporbeyond the distunity for me to get where people with ability and looking to do this and get a (at) what the perdisabilities can meet sense of purpose.” son is able to do Community Op- the general public and is critically importions purchased tant to get people the current Vase- forge relationships.’ with disabilities ful site five years into the working ago and first used world.” it as temporary offices. Stack said his The store gets its flowers from local vision was always to make it a flower wholesalers and is home to 20 varieties. store, a step that required getting a A large walk-in refrigerator keeps the variance from the town and renovating flowers cool. Customers can make orthe building. ders for special or important occasions At a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the or buy something already prepared to store’s grand opening on June 5, state grab and go. Senate President Stephen M. Sweeney “We have to break even after we pay said he was proud of his adult daugh- the staff and after we pay for everyter, Lauren, who has Down syndrome thing,” Stack said.

Vaseful is not the only business in town with this kind of mission. Blue Bears Special Meals, a restaurant that opened this year in the Princeton Shopping Center, employs adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities (see the Echo, June 2019). For Stack, working with the special needs community started when he was a teenager. Growing up in Pittsburgh, where his father was a milkman, he thought he wanted to be a priest, and at an age when most children are still in middle school, he began attending a seminary in Butler, Pennsylvania, when he was 12. On his time off when he was not taking class, he volunteered working at a home for disabled children. He decided being a priest was not for him and enrolled in public high school. He earned a degree in philosophy at the University of Dayton and spent some time teaching, but ultimately returned to his original calling. Eventually he worked as the executive director at United Cerebral Palsy of New Jersey and later for the state in the Department of Human Services. At the time, New Jersey was second in the nation for number of people with developmental disabilities living in institutions, and Stack’s job was to try to get them out of those facilities. “New Jersey was horrifically behind in its de-institutionalization movement,” he said. “And what I realized very early on was that there weren’t any agencies that wanted to deal with people who had significant disabilities.” In 1989, when he was 32, he formed Community Options out of “nothing,” in his words, out of his row home in Bordentown. He wrote the bylaws and the articles of incorporation and came up with the name of the organization. “We opened up the first three houses in New Jersey, and that was the toughest time because we had to wait for money,” he said. “And so I had to mortgage my house and just take everything I had in order to sink this in there. We had no money at all.” The mission of the organization has not changed since then: to provide housing and employment for people with disabilities. “People with disabilities have the same problem as celebrities — they’re surrounded by people who are paid to be around them,” Stack said. “And so what we try to do is create relationships where people with disabilities can meet the general public and forge relationships, either with other people with disabilities or anyone in the community.” Vaseful, 305 Witherspoon Street. Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Closed Sundays. 609-751-9800 or www.vasefulprinceton.com.


FOOD AND DRINK Bon Appetit kiosk opens by Carnevale Plaza

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rinceton’s newest kiosk has been a long time coming. It was late 2016 when Bon Appetit, the longtime purveyor of gourmet foods at Princeton Shopping Center, announced plans to construct a kiosk outside the Carnevale Plaza apartments being constructed at the east end of Nassau Street. The apartments opened in 2017, and a kiosk appeared in the plaza, where it sat, shuttered and unadorned, awaiting equipment and permits — until May, 2019. Now it’s time to bring your appetite. The menu is heavy on carbohydrates, and the servings are sizable. Stop by at breakfast time and chalkboard crepe and waffle menus hang from the brick exterior. Crepes, $6.99 to $9.99, are divided between savory options such as the Popeye (prosciutto, goat cheese, baby spinach, roasted red peppers, and tomato) and sweet options such as the Italian Banana (nutella and fresh sliced banana). The waffles operate with a similar dichotomy: savory options include the Pig and Cloud (creme fraiche, bacon, and salted caramel sauce); sweet options come topped with fruit, chocolate, and other treats. The kiosk also serves croissants and other pastries.

