9-19 PE

Page 1

ECHO

ARTS

>

PRINCETON

CULTURE

>

LIFESTYLE

S EPTEMBER 2019

Jersey’s Main Squeeze Princeton celebrates the tomato, page 18. Rage on the Ridge

The Storyteller’s Story

Back to School

Neighbors are vehemently opposed to a proposed development off Herrontown Road. Attorney Bruce Afran is on the case. Page 5

Kathryn Weidener of the New Jersey Storytelling Network explains how to engage an audience in the age of distraction. Page 8

School is back in session. Set your kids up for success with advice from area leaders in education. Special Section


ECHO color to dye for Phone: (609) 396-1511 Fax: (609) 844-0180 Website: communitynews.org Co-Publishers Jamie Griswold and Tom Valeri

Metro Editor Sara Hastings Arts Editor Dan Aubrey

Administrative COordinator Megan Durelli

EVENTS Editor Samantha Sciarrotta

Šâ€Ż2019 by Community News Service, LLC. All rights reserved.

BUSINESS EDITOR Diccon Hyatt

Just like you, we recognize that color brings out the best in a fabulous hair cut. Goldwell products are gentle on the hair follicle and provide vibrant color with long lasting results. Through innovative technologies, superior formulas and unsurpassed results, Goldwell is the brand of choice to many discerning stylists and creative colorists throughout the world.

190 W itherspoon St | 609-683-4455 www.bbcolorstudio.com Appointment Only

News news@communitynews.org Events events@communitynews.org

Photographer Suzette J. Lucas Contributing WriterS Philip Sean Curran, George Point, Patricia A. Taylor Contributing COLUMNIST Pia de Jong

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 Addresses and phone numbers will not be published.

Production Manager Stacey Micallef (Ext. 131) Graphic Artists Vaughan Burton AD TRAFFIC COORDINATOR Stephanie Jeronis

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.

Sales Director Thomas Fritts (Ext. 110) Senior Account Executive Jennifer Steffen Account Executives Deanna Herrington, Mark Nebbia Administrative Advertising assistant Gina Carillo, Maria Morales

send e-mail to advertise@communitynews.org or call (609) 396-1511, Ext. 111.

To advertise

A Community News Service, LLC publication 15 Princess Rd., Suite K, Lawrence, NJ 08648

grow your Network of Opportunity with the Region’s Chamber

SALES AWARD ÂŽ CIRCLE OF EXCELLENCELicensed ÂŽ in NJ & PA

2013-2018 NJ REALTORS

  Â? Â? Â?Â?Â? Â? ­ € Â? Â? ‚ ƒ€ Â?„…Â?Â?  Â? † ‡  Â‡ Â?Â? Â?Â? Â?Â?  Â‡ ˆ ƒ ‰Š ‰ ‹Œ ‰ƒŽŠ‘’

2 Princeton Echo | September 2019


““

After 22 seasons in the NFL, including After 22 seasons two championships within the NFL, including the New York Giants, you two championships with can believe that I’ve had thefair Newshare York of Giants, you my injuries. can believe that I’ve had What’s important to me my fair share ofhealthy, injuries. now is staying What’s with important me playing my son,toand now isactive staying healthy, staying without pain. playing with my and Through my years I’ve seen a lot son, of orthopedic and pain management doctors and I’ll allow staying active without pain. only the best doctors on my team. That’s why now,my I trust Through yearsthe I’vedoctors seen a lotatofPrinceton orthopedic Spine andmanagement Joint Center doctors to keepand me I’ll outallow of and pain pain mydoctors game without to onlyand theon best on myresorting team. That’s surgery or dangerous why now, I trust themedications. doctors at Princeton Spine and Joint Center to keep me out of The doctors at Princeton Spine and Joint pain and on my game without resorting to Center are incredible. They take their time surgery or dangerous medications. and they listen to you whether you play on a team sit in anat office. They work with you to The or doctors Princeton Spine and Joint craft a treatment plan toThey achieve your goals Center are incredible. take their time safely andlisten quickly. and they to you whether you play on a team or sit in an office. They work with you to Look, I live close to NYC and Philadelphia, craft a treatment plan to achieve your goals and I could go anywhere in the world for safely and quickly. my orthopedic care. After seeing scores of doctors, it just doesn’t get and any Philadelphia, better than Look, I live close to NYC the team at Princeton Spine and Center. and I could go anywhere in Joint the world for my orthopedic care. After seeing scores of If you have pain and you want doctors, it just doesn’t get any better than to stay active, be pain-free and the team at Princeton Spine and Joint Center. receive cutting edge care, call them now and getand on the If you have pain youroad want back to the active you want to stay active, belife pain-free and toreceive lead. cutting edge care, call them now and get on the road back to the active life you want to lead.

””

— SEAN LANDETA

— SEAN LANDETA At Princeton SpineSpine and Joint in the latest medical treatments to get people all agesofand better and back to their At Princeton andCenter, Joint,we wespecialize specialize in the latest medical treatments to getofpeople allabilities ages and abilities better andbest performing pain and without Ourpain Regenerative Medicine DivisionOur offers the latest in restorative treatments, including back toselves theirwithout best performing selvessurgery. without and without surgery. Regenerative Medicine tissue Division offers the latestPRP. At Princeton Spine Joint, weincluding specializePRP. the treatments get people of all ages of and abilities better Our in doctors are co-editing along with the chairperson ofinMount Sinai’smedical PM&R department thetonew textbook, “Regenerative Medicine for Spine andand Joint restorative tissueand treatments, Ourlatest doctors are co-editing along with the chairperson Mount Sinai’s PM&R Pain”department and the second edition of “Essential Sportswithout Medicine.” back to their best selves pain andfor without surgery. Regenerative Medicine Division offers the latest the newperforming textbook, “Regenerative Medicine Spine and JointOur Pain.”

in restorative tissue treatments, including PRP. Our doctors are co-editing along with the chairperson of Mount Sinai’s PM&R Now the offering same day appointments, because weand understand department new textbook, “Regenerative Medicine for Spine Joint Pain.”that when you have an injury or

significant pain, you need to be seen right away. Treating people from ages 8 to 108. Now offering same day appointments, because we understand that when you have an injury or Grant Cooper, MDpain, you need Zinovy Meyler, Scott Curtis, DO Jason Kirkbride, significant to be seenDOright away. Treating people from ages 8 to 108.MD

Ana Bracilovic, MD Grant Cooper, MD Ana Bracilovic, MD

Marco Funiciello, DO Zinovy Meyler, DO Marco Funiciello, DO

Zachary Perlman, DO Scott Curtis, DO Zachary Perlman, DO

Jason Kirkbride, MD

601 Ewing Street, Building A-2, Princeton 601 Ewing Street, Building A-2, Princeton 256 Bunn B, Princeton 256•Bunn Drive,Drive, Suite Suite B, Princeton (609) 454-0760 •(609) www.princetonsjc.com 601 Ewing Street, Building A-2, Princeton • 256 Bunn Drive, Suite B, Princeton 454-0760 • www.princetonsjc.com

(609) 454-0760 • www.princetonsjc.com September 2019 | Princeton Echo3


Visit Our Showrooms 2850 Brunswick Pike 10 North Main Street (Business Rt. 1)

Lawreceville, NJ 08648

609-883-0900

(At The Gristmill))

Yardley, PA 19067

215-493-7709

10am-6pm Monday- Friday

www.jammerdoors.com

Experience 98 Years & 4 Generations of Jammer Quality & Commitment

PAHIC# 022787 | NJHIC#13VH02000800

Garage Doors • Operators • Gate Openers • Entry Doors • Patio Doors • Storm Doors • Windows

Summer s Saving

TPNP

Expires 9-30-19 8-31-18

TPNP

Expires 9-30-19 8-31-18

TPNP

LEADING OFF

Expires Expires9-30-19 8-31-18

To the editor: Spend now, ask questions later

A

site, it is not hauling the compost, it has the ability to mandate participation, control contamination, and have deep pockets to pay for repairs and competent staff to oversee the program. From the failure of the initial program we learned transparency is important. We learned that contamination is a big issue and that voluntary programs, even with widespread support, don’t generate high participation numbers. None of the critical issues responsible for the failure of the first program have been addressed by the elected officials who voted yes on the digester. We all want to be optimists, and with the climate crisis looming we all want to support green action. It is easy to vote to spend now and worry about the logistics later. It isn’t bold to support voluntary composting in 2019; what is bold is advocating for good governance. Good green policies are well researched; they are transparent, authentic, and impactful. They help the planet and make good fiscal sense. The current proposal to have the town take on hauling the compost, operating a digester, hiring more municipal staff, a private paid “consultant,” and buying trucks, the cost of which is all based on estimates, isn’t good use of taxpayers’ dollars. It sadly lacks all the elements of a good green policy.

t the August 5 Council meeting the mayor and council (with the exception of Eve Niedergang) voted to spend $20K of hard-earned taxpayer money to acquire a “donated” digester (The Echo, August, 2019). The idea behind the initial investment is that it will allow the town to resurrect its curbside composting program. The initial program, unlike the current one being proposed, was designed as a pilot. The goals of the program were to reduce food waste and more importantly to serve as a model of a successful program that would eventually scale to composting for all residents and be duplicated by other towns. That program had the public support of the Princeton Environmental Commission, Sustainable Princeton, all of council, the mayor, local green activists, many residents, and myself. The donated digester can’t scale to support full composting and it isn’t going to offer towns a model to follow. Several green activists came out against the proposed program. Princeton University is using a digester, yes, but the elements that make its program successful are unfortunately lacking in ours. The university’s digester is on Chestnut Street

Bainy Suri

STARTING AT

17

$

per month

the WASH

CLUB

wash often save more (609) 557-7100 | VALETWASH.COM

TRENTON

HAMILTON

LAWRENCEVILLE

PRINCETON

BORDENTOWN

CINNAMINSON

EXPREsS LUBE

EXPREsS LUBE

4 Litho Road

3515 US Route 1

840 Route 206

2603 US Route 130

228 Lalor Street

770 US Route 130

4 Princeton Echo | September 2019


REAL ESTATE

Blue Sprin gR

oad

Neighbors say no way to new homes

reconvenes on Thursday, September 19, as residents opposed to the idea — he fireworks came to Prince- represented by public interest attorney ton a few weeks late this year, Bruce Afran — make their case for the and in an unlikely setting. A proposal to be voted down. proposal that would allow a 30-home For the record: the letter writer, residential development in the PrincPrinceton resieton Ridge incited dent Daniel Harone unnamed and ris, published a letter in area meunruly attendee at ‘This is an intrusion dia that week that the July 18 Prince- into the heart of a stated, in part, ton Planning Board that the proposed meeting to shout totally undeveloped development “is at board members place, or least as environmentally and attorney Gerry unsustainable; it Muller, demanding undeveloped as pulls Princeton to know why a letter Princeton gets, in into economic in opposition to the discrimination Thompson Woods Site development was to a very sensitive against those be stricken from the who can only afrecord and conclud- environment. and ford ‘affordable ing, “I want the fact it will be destroyed housing,’ not the that this hearing is estimated $1.5M bulls--t to be on the forever,’ afran says. for a stand-alone He record. Thank you.” rro house in what nto He left under threat was once woodlands.” wn Roa of being forcibly removed by the police. The developer at the center of the d And that was all within the first 15 fight is Lanwin Development Corp., a minutes of a hearing that stretched on company owned by the children of the Lanwin Development seeks to build 30 homes on part of a 90-acre tract it for more than two hours. The drama owns on the Princeton Ridge. The entrance to the development would be off See LANWIN, Page 6 Herrontown Road. continues when the planning board

VT

State Road, Princeton, NJ

/@40.3877537,-74.6516109,16z

Herrontow n

Lane

Mou nt L u

T

cas Roa d

By Philip Sean Curran

Does your money need a professional trainer? The right coach can help an athlete reach his or her goals. The same can be said of your finances. With guidance from a Financial Advisor, you can follow a path of fiscal responsibility and create a strategy that may help you maximize the potential of your investments. As Morgan Stanley Financial Advisors, we EDIT

can work with you to develop a goals based strategy, and adjust it to help you manage your investments and assets now and through the years to come. Call us to arrange a meeting, and let’s work toward a stronger future.

The Caiazzo Mento Group at Morgan Stanley Rick Caiazzo, CFP® Senior Portfolio Management Director Executive Director | Financial Advisor Andrew J. Mento Portfolio Manager | Senior Vice President Financial Advisor Robert Formisano, CFP® Portfolio Manager | Financial Advisor 1200 Lenox Drive, Suite 300 Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 609-620-7123 caiazzo_mento_group@ morganstanley.com advisor.morganstanley.com/ the-caiazzo-mento-group

Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards Inc. owns the certification marks CFP®, CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ and federally registered CFP (with flame design) in the US. The appropriateness of a particular investment or strategy will depend on an investor’s individual circumstances and objectives. © 2019 Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC. Member SIPC. FAS009 CRC2472007 05/19

September 2019 | Princeton Echo5


Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner •

“We believe that the development will provide a much needed additional late Princeton-based real estate mogul tax revenue for the community,” he Bryce Thompson IV. Lanwin wants to said. “And we’ve made every effort to create a cluster subdivision of 30 lots mitigate the environmental impact in for single-family homes along Herron- any way, shape, or form and provide town and Mount Lucas roads. The proj- affordable housing on the property for ect, encompassing about 18.52 acres of Princeton, which it needs and in the an overall 90.6-acre property, is dubbed way that Princeton deemed appropri“Thompson Woods.” ate.” In addition, three acres facing Mount He said Lanwin would not be buildLucas Road would be “dedicated” to ing the homes. “Someone will purchase the town for future affordable housing, the property from us and build the with the rest of the 67.4 acres left as homes themselves,” he said. open space, according to documents in Yet if Lanwin gets its subdivision apthe municipal planning office. proved, he left the door open to selling The proposal predates the merger the property, minus the three acres for of the two Princthe town, at “fair etons, going back market value” to a to discussions that buyer, like the state Bryce Thompson V then-Township ofof New Jersey, that ficials had in 2011 calls the neighbors’ would be willing to with Thompson. preserve it. In more recent concerns ‘fake news.’ “And if we get years,Princeton fair market value ‘It’s made up stuff so officials, includfor the property, ing Mayor Liz that a piece of property we would be absoLempert, have enlutely open to dodorsed the concept next door to them ing that,” he said. of a cluster as a way doesn’t get developed,’ But Thompto keep as much of son Woods faces the property from he says. opposition from being developed. nearly 20 residents Thompson, the who live near the owner of large tracts of land in New property on Herrontown Road and Jersey during a long career in the real Herrontown Lane. They turned to atestate industry, bought this parcel in torney Afran, who has battled the likes the late 1950s and subsequently sold it of Princeton University and the Instito his children. He died on June 21 at tute for Advanced Study in high-profile age 87. cases, to help them fight the project. Lanwin President Bryce Thompson V, the late developer’s son, said in an infran said in an August interview terview that the first attempt to develop that putting a 30-unit “dense the land called for 20 lots, based on the development” in the heart of the Princzoning, and would have incorporated eton Ridge would spoil a natural area the entire property. But to preserve as that has remained mostly untouched. much of the forest as possible, a cluster He spoke of the consequences of introsubdivision was seen as the best option ducing human activity into the area, as “instead of having houses all over the Princeton Soup & Sandwich place and driveways all over the place,” well as the loss of trees and other environmental side effects that a develophe said.

LANWIN, continued from page 5

Word from Windy Top

S

eparately, the first two single-family homes of the Windy Top subdivision on Snowden Lane are now on the market. Overall there are seven lots on the site, though there was no timetable available for when all the homes will be constructed. The five-bedroom, five-bathroom home at 1 Windy Top Court is listed for sale at $1,699,000; the five-bedroom, four-bathroom home at 3 Windy Top Court is listed for $1,649,000. Windy Top, named for a farm that once stood there, is directly across the street from Smoyer Park and had until recently been undeveloped. In fact, a 2004 letter to the Town Topics celebrated the continued, undisturbed land at Windy Top in the face of a proposal to remove multiple trees in order to install sidewalks on parts of Snowden Lane: “Windy Top in the distance reassures me that all is not yet the tract housing of the Windsors, nor the Belgian-blocked McMansions of Brooks Bend,” wrote Fairfax Hutter. But times have changed.

