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Coming and going: Adam Welch named to Princeton Arts Council post; Barry Rabner to step down from Princeton Health, page 12.

© AU

5, 202 GUST

609-452-7000 • PrincetonInfo.com

Living History

New Trent House president Princess Hoagland looks to reopen Trenton’s oldest house to the community. Dan Aubrey reports, page 8.

We are all in this together. We hope you are staying healthy and safe. www.firstbanknj.com

Life is

Hopeful

with a Personal Banker


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U.S. 1

AUGUST 5, 2020

TDA Brings

Art Joy

to Trenton!

O

nce again, one of Trenton’s most celebrated graffiti artists, Leon “Rain” Rainbow, will be bringing together an amazing group of artists to repaint panels on Front and Broad Streets. This annual event, called “Murals on Front Street,” will run from July to September, with new murals from 12 artists starting every Thursday. Although there will be no

live Levitt AMP Trenton Music Series concerts this year, the mural paintings will go on, thanks to funding from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts. The first two murals were created by Dean “RAS” Innocenzi and R Fab. RAS, who picked up a can of spray paint in 2007 and never looked back, is best known for his signature style of semi-realism. R Fab is an experienced self-taught artist who

works primarily in aerosols, acrylics and tattooing, but has experience with a wide variety of mediums. Be sure to stroll down Front Street to watch the creativity explode!

Murals on Front Street is a project of TDA and the New Jersey State Council on the Arts.

Business Spotlight Join the friendly, fiercely supportive community at Base Camp Trenton. Work, network and create in our beautiful 19th-century brownstone in historic Mill Hill.

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*Our coworking spaces are temporarily closed due to COVID-19, but we expect to reopen soon.

Established in 1947, Giaquinto’s Shoe Repair provides fast, friendly service in the heart of historic Trenton.

Shoe Repair and Products

Polish and repair shoes, handbags and other leather goods, as well as fix zippers and shorten belts.

Since the Capital City Farmers’ Market is closed this summer, we wanted you to know where you can find all your favorite vendors – and the most refreshing beverages!

Tea-for-All serves tea to go, as well as a large selection of delicious packaged teas, at its Tea Bar at the Trenton Farmers’ Market on Wednesday – Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and Sundays by appointment. 247 East Front Street, Trenton, NJ

115 South Warren Street, Trenton, NJ

609-392-0203

Call 609-599-9090

Inquire at join@basecamptrenton.com Visit www.basecamptrenton.com

Monday – Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Call 609-577-8038 —

You’ll also find Tea-for-All at these seasonal markets: Burlington County Farmers’ Market – Saturdays Bordentown City Farmers’ Market – Sundays

Love Local for Trenton! Your Support Means Everything. There are many ways you can show your love for downtown Trenton and the small business owners, artists, entrepreneurs and residents who define this vibrant community.

Stop by Front and Broad Streets to let our mural artists know their work is appreciated Support local farmers and other favorite CCFM vendors while the market is closed Explore outdoor dining options and order takeout from our restaurants

Stop into the shops, salons and other businesses that make life a little better for us all

Find more ways to love local at Trenton-downtown.com

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AUGUST 5, 2020

U.S. 1

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U.S. 1

AUGUST 5, 2020

Updating the Mercer County Community MANAGING EDITOR Sara Hastings ARTS EDITOR Dan Aubrey DIRECTOR OF DIGITAL INITIATIVES Joe Emanski ADMINISTRATIVE COORDINATOR

Megan Durelli

PRODUCTION MANAGER Stacey Micallef SENIOR ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE

Jennifer Steffen

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE

Mark Nebbia

ADMINISTRATIVE ADVERTISING ASSISTANTS

Gina Carillo, Casey Phillips CO-PUBLISHERS Jamie Griswold, Tom Valeri ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Thomas Fritts FOUNDING EDITOR Richard K. Rein, 1984-2019

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

Copyright 2020 Community News Service LLC. Community News Service LLC A proud member of:

Editor’s Note: On Friday, July 31, Mercer County Executive Brian Hughes sent the following update to the Mercer County community. In the aftermath of the poor statistics related to the spread of coronavirus cited last week, Governor Murphy on August 3 announced the re-implementation of tighter restrictions on indoor gatherings, including a reduction capping gatherings at 25 people or 25 percent of a room’s capacity, whichever is smaller.

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

SUMMER FICTION

All There Was

What we had was most of all there was. Where the plow stops suddenly The clank of the metal against stone berating any melancholy. Where the poetry runs out sucks the breath from my lungs. Where the words are mere empty vessels, of use no more. Time squandered with poetry and sadness.