day last October and never reopened; before that it was Cheeburger Cheeburger. But the proprietors of its latest incarnation, Spice Grill, are hoping the third time is the charm. Like Marhaba, which already had a popular location in Lambertville, Spice Grill has already established its presence in Parsippany, where it first opened in 2006. The Morris Countybased couple behind Spice Grill has years of restaurant experience. Gajinder Singh Chauhan worked for years at restaurants in his native India, then spent five years working on cruise lines before moving to the United States in 1993. He managed a restaurant in New York for 13 years before opening the first Spice Grill with his wife, Hazel Dias, in 2006. The Princeton restaurant offers lunch, dinner, and takeout and catering options. The dinner menu includes traditional Indian stews like vindaloo, The Bon Appetit kiosk outside the Carnevale Plaza apartments at 255 Nassau korma, and saag, served over rice with Street is open daily with savory and sweet crepes, waffles, and baguettes. vegetarian, chicken, goat, and seafoodbased options, ranging in price from In the afternoon the kiosk offers New restaurant tries its $11.95 to $19.95, as well as kababs, baguette sandwiches, from the classic breads, and appetizers. Spice Grill also tomato, mozzarella, and basil to tur- luck at 182 Nassau key, brie, and mango chutney. Sandt’s been a revolving door for restau- offers “Indo-Chinese” appetizers such wiches are $6.99 to $8.99. Also availrants at 182 Nassau Street since the as chicken and vegetable spring rolls. able throughout the day are a range of Carousel Diner closed in 2012. Most The lunch menu offers kati rolls — hot and iced espresso and coffee-based recently it was the Middle Eastern spot lamb, chicken, or vegetarian wraps — drinks. See FOOD, Page 20 Marhaba, which closed its doors one

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July 2019 | Princeton Echo19


FOOD, continued from page 19

rice-based biryanis, and special lunch platters ($12.95 to $16.95). Spice Grill joins Princeton’s sizable contingent of existing Indian restaurants, the closest of which is Mehek at 164 Nassau Street. It will also compete with Chennai Chimney at 19 Chambers Street, Tandoori Bite at 36 Witherspoon Street, and Cross Culture in the Princeton Shopping Center. Spice Grill, 182 Nassau Street. Open daily, 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. and 5 to 10:30 p.m. 609-250-7152 or www.spicegrillprinceton.com.

Chinese food with a Louisiana twist

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nother in the recurring theme of the ever-evolving restaurants in downtown Princeton is the Chinese restaurant at 238 Nassau Street. While the decor has remained largely unchanged, the spot has gone through numerous name changes since Ivy Garden left the spot seven years ago. Earlier this spring the Eps Corner sign that most recently hung above the restaurant’s front door changed to a sign that reads Seafood Boil. The new restaurant still serves the Chinese specialties that restaurants in that spot have long been known for, but it has also added its namesake seafood

boil. The concept: take your pick of 11 shellfish options — different varieties of crab and shrimp, lobster, clams, or mussels — a seasoning, a spice level, and any add-ons like mushrooms, lotus root, or sausage, and receive a massive plate of fish prepared to your specifications. Costs are based on market prices for most items. Seafood Boil, 238 Nassau Street. Monday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. 609-921-2388.

Diesel and Duke takes 30 Burgers’ spot

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n your marks, get set, spill! The ninth annual Princeton Waiters’ Race honors the hard workers in Princeton’s restaurants and puts on a show for onlookers on Thursday, July 18, at 4 p.m. at Princeton Shopping Center. Waitstaff from Princeton’s restaurants will race while balancing trays with glasses full of water. At stake? Cash, prizes, and bragging rights until next year. The event is organized by the Princeton Merchants Association. Learn more at www.princetonmerchants.org.

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Terra Momo Bread Company expands

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nd another notable Princeton restaurant group is spreading its influence. The Terra Momo group, which includes restaurants Mediterra, Teresa Caffe, and Eno Terra as well as the eponymous bread company, is set to open a new branch of the bread company at the Trenton Farmers Market, where it will join an eclectic collection of shops and eateries.

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fter 30 Burgers left its Nassau Street location in favor of a spot at Quaker Bridge Mall, it didn’t take long for a new burger joint to take its place. Diesel and Duke, which already has locations in New Brunswick, Jersey City, Caldwell, and Montclair, offers cleverly named burgers ranging from the standard — lettuce, tomato, American cheese, ketchup, aioli — to the one-of-a-kind, like the S.P.B.B., which combines sriracha, peanut butter, and bacon. On the horizon: Diesel and Duke is also one of several Kristine’s is coming area establishments that now offers the “Impossible” burger, a vegetarian burgrogress is being made on Kristine’s, er invented by California-based Imposthe latest restaurant from Jack Morsible Foods that has achieved massive rison’s JM Group, which will be located popularity for how well it imitates the adjacent to Witherspoon Grill in the

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taste and texture of a beef-based burger. It’s also served with lettuce, tomato, American cheese, ketchup, and aioli. Burgers cost $7.49 to $10.49, extra toppings are $1, and an extra patty is $3. Diesel & Duke, 124 Nassau Street. Open Monday through Thursday, 11:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Friday, 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m.; Saturday, noon to 10 p.m.; Sunday, noon to 9 p.m. 609-921-3300. www.eatdiesel.com.