1 Windy Top Court.

To the editor:

I

decided to change my biking route in the morning to include a path around Herrontown Woods. I thought all the area around the natural reserve was in fact a “reserve” but happened upon a shoddy little development on Windy Top Court, which includes the cheapest vinyl sided houses that I have ever seen. Right across from Smoyer Park is the first two many houses for this development. The first house features various vinyl sidings in various shades running perpendicular to one another, in the most bizarre way. Can this be? And just like “the barns” these are eyesores in the midst of some of our most precious land in Princeton. How can this be happening?

DELIVERY & CATERING FO A

LO L OW

ment would cause. “The development itself is going to “Pets, garden refuse, exhaust fumes, have serious impacts on what’s left,” he extensive noise will all be introduced said. “It will no longer be an untouched, where none exist now,” he said. “And unspoiled area.” so basically this is an intrusion into the For his part, Thompson called the heart of a totally undeveloped place, or concerns of the neighbors “fake news.” least as undeveloped as Princeton gets, “It’s made up stuff so that a piece of in a very sensitive environment. And it property next door to them doesn’t get will be destroyed forever.” developed,” he said. “It’s on a flat, open He said the town’s master plan said piece of land that used to be farmed … PRINCETON 2019many years ago.” this area should be used forFALL preservation.

S SC S C CH H HO B OO O B B A OLL R O A A RE N R L N N EN D E D NTT D N TA ALL A SCHOOL LSS SCHOOL S

CLA W R RA AT R TRU INET T ES E S Mo • M ntg VIO PET FLUT om LIN er y •S E We Sho TRO • C AX st W pp MB ELLO LE L ind ing C ES ON sor ent S E 6 S e S r M FALL 0 PRINCETON O 2019

GOT PROPANE?

FAX: 609.497.00

SCHOOL BAND BAND y 8 BAND RENTALS L O RENTALS 2 S f afar RENTALS PRINCETON FALL 2019 We st W hoppi rri W

Princeton Soup & Sandwich

9-8

9

609 o - nt

ON N

7 - 0 9 24go S S me 0FALL PRINCETON 3 2 - 82019 2 r

Princeton Soup & Sandwich

ton Soup & Sandwich

Princeton Soup & Sandwich

609.497.00 Anne Daniecki

LOW RATESindsorng• CenteiMnnggtto ns

CLARINETFALL • FLUTE PRINCETON 2019 TRUMPET • SAX World’s LobsterBisque Bisque World’sBest Best Lobster

VIOLIN • CELLO TROMBONE World’s Best Lobster DELIVERY & CATERING FOR ALLBisque EVENTS Breakfast• Lunch • Lunch •• Dinner Breakfast Dinner• Smoothies • Smoothies

CL A

R A RATES LOW

R TE ro m muu TRU INET S • FLUTE 9-8 • n6t0g9o • FL M P CLARINET m 97-9e2r ssiicc.c. V IOL ET • UTE coom 003W 4y-8S IN S m 2 e s t 2h8o2p AX • CTRUMPET TR • SAX Wi ping n d s SCHOOL L E OMBO ELLO Cen o r SCHOOL VIOLIN • CELLO N S t 6 0BAND er SO E 9BAND -89 609 7 - 0 - 9 24 N S TROMBONE RENTALS 032 -8 RENTALS 282 LOW RATES 60

Choose the company many families switched to last season! LOW RATES

DELIVERY & CATERING FOR ALL EVENTS LOW RATES LESSONS 609.497.0008 farringtonsmusic.com PRINCETON FALL 2019 farringtonsmusic.com LESSONS CLARINET • FLUTERATES CLARINET • FLUTE MOST EXPERIENCED SHOWERS, REHEARSAL DINNERS, CORPORATE LOW 609.497.0008 South Jersey’s FAX: 609.497.0008 World’s Best Lobster Bisque Breakfast30• Palmer Lunch • Dinner •Montgomery Smoothies TRUMPET • SAX ••SAX Shopping Center 609-924-8282 ShoppingTRUMPET CenterMontgomery 609-924-8282 FAX: 609.497.0008 Square East • Princeton, NJ family-owned propane company since 1919! CATERING, SPORTING EVENTS & PICNICS Montgomery Shopping Center 609-924-8282 CLARINET • FLUTE VIOLIN • CELLO VIOLIN • CELLO

Princeton Soup & Sandwich

West Windsor 609-897-0032TROMBONE 609-897-0032 30 Windsor Palmer Square East Princeton, NJ Windsor •TRUMPET DELIVERY & CATERING FOR ALL West EVENTS West 609-897-0032 Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner •• Smoothies TROMBONE • SAX • VIOLIN www.PrincetonSoupAndSandwich.com FREE INSTALLATION

World’s Best Bisque DELIVERY & CATERING FOR Lobster ALL EVENTS 609.497.0008 www.PrincetonSoupAndSandwich.com

farringtonsmusic.com LESSONS farringtonsmusic.com CELLO • TROMBONE

L E S S O NinSmost cases

Shopping Center 609-924-8282 Montgomery Shopping CenterMontgomery • 609-924-8282 Montgomery Shopping Center 609-924-8282 Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner • Smoothies West Windsor 609-897-0032 West Windsor • 609-897-0032 West Windsor 609-897-0032

FAX: 609.497.0008 609.497.0008 & CATERING FOR ALL EVENTS FAX:DELIVERY 609.497.0008 30 Palmer Square East • Princeton, NJ 609.497.0008

LESSONS

ADVERTISING PROOF farringtonsmusic.com 30 Palmer Square East • Princeton, NJ

427 North Main Street Vincentown, NJ

609-859-2334 Montgomery Shopping Center www.PrincetonSoupAndSandwich.com allensoilandpropane.com www.PrincetonSoupAndSandwich.com www.PrincetonSoupAndSandwich.com 609-924-8282 Thank you for choosing College Calendar Company for your college advertising FAX: 609.497.0008 30 Palmer Square East • Princeton, NJ

needs. This proof is for your protection as every effort has been made to assure accuracy in the typesetting and layout of your ad. This is your opportunity to see

6 Princeton Echo | September 2019


Zoning Board updates

T

he Zoning Board of Adjustment was scheduled to hear two applications at its August 28 meeting, after the Echo went to press. 133-135 John Street, Bi-Hwa & Theresa Huang, owners; and Alexander Masiuk, applicant. C1/C2 variances to permit the installation of parking area in exception to the required parking setback and impervious coverage requirements. An additional rear yard setback variance is required to permit a small gable roof that has already been constructed. 21 Battle Road, Albert E. and Jenny G. Internoscia, owners and applicants. D4 and C1/C2 variance for floor area ratio to permit the construction of a new home and secondary residence. Additional variances are requested for lot area to permit the secondary residence, height to setback ratio, impervious coverage ratio, length of front facade and the distance permitted between the openings of a U shaped driveway. The next Zoning Board meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, September 25.

Recent transactions

T

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. 121 Winfield Road. Seller: Hobart and Linda Sichel. Buyer: Craig and Jeannette Lamb. Two-story Colonial. 4 bedrooms, 5.5 baths. $1,753,089 (-$142,000). 52 Mason Drive. Seller: Salwan Almashat and Kathriel Brister. Buyer: Hongmiao Zhou and Eva Dong. Twostory Colonial. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. $935,000 (-$44,000). 8 Foulet Drive. Seller: Howard and Susan Schrayer. Buyer: Mingming Yu. Colonial/Contemporary. 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. $1,150,000 (-$189,000). 24 Deer Path. Seller: Aylin Tugcu. Buyer: Janet Gardner. Ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. $1,084,000 (-$41,000). 210 Birch Avenue. Seller: Bridget Carnevale. Buyer: Christopher Fruendt and Barbara Downey. Twin/ semi-detached. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath. $450,000 (-$39,000). 48 Benjamin Rush Lane. Seller: Arthur and Christine Siemientkowski. Buyer: Shodeinde and Modupe Coker. Townhouse. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. $618,000 (-$22,000). 142 Mercer Street. Seller: Hope Cobb Estate. Buyer: Lucas and Lauren Bento. Three-plus-story Colonial. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. $837,000 (-$48,000).

16 Charlton Street. Seller: Trefor and Nancy Williams. Buyer: Frances Lee. Twin/semi-detached. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. $635,000 (-$60,000). 724 Princeton-Kingston Road. Seller: Grosso Homes. Buyer: Kwangjin Suk. Two-story Colonial. 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths. $1,500,000 (-$99,000). 44 Park Place #2. Seller: Susan Beshel. Buyer: Mark and Daria Pettus. Condo. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. $418,500 (-$31,500). 49 Palmer Square West, Unit O. Seller: Michel Merle Estate and Nicole Merle. Buyer: Carol Ann Boyle. Condo. 1 bedroom, 1 bath. $431,000 (-$24,000). 238 Witherspoon Street. Seller: Chuang Wen Jung. Two-story Colonial. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. $708,000 ($8,100). 25 Haslet Avenue. Seller: Lucas and Nancy Visconti. Buyer: Halil and Serpil Soner. Two-story Traditional. 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. $1,750,000 (-$450). 2 Morven Place. Seller: Tobin and Susan Levy. Buyer: Theological Inquiry Center. Two-story Colonial. 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths. $1,732,000 (-$163,000). 621 Lake Drive. Seller: Roger and Theresa Liao. Buyer: Sandeep and Anita Gupta. Ranch. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 half baths. $1,600,000 (-$350,000). 64 David Brearly Court. Seller: David and Lisa Rossbach. Buyer: Yuhan Li and Hui Yang. Condo. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. $360,000. 36 Paul Robeson Place. Seller: George Hansen and Susan Rhoda. Buyer: John Van Scoter II. Condo. 3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. $1,975,000 (-$25,000). 156 Spruce Street. Seller: Peter Wolanin and Karen Sisti. Buyer: Michael Dahl. Condo. 3 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. $585,000 (-$10,000). 52 Dodds Lane. Seller: Carl Schulze. Buyer: Guy and Ilanit Fuchs. 2.5-story Traditional. 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths. $1,213,000 ($228,000). 25 Linden Lane. Seller: Karen Loomis. Buyer: Joshua Seufert and Nannan Liu. Three-story Victorian. 4 bedrooms, 1 bath. $690,000 ($15,100). 207 Riverside Drive. Seller: Peter Ramadge and Selina Man. Buyer: Nicholas Vossbrink and Rosina Lozano. 2.5story Contemporary. 5 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. $899,000. 268 Stockton Street. Seller: Viquar Parvaaz. Buyer: Peter and Elizabeth Meggitt. Two-story Traditional. 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, 2 half baths. $1,225,000 ($126,000). 44 Southern Way. Seller: Mark Stern and Rita Nannini. Buyer: Laura K. Doctor Living Trust. Two-story Traditional. 3 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. $685,000 ($36,000).

PRINCETON Janet Stefandl $575,000 MLS# NJME275908

PRINCETON Jennifer E Curtis $2,175,000 MLS# NJME203390

PRINCETON Madolyn Greve $900,000 MLS# NJME282314

PRINCETON Barbara Blackwell 2,285,000 MLS# NJME283362

INTROduCING

PRINCETON Barbara Blackwell $985,000 MLS# NJME100119

PRINCETON Norman T Callaway $2,995,000 MLS# 1000266343

PRINCETON Norman T Callaway, Jr $1,875,000 MLS# NJME274396

PRINCETON Hunt Drive $3,975,000 MLS# NJME266080

PRINCETON Brinton H West $1,995,000 MLS# NJME276934

PRINCETON Winant Road $4,950,000 MLS# NJME276624

CallawayHenderson.com LAMBERTVILLE 609.397.1974

MONTGOMERY 908.874.0000

PENNINGTON 609.737.7765

PRINCETON 609.921.1050

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

September 2019 | Princeton Echo7


Telling a storyteller’s story By George Point

F

or some of us our experience as storytellers began and ended the day we attempted to explain to a teacher how “a squirrel ate my homework!” For others storytelling only takes place at the bedside of a child while they struggle to stay awake for a few minutes more. But for Princeton resident Kathryn Weidener storytelling is not simply something she loves to do; thanks to her talent, perseverance, and a bit of luck she has made it her profession. As president of the New Jersey Storytellers Network, she and a cohort of tale-telling colleagues from the tri-state area are busy preparing for their signature annual event: the New Jersey Storytelling Festival at Howell Living History Farm on Saturday, September 14. Not that Weidener’s storytelling talent was passed on to her from her parents. “Not really, no,” she says. “My older brother always claimed I was born talking. He had a stutter, and it was a family legend that my brother trained me to speak in his place.” She does allow that her parents were both avid readers. “My dad loved poetry,” she says. “He would recite poetry at

the grocery store if he was bored. And the establishment of an accounting at the very end of his life, the only thing practice of her own. he responded to was poetry.” There was also the small matter of Looking back, Weidener observes starting a family, and as fate would that she has encountered a few speed- have it, the birth of her second son put bumps on the road leading to her taking her squarely back on the storytelling the storytelling stage at Howell Farm. track. “My first son was in kindergarten “I’ve always been when I brought telling stories,” she my second son to says. A speech and ‘Part of the joy of his school,” she communications says, “because big major at Allegh- storytelling is that it’s brother wanted eny College, she not simply holding little brother as used storytelling his show-and-tell.” in speech therapy. a book and reading After Weidener While working for it; storytelling is was done presentthe Girl Scouts she ing little brother became the go-to oral recitation and to the class, big person for emceebrother’s kindering events and engagement with garten teacher bet mesmerized young a community of her a lunch that Scouts by spinning she could make a yarns around the listeners.’ living as a storycampfire. teller. All very satisfy“A month later I ing personally, but, alas, she encoun- had to take her out to lunch,” she contered her first speedbump. “The arts tinues, “because I had established that doesn’t pay much, nor does social I could do participatory storytelling work,” Weidener notes. Fortunately with preschoolers. As my kids got older she had experience in accounting, and I advanced to after-school programs, found a spot in accounts payable at a libraries, and camps over the next 10 small company, eventually leading to years.”

She also found a niche for her storytelling talent at her church, developing and presenting mini-sermons for the children in her congregation. “I’d take the theme from the bible verse of the service and put it into a participatory mini-sermon for the kids. A lot of adults preferred that, too! I’d get them up during the service, make animal noises, very participatory. A lot of churches started doing that in the ‘80s, and I worked with a number of youth ministries.” As Weidener’s experience and reputation grew, she was invited to apply her storytelling talent at other venues. “Someone asked me to tell a story at a senior citizen club after church,” she explains, “and one of my friends’ mothers said ‘You could make this into a business doing senior groups.’ I practiced with a seniors’ group in Branchburg few times, developed some themes, and wound up telling stories at assisted living facilities and senior centers for about 15 years.” Weidener takes care to emphasize that, as with her mini-sermons for children, her approach to telling stories to seniors was participatory and connected her audience with the story. “I’d start with a basic theme, be it herbs and

FREE DANCE CLASSES Fall Open Houses Two days of free sample classes Saturday, August 24, 10am-12pm: Ballet, Hip Hop, Modern Saturday, September 7, 10am-12pm: Tap and Jazz Placement classes offered both days, 12-2pm, for ballet dancers ages 8+ with prior training.