The loss was not special though she would think it so. overnor Murphy and the State Department of Health reportMaybe you would too. ed an alarming statistic related to firm. Lapses in judgment, such as Haunted dreams with half-hidden view of her face. COVID-19 this week. They an- congregating indoors without Her image visited in semi-sacred pews, nounced on Wednesday that over masks, can quickly undo the gains the previous four days, New Jersey we’ve made in combating the virus amid a stand of oaks marked by green-grey lichens, had seen 2,000 new positive test re- since April. Regardless of how in- in noisy airline terminals sults, which put the state back to vincible individuals might feel, with everyone anxiously waiting to leave. where it was a month ago in the they have a personal responsibility She catches a fleeting glimpse of her loved, lost face daily number of new to social-distance, wear cases. That’s not proga face covering and And then she’s gone.

G

Between practice good hand hyress. The State officials said giene to protect themthey are worried about selves and those around Lines the increasing number of them, especially our coronavirus cases being most vulnerable populatraced to indoor house parties. A tions. None of us can let our guard large number of people gathering down when it comes to COVID-19. indoors – where public health ex- There is too much at stake. perts agree the virus is more easily The desire to socialize, to celetransmitted, and where it’s more brate birthdays and graduations, difficult to social-distance – while and simply unwind after months of not wearing face coverings is an limited activity is to be expected, obvious high-risk situation. The but we have to take precautions. state health commissioner ex- Keep gatherings small and have pressed particular concern about an them outside. If you can’t keep a increase in cases among 18- to safe distance, wear a mask. Make 29-year-olds. sure hand sanitizer is available. Be While none of the indoor gather- sensible and be supportive of one ings they cited took place in Mercer another. Let’s continue to work toCounty, it serves as a cautionary gether. tale. The grip we’ve been able to Brian M. Hughes get on COVID-19 is anything but

— Johanna Stohler Stohler is a retired high school English teacher who taught for many years at Edison High School. After retiring she taught GED classes and ESL to adults.

Pandemic Paranoia – a haiku LOUD mask approaching Louder...CLOSER...then...past Of course! a blue tooth! From ‘Waiting on Wallenberg: Haiku Musings for Trenton Busstops’ — Karen Carson Karen Carson is a contributing writer for Trenton Daily online, a project of Greater Trenton. Wallenberg is the name of the road outside the Trenton Train Station.

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

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

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

Questions?

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

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


AUGUST 5, 2020

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Wednesday, August 5

Mercer County Launches Webinar Series

SURVIVAL GUIDE Nominations Sought for Immigrant Entrepreneur Awards

E

instein’s Alley is soliciting nominations for its 2020 Immigrant Entrepreneur of the Year. Awards are given for achievements in growth, advocacy, and innovation. New this year is a category for non-profit leaders. Nominations will be accepted through Saturday, September 12. Awards will be presented at a virtual ceremony in October. New Jersey ranks fourth in the nation in terms of proportion of new businesses founded by immigrants. With more than one in three new companies launched by immigrants, they account annually for $6.2 billion of income in New Jersey. For more information or to make a nomination visit https://njbusinessimmigration. org/nominations.

Thursday, August 6

How Can Theater Survive?

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mong the many industries that found their normal operations upended by the coronavirus pandemic, few have been hit harder than the performing arts, which rely on audiences packing into theaters and concert halls. Arts venues were forced to shut down their seasons in March and are now considering how to move on in an age of social distancing. Venues have gotten creative: Bristol Riverside Theater in Bristol, Pennsylvania, is streaming its traditional summer concert series online. The Princeton University Summer Chamber Concerts also held a fully virtual season, while the Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey in Madison has arranged for socially distanced outdoor performances. But as the start of a fall season planned prepandemic approaches, theaters are looking to what’s next. Joseph P. Benincasa, president and CEO of the Actors Fund, will address the future of theater and Broadway at the Princeton Mercer Regional Chamber of Commerce’s monthly membership luncheon on Thursday, August 6, at noon. Register for the virtual event at www.princetonmercerchamber.org. Cost: $25, $15 members. The New York City-based Actors Fund, which Benincasa has led since 1989, provides social services, health care services, employment and training, and affordable, supportive, and senior housing for people in the performing arts. Benincasa is a graduate of St. Joseph’s University and holds a master’s degree from Rutgers.