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July 2019 | Princeton Echo21


PARTING SHOT

Learning traditions By Pia de Jong

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raditions with which you did not grow up lack a certain nostalgic magic. So I manage not to get overly excited at the annual Memorial Day barbecue on our block after the war veterans’ parade. Or by the fusillades of lethal fireworks in our backyard on Independence Day. Never mind crowding onto a sofa to share pigs in a blanket with my neighbors while watching the Super Bowl. Alas, I even have few warm and fuzzy family feelings about pouring thick gravy over the Thanksgiving turkey. You simply cannot long for something that you did not experience when you were growing up in Europe. This is also the case with the senior prom, the ritualistic extravaganza with which high school students all across America close the book on high school. For my family, this year was the third and last time we experienced it, first our two boys, this time with our graduating daughter in the starring role. The rituals surrounding the prom are mysterious and puzzling to my eyes but are loaded with emotional wallop for the high school kids — and their parents. Preparations start about a year in advance. But the logistics are not

22 Princeton Echo | July 2019

just about signing up the right escort. This is accompanied by a whole arsenal of feelings, from genuine jealousy and fear of rejection to relief when the choice is finally made. For girls this stress runs highest when selecting a prom dress. This choice must follow strict school rules of decorum and square inches of bare skin. What it comes down to is that just about nothing can be exposed. In comparison, renting a tuxedo for our sons was child’s play at the time. But boys have their own angst — the perilous moment when they invite their desired date in the most charming way possible. This happens under the watchful eye of giggling girlfriends who immediately post everything on Instagram. Before you know it, your embarrassingly awkward attempt is exposed to the whole world.

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s the P-Day approaches, tensions continue to rise. Parents consult nervously about renting limousines and photographers and inspect their garden again for poison ivy, before the pre-prom party. The administrators at the high school send reassuring letters about Breathalyzers. The celebrating students must do a breath test both before and after the ball so that no one

will be able to smuggle in a hip flask of vodka. This makes me slightly uneasy. On the morning of the prom, a ghastly tableau of a fake car accident appears in front of the school as a warning, with a real smashed-up car and dummies as bleeding victims. The day of the prom is busy with dressing, make-up, fiddling with boutonnieres, and, in our case, last-minute showers for a couple of girls who slathered on too much bronzer. We parents look at all this with very mixed feelings. We know from experience that all those couples who pose for photographs today as if they are getting married will lose sight of each other tomorrow. And how pushy those other parents are. All this unnecessary hassle.

Illustration by Eliane Gerrits

But suddenly there she is: my daughter, shining in her dress. How beautiful she is. And so soon after when, as a 12-year-old year old with braces, she walked into a Princeton school for the first time. I hear myself calling, “Wait, another photo. Just one.” But she is already leaving. And then I cry, just like all fathers and mothers. Can I already sense my future nostalgia for the prom? Pia de Jong is a Dutch writer who lives in Princeton. Her bestselling memoir, “Saving Charlotte,” was published in the U.S. in 2017. She can be contacted at pdejong@ias.edu.


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Advertise for $59 a month. For more information, call 609-396-1511 ext. 110. QUALITY IS STILL AFFORDABLE!

JIM GENDEK

PAINTING CONTRACTOR POWERWASHING DECKS • FENCES • HOMES

INTERIOR / EXTERIOR PAINTING ALL WORK OWNER-OPERATED

CELL 609-290-5687

OFFICE 609-921-8030

S. Giordano’S ConStruCtion Fully Insured

Free Estimates

Custom Homes remodeling additions Bathrooms

Kitchens roofing Windows doors

Siding • Sun Rooms • Custom Decks Sam Giordano

Lic#13VH02075700

609-893-3724

www.giordanosconstruction.com

July 2019 | Princeton Echo23

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1179 NEWARK, NJ

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24 Princeton Echo | July 2019


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