Princeton Dance and Theater Studio

116 Rockingham Row • Forrestal Village, Princeton • studiomanager@princetondance.com • 609-514-1600 Schedule and Registration online at

www.PrincetonDance.com 8 Princeton Echo | September 2019


spices, Chinese New Year, love, spring flowers, patriotism,” she says, “then blend in a little bit of poetry to try to engage the audience. I thoroughly enjoyed doing that.” Then Weidener encountered more of the speed bumps alluded to at the beginning of this tale, big ones. She spent years serving as a caregiver for a family member. Other emotionally trying events and the inevitable issues that followed consumed both her and her husband (Peter Szego, an architect); for a time storytelling simply had to take a back seat. Eventually Weidener connected with the New Jersey Storytelling Network. Begun in 2002 and structured as a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization, its official stated purpose is “to encourage and promote storytelling in New Jersey and elsewhere.” The organization and its dues-paying members ($25 annually) strive to preserve the storytelling tradition, educate others about the art of storytelling, and make the services of individual storytellers and storytelling events accessible to the general public. In addition to information about the organization and upcoming events, the network’s website includes a directory of New Jersey member/storytellers searchable by name or county. Listings contain a photo, biography, and news of upcoming events. The NJ Storytelling Festival at Howell Living History Farm is one of two major events the

organization holds in the slam section annually. This is the or on one of the third year that the four stages in the festival will be held afternoon at four at Howell Farm. different locations “I’ve become at the farm.” very involved in How does a stoplanning this fesryteller manage to tival,” Weidener keep a story fresh says. “I love planafter dozens or ning this festival. I perhaps hundreds love this festival!” of tellings? “A story Featured events stays fresh because this year include every audience is a workshop open new,” Weidener to the public that explains. “You explores storytellwant to make the ing techniques story fresh for and strategies, a each audience, and Story Slam themed there is something “HOG WILD!” innate in every acthat invites concomplished storytestants chosen at teller, entertainer, random to recount or public speaker a personal tale in that motivates five minutes or less, Kathryn Weidener is president of the them to do that New Jersey Storytelling Network. and the popular each and every “Lightning Round” time.” featuring storytellers performing nonWhat’s the hardest thing about tellstop throughout the farm all afternoon. ing a story to an audience? “The hardWeidener stresses that because How- est thing is that it’s harder to gauge an ell Farm is a family-friendly venue, par- audience these days, because audiences ents may rest assured that all the stories are less engaging,” she observes. “One performed at the event will be G-rated. of the things that is really difficult is “Some of the stories will be funny, when storytellers are asked to do chilsome poignant,” she says. “All emotions dren’s parties or events where other accome out in these stories, whether it’s tivities are going on at the same time.

It’s harder to keep people tuned in to the story. That’s when I discovered the importance of participation, because if you’re engaging more than one sense it’s easier to keep people involved.” Weidener notes that the digital age has taken a toll on traditional storytelling as well. “When people are screenengaged it’s harder to get them to look up and be attentive. I hear this in theaters where people are always saying ‘turn off that screen’ because even If you think you’re being quiet everybody sees that little glow. You can’t go to McCarter without someone’s phone going off. They ask us to turn our phones off, we all know we shouldn’t do it, but everybody thinks that life can’t go on without them being connected to their phone. “I understand that competition from media and other entertainment outlets compete for people’s time and attention, but I believe that storytelling engages us more intellectually, creatively, and collectively,” she continues. “Part of the joy of storytelling is that it’s not simply holding a book and reading it; storytelling is oral recitation and engagement with a community of listeners.” 2019 New Jersey Storytelling Festival, Howell Living History Farm, 70 Woodens Lane, Lambertville. Saturday, September 14, noon to 5 p.m. Free. www.howellfarm.org New Jersey Storytelling Network, www.njstorynet.org.

Damien Chazelle Homecoming: An Evening in Support of The Petey Greene Program September 26th, 7:30-9:30PM

Join in a conversation with Princeton High School graduate and Academy Award-winning director, Damien Chazelle (Whiplash, La La Land, First Man) and Roger Durling, Executive Director, Santa Barbara International Film Festival. See www.peteygreene.org/upcoming-events for event details and to purchase tickets. $15 student tickets go on sale September 15th

The Knowles House

T

96 N Main St, Yardley, PA

• $1,050,000

his elegant 5 bdrm/3.1 bath stately Federal style manor home, w/carriage house, sits on 1.22 acres in the boro and backs to the upper bank of the Delaware Canal. Main house features include an expansive front porch, large brick rear patio, kitchen with upgraded stainless steel appliances and a 3-window walled breakfast room. Authentic historic details include high ceilings, tall windows, wide moldings and pumpkin pine floors. The carriage house is comprised of spacious 1-bedroom guest quarters, gym with spa, 4-car garage, and storage/workshop space. Just a short walk to Yardley’s center, in close proximity to I-95, train stations and Mercer airport. You can get anywhere from here! LISTING AGENT: CAROLE BAROCCA, 215.378.8397 WWW.CAROLEBAROCCAREALTOR.COM

September 2019 | Princeton Echo9


HAPPENING 9/6 • Creature Comforts at the D&R Greenway Pictured: Pumpkinseed by Patrick Bernuth

Sunday September 1

9/7 • Arts Council of Princeton open house 9/7 • ‘Baseball’s Outsiders: Race and 9/6 to 10/6 • Emily Gender in the Early Years’ at Morven Mann’s ‘Gloria: A Life’ ‘Shadow Ranch’ by Anne Marie Coppola

partner needed. Beginners of all ages welcome. Lesson followed by dance. $5. Every Tuesday. 7:30 p.m.

Tiffany Window Tours, Princeton United Methodist Church, 7 Vandeventer Avenue, Princeton, 609-924-2613. www. Wednesday September 4 princetonumc.org. See Saint George and the Tea and Tour, Morven Museum, 55 Dragon and other stained glass windows. ApStockton Street, Princeton, 609-924-8144. pointments also available. Free tours every www.morven.org. A docent-led tour of the 15 minutes. Every Friday and Sunday. Noon museum followed by tea and refreshments. to 1:30 p.m. Registration required. $22. Every WednesSummer Carillon Concerts, Princeton day. 1 p.m. University Carillon, 88 College Road West, Hollywood Summer Nights, Princeton Princeton, 609-258-7989. Robin Austin, Garden Theater, 160 Nassau Street, PrincPennsylvania. Free. 1 p.m. eton, 609-279-1999. www.thegardentheatre. Sneak Peek, Princeton First Aid & Res- com. Mikey and Nicky. 7:30 p.m. cue Squad, 2 Mount Lucas Road, Princeton, 609-924-3338. www.pfars.org. Tour the new Thursday September 5 building, inspect rescue vehicles, and meet Princeton Farmers Market, Princeton volunteers. Complimentary ice cream from Public Library, Hinds Plaza, 55 Witherspoon Bent Spoon. Music by Andy Koontz and Bill Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princO’Neal. 1 to 3 p.m. etonfarmersmarket.com. Fresh produce, live Historic Princeton Walking Tour, Bain- music, community organizations, and more. bridge House, 158 Nassau Street, Princeton. Weekly on Thursdays. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. www.princetonhistory.org. $7. Register. EvHollywood Summer Nights, Princeton ery Sunday. 2 p.m. Garden Theater, 160 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-279-1999. www.thegardentheatre. Tuesday September 3 com. Rebel Without a Cause. 7:30 p.m. Tuesday International Folk Dancing, Argentine Tango, Viva Tango, Suzanne Princeton Folk Dance, Princeton YWCA, Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princ59 Paul Robeson Place, Princeton, 609-921eton, 609-948-4448. www.vivatango.org. 1702. www.princetonfolkdance.org. Dances No partner necessary. Beginners welcome. of many countries with original music. No Every Thursday. $15. 8 p.m.

Paintings by Minako Ota, Small World Coffee, 14 Witherspoon Street, Princeton. Job Seeker Sessions, Princeton Public www.minak-art.com. Meet the artist. AniLibrary, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, mals and nature paintings by an award win609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. ning Japanese painter and Princeton resident How to AI-proof your career with George Minako Ota are on view through October 1. Pace. 9:45 a.m. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Garden Tours, Morven Museum, 55 Gloria: A Life, McCarter Theatre, 91 UniStockton Street, Princeton, 609-924-8144. versity Place, Princeton, 609-258-2787. www. www.morven.org. 45-minute tour of what’s mccarter.org. Emily Mann’s play tells the stoin bloom in the gardens. $10. Register. Week- ry of feminist icon Gloria Steinem. Through ly through October 4. 11 a.m. October 6. 8 p.m. Photography Exhibit, Present Day Folk Dance, Princeton Folk Dance, SuClub, 72 Stockton Street, Princeton. www. zanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, presentdayclub.org. Opening reception for Princeton, 609-912-1272. www.princetonan exhibition of works by photographer Larry folkdance.org. Beginners welcome. Lesson Parsons. Through October 30. 5 to 7 p.m. followed by dance. No partner needed. $5. Opening Reception, D&R Greenway Every Friday. 8 to 11 p.m. Land Trust, 1 Preservation Place, Princeton, 609-924-4646. www.drgreenway.org. Saturday September 7 Opening for “Creature Comforts: Habitat Portrait Photography from Start to Immersions,” featuring works celebrating Finish, Princeton Photo Workshop, Harnature’s creatures in their aquatic, forest, and lingen Road Studios, Belle Mead. www.princmeadow habitats. Running through Friday, etonphotoworkshop.com. Learn the basics September 20. Register. 5:30 p.m. of composing and capturing portaits. $99. Dancing under the Stars, Princeton Register. 10 a.m.

Friday September 6

Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Members of Central Jersey Dance demonstrate basic steps and lead and evening of dancing to recorded music of all kinds. Free. Also September 20. 7 to 9 p.m.

The Not So Secret Garden, Morven Museum and Garden, 55 Stockton Street, Princeton. www.morven.org. Activities, games, and take-home crafts based on “The Secret Garden” by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Free. 10 a.m.

DID YOU KNOW THAT DANCING Controls Weight & Promotes Heart Health Increases Flexibility, Agility & Coordination Enhances Communication Skills Counteracts Sadness Fosters Social Bonds Expresses Creativity Teaches Teamwork Boosts Confidence Improves Memory Relieves Stress

Life ’s Better When You Dance!

CALL US AT 609-921-8881 • NO PARTNER NECESSARY Fred Astaire Dance Studio of Princeton • Located in the Princeton Shopping Center 301 N. Harrison St. Princeton, NJ 08540 princeton@fredastaire.com • www.fredastaire.com/princeton

10 Princeton Echo | September 2019

KNIGHT

ARCHITECTS

LLC

princeton, nj • 609.252.0474 • www.knightarch.com


9/8 • Toby Tobias, ‘Journey from Johannesburg’ Festomato, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Crafts, cooking demonstrations, speakers, a canning workshop, food and drink, live music, and children’s programs all celebrating the tomato. 11 a.m. Fall Open House, Arts Council of Princeton, Princeton Shopping Center, 301 North Harrison Street, 609-924-8777. www. artscouncilofprinceton.org. Hands-on artmaking and artist demos, live performances, and gallery opening receptions for “Wonder,” a joint exhibit by Marilyn Keating, Eric Schultz, and the Oiseaux Sisters on view through October 5; and “Paintings from the Garden State,” work by students of Charles David Viera on view through September 28. 1 to 3 p.m. Baseball’s Outsiders: Race and Gender in the Early Years, Morven Museum and Garden, 55 Stockton Street, Princeton. www. morven.org. Leslie Heaphy highlights women’s baseball before 1915 and 19th century black baseball in New Jersey. $15. Register. 2 p.m.

Sunday September 8

9/12 • Author Mort Zachter

9/13 • So Percussion, Richardson Auditorium

Peer-facilitated discussion and information Hollywood Summer Nights, Princeton sharing in a safe, confidential, non-judgmen- Garden Theater, 160 Nassau Street, Princtal setting. 7 p.m. eton, 609-279-1999. www.thegardentheJourney from Johannesburg, Princatre.com. Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? eton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Tuesday September 10 7:30 p.m. Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonThe Power of Faces, Princeton Public library.org. Songwriter Toby Tobias presents Thursday September 12 a musical/theatrical/visual arts performance Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, Author Mort Zachter, Princeton Public featuring original songs and vignettes about 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. his life growing up in Johannesburg and Je- Images from a global photojournalism proj- Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, rusalem before moving to New York. 2 to 4 ect by Theresa Menders and Daniel Farber 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Huang. Through November 30. 9 a.m. to 9 Princeton author Mort Zachter discusses his p.m. p.m. book “Red Holzman: The Life and Legacy of a Monday September 9 Author Eric Weitz, Princeton Public Hall of Fame Basketball Coach.” 7 p.m. with Washington’s crossing of the Delaware River. $7. 1 p.m.

Poets at the Library, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Poets Anna M. Evans and Kim Bridgford read from their works, followed by an open mic session. Free. 7 p.m.

Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Weitz, a history professor at CUNY, speaks on his new book, “A World Divided: The Global Struggle for Human Rights in the Age of Nation States.” 6:30 p.m.

Author James Williams, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary. org. Engage in an exploration of the key themes and questions raised in Princeton University’s 2019 pre-read selection, “Stand Out of Our Light: Freedom and Resistance in BE LOUD WITHOUT LIMITS the Attention Economy.” 7 p.m.

League of Women Voters Princeton Job Seeker Sessions, Princeton Public Area, Suzanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton. www.lwvprinceton. Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, org. New member welcome and November 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Body language for job seekers with Eileen election voter service. 7 p.m. Sinett. 9:45 a.m.

GR

GR

HIC & PRI AP N

AP

HIC & PRI

G

T

GR

SO

SO

NT

AP

HIC & PRI

LUTIONS

LUTIONS

SO

BE LOUD WITHOUT LIMITS

RA

PHIC

& PR

IN

T

NT

SO

LUTIONS

BE LOUD WITHOUT LIMITS

LUTIONS

BE LOUD WITHOUT LIMITS

Meetings, PFLAG Princeton, Trinity Princeton Battlefield Tour, Princeton Church, 33 Mercer Street, Princeton. www. Battlefield State Park, 500 Mercer Street, pflagprinceton.org. Support group for famiPrinceton. www.pbs1777.org. Learn about the lies and friends of lesbian, gay, bisexual, Battle of Princeton, which ended the cam- transgender and queer (LGBTQ) individuals. paigns of the Ten Crucial Days that began HERE’S HERE’S GR

AP

HIC & PRI

GR

NT

AP

HIC & PRI GR

G

NT

HIC & PRI AP N

RA

PHIC

& PR

AP

HIC & PRI

SO

LUTIONS

GR

IN

NT

T

T

S

O

UD

LUTIONS

T

S

WITHOUT SO L U T ISOON S I L U T I OMN S I L M LI D W OUD LI I T H OWUITT H O U T

LI

M

I

S

I

E

OU

SO

T

M

L

E

WITHOUT

B

LI

B

LUTIONS

T

E

UD

BE

B

LO

L

TS

BE LOUD WITHOUT LIMITS

SO

GR

AP

HIC & PRI

NT

E

LO

QUANTITY CLIENT

S

LI

M

I

60075

YOUR PROOF STD Card STDJOB Card # 60075 PRODUCT STD Card JOB # 60075 SIZE 9”w x 6”h 9”w x 6”h PRODUCT STD Card PRODUCT SIZE STD9”w Card x 6”h QUANTITY TBD SIZE 9”w x 6”h TBD QUANTITY SIZE 9”wTBD xCLIENT 6”h QUANTITY TBD St Law St Law CLIENT St Law CLIENT QUANTITY TBDSt Law JOB #

SIZE

LUTIONS

WITHOUT

JOB #

JOB #

PRODUCT

SO

UD

T

B

HERE’S YOUR PROOF HERE’S YOUR PROOF YOUR PROOF YOUR PROOF 60075 60075 HERE’S PRODUCT

11:08February AM 11,201911:08AM DATE February11,201911:08AMDATE February11,2019 DATE DATE

February11,201911:08AM It is very important that

Law It is very important It is very importantStthat you that review this proof’s content for accuracy. is very you important that you review thisIt proof’s review this proof’s DATE February11,201911:08AM you review this proof’s We are not responsible content for accuracy. content for accuracy. content for accuracy. for any errors after proof approval. We are not responsible We are notthat responsible It is very important We are notforresponsible for any errors after any errorsPlease after Note: This PDF is you review this proof’s proof quality and may for any errors proof approval. proof after approval. not be suitable for print contentproof for accuracy. approval. reproduction. Please Note: This PDF isPlease Note: This PDF isNOTES Please Note: PDF We are responsible proof quality andnot may proofThis quality andismay Dotted outline proof quality and may not be suitable for print for any errors not beafter suitableindicates for print the edge and not be suitable for print reproduction. reproduction. proof approval. will not print. reproduction. CLIENT

NOTES NOTES Please Note:NOTES This PDF is proof quality andoutline may Dotted outline Dotted Dotted outline indicates not the be edge and suitable for print indicates the edge the edge and and will not print.indicates reproduction. will not print. will not print.