Wednesday, August 12

Virtual Demo Day for Student Startups

Each summer for the past eight years teams of Princeton University undergradu-

ates have spent their summers on campus, working to design and build startup ventures through the Keller Center’s eLab Accelerator Program. This summer the students had their entrepreneurial skills and adaptability put to the test as the normal in-person collaboration was moved to a virtual setting as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The results of their work will also be shared in a virtual setting on Wednesday, August 12, in a Zoombased version of the annual Demo Day. The online program begins at 11:30 a.m. and will include remarks by Cornelia Huellstrunk, director of the Keller Center,

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Cornelia Huellstrunk, director of the Keller Center at Princeton University, gives opening remarks at the center’s virtual Demo Day on Wednesday, August 12. followed by pitches by each of the six student teams and an opportunity for questions and answers. Access to the virtual presentation is free, but registration is required at kellercenter.princeton.edu. Phase One is aimed at business development in the pharmaceutical industry. The founders note that existing databases used to inform decisions on licensing agreements and mergers and acquisitions are either prone to inaccuracies or prohibitively expensive. Phase One seeks to create a reliable and affordable platform for those performing due diligence on biopharma companies and their products. The team consists of Brian Kang and Satya Nayagam, rising juniors majoring in chemical and biological engineering; John Ahloy, a rising junior studying math; and Nathan Spilker, a rising senior studying mechanical and aerospace engineering. Claudius Legal Intelligence seeks to improve efficiency in the practice of law through the use of artificial intelligence. The team, led by computer science graduate student Joseph Avery, who also has a law degree, is combining AI with predictive analytics to produce data that informs lawyers’ decisions on what cases are worth taking on. It could also, for example, provide guidance on the optimal settlement amount in a personal injury case. Other team members include Zhe Chen, a graduate student in chemical and biological engineering, and computer science undergraduates Veronica Abebe, Beatrice Caruntu, and Ariel Rakovitsky. Kotami is a fashion brand that produces sustainable clothing at reasonable price points. Team members include recent graduates MC Otani, electrical engineering; Taylor Branch, African American studies; Somi Jun, comparative literature; and Sharon Musa, neuroscience; as well as rising senior Anika Nishat, anthropology. Maname a logistics startup that uses advances in blockchain technology to improve access to transportation services in Africa. Team members include Serge Priam Nsanzineza and Collins Metto, recent graduates in computer science; Peter Mwesigwa and Diamond Acharya, rising seniors in computer science; and Ifeanyi Isichei, rising sophomore in operations research and financial engineering. Lumentee is a social media platform specifically for underprivileged high school students. The platform connects the high schoolers with current college students, who are able to offer advice and support on the college admissions process and college experience. Team members include Winfred Dark, a recent computer science graduate; rising seniors Natashia Neckles, School of Public and International Affairs, and Laura Molina, African American studies; and rising juniors Amanda Vera, computer science, and Miranda Wang, electrical engineering. The Crumpet Society is a restaurant company that has reinvented the traditional English crumpet with locally sourced ingredients, sustainable packaging, and a range of flavors as well as vegan and gluten-free options. Their products are branded as commuter cuisine — something that can be ordered

ercer County’s Office of Economic Development is offering a “Business Survival Series” of weekly free webinars designed to help the business community recover from the effects of the coronavirus pandemic. The workshops are held in partnership with the UCEDC, a nonprofit economic development corporation that provides business loans, government contracting assistance, and training workshops. Register for the webinars at www. ucedc.com. The first session in the series takes place Wednesday, August 5, from 10 to 11:30 a.m. on the topic of “Business Reassessment.” The workshop will emphasize enhancing customer experience and customer-focused strategies as well as ways to refresh a business plan for sustainability. The second workshop, on Wednesday, August 12, is focused on marketing strategy. The webinar includes a review of the basic principles of marketing strategy and the “4Ps of marketing” (product, price, place, promotion), SWOT analysis, and target marketing. Materials will also include advice on making good local advertising choices, including social media and effective digital marketing. The third session, on Wednesday, August 19, is titled “Basic Financial Statements & Profitability.” It is critical for

Alejandro Cruz of the UCEDC leads a Q&A session after each webinar in Mercer County’s ‘Business Survival Series.’ business owners to understand their finances in order to maintain profitability and realize when adjustments need to be made. Key tools that will be discussed in this workshop are the balance sheet, profit & loss statement, and cash flow statement. The final webinar, on Wednesday, August 26, focuses on projecting financial results. Topics of discussion include sales projections, expense projections, and responsibly projecting cash flow. Each webinar concludes with a Q&A session with Alejandro Cruz, a training and mentoring officer at UCEDC.

quickly and eaten on the go — and the founders, all graduate students in architecture, have created a micro-store model that makes for minimal infrastructure costs associated with new storefronts. Team members are Esra Durukan, Nathaniel Banks, and Yidian Liu. In an article published by the Keller Center, former high tech entrepreneurship professor Ed Zschau said that this summer’s eLab program amounted to “a 'great experiment' to see if startup companies can be successfully formed and launched when the founders are remote from one another. If that is true, it has significant implications for the future: It would mean that it may not be necessary to live in expensive areas like Silicon Valley or NYC or even be co-located with other founders to start up a new venture. It could open a great many possibilities.”