NOTES

Dotted outline indicates the edge and will not print.

Wednesday September 11

GrandPals, Suzanne Paterson Building, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609-9247108. www.princetonsenior.org. Learn about GrandPals, a group of volunteers that reads to children once a week duringFront the day. Register. 11 a.m.

Hollywood Summer Nights, Princeton Garden Theater, 160 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-279-1999. www.thegardentheatre.com. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. 7:30 p.m.

Friday September 13

So Percussion, Richardson Auditorium, Princeton University. www.princetonuniversityconcerts.org. Featuring works by Julia Wolfe and Jason Treuting. Free. Register. 7:30 p.m.

See EVENTS, Page 12 SAVE THETHE DATE SAVE DATE SAVE THE DATE

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2019 7:30PM SATURDAY, • 7:30PM SAVEOCTOBER THE DATE5, •2019 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2019 • 7:30PM SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2019 • 7:30PM

PATRIOTS THEATER AT THE FOUNDATION OF MORRIS HALL / ST. LAWRENCE, INC. THE TRENTON WAR THE FOUNDATION OF MORRIS HALL / ST. LAWRENCE, INC. THE FOUNDATION MORRIS HALL / ST. LAWRENCE, INC. presentsOF a benefit concert presents benefit concert THE FOUNDATION OF aMORRIS HALL / ST. LAWRENCE,MEMORIAL INC. presents a benefit concert GENERAL ADMISSION presents a benefit concert TICKET PRICES RANGE $35-$90 Motown's Greatest Hits with vocal quartet Spectrum

Call 215-893-1999 or visit www.ticketphiladelphia.org to purchase For more information about patron tickets or sponsorships, please contact Jane Millner at 609-896-9500, ext 2215 or jmillner@slrc.org. The concert will benefit the patients and residents of St. Lawrence Rehabilitation Center and Morris Hall.

September 2019 | Princeton Echo11


9/14 • John Parra and the image he designed for the Princeton Children’s Book Festival EVENTS, continued from page 11

Girl Scout Badge Workshops, Morven Museum and Garden, 55 Stockton Street, Saturday September 14 Princeton. www.morven.org. Three separate Portrait Photography from Start to workshops for Girl Scouts: Bugs Badge for Finish, Princeton Photo Workshop, Har- Brownies at 11 a.m. and Scribe Badge and lingen Road Studios, Belle Mead. www. Flowers Badge for Juniors at 2 p.m. $18. Regprincetonphotoworkshop.com. Learn about ister. 11 a.m. lens choices and get hands-on experience Citizens’ Climate Lobby Meeting, working with natural and artificial light and Unitarian Universalist Congregation of posing. $179. Register. 10 a.m. Princeton, 50 Cherry Hill Road, Princeton, citizensclimatelobby.org/ Princeton Children’s Book Festival, 609-240-2425. Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon chapters/NJ_Princeton. Nonprofit, nonpartiStreet, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www. san, grassroots advocacy organization. 12:30 princetonlibrary.org. More than 80 authors to 2:30 p.m. and illustrators in children’s literature meet, Celebrating 70: A Night on the Town, interact with, and sign books for young read- The Jewish Center of Princeton, 435 Nasers. “Saturday Stories” session led by book sau Street, Princeton, 609-921-0100. www. festival poster creator John Parra at 10:30 thejewishcenter.org. Dinner, music, and fun a.m. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

9/15 • Author Gina Rippon

celebrating the center’s 70th anniversary. Festive attire requested. $180; $125 for people under 45. 7:45 p.m.

Sunday September 15 Music Fest 2019, Palmer Square, Princeton. www.palmersquare.com. Free familyfriendly event featuring two stages of live music, food, drinks, vendors, and activities for children. Performances include a Frank Sinatra tribute with Jerry Pearce & Swingadelic, best of New Jersey mix with Some Assembly Required, Bruce Springsteen tribute with the B-Street Band, Paul Simon tribute with ALEO-music, and Bon Jovi tribute with Slippery When Wet. 11 a.m. Rick Recht: Family Concert, The Jewish Center Princeton, 435 Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-921-0100. www.thejewishcenter.

9/15 • Rick Recht org. Rick Recht is one of the top touring musicians in Jewish music. Free. Noon. Getting to Know Your Digital Camera, Princeton Photo Workshop, 20 Library Place, Princeton. www.princetonphotoworkshop.com. Learn about camera settings, composition, and more. Bring your own digital camera. $59. Register. 1 p.m. Author Gina Rippon, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary. org. Rippon will discuss her book, “Gender and Our Brains,” which explores how recent breakthroughs in neuroscience and psychology research have helped debunk long-held beliefs that there are biological distinctions between female and male brains. 4 p.m.

See EVENTS, Page 13

IMAGINE THE POSSIBILITIES

“YOUR INDOOR AIR QUALITY SPECIALIST”

indoorairtech.com

FULLY LICENSED & INSURED

HARDSCAPING Patios Retaining Walls Brick Pavers Driveways Pillar Steps Path Walkways

indoorairtech.com indoorairtech.com

WHAT CUSTOMERS ARE SAYING…

“ They did the pavers, planted countless trees, framed out my son’s swing set area. They made elegant and organic looking designs which completely transformed my yard. We actually had them come back a second time to add on (doubled the size) to our patio because we liked the look so much.” - Customer from Spotswood, NJ

SCHEDULE YOUR FREE ESTIMATE CALL 732-246-2347 info@jirehlandscapingandtreeservice.com 12 Princeton Echo | September 2019

609-208-1330 Family Owned & Operated

indoorairtech.com indoorairtech.com


9/15 • Bon Jovi tribute band Slippery When Wet at Music Fest 2019

9/16 • Ruha Benjamin

EVENTS, continued from page 12

Thursday September 19

Monday September 16

Tuesday September 17

Alarm Will Sound, Princeton Sound Kitchen, Richardson Auditorium, Princeton Women’s College Club of Princeton, University, 609-258-9220. music.princeton. All Saints Church, 16 All Saints’ Road, Princeton. www.wccpnj.org. Library consultant Jim edu. The ensemble performs the concert Hecht presents “The Public Library: Yester- version of Princeton University professor Donnacha Dennehy’s modern cantata “The day, Today, and Tomorrow.” Free. 1 p.m. Hunger.” Free; ticket required. 8 p.m. Ruha Benjamin in Conversation with Eddie Glaude Jr., Princeton Public Library, Wednesday September 18 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924PSO Soundtracks, Princeton Public 9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. A converLibrary, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, sation about the launch of Benjamin’s new 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. book, “Race After Technology: Abolitionist Presentation by James Barron, author of Tools for the New Jim Code,” and “Captivating “Piano: The Making of a Steinway Concert Technology: Race, Carceral Technoscience, Grand” and a staff reporter for the New York and Liberatory Imagination in Everyday Life,” Times. 7 p.m. which Benjamin edited. Register. 6 p.m.

9/17 • Composer Donnacha Dennehy

edu/frenchtheater. French theater festival brings celebrated French actors and direcHighlight Seminar Series, Andlinger tors, as well as promising early-career artists, Center for Energy and the Environment, to Princeton University. Check website for 92 Olden Street, Princeton, 609-258-1971. schedule. Through September 28. 8 p.m. acee.princeton.edu. Kimberly Prather discusses unraveling the impacts of humans Friday September 20 and oceans on clouds and climate. Free. Job Seeker Sessions, Princeton Public 12:30 p.m. Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, Friends for Bates Cocktail Reception, 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. YWCA Princeton, Springdale Golf Club, Keith Bogen presents on building a career Princeton. www.ywcaprinceton.org/friends- rather than looking for a job. 9:45 a.m. forbates. Proceeds benefit the Pearl Bates Prindie Film Festival, Princeton UniScholarship Fund, which supports families versity. www.prindiefest.com. View 22 in need of financial assistance in securing acshort, international films. Go online for specess to the YWCA’s programs. Register. $100. cific screening information. $10. Register. 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Continues September 21 and 22. 3 p.m. Seuls en Scene French Theater FesSee EVENTS, Page 14 tival, Princeton University. arts.princeton.

609-371-7007 Call for Lunch and a Tour!

2019-2020 Concert Season Mozart: Great Mass in C Minor Sunday, November 3, 2019 I 4:00pm Richardson Auditorium, Princeton

Messiah and More! Sunday, December 15, 2019 I 3:00pm Patriots Theater, Trenton

James Whitbourn: Annelies Sunday, March 15, 2020 I 4:00pm Richardson Auditorium, Princeton

Power and Peace: Durufle Requiem Saturday, May 9, 2020 I 4:00pm Princeton University Chapel, Princeton

SAVE THE DATE

PROJECT LINUS Fall Blanket Drive Saturday Sept 21ST • 10-1 We will be collecting new handmade blankets for children in need of a hug, love, warmth, or comfort. Also collecting yarn, fleece and monetary donations.

Project

Linus

Call 609-575-2001 with questions. Mercer County, NJ Providing Security Through Blankets

Ryan James Brandau I Artistic Director

1150 Washington Boulevard, Robbinsville, NJ 08691 located across from Foxmoor Shopping Center www.rosehillassistedliving.com

For tickets, visit www.princetonpromusica.org or call 609-683-5122 DePaul Healthcare Systems

September 2019 | Princeton Echo13


9/19 • ‘Desordre du Discours,’ Seuls en Scene

9/20 • Skye Trio, Princeton Folk Music Society

EVENTS, continued from page 13

Smithsonian Museum Day: Baroque Music and Victorian Flowers, Morven Skye Trio, Princeton Folk Music SociMuseum and Garden, 55 Stockton Street. ety, Christ Congregation Church, 50 Walnut www.morven.org. Generations Baroque EnLane, Princeton, 609-799-0944. www.princsemble performs. $10. Register. 10 a.m. etonfolk.org. $25. 7:30 p.m.

9/21 & 22 • Christina and Michelle Naughton, PSO

Edward T. Cone Concert: All Mozart, Princeton Symphony Orchestra, Richardson Auditorium, Princeton University. www. princetonsymphony.org. Christina and Michelle Naughton, piano. $30-$100. Register. Also September 22, 3 p.m. 8 p.m.

Chapter Meeting, Represent New Jersey, Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Sunday September 22 Team Parkinson 5K and Fun Run, Carn- Princeton, 50 Cherry Hill Road, Princeton. One World, One Love, Hinds Plaza, 65 egie Center, 101 Carnegie Center Drive, centralnjrepresentus.wordpress.com. Guest Witherspoon Street, Princeton. Free commuspeaker Assemblyman Andrew Zwicker talks Princeton, 800-579-8440. www.runforpd. org. 5K race and one-mile fun run plus team about his bill on ranked choice voting (RCV) nity yoga and music event to create awareness about the climate change crisis. Yoga photos, kids’ activities, refreshments, awards, and New Jersey’s dark money bill. 11 a.m. every hour on the hour. Music from 10 a.m. to and door prizes. Register. 7:30 a.m. No-Name Dance, Suzanne Patterson 3 p.m. by DJ Richie Parella, Nature to Nature, Take Better Pictures with Your Digital Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609- Arul Karttikeya, and Turiya. The Environmenwww.centraljerseydance.org. Camera, Princeton Photo Workshop, Har- 945-1883. tal Education Fund, New Jersey Environmenlingen Road Studios, Belle Mead. www.princ- No partner needed. Beginners, singles, and tal Lobby, Sierra Club, and Citizen’s Climate etonphotoworkshop.com. Hands-on digital couples welcome. Refreshments served. $15. Lobby will be on hand. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 7:30 p.m. photography class. $99. Register. 10 a.m.

Saturday September 21

New homes start at $79,000! Finally, An Affordable Way To Live in New Jersey!

NEW MODELS Ready to Move In!

Brunch Milonga, Viva Tango, Suzanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton, 609-948-4448. Argentine tango dancing. Brunch included. No partner necessary. Beginners welcome. $15. Noon. Korean Lotus Flower Lantern-Making Workshop, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-9249529. The Korean Spirit and Culture Promotion Project helps attendees make traditional lotus flower lanterns. Materials provided. Ages 12 and up. Register. 2 to 4 p.m. Artist Talk, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-9529. In conjunction with “The Power of Faces,” a global photojournalism project by Theresa Menders and Daniel Farber Huang. 4 p.m.

ATTENTION ALL MERCER COUNTY BUSINESSESSee EVENTS, Page 16 ATTENTION ALLClean Energy Workshop The New Jersey MERCER COUNTY BUSINESSES September 19, 2019, 8 a.m. — 10 a.m. The Boathouse at Mercer Lake | 334 S. Post Rd., West Windsor

The New Jersey Clean Energy Workshop September 19, 2019, 8 a.m. — 10 a.m.

On behalf of Mercer County Executive Brian M. Hughes, the Mercer County Office of Economic Development invites you to learn about energy resource programs that will help you become more energy efficient and The Boathouse at Mercer Lake | 334 S. Post Rd., West Windsor improve your business’s bottom line! This FREE WORKSHOP features presentations Mercerthe County Office of Economic Development, the Board On behalf of Mercer County Executive Brian M.by Hughes, Mercer County Office of Economic Development to learn resource programs thatand willthe helpDirect you become more energy efficient and ofinvites Publicyou Utilities, theabout New energy Jersey Clean Energy Program Install Program. A continental improve your business’s breakfast will be served. bottom line! This FREE WORKSHOP features presentations by Mercer County Office of Economic Development, the Board of Public Utilities, the New Jersey Clean Energy Program and the Direct Install Program. A continental breakfast will be served.

Our low monthly Maintenance fee of $525

INCLUDES:

TAXES, SEWER, WATER, BASIC CABLE TV, TRASH PICK UP, HEATED POOL ... and Much More!

2 Terrace Rd., Browns Mills, NJ 08015

Folllow w us on n Facebbook

(609) 893-3388 www.pineviewterrace.com

Visit our community to see our available homes. 14 Princeton Echo | September 2019

For more information or to register, contact Ed Kemler in the Mercer County Office of Economic more information or to register, Development For at 609-989-6555 / ekemler@mercercounty.org contact Ed Kemler in the Mercer County Office of Economic Development at 609-989-6555 / ekemler@mercercounty.org

Brian M. Hughes, Mercer County Executive • The Board of Chosen Freeholders Mercer County Office of Economic Development│609.989.6555│mercercounty.org Brian M. Hughes, Mercer County Executive • The Board of Chosen Freeholders Mercer County Office of Economic Development│609.989.6555│mercercounty.org


55+ BREAKFAST SERIES YOUR BREAST HEALTH: Understanding a Comprehensive Approach to Care

Thursday, September 19, 2019 Capital Health – Hamilton 1445 Whitehorse-Mercerville Road, Hamilton, NJ 08619 8:30 – 9 a.m. · Registration/Continental Breakfast 9 – 10:30 a.m. · Program

Join DR. LISA ALLEN and DR. ROSE MUSTAFA, fellowship trained breast surgeons from Capital Health Surgical Group Breast Surgery for an informative program on breast cancer. Learn more about what makes you high risk, what imaging is available, and the role genetics plays. Also learn more about benign breast disease and what women can expect during menopause.

Register by calling 609.394.4153 or register online at capitalhealth.org/events

CAPITAL HEALTH MEDICAL GROUP IS PLEASED TO WELCOME JOYCE VARUGHESE, MD, FACOG GYNECOLOGIC ONCOLOGY SURGEON Whether it is an initial visit to help diagnose a condition, obtaining some of the most advanced treatments, or getting a second opinion, our team of specialists and surgeons can help. Now you can schedule appointments with DR. JOYCE VARUGHESE at Capital Health Surgical Group. Dr. Varughese offers expertise in the most advanced treatments for all gynecologic cancers—ovarian, uterine/endometrial, cervical, vulvar and vaginal—as well as pre-cancerous conditions in the female reproductive system. Fellowship trained in gynecologic oncology from Yale University, Dr. Varughese specializes in

traditional and minimally invasive surgical approaches (including laparoscopic and robotic using the da Vinci surgical system). Dr. Varughese joins Capital Health Surgical Group, our multi-specialty surgical practice comprised of experienced surgeons who are experts in the surgical fields of acute care, bariatrics, breast, hepato-pancreato-biliary, vascular and surgical critical care. She also joins our network of physicians at Capital Health Cancer Center, the area’s most advanced provider of cancer treatment.

TO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT, CALL 609.537.6700 CAPITAL HEALTH SURGICAL GROUP

www.capitalsurgical.org Two Capital Way, Suite 505, Pennington, NJ 08534

MEDICAL GROUP

September 2019 | Princeton Echo15


9/21 • Andrew Zwicker

9/25 • Joyce Carol Oates

9/26 • Damien Chazelle, Petey Greene Program

EVENTS, continued from page 14

Owned: A Tale of Two Americas, Princeton Garden Theater, 160 Nassau Street, Monday September 23 Princeton, 609-279-1999. www.thegardenAuthor Talk: Marc Brackett, Princ- theatre.com. Special documentary screeneton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, ing in partnership with Housing Initiatives of Princeton, 609-924-9529. www.princetonli- Princeton. Register. $11.50. 7:30 p.m. brary.org. Marc Brackett, Yale professor and Thursday September 26 founding director of the Yale Center for EmoBaseball Legends Storytime, Mortional Intelligence, speaks on his new book “Permission to Feel: Unlocking the Power of ven Museum, 55 Stockton Street, PrincEmotions to Help Our Kids, Ourselves, and eton, 609-924-8144. www.morven.org. Walk through Morven’s baseball exhibit, make a Our Society Thrive.” 6 p.m. baseball card, and read “We Are the Ship: The Tuesday September 24 Story of Negro League Baseball.” 11 a.m. Le Brio, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-9249529. www.princetonlibrary.org. French film features Neila Salah, who dreams of becoming a lawyer and registers at the great Parisian university of Assas. 6:30 p.m.

Poetry Presentation, Labyrinth Books, 122 Nassau Street, Princeton. www.labyrinthbooks.com. Poet, critic, professor of English, translator, and editor of Princeton University’s poetry series Susanne Stewart introduces Kathleen Graber and Eleanor Wilner, the two most recent poets published in that series. 6 p.m.

9/29 • Rhiannon Giddens & Francesco Turrisi

Nassau Street, Princeton. www.peteygreene. Sunday September 29 org. Princeton High School graduate and Rosh Hashana begins at sundown Oscar-winning director Damien Chazelle in conversation with Roger Durling. $15 and up. In the Studio: the Fine Art Nude, PrincRegister. 7:30 p.m. eton Photo Workshop, Harlingen Road Studios, Belle Mead. www.princetonphotoFriday September 27 workshop.com. Learn how to work with a live Job Seeker Sessions, Princeton Public model in a small-group setting. $249. RegisLibrary, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, ter. 10 a.m. 609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. A Book Brunch, Princeton Public Library, panel of career coaches host a Q&A session 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924about job searching and career development. 9529. Jamaican-American author Nicole Den9:45 a.m. nis-Benn discusses her acclaimed new novel, Gallery Talk and Reception, Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton University. artmuseum.princeton.edu. “Legacy: Selections from the Gillett G. Griffin Collection,” running through Sunday, October 6. 4 p.m.

“Patsy.” 11 a.m.

Ray Kamalay’s Musical Flea Market, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-9529. www. princetonlibrary.org. The guitarist and singer covers a wide variety of historical styles, inSaturday September 28 cluding Elizabethan, bossa nova, Delta blues, Human Origins and Antiquity, Johnson yodeling, ragtime, jazz, cowboy songs, gypsy Wednesday September 25 Education Center, 1 Preservation Place, guitar, Irish music and even a few originals. 3 Author Talk: Joyce Carol Oates, PrincTwilight Walking Tours, Morven Mu- Princeton. www.icrl.org. Michael A. Cremo to 4:30 p.m. eton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, seum, 55 Stockton Street, Princeton. www. presents. Refreshments served. 1 p.m. Rhiannon Giddens with Francesco TurPrinceton, 609-924-9529. Oates discusses morven.org. Travel through the grounds of Pink Martini, McCarter Theatre, 91 risi, McCarter Theater, 91 University Place, her new novel, “My Life as a Rat,” which fol- the museum to explore architecture, garden, University Place, Princeton, 609-258-2787. Princeton, 609-258-2787. www.mccarter.org. lows Violet Rue Kerrigan, a young woman and buildings. $10. 7 p.m. www.mccarter.org. Latin, jazz, cabaret, and The two musicians trace the journey of the who looks back upon her life in exile from Damien Chazelle Homecoming: An cinema scores from Hollywood’s musicals of banjo and frame drum through Africa, the her family following her testimony, at age 12, Middle East, southern Europe, England, and Evening in Support of the Petey Greene the 1940s and 50s. 8 p.m. about the racist murder of an African-Amerithe Americas. 8 p.m. Program, Nassau Presbyterian Church, 61 can boy by her older brothers. 7 p.m.

Fireworks Food Beer Wine Music Bocce Italian Market Amusement Rides Kids Zone Cultural Presentations Sunday Mass 16 Princeton Echo | September 2019


1

2

3

4

5

6

DAILY GRIND

7

SNAP SIGN UP TELL YOUR MAKE CONNECT E September 2019 2019 2019 is HUNGER ACTION MONTH September is isHUNGER HUNGER ACTION ACTION MONTH MONTH !September

AA TTA ACCTTAAKKE C TIIOK E TI ONE O N! N! !

TAKE THE TASK 30 WAYS IN 30 DAYS K N DID YOU FRIENDS CHANGE WITH TASK A Take the TASK Take Take the the TASK TASK T IO KNOW? T 30 WAYS IN 30 DAYS TO FIGHT HUNGER CHALLENGE 30 30 WAYS WAYS IN IN 30 30 DAYS DAYS TO TO FIGHT FIGHT HUNGER HUNGER CHALLENGE CHALLENGE HUNGER ACTION MONTH CHALLENGE C A Do one or do them all - Every action matters! Take a “Spoon Selfie” (essentially you, holding up a spoon and smiling) Post the TASK “30 Save all your change Check us out on today at lunchtime and Ways in 30 Days” for the month and TASK on Instagram, The Food Stamp Act share your picture on Hunger Action donate it to TASK. Facebook, and was signed into law Instagram to show your Challenge calendar Every penny counts! Twitter: in 1964 by President friends you’ve accepted in your home or @TASKSoupKitchen. Lyndon B. Johnson? TASK’s “30 Ways in 30 office to tell your Today, there are Days” Hunger Action friends September is nearly 40 million Challenge. Don’t HUNGER ACTION MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY MONDAY MONDAY TUESDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY Americans enrolledTHURSDAY forget to tag MONTH. in the program @TASKSoupKitchen!

Skip your coffee run and donate what you would have spent to TASK to help provide one free, wellbalanced meal for at least one family in your community. Five bucks can pay for one meal.

Visit www.hungeractionnj.com to sign-up to receive TASK’s monthly electronic newsletter. We’ll keepArea you up-toTrenton Soup Kitchen date year-round with new opportunities to FRIDAY SATURDAY hunger in FRIDAY FRIDAYhelp fightSATURDAY SATURDAY your community.

Do Do one one oror do do them them all all - Every - Every action action matters! matters!

DO ONE OR DO THEM ALL · EVERY ACTION COUNTS HungerActionNJ.com HungerActionNJ.com HungerActionNJ.com

SUNDAY SUNDAY SUNDAY

11 1

22 2

TELL YOUR TELL TELL YOUR YOUR FRIENDS FRIENDS FRIENDS

33 3

8 MAKE MAKE MAKE 9

10

44 4

55 5

11

12

66 6

13

DAILY DAILY DAILY GRIND GRIND GRIND

14

77 7

SNAP SNAP SNAP SIGN UP SIGN SIGN UP UP Take “Spoon Selfie” Skip your coffee run Take a a“Spoon a “Spoon Selfie” Selfie” Skip Skip your your coffee coffee run run DID YOU DID DID YOU YOU Take GO (essentially you, holding and donate what you (essentially (essentially you, you, holding holding and and donate donate what what you you Visit Visit Visit KNOW? KNOW? KNOW? Save allyour your change Check usout out onon aspoon spoon and smiling) would have spent a HUNGER spoon and and smiling) smiling) ORANGE! would would have have spent spent www.hungeractionnj.com Save Save all all your change change Check Check us us out on MATCH YOUR www.hungeractionnj.com ENCOURAGE www.hungeractionnj.com PATRIOTupupaup CONNECT CONNECT CONNECT WITH TASK WITH WITH TASK TASK

CHANGE CHANGE CHANGE

Post the TASK “30 Post Post the the TASK TASK “30 “30 Ways 30Days” Days” forfor the month and TASK onInstagram, Instagram, today lunchtime and TASK help today today atatlunchtime at lunchtime and and totoTASK to TASK totohelp to help Ways Ways inin30 in 30 Days” for the the month month and and TASK TASK on on Instagram, The tosign-up sign-up toreceive receive to to sign-up to to receive The Food Stamp Act The Food Food Stamp Stamp Act Act Turn your social Hunger Action donate to TASK. Facebook, and share your picture onon provide provide one free, wellHunger Hunger Action Action donate donate ititto it TASK. to TASK. Facebook, Facebook, and and share your your picture picture on provide one one free, free, wellwellTASK’s monthly TASK’s TASK’s monthly monthly was signed into law was was signed signed into into law law share media over to the Challenge calendar Every penny counts! Twitter: Instagram to show your balanced meal for at Instagram Instagram to show to show your your balanced balanced meal meal for at for at Challenge Challenge calendar calendar Every Every penny penny counts! counts! Twitter: Twitter: electronic newsletter. electronic electronic newsletter. newsletter. 1964 byPresident President inin1964 in 1964 by by President Check human Craft@TASKSoupKitchen. your own Give your time atfriends ORANGE. Change your home oror friends you’ve accepted least one family your friends you’ve you’ve accepted acceptedleast least one one family family ininyour in yourWe’ll ininyour in your home home or @TASKSoupKitchen. @TASKSoupKitchen. Lyndon We’ll keep you up-toWe’ll keep keep you you up-toup-toWear Orange B.Johnson? Johnson? Lyndon B. B. Johnson? resources toLyndon find donation jar today office totell tell your TASK’s “30 Ways 3030 community. community. Five bucks TASK orare volunteer office office to to tell your your TASK’s TASK’s “30 Ways Ways inin30 in community. Five Five bucks bucks date your cover photo date year-round with date year-round year-round with with Today, there Today, Today, there there are are Support TASK while you in“30 support out whether your and set it on your friends September Days” Hunger Action can pay for one meal. Days” Days” Hunger Hunger Action Action can can pay pay for one for one meal. meal. friends friends September September isis is new opportunities toto at your local food new new opportunities opportunities to to orange or add nearly 40million million nearly nearly 40 40 million shop on Amazon. Search of HUNGER Sign-up for the Battle HUNGER ACTION Challenge. Don’t Challenge. Challenge. Don’t Don’t HUNGER HUNGER ACTION ACTION company matches desk at work. help fight hunger help help fight fight hunger hunger inin in pantry on this Americans enrolled a profile frame Americans Americans enrolled enrolled Smile.Amazon.com, ACTION Against Hunger Bike MONTH. forget to tag MONTH. MONTH. forget forget to tag to tag your community. donations orininthe Encourage your your your community. community. the program in the program program national day of around your image @TASKSoupKitchen! choose TASK as your MONTH. Send @TASKSoupKitchen! @TASKSoupKitchen! Ride taking place on volunteer hours. coworkers and office

CYCLING AGAINST HUNGER

88 8 CYCLING CYCLING CYCLING AGAINST AGAINST AGAINST HUNGER HUNGER HUNGER

EFFORTS

DAY

ACTION DAY

remembrance. Sunday, September visitors to donate their 15th. Can’t ride? Team work makes loose pocket change Volunteer at the the dream work! each day to help feed event. Visit www. hungry families in battleagainsthunger.org your community. MATCH YOUR MATCH MATCH YOUR YOUR PATRIOT ENCOURAGE PATRIOT ENCOURAGE ENCOURAGE PATRIOT for details.

99 9

15

10 10 10

16

11 11 11

EFFORTS EFFORTS EFFORTS

12 12 12

DAY DAY DAY

17

18

OFFICE COLLECTION

to support HUNGER charity, and every time you ACTION MONTH. shop make sure you open www.facebook.com/ to the Smile.Amazon.com profilepicframes GO GO GO page first. Amazon will (search Feeding donate .05 percent of your ORANGE! America) ORANGE! ORANGE! total purchase to TASK.

13 13 13

HUNGER HUNGER HUNGER HUNGER ACTION ACTION DAY ACTION ACTION DAY DAY

Check human Craft your own Check Check human human Craft Craft your your own own Give your time Give Give your your time time atat at resources tofind find donation jartoday today resources resources to to find donation donation jar jar today TASK orvolunteer volunteer TASK TASK or or volunteer out whether your and set on your out out whether whether your your and and set set ititon it your on your atyour your local food at at your local local food food Sign-up forthe the Battle Sign-up Sign-up for for the Battle Battle company matches desk work. company company matches matches desk desk atatwork. at work. pantry onthis this pantry pantry on on this Bike Against Hunger Bike Bike Against Against Hunger Hunger donations oror Encourage your donations donations or Encourage Encourage your your national day ofof national national day day of Ride taking place onon coworkers Ride Ride taking taking place place on volunteer hours. coworkers and office volunteer volunteer hours. hours. coworkers and and office office remembrance. remembrance. remembrance. Sunday, September Sunday, Sunday, September September visitors visitors donate their visitors totodonate to donate their their 15th. Can’t ride? 15th. 15th. Can’t Can’t ride? ride? Team work makes loose pocket change Team work work makes makes loose loose pocket pocket change change Team Volunteer the Volunteer Volunteer atatthe at the Could you feed the dream work! each day help feed the the dream dream work! work! each each day day totohelp to help feed feed Invite five friends event. Visit www. event. event. Visit Visit www. www. Create a Facebook hungry families hungry hungry families families yourself on $4 a inin in to like TASK battleagainsthunger.org battleagainsthunger.org battleagainsthunger.org your your community. your community. community. Set up a collection fundraiser inviting day? Take the SNAP fordetails. details. for for details. on Facebook,

HUNGER CHALLENGE

us your best pictures on social media. Tag us @ TASKSoupKitchen

SHOP-NGIVE

19

Wear Orange Wear Wear Orange Orange support ininsupport in support HUNGER ofofHUNGER of HUNGER ACTION ACTION ACTION MONTH. Send MONTH. MONTH. Send Send usyour your best us us your best best pictures on pictures pictures on on social media. social social media. media. Today is Food Tag us@ @ Waste Tag Tag us us @ TASKSoupKitchen Prevention Day in TASKSoupKitchen TASKSoupKitchen

SPREAD THE FACEBOOK FOOD WORD FUNDRAISER WASTE DAY

14 14 14

Turn your social Turn Turn your your social social SHOP-NSHOP-NSHOP-Nmedia over tothe the media media over over to to the ORANGE. Change ORANGE. ORANGE. Change Change GIVE GIVE GIVE your cover photo your your cover cover photo photo Support TASK while you Support Support TASK TASK while while you you toorange orange oradd add to to orange or or add shop shop on Amazon. Search shop on Amazon. on Amazon. Search Search profile frame a aprofile a profile frame frame Smile.Amazon.com, Smile.Amazon.com, Smile.Amazon.com, around your image around around your your image image choose TASK your choose choose TASK TASK asas your as your tosupport support HUNGER to to support HUNGER HUNGERcharity, charity, and every time you charity, and and every every time time you you We always need your ACTION MONTH. ACTION ACTION MONTH. MONTH. shop shop make sure you open shop make make sure sure you you open open www.facebook.com/ help. Sign up toSmile.Amazon.com serve a www.facebook.com/ www.facebook.com/ the Smile.Amazon.com toto the to the Smile.Amazon.com profilepicframes profilepicframes profilepicframes meal or gather apage group ofAmazon View the latest page first. willwill page first. first. Amazon Amazon will (search Feeding (search (search Feeding Feeding donate .05 percent your friends and/or coworkers donate donate .05 percent .05 percent ofof your of your statistics on hunger America) America) America) total purchase TASK. total total purchase purchase toto TASK. to TASK. to schedule time to in our area at

20

21

HUNGER NEAR YOU

VOLUNTEER

New Jersey. Join box in your office, your friends to (formerly known volunteer. Visit Instagram, or advocates from more FeedingAmerica.org ask your coworkers donate and help as food stamps) www.hungeractionnj.com Twitter. Tag us than 30 countries to to bring in a can or provide meals for Challenge and post @TASKSoupKitchen help raise awareness box of dry goods hungry families who your meals and to inspire change. to work, and when eat at TASK. Every recipes on social HUNGER VOLUNTEER HUNGER HUNGER VOLUNTEER And remember, don’t SPREAD THE FACEBOOK FOOD HUNGER SPREAD THE THEFACEBOOK FACEBOOK FOOD FOOD HUNGER HUNGER VOLUNTEER it’s SPREAD full, donate the $5 pays for a meal. media. Tag us CHALLENGE take more food than OFFICE We always need your CHALLENGE CHALLENGE @TASKSoupKitchen OFFICE OFFICE goods to TASK We We always always need need your your this WORD FUNDRAISER WASTE DAY NEAR YOU WORD WORD FUNDRAISER FUNDRAISERWASTE WASTE DAY DAY NEAR NEAR YOU YOU help. help. Sign upto toserve serve help. Sign Sign up up to serve aa a you can eat. Could you feed COLLECTION Could Could you you feed feed COLLECTION COLLECTION month.

15 15 15

16 16 16

17 17 17

18 18 18

Invite five friends Invite Invite five five friends friends yourself on$4 $4a a a yourself yourself on on $4 tolike like TASK to to like TASK TASK Set upup collection Set up a acollection a collection day? Take the SNAP day? day? Take Take the the SNAP SNAP Set onFacebook, Facebook, on on Facebook, box your office, box box ininyour in your office, office, (formerly known (formerly (formerly known known Instagram, oror Instagram, Instagram, or ask your coworkers ask ask your your coworkers coworkers asfood food stamps) as as food stamps) stamps) Twitter. Tag usus Twitter. Twitter. Tag Tag us to bring in a can or to bring in ain can a can or or Challenge and post Challenge Challenge and and post post to bring @TASKSoupKitchen @TASKSoupKitchen box ofdry dry goods box box of of dry goods goods @TASKSoupKitchen your meals and your your meals meals and and towork, work, and when to to work, and and when when recipes onsocial social recipes recipes on on social it’sfull, full, donate the it’s it’s full, donate donate the the media. Tag usus media. media. Tag Tag us goods toTASK TASK this goods to to TASK this this @TASKSoupKitchen @TASKSoupKitchen @TASKSoupKitchen goods Brown bag your month. month. month.

22

BROWN BAG IT

22 22 22

23

FOOD WASTE CHALLENGE

24

lunch this week and donate what you 30 percent of food would ordinarily goes uneaten every year. Can you achieve spend on lunch to FOOD FOOD FOOD zero food waste for a TASK week, a month WASTE WASTE WASTE day,oraeven a year?

23 23 23

24 24 24

19 19 19

20 20 20

21 21 21

meal gather group Today Food Waste View the latest meal meal ororgather or gather a agroup a group ofof of Today isisFood is Food Waste Waste View View the the latest latest Create Facebook Create Create a aFacebook a Facebook Today friends and/or coworkers Prevention Day statistics onhunger hunger friends and/or and/or coworkers coworkers Prevention Prevention Day Day inin in statistics statistics on on hunger friends fundraiser inviting fundraiser fundraiser inviting inviting schedule time New Jersey. Join our area totoschedule to schedule time time toto to New New Jersey. Jersey. Join Join ininour in our area area atat at your friends toto your your friends friends to volunteer. Visit advocates from more FeedingAmerica.org volunteer. volunteer. Visit Visit advocates from from more more FeedingAmerica.org FeedingAmerica.org donate and help donate donate and and help help advocates www.hungeractionnj.com than 30countries countries toto www.hungeractionnj.com www.hungeractionnj.com than than 30 30 countries to provide meals for provide provide meals meals for for help raise awareness help raise raise awareness awareness hungry families who hungry hungry families families who who help toinspire inspire change. to to inspire change. change. eat TASK. Every eat eat atatTASK. at TASK. Every Every And remember, don’t And And remember, remember, don’t don’t $5 pays for a meal. $5 pays $5 pays for for a meal. a meal. take more food than take take more more food food than than you can eat. you can can eat. eat. In honor of National you

25

SHARE A RECIPE

Cooking Recipe Day, find one recipe you’ve been eager to try. Post it on Facebook SHARE SHARE Volunteer to wrapSHARE and don’t forget flatware for TASK meals. AA RECIPE A RECIPE RECIPE to use our hashtag Wrap a fork, knife and #HungerActionMonth. spoon in a napkin andhonor honor ofNational National InInhonor In of of National

WRAP 25 25 25 CUTLERY

26

TAKE A TOUR

27

28

SPREAD

THE hunger every day. 26 27 26 26 27 27JOY Email us to schedule See how TASK fights

GOOD NEIGHBOR DAY

28 28 28

Help your hungry neighbors by donating Make peanut butter your visit at: or volunteering your and jelly sandwiches GOOD GOOD GOOD info@trentonsoup TAKE TAKE TAKE time. We appreciate with your friends and/ kitchen.org NEIGHBOR NEIGHBOR NEIGHBOR Brown bag your your help. Visit Brown Brown bag bag your your CHALLENGE CHALLENGE CHALLENGE AA TOUR A TOUR TOUR or family and donate lunch this week and seal it with a Cooking twisty-tie. lunch lunch this this week week and and Cooking Recipe Day, www.hungeractionnj.com. Cooking Recipe Recipe Day, Day, Post your results on SPREAD DAY DAY DAY themSPREAD to SPREAD TASK. We donate what you WRAP We serve nearly 400,000 donate donate what what you you WRAP WRAP 30percent percent food find one recipe you’ve See how TASK fights 30 30 percent ofoffood of food See See how how TASK TASK fights fights find find one one recipe recipe you’ve you’ve our Instagram page giveTHE out moreJOY than would ordinarily meal each year. Visit goes uneaten every would would ordinarily ordinarily THE JOY goes goes uneaten uneaten every every been eager totry. try. hunger every day. THE JOY hunger hunger every every day. day. been been eager eager to to try. Help your hungry Help Help your your hungry hungry @TASKsoupkitchen CUTLERY CUTLERY CUTLERY year. Can you achieve www.HungerActionNJ. spend onlunch lunch toto year. year. CanCan youyou achieve achieve spend spend on on lunch to Post on Facebook Email usto toschedule schedule Email us us to schedule 5,000 sandwiches Post Post ititon it Facebook on Facebook Email neighbors bydonating donating neighbors neighbors by by donating Make peanut butter Make Make peanut peanut butter butter Volunteer wrap zero food waste forfor Volunteer Volunteer totowrap to wrap zero zero food food waste waste for aa a com for details. TASK TASK TASK and don’t forget your visit at: each year! your your visitvisit at: at: andand don’t don’t forget forget orvolunteering volunteering your or or volunteering your your

BROWN BROWN BROWN BAG ITIT BAG BAG IT

flatware forTASK TASK meals. andjelly jelly sandwiches day, week, month flatware for for TASK meals. meals. to use our hashtag jelly sandwiches sandwiches day, day, a aweek, a week, a amonth a monthflatware info@trentonsoup info@trentonsoup info@trentonsoup andand to use to use ourour hashtag hashtag time. We appreciate time. time. We We appreciate appreciate Wrap fork, knife and Wrap Wrap a afork, a fork, knife knife and and oreven even year? with your friends and/ or or even a ayear? a year? with with your your friends friends and/ and/ #HungerActionMonth. kitchen.org kitchen.org kitchen.org #HungerActionMonth. your help. Visit spoon anapkin napkin and your your help. help. Visit Visit spoon spoon ininain a napkin and and#HungerActionMonth. orfamily family and donate or or family and and donate donate seal it with a twisty-tie. it with it with a twisty-tie. a twisty-tie. www.hungeractionnj.com. www.hungeractionnj.com. www.hungeractionnj.com. Post your results onon sealseal Post Post your your results results on them to TASK. We them them to TASK. to TASK. We We We serve nearly 400,000 We We serve serve nearly nearly 400,000 400,000 our Instagram page our our Instagram Instagram page page meal give out more than give give out out more more than than meal each year. Visit meal each each year. year. Visit Visit @TASKsoupkitchen @TASKsoupkitchen @TASKsoupkitchen www.HungerActionNJ. www.HungerActionNJ. 5,000 sandwiches www.HungerActionNJ. 5,000 5,000 sandwiches sandwiches com fordetails. details. com com for for details. each year! each each year! year!

29

30

NATIONAL HUNGER ACTION MONTH IS TIME WHEN SOUP KITCHENS AND FOOD BANKS COME TOGETHER TO MOBILIZE CITIZENS TO TAKE ACTION AGAINST HUNGER AND FOOD INSECURITY IN THE UNITED STATES.

CLEAN-UP 30 30 30TIME

SHARE YOUR STORY 29 SEPTEMBER HUNGER ACTIONHUNGER MONTH IS A TIME WHEN SOUP KITCHENS AND FOOD BANKS COME NATIONAL HUNGER ACTION MONTH ISIS TIME WHEN 29 29 NATIONAL NATIONAL HUNGER ACTION ACTION MONTH MONTH IS TIME TIME WHEN WHEN Tell us about how you SOUP SOUP KITCHENS AND FOOD BANKS COME TOGETHER TO SOUP KITCHENS KITCHENS AND AND FOOD BANKS BANKS COME COME TOGETHER TOGETHER TO TO TOGETHER TO MOBILIZE THE PUBLIC TOFOOD TAKE ACTION AGAINST HUNGER AND FOOD INSECURITY IN Clean out your IN MERCER COUNTY ALMOST 40,000 PEOPLE SUFFER FROM HUNGER took action against MOBILIZE MOBILIZE CITIZENS TO TAKE ACTION AGAINST HUNGER AND MOBILIZE CITIZENS CITIZENS TO TO TAKE TAKE ACTION ACTION AGAINST AGAINST HUNGER HUNGER AND AND pantry and donate THE UNITED STATES. CLEAN-UP SHARE YOUR CLEAN-UP CLEAN-UP SHARE SHARE YOUR YOUR hunger this month. OR FOOD FOOD INSECURITY, NEARLY 10,000 OF THEM ARE CHILDREN your collection of FOOD INSECURITY IN THE UNITED STATES. FOOD INSECURITY INSECURITY IN IN THE THE UNITED UNITED STATES. STATES. Share your story with TIME STORY TIME TIME STORY STORY canned and dryIN MERCER COUNTY ALMOST 40,000 PEOPLE SUFFER FROM HUNGER OR FOOD INSECURITY, NEARLY us @TASKSoupKitchen Tell usabout about how you WHAT CAN40,000 YOU DO ABOUT IT? FROM Tell Tell us us about how how you you packaged goods to Clean out your Clean Clean out out your your IN MERCER COUNTY ALMOST 40,000 PEOPLE SUFFER FROM HUNGER 10,000 OF THEM ARE CHILDREN IN IN MERCER MERCER COUNTY COUNTY ALMOST ALMOST 40,000 PEOPLE PEOPLE SUFFER SUFFER FROM HUNGER HUNGER on Facebook, took action against took took action action against against TASK. Be sure to pantry and donate pantry pantry andand donate donate hunger this month. Instagram or Twitter orOR OR FOOD INSECURITY, NEARLY 10,000 OF THEM ARE CHILDREN hunger hunger this month. month. OR FOOD FOOD INSECURITY, INSECURITY, NEARLY NEARLY 10,000 10,000 OF OF THEM THEM ARE ARE CHILDREN CHILDREN your collection ofof your your collection collection of check forthis expired TAKE ACTION this month and JOIN TASK in Share your story with POST Share Share your your story story with with email us at THIS CALENDAR IN YOUR HOME OR HANG IT IN YOUR OFFICE canned and drycanned canned and and drydryitems. us@TASKSoupKitchen @TASKSoupKitchen us @TASKSoupKitchen WHAT CAN YOU DO ABOUT IT? the nationwide battleDO against hunger and IT? WHAT WHAT CAN CAN YOU YOU DO ABOUT ABOUT IT? info@trentonsoup packaged goods toto us packaged packaged goods goods to on Facebook, on Facebook, on Facebook, TAKE ACTION this month and JOIN TASK in the na�onwide ba�le against hunger and TASK. BeBe sure toto TASK. TASK. Be sure sure to kitchen.org Instagram or Twitter or Instagram Instagram or Twitter or Twitter or or check forfor expired check check for expired expired TAKE ACTION this month and JOIN TASK inin TAKE ACTION ACTION this this month month and and JOIN JOIN TASK TASK in TURN HUNGER INTO HOPE TURN HUNGER INTOTAKE HOPE email usat at at email email us us items. items. items. info@trentonsoup info@trentonsoup info@trentonsoup kitchen.org kitchen.org kitchen.org

the nationwide battle against hunger and the the nationwide nationwide battle battle against against hunger hunger and and

For more ways to help visit www.HungerAc� onNJ.com TURN HUNGER INTO HOPE TURN TURN HUNGER HUNGER INTO INTO HOPE HOPE

PRESENTED BY:

PRESENTED BY: PRESENTED PRESENTEDBY: BY: Presented by:

9283482-04 9283482-04 9283482-04 9283482-04

September 2019 | Princeton Echo17


FOOD AND DRINK

From farm to plaza, the tomato gets its day in the sun By Patricia A. Taylor

O

n a cold, gray, rainy day last March Nagisa Manabe had an idea: why not create a celebration of the tomato? After all, the colorful tomato is the iconic New Jersey vegetable, and there really is nothing like it when picked fresh off the vine. And while many people might have had such a wishful idea, Manabe is one of the few, if not the only one, who could actually pull off such a celebration in Princeton. And that’s why there will be a Festomato! in Hinds Plaza on Saturday, September 7, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. This is a tomato celebration that literally goes beyond bounds. There will be a tomato tasting featuring 50 organically grown varieties outside on the plaza and lectures inside the Princeton Public Library; there will be cooking demonstrations and a canning workshop; there will be activities for children; there will be dining samples featuring new tomato based recipes such as tomato jam and tomato sorbet; there will be a tomato-based alternative to tuna called Ahimi (you have to taste it to believe it); and much, much more.

So, how was Manabe able to pull this off in less than six months? First she had to convince the Northeast Organic Farming Association of New Jersey (NOFA-NJ), where she serves on the board of directors, that it was a good idea. That wasn’t difficult: In the late 1980s NOFA-NJ had sponsored a tomato-featured cooperative that closed after a few years because demand outstripped supply. More recently, it has

Nagisa Manabe combined her marketing, cooking, and farming skills to organize the inaugural Festomato! at Princeton Public Library. been a close partner with the Princeton Public Library’s Environmental Film Festival. Second, she had to ensure that a site was available, and NOFA-NJ’s involvement with the library made Hinds Plaza an obvious choice. Kim Dorman, the library’s community engagement coordinator, quickly agreed. “Food literacy

is part of the library’s mission,” Dorman explains, “and we have a shared sense of stewardship with NOFA-NJ and its emphasis on the importance of sustainability.” Festomato! is the library’s first signature event featuring food. Third, sponsors were needed. NOFA-NJ board president Stephanie Harris, owner of the organic Stonehedge farm in Hopewell, touched base with Princeton residents Gordon Douglas and Sheila Mahoney, two of the founders and major funders of the Princeton University’s Princeton Studies Food program. The two felt the event was an excellent example of furthering that program’s mission to connect with the community. Food, they feel, is the best way to bring people together as it is the nexus of major water consumption and environmental problems facing humanity. NOFA-NJ Executive Director Adrian Hyde, a Princeton resident and owner of Hopewell’s organic Dunwald Farm, joined Manabe in asking the Whole Earth Center and McCaffrey’s to also sign on as sponsors. Both grocery stores, long time supporters of local agriculture, readily agreed and will be present at the event. Contacting local businesses and or-

Festomato! organizer Nagisa Manabe with a home-grown melon from her River Stoan Farm.

ganizations comes naturally to Manabe as she grew up in Princeton, moving here as a five-year-old in 1968 when her father joined the university’s Geophysical Dynamics Laboratory as a senior research meteorologist. There, Syukuro Manabe pioneered in the use of computers to simulate global climate change. After assignments in his native

RYANS COMMERCIAL We take the stress out of your everyday maintenance MAINTENANCE

We take the stress out of your everyday maintenance

We take the stress out of your everyday maintenance • Lamp Replacement

• Masonry Repair

• Painting & Wall Repair • Fire Inspection Remediation • Ceiling Tile Work • Leaks, Drips & • Exterior Sealing Clogs • Fencing Repairs • Windows, Doors, Hinges & Locks • Pressure Washing & Chemical Cleaning

• Drafts & Noise

Family Owned • Insured ONE CALL Registered • Bonded REPAIRS IT ALL • Light Welding

FALL CLASSES! • Robotics • Jr FLL Robotics Competition Team • Electronics, 3D Printing, Pottery, Puppetry, Coding Workshops & more!

• Floor Stripping, ONE CALL REPAIRS IT ALL

NJ# 13VH08647400 Free Estimates Waxing & Buffing • And Much More... PA# 125477 Bill Ryan, Owner & Jill Ryan, General Manager

Free Estimates

ONEBillCALL REPAIRS ITManager ALL Ryan, Owner & Jill Ryan, General FREE ESTIMATES Work Weekends &

Bill Ryan, Owner &Hours Jill Ryan, General Manager After Business Family Owned Insured Registered Convenient Service Options Work Weekends & With Our Installed Lockboxes After Business Hours Family Owned Insured Registered Works Weekends & NJ# 13VH08647400 PA# 125477 After Business hours NJ# 13VH08647400

PA# 125477

18 Princeton Echo | September 2019

609-570-5319

For more information email us at info@steamworksstudio.com or call us at 844-265-9880 steamworksstudio.com


Japan, he returned to Princeton and currently serves as a senior meteorologist for the Program in Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences. While attending Princeton public schools, Manabe not only enjoyed but appreciated her mother’s culinary preparation and presentation skills. Nobuko Manabe is a member of the Omotesenke School of Tea and has taught Japanese cooking classes at the Princeton Adult School, among her many activities. Manabe credits her mother for introducing her to the pleasure of fine dining.

W

ell aware of the skills involved, Manabe decided to enroll in a Paris cooking school. With a degree from Yale and several years under her belt as an analyst at Morgan Stanley, she took a four-year intermission and earned a Diplome d’Etude Culinaires from La Varenne Ecole de Cuisine. She returned to the U.S. to earn an MBA at Harvard’s Graduate School of Business and then spend almost 20 years in marketing positions for various companies. Her tastiest job, in this writer’s opinion, was as head of marketing and product development for Godiva North America. She also made time during the past 11 years to become the majority owner of the Simply Yoga studio in Kingston. She still serves as a senior instructor at See FESTOMATO, Page 20

The return of the Rutgers Tomato

F

or all intents and purposes, the Rutgers tomato — once the most popular tomato variety in the world — did not exist 20 years ago. This was a plant originally developed by Campbell Soup scientists in 1928 and then refined and introduced in 1934 by Rutgers professor Lyman Schermerhorm. It featured lots of juicy flavor and a perfect balance of acidity and sweetness. Though the Plant Patent Act had been introduced in 1930, there never were any steps taken to patent the Rutgers tomato. That meant the plant could be and was modified beyond recognition but still had the familiar Rutgers name. The modifications did not eliminate two significant drawbacks: the newer Rutgers tomatoes remained unsuitable for mechanical harvesting or long-haul distribution, qualities needed to provide canning and processing factories and grocery store produce throughout the year. Other tomato varieties did provide such traits while slowly extinguishing flavor. Rutgers is believed to be the only land grant university that seeks to develop plants suitable for both the home gardener and the small scale farmer rather than primarily furthering the interests of large scale, commercial farming. Its work is generally conducted through its New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station in New Brunswick. With this in mind, two Rutgers researchers — plant biology professor and extension specialist Tom Orton and Cooperative Extension agent Pete Nitzsche — were immediately responsive to a 2010 call from Campbell Soup. Long thought to have disappeared, it turned out that Campbell Soup had preserved the parent seeds of the original Rutgers tomato in a temperature-controlled vault. Would Rutgers be interested in bringing back that old tomato flavor and adaptability to small scale gardening? Of course it would. “It took five years,” Orton says. “Working with the parent seeds, we cross-pollinated and grew plants at the Rut-

The Rutgers 250 tomato, introduced in 2016. Photo by Peter Nitzsche

gers Snyder Research Farm in Pittstown. Each year we winnowed the selection by choosing those with the documented attributes of the original Rutgers tomato.” Taste tests were conducted yearly and in summer, 2015, three finalists were offered in several New Jersey locations. The winner was named Rutgers 250 and introduced in 2016, Rutgers’ 250th anniversary. “We believe it has all the juiciness, flavor, and taste of the original,” Orton says. “It certainly has a rich red color and a skin that is not heavy but which does not bruise easily. In addition, it need not be eaten at once but can sit on a counter for several days when you find you have bought or harvested too many.” Both seeds and plants sell out quickly. Sources can be found at www.breeding.rutgers.edu/tomatoavailability. Better yet, Professor Orton will be distributing free organic Rutgers 250 seeds at the close of his Festomato! lecture, currently scheduled for noon in the library’s Community Room.

NOT ALL BOWLS ARE CREATED EQUAL

ONLY AVAILABLE FOR @PLAYABOWLSPRINCETON 10 HULFISH STREET, PRINCETON September 2019 | Princeton Echo19


FESTOMATO, continued from page 19

the studio and is a familiar name to residents throughout the area. She really, really likes fresh food. “There’s nothing better than eating produce from your backyard or patio,” she says. What is it with this super organized, exceptionally friendly, thoughtful, and personable woman? Not content with her marketing jobs and her yoga instruction, she convinced her husband, Oscar Schofield, a distinguished professor and chair of Rutgers’ Department of Marine and Coastal Sciences, that they should go beyond a backyard or patio growing area and establish an organic fruit, vegetable, and egg farm. In 2014 the two bought a 3.9-acre former goat farm in Kingston and named it River Stoan farm. There are lots of stones on the property as it was a river bed in ancient times, and while the word “stoan” is a Middle English alternative spelling for “stone,” in Manabe’s case it consists of her family’s initials: Samantha (daughter), Tobias (son), Oscar (husband), Allegra (daughter), and Nagisa. Neither Schofield nor Manabe had ever farmed before. “I was often the brunt of family jokes,” she reports, “because I killed any plant that was left in my care.” But they were fortunate in having many friends and in Manabe’s case yoga students who were avid vegetable growers. Manabe also enrolled

Fruit or vegetable?

B

otanically speaking, the tomato is a fruit since it is formed from the mature ovary of a flowering seed plant. It is called a vegetable because the U.S. Supreme Court said so. That pronouncement was made in 1893, when fruits were exempt from import duties and vegetables subjected to a 10 percent tax. Seeking to protect their market from outside growers, American tomato farmers argued that the tomato was a vegetable and should be hit with an import tax. The U.S. Supreme Court agreed. In writing the decision in Nix v. Hedden, Associate Justice Horace Gray noted: “Botanically speaking tomatoes are the fruit of the vine … But in common language … tomatoes are vegetables which are usually served

in the numerous and varied classes provided by NOFA-NJ throughout the year. She joined the organization last year and became a board member this past January. “They chose me for my marketing skills,” she readily admits, “and not for my farming expertise.” She hopes that her experience as a teenage destroyer of plants and now as a successful organic farmer will show others, as NOFA-NJ believes, that or-

Looking for more local news? DELIVERY AVAILABLE

Visit our website communitynews.org to get updates about your community all month long

HOURS M-Sa: 11 AM - 10 PM Sunday: Closed LOCATION 242 1/2 Nassau St. Princeton, NJ 08542

at dinner with the principal part of the repast and not like fruits generally, as a dessert.” With the tomato legally classified as a vegetable, imported tomatoes became too expensive, and local growers went on to reap profits without foreign competition. The Supreme Court ruling still stands, though the vegetable tariffs no longer exist, especially since the passage of the North America Free Trade Agreement. Tomatoes are not part of the current trade war between the U.S. and China. When the tomato was introduced to China in the 1500s its Chinese name translated as “barbarian eggplant.” Today China is home to 32 percent of world tomato production, ranking it first among all countries. Nary a one of those tomatoes is exported to the U.S., taking these legally designated vegetables off the trade conflict plate. ganic gardening is both a feasible and flavorsome path not only for small operations but also for home owners to enrich diets and health. Indeed, the underlying theme of Festomato! is to further a deeper appreciation for our area’s regional farms as well as to increase food literacy. While Manabe’s March idea has led to Festomato!’s exuberant celebration, she emphasizes many times that other members of the planning group have

Another tomato celebration

T

he library is not the only venue celebrating the tomato this month. Mediterra Restaurant is hosting a special “End of Season Tomato” dinner on Thursday, September 26, at 6:30 p.m. The meal costs $69 per person and features tomato-inspired dishes along with wines from the Mediterranean. Register online at www.mediterrarestaurant.com.

Changes afoot at former Fenwick group restaurants

CONTACT US (609) 683-8900

S

info@pizzadenprinceton.com NOW SERVING GLUTEN FREE PIZZAS!

COMMUNITYNEWS COMMUNITYNEWS c o m m u nity new s . o r g

20 Princeton Echo | September 2019

mall and large signs of change are coming to the Fenwick group of restaurants that was sold earlier this year to north Jersey-based Harvest Restaurant group. A big change came at the end of July, when Cargot Brasserie closed down to prepare to re-open as a steakhouse called Roots this fall. The neighboring Dinky Bar, meanwhile, remains open and now offers breakfast seven days a week from 8 to 11 a.m. Menu items include stone ground oatmeal ($6), avocado toast ($12, $14 with a poached egg), and the Dinky Benny — poached egg with Canadian bacon, baby kale, and hollandaise — for $15.

been crucial in making it possible. For example, Princeton resident Kim Rizk, owner of Nassau Street’s Jammin’ Crepes, which relies heavily on produce from local farms, drew on her contacts to convince regional farmers – Abe’s Acres Farm, Cherry Grove Farm, Cherry Valley Farm, Chickadee Creek Farm, and Muth Family Farm – to participate in the event by offering samples of and selling over four dozen different tomatoes, the vast majority not available elsewhere. Festomato! will also have seed saving classes, tomato preserving demonstrations, and a garden doctor booth open from noon until 3 p.m. At various times there will be blues music, American roots music, and a string band. And a dozen Princeton-area restaurants will be tempting passersby with tasty tomato treats from their kitchens. A full schedule and the times for various activities is on the event’s website, www. nofanj.org/event/festomato. It promises to be a fun, educational, appetizing day, rain or shine. There will be a tent outside and many classes held in the Library’s Community Room. While March rains are supposed to lead to April showers, in this case they have been the catalyst for a terrific, delicious occasion open to the entire region. Festomato! Hinds Plaza, 65 Witherspoon Street. Saturday, September 7 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. www.nofanj.org/ event/festomato.

fthought od for

Agricola, for the moment, remains unchanged, but a liquor license transfer from Agricola to “Lahiere’s Taverne” was approved at the August 5 council meeting. The former Two Sevens space on Witherspoon Street, not part of the sale to the Harvest group, was sold to an entity known as Elm Princeton 277, and signage is now up for “Elite Five Sushi and Grill.”

Cafe Eclair opens

N

early two years after its imminent arrival was first announced, Cafe Eclair has opened its third location in the space previously occupied by More Cafe at 41 Witherspoon Street. The shop, open from 7:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday, offers Italian coffees, pastries, and other treats. It joins Cafe Eclair locations in Plainsboro and Pennington.


All You Can Eat Sushi Lunch $18.95 • Dinner $24.95 • Kids Half-Price (under 4.5’)

Tel: (609) 520-8883

Tel: (609) 683-2222

415 Nassau Park Blvd. Princeton, NJ 08540 (near Sam’s Club)

1378 Route 206 Skillman, NJ 08558 (behind Wells Fargo Bank)

masa8restaurant.com

morisushinj.com

September 2019 | Princeton Echo21


PARTING SHOT

Cultures and kids By Pia de Jong

C

ulture is primarily about adapting to something that most others think is normal, even though you may have doubts about it. Nowhere is this more sharply felt than in child-rearing. Every nation is different, every parent is different, and no one agrees. As a Dutch mother now living in America, I was recently quoted in the New York Times about the Dutch tradition of deliberately leaving children behind in a forest and letting them find their own way home. The writer wanted to know what this said about Dutch culture. I told her that the custom was ingrained, and added, “Of course you ensure that they do not die, but otherwise you let them find out for themselves. ” When my comment was appointed Quote of the Day (July 21, 2019), the reactions erupted on both sides of the ocean and both equally predictable. American readers responded with a mix of horror and admiration about the careless ease with which we seem to throw our children into uncharted waters. The article generated 700 online comments within days before they were cut off. The Dutch thought the attention for

the tradition was exaggerated and went wild on Twitter with playful hyperboles. The Netherlands is not often frontpage news in the United States — never mind above the fold — and so even that fact made news in the Netherlands. (The reverse is unfortunately never the case.)

B

ut apart from slinging jokes back and forth about what weird people were the Dutch or the Americans — the article clearly touched a raw nerve. For the Times it was the second-mostread article of the day. Because the dilemmas of parenting are timeless and universal, in particular the struggle between letting go and protecting. Just as with learning to ride a bicycle, a child has to find the balance himself, because you simply can’t ride with training wheels all your life. But the delicate moment of letting go — every parent struggles with that. People think about it differently in different cultures. The Netherlands has a centuries-long tradition of giving children a lot of freedom and responsibility at a young age. It thereby helps to be blessed with a society that is one of the safest in the world. The United States has taken a differ-

ent turn. In recent decades, parenting has been primarily in the context of protecting children against an angry and threatening outside world. But not all of these dangers are imaginary. It really is a land of bears and guns. But that does not mean that many American helicopter parents do not have a deep-rooted desire to return to a romantic Huck Finn and Becky Thatcher youth of yore, when children could still endlessly roam the rivers and fields. Whether it is about giving birth at home, cycling without a helmet, or leaving your children in the woods on good luck. Parenting is mainly go with

Illustration by Eliane Gerrits

the flow, both here and there. That’s why you always find crazier customs the farther you get from home. Parenting is a struggle for everyone and everywhere. As a parent you are also dropped in the middle of a dark forest and you have to find your own way. 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.

Financing Available

DELHAGEN

ALL HVAC EQUIPMENT COMES WITH A 10 YEAR PARTS & LABOR WARRANTY

Plumbing, Heating & Air Conditioning, LLC. 609-586-4969 Hamilton Square, NJ www.delhagenplumbingandheating.com

They could...go.... all...the way!

Plumbing Lic # BI0104900 I Lic # 13VHO1158200 | HVAC Lic # 19HC00456500 Service & Maintenance I Agreements Available

delhagenplumbin@optonline.net

Call Now to Schedule your Service/Maintenance Appointment. Special Limited Time Offer!

$200 OFF Installation of Complete “Coleman” Air Condition & Heating System Mention coupon when calling. Cannot be combined with other offers. Expires: 9-15-19.

$130

+ tax

AC Inspection Mention coupon when calling. Cannot be combined with other offers. For a limited time only.

$75 OFF $25 OFF Any Water Heater or Boiler Installation

Any Service or Repair Call Over $150

Mention coupon when calling. Cannot be combined with other offers. For a limited time only.

Mention coupon when calling. Cannot be combined with other offers. For a limited time only.

22 Princeton Echo | September 2019

Beginning Friday, September 13


CLASSIFIED HELP WANTED Recreation Supervisor/ Recreation Leader/ Recreation Aide. Accepting applications for Part-time, seasonal employment opportunities for 2019-2020 school year for Recreation Programs. Skills, experience and professionalism required to lead a variety of recreation activities including music classes, yoga classes, Pilates classes, sports classes, dance classes, etc. E-mail resume to humanresources@ hopewelltwp.org or via mail to Human Resources, Township of Hopewell, 201 Wash. Cross-Penn. Rd. Titusville, NJ 08560 label CONFIDENTIAL. EOE. Closing date 9/20/19. Live-in housekeeper and cook (Indian cuisine) wanted. Call 908-342-3267. Driving instructors wanted! Must have clean driving record and flexible hours. We will license and train you. Call 732-821-4911. Virtua Primary Care is currently seeking Certified Medical Assistants </B>for our Mansfield and Browns Mills practices. Please email resume to lmissan@virtua.org or call 856-761-3870. EARN EXTRA INCOME WALKING DOGS AND PET SITTING – MAKE FETCH! HAPPEN! Fetch! Pet Care serving Ewing, Lawrence, Pennington and Titusville has immediate openings for dog walkers and pet sitters. Only those with experience caring for animals and who can make a minimum 6 month commitment need apply. Must be 21, own a car and a smartphone, and submit to a background check. Visit www.fetchpetcare.com/dogwalking-and-pet-sitting-jobs/ to apply. Inside Sales / Lead Generator in Lawrenceville, NJ. Must be well-spoken & upbeat to call businesses for outbound phone work. Previous sales exp. a plus but not required. 7+ hrs Mon-Fri, day hours. Hourly + commission = $15$18/hr + bonuses. Opportunity to grow within the company- looking to promote to Campaign Manager or Business Developer. Apply at www.MarketReachResults. com.

JOBS WANTED I AM A CAREGIVER LOOKING FOR AN OPENING Live in or out. 5 years of experience providing personal care, household tasks, responsible and trustworthy. Contact me at 609-733-2626.

FOR SALE TREADMILL AND HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE FOR SALE! Request photos by email or view items in

Lawrenceville, NJ. Call 609331-3370 or email gvprinter@ gmail.com.

WANTED TO BUY HAPPYHEROES USED BOOKS LOOKING TO BUY Old Mysteries, Science Fiction, Children’s Illustrated, Signed books, EASTON press and GOOD condition pre-1965 Saturday Evening Posts and Collier’s Magazines. Call 609-619-3480 or email happyheroes@gmail.com. CASH PAID FOR WORLD WAR II MILITARY ITEMS. Helmets, swords, medals, etc. Call 609-581-8290 or email lenny3619@gmail.com CASH PAID FOR SELMER SAXOPHONES and other vintage models. 609-581-8290 or email lenny3619@gmail. com WANTED: BETTER QUALITY CAMERAS AND PHOTO EQUIPMENT FOUNTAIN PENS AND OLDER WATCHES FAIR PRICES PAID CALL HAL-609-689-9651.

COMMERCIAL SPACE OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE FOR RENT – 1250 SQ FT. @ Building 200, 666 Plainsboro Road, Plainsboro, NJ 08536. Contact : 609-750-0093 Atul Or Manoj Modi.

INSTRUCTION MUSIC LESSONS Piano, Guitar, Recorder, Handbells, & Uke! Reasonable rates. Experienced MMus., BA, & NJ certified teacher. ASCAP award winning, published composer. Call Susan 609588-5124. INFANT CLASS week of 7/4/19. MOM/ME UNDERWATER - 2- 6 (SWIM IN 5 DAYS) ONE ON ONE (Swim in 5 days) ADULT PRIVATE. SEE WEB PAGE www.babyswimbootcamp. com. FACEBOOK... Patty Blackwell’s Swim Class. ADULT PRIVATE CLASSES… 609-890-2223 or online to register. MUSIC LESSONS: Piano, guitar, drum, sax, clarinet, voice, flute, trumpet, violin, cello, banjo, mandolin, harmonica, uke, and more. $32/half hour. Ongoing Music Camps. Free use of an instr. For your trial lesson! Call today! Montgomery 609-9248282. www.farringtonsmusic. com.

MENTAL HEALTH YOU MAY NEVER THINK ABOUT TRAUMA. BUT TRAUMA ALWAYS THINKS ABOUT YOU. TRAUMA never resolves itself. Female. Male. Young. Old. Trauma Hurts. AN UNOBSTRUCTED PATH: A practical approach for understanding and managing trauma. Located in Chatsworth, NJ. Over 20

50 cents a word $10 minimum. For more information call 609-396-1511 years of dedication to trauma resolution. Are you repressing trauma? Take our quiz www. anunobstructedpath.net.

BUSINESS FOR SALE SALON FOR SALEexcellent opportunity. Priced to sell. Relocating out of state. Large space, great potential. Call 609-462-0188.

PERSONAL ARE YOU SINGLE? Try us first! We are an enjoyable alternative to online dating. Sweet Beginnings, 215-9490370.

OPPORTUNITIES LOOKING TO START YOUR CAREER ASAP? Mercer Med Tech offers CHHA, CNA, CMA, EKG, Phlebotomy Certification with job opportunities in labs, nursing homes, with payment plan options. Call 609-712-5499 or visit our website WWW. MMTNJ.COM.

RENTAL Florida Beach Rental: Fort Myers Beach 1br vacation condo on the beach, flexible dates available. Call 609-5778244 for further information

BURIAL PLOT DOUBLE CRYPT IN MAGNIFICENT, GRANITE MAUSOLEUM IN HISTORIC EWING CHURCH CEMETERY. Open to All Faiths. Prime location in Mercer County. Just off Exit 73 on I-295. Motivated Seller. Call for details 609-323-7565.

REAL ESTATE SEASIDE PARK BORO $139,000, ONE BLOCK FROM THE BEACH. 1BR, 1BA, Owned land MLS #21828711 ERA CENTRAL REALTY 609259-9900 Janice Ridgway RA 609-915-1167 cell. PLUMSTED TWP $875,000, COMMERCIAL Established restaurant on almost 4 acres MLS #21906693 ERA CENTRAL REALTY 609259-9900 James Burke RA 609-672-6359 cell. ROOSEVELT BORO $219,000, 5+ ACRE LOT BORDERS ASSUNPINK PARK 5.37 Acres MLS #21910550 ERA CENTRAL REALTY 609259-9900 Ann H. Davis BA 609-847-2980 cell. PLUMSTED TWP $119,900, 2.52 AC LOT Build your dream home on this flat wooded homesite MLS #21906993 ERA CENTRAL REALTY 609259-9900 Debra Richford RA 609-468-4285 cell. HAMILTON TWP $1,499,000 COMMERCIAL INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY Comm District, tavern/legal rooming house, Hamilton Liquor Lic. MLS #6913881 ERA CENTRAL REALTY 609259-9900 Kevin Zimmer BA

609-529-3549 cell. UPPER FREEHOLD TWP $699,000 GREAT OPPORTUNITY FOR INVESTORS! Commercial MLS #21818730 ERA CENTRAL REALTY 609-2599900 Ann Davis BA 609-8472980 cell. TRENTON CITY $75,000 COMMERCIAL OPPORTUNITY Convenience store, Lottery, ATM, Heart of Trenton MLS #NJME203758 ERA CENTRAL REALTY 609-259-9900 Anjani “Anjie” Kumar, BA 609-5753029 cell. NORTH HANOVER TWP $97,500 LAND/LOT Currently zoned commercial but on a street with mixed use MLS #NJBL280990 ERA CENTRAL REALTY 609-259-9900 Kevin Zimmer BA 609-529-3549 cell. PLUMSTED TWP $230,000 HISTORIC MAIN STREET IN NEW EGYPT Income generating property plus 3BR, 1/1BA residential on 2nd floor MLS #21923985 ERA CENTRAL REALTY 609-2599900 Jeffrey Gualtieri BA 732-829-0364 cell. PLUMSTED TWP $38,900 CLEARED CORNER LOT Lot/ land for sale MLS #21847490 ERA CENTRAL REALTY 609259-9900 Karen Contreras BA 732-539-9378 cell. ERA is seeking new and experienced NJ licensed real estate sales people! Must be motivated, collaborative, committed, hardworking, and creative. We provide comprehensive training as well as in-house administrative and marketing support. Competitive commission-based compensation. Locations throughout central NJ. whyERA.com or 609-2599900. MARLTON - GORGEOUS TOWN HOME WITH LARGE 3RD FLOOR LOFT! Rare model features 2 oversized BRs & 2.5 updated BAs. Renovated & move in ready! Designer KIT. Master suite w/private BA. 3rd flr loft w/skylight. New W/D. Community pool. Much sought after Rice School! Close to parks, shopping, & restaurants. $245,000 RE/MAX IN TOWN Joe DeLorenzo (609) 895-0500 ext 107 www.joedhomes. com/NJBL322972 LAWRENCEVILLE - Award winning schools. LG spacious 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath Colonial located in desirable University Park. Beautifully maintained, move in ready. Stunning eat-in kitchen, gorgeous hardwood throughout most. Spacious LR w/brick FP, cozy FR, sunroom, large back yard. Fin basement Convenient location to Princeton & public trans $385,000 RE/MAX IN TOWN Joe DeLorenzo (609) 895-0500 ext 107 www.joedhomes. com/NJME284178 HILLSBOROUGH - Beautiful center hall 3 bed, 2.5 bath Colonial on quiet st. Great

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

location in nice community. Updated EIK, Formal DR, spacious LR w/gas FP. LG Master w/full updated bath, WIC. 2 add’l nicely sized bdrms, updated hall bath, upper fl laundry. Fin BSMT. Prof landscape w/in-ground sprinkler. NEW HVAC & tankless water heater. $475,000 RE/MAX IN TOWN Joe DeLorenzo (609) 895-0500 ext 107 (609) 895-0500 EXT: 107 www.joedhomes.com/ NJSO112108 HAMILTON - Beautiful updated 2nd fl condo in desirable Society Hill. Sunny and bright spacious LR w/balcony. Formal DR, renovated kitchen, updated hall bath w/Jacuzzi jetted tub. Large master w/updated bath, WIC. Spacious 2nd bedroom. Engineeredwood floors. Laundry room. New water heater & AC. Close to public transportation and hwys. Comm pool & tennis. $165,000 RE/MAX IN TOWN Joe DeLorenzo (609) 895-0500 ext 107 www.joedhomes. com/ NJME276458 THE KNOWLES HOUSE, a 5 bdrm/3.1 bath stately Federal style manor home w/carriage house rests on 1.22 acres in Yardley borough. Main house features expansive front porch, large brick rear patio, kitchen with upgraded appliances, sunny breakfast room, high ceilings, tall windows, wide moldings and pumpkin pine floors. The carriage house includes spacious guest quarters, gym with spa, 4-car garage, and storage/workshop space. Close proximity to main roads, train stations and airports. This is a lovely serene haven from the daily hustle. Carole Barocca, 215-378-8397 cell. Berkshire Hathaway Home Services Fox & Roach, Realtors.

NATIONAL CLASSIFIED CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!!! All Makes/Models 20022018! Any Condition. Running or Not. Top $$$ Paid! Free Towing! We’re Nationwide! Call Now: 1-888-985-1806 Suffering from an ADDICTION to Alcohol, Opiates, Prescription PainKillers or other DRUGS? There is hope! Call Today to speak with someone who cares. Call

NOW 1-855-866-0913 A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation’s largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/ no obligation. CALL 1-844722-7993 Earthlink High Speed Internet. As Low As $14.95/month (for the first 3 months.) Reliable High Speed Fiber Optic Technology. Stream Videos, Music and More! Call Earthlink Today 1-855520-7938 Applying for Social Security Disability or Appealing a Denied Claim? Call Bill Gordon & Assoc., Social Security Disability Attorneys, 1-855-498-6323! FREE Consultations. Local Attorneys Nationwide [Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL (TX/NM Bar.)] Become a Published Author. We want to Read Your Book! Dorrance PublishingTrusted by Authors Since 1920 Book manuscript submissions currently being reviewed. Comprehensive Services: Consultation, Production, Promotion and Distribution Call for Your Free Author’s Guide 1-877626-2213 Portable Oxygen Concentrator May Be Covered by Medicare! Reclaim independence and mobility with the compact design and long-lasting battery of Inogen One. Free information kit! Call 888-609-2189 Get a SMARTPHONE for $0 DOWN* with AT&T Next® and AT&T Next Every Year; $250 Gift Card for Switching to AT&T! (*Requires well-qualified credit. Limits & restrictions apply.) 1-888-545-5093 Denied Social Security Disability? Appeal! If you’re 50+, filed for SSD and denied, our attorneys can help get you approved! No money out of pockets! Call 1-866-376-3163 Use RoundUp Weedkiller? Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, Multiple Myeloma, and Leukemia may result from

RoundUp exposure. A recent $2 billion judgment was awarded in a RoundUp injury case. Call 1-619-4934791 or email RoundUp@ breakinginjurynews.com and let us begin work on your RoundUp case today.

distance Moving Company, out of state move $799 Long Distance Movers. Get Free quote on your Long distance move. 1-844-452-1706 Call Empire Today® to schedule a FREE in-home estimate on Carpeting & Flooring. Call Today! 1-855404-2366

Lung Cancer? Asbestos exposure in industrial, construction, manufacturing jobs, or military may be the cause. Family in the home were also exposed. Call 1-866-7953684 or email cancer@ breakinginjurynews.com. $30 billion is set aside for asbestos victims with cancer. Valuable settlement monies may not require filing a lawsuit.

Spectrum Triple Play! TV, Internet & Voice for $99.97/ mo. Fastest Internet. 100 MB per second speed. Free Primetime on Demand. Unlimited Voice. NO CONTRACTS. Call 1-855-652-9304 or visit http://tripleplaytoday.com/ national

DENTAL INSURANCE from Physicians Mutual Insurance Company. NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage for [350 ] procedures. Call 1-877308-2834 for details. www. dental50plus.com/cadnet 6118-0219

Get DIRECTV! ONLY $35/ month! 155 Channels & 1000s of Shows/Movies On Demand (w/SELECT All Included Package.) PLUS Stream on Up to FIVE Screens Simultaneously at No Addt l Cost. Call DIRECTV 1-855-781-1565

Attention all Homeowners in jeopardy of Foreclosure? We can help stop your home from foreclosure. The Foreclosure Defense helpline can help save your home. The Call is absolutely free. 1-855-516-6641.

DISH Network $59.99 For 190 Channels! Add High Speed Internet for ONLY $14.95/month. Best Technology. Best Value. Smart HD DVR Included. FREE Installation. Some restrictions apply. Call 1-855-837-9146

GENERIC VIAGRA and CIALIS! 100 Pills $99.00 FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. 24/7 CALL NOW! 888-889-5515 Eliminate gutter cleaning forever! LeafFilter, the most advanced debris-blocking gutter protection. Schedule a FREE LeafFilter estimate today. 15% off and 0% financing for those who qualify. PLUS Senior & Military Discounts. Call 1-855-402-0373 HEAR AGAIN! Try our hearing aid for just $75 down and $50 per month! Call 800-426-4212 and mention 88272 for a risk free trial! FREE SHIPPING!

Wants to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201 Donate Your Car to Veterans Today! Help and Support our Veterans. Fast - FREE pick up. 100% tax deductible. Call 1-800245-0398 AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Get FAA approved hands on Aviation training. Financial Aid for qualified students - Career placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 888-686-1704

Cross country Moving, Long

AT YOUR SERVICE

Advertise for $59 a month. For more information, call 609-396-1511 ext. 110.

609-558-4703

Peter’s Remodeling Inc.

of Princeton, Robbinsville and Newtown

Experienced • Professional • Guaranteed Carpentry • Home Improvements • Lists

Office: (609) 779-1212 mrhandyman.com

M.J. Grove, Inc. 609-448-6083 Over 70 Years of Experience

From minor plumbing repairs to complete remodels, Water heaters, Sewer replacement, Water Service replacement, Oil to Gas Conversions and Gas heating unit repairs. License #8442

www.mjgroveph.com

PAINTING • TILE WORK • WOOD FLOORS KITCHENS • BATHROOM • DOORS FULLY INSURED

NJHIC #13V09854100/PA138189

Plumbing & Heating

609-558-4696

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

September 2019 | Princeton Echo23


1179 NEWARK, NJ

H H H

Heidi H eidi A. Hartmann Harrtmann C all / Text 609.658.3771 609 658 3771 Call

E: HeidiHartmannHomes@gmail.com W : See Above Abo ove W: See

24 Princeton Echo | September 2019


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.