Business Meetings Wednesday, August 5

Business Survival Series, Mercer County Office of Economic Development. www. ucedc.com. Free webinar on Business Reassessment. Q&A session follows. Register. 10 to 11:30 a.m.

Thursday, August 6

Virtual Monthly Membership Luncheon, Princeton Mercer Regional Chamber of Commerce. www.princetonmercerchamber.org. Featured speaker is Joe Benincasa, president and CEO of the Actors’ Fund, on the future of theater and Broadway. Register. $25; $15 members. Noon to 1 p.m.

Friday, August 7

JobSeekers, Professional Service Group of Mercer County. www.psgofmercercounty.org. Virtual presentation by career coach Tony Calabrese. 9:45 a.m. to noon.

Monday, August 10

Virtual Albert Einstein Memorial Lecture, Princeton Mercer Regional Chamber of Commerce. www.princetonmercerchamber.org. Lecture by James Peebles, 2019 Nobel laureate in physics. Q&A follows. Free. Register. 12:30 p.m.

Tuesday, August 11

Women, Money, Power, Princeton SCORE. princeton.score.org. A virtual con-

Daily updates on TWitter @princetoninfo

The Princeton Chamber’s annual Albert Einstein Lecture, postponed from March, takes place virtually on Monday, August 10, featuring James Peebles, the 2019 Nobel laureate in physics. versation on advancing financial inclusion, the wealth disparities that exist between women and women, and the ways in which we can create a path to a healthier, more inclusive economy featuring Emily Green of Ellevest. Register. Free. 6:30 p.m. JobSeekers. sites.google.com/site/njjobseekers. Virtual meeting for those seeking employment. Visit website for GoTo Meeting link. 7:30 to 8:30 p.m.

Wednesday, August 12

Business Before Business Virtual Networking, Princeton Mercer Regional Chamber of Commerce. www.princetonmercerchamber.org. Networking over coffee plus talk by Assemblyman Andrew Zwicker on the role of innovation in a pandemic economy. Register. $25; $15 members. 8:30 to 9:30 a.m. Business Survival Series, Mercer County Office of Economic Development. www. ucedc.com. Free webinar on Marketing Strategy. Q&A session follows. Register. 10 to 11:30 a.m. eLab Accelerator Demo Day, Keller Center, Princeton University. kellercenter. princeton.edu. Showcase by six teams of undergraduate and graduate students working on startup ventures. Register for Zoom login information. Free. 11:30 a.m.


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U.S. 1

ART

AUGUST 5, 2020

FILM

LITERATURE

DANCE DRAMA MUSIC

PREV I E W

DAY-BY-DAY VIRTUAL EVENTS, AUGUST 5 TO 12 birds and how to attract them to your yard. Register for Zoom link. $10 suggested donation. 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.

Event Listings: E-mail events@princetoninfo.com

Kids Stuff

All of the events listed below are taking place virtually unless noted otherwise. Visit venue websites for information about how to access the events. To include your event in this section email events@princetoninfo.com.

Once Upon a Magic Show, Mercer County Library. www.mcl. org. Mike Rose presents a special magic show designed to complement the “Imagine Your Story” summer reading program. Register. Free. 1:30 p.m.

Saturday August 8

Wednesday August 5

In Person

Pop Music A Night at the Movies, Summer Music Series, Bristol Riverside Theater. www.brtstage.org. A Night at the Movies celebrates your favorite songs from Tinsel Town’s greatest musicals and movies. From Casablanca to Goldfinger, the music from the silver screen will have you singing along. Concert via YouTube. $35. 7 p.m.

Ding Dong Merrily on High

Lectures

Summer Scholar Spotlight Series, Princeton Senior Resource Center. www.princetonsenior.org. Eight-part series featuring academics from across the country via Zoom. Marc Herman of the Abdallah S. Kamel Center for Islamic Law and Civilization at Yale Law School presents “Maimonides In His Workshop,” exploring what his texts can teach us about how Maimonides worked, how he edited his own writings, and the process of writing a book in the era before print. Register. $75 for the whole series or $10 per lecture. 10 a.m.

Schools

Stress, Anxiety, and School: Does Your Teen Need a New Environment?, Princeton Learning Cooperative. www. princetonlearningcooperative.org. Could moving to a more flexible, relaxed, and interest-based educational environment be the change your teenager needs to thrive? In this Zoom panel discussion, a young adult, their parent, and a mental health professional will talk about their experiences with mental health and school and how self-directed education supported their well-being and growth. Q&A to follow. Register via EventBrite. Free. 7 to 8:30 p.m.

Thursday August 6 In Person Verily, Madly Thine, Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, Great Lawn, Thomas H. Kean Theatre Factory, Florham Park. www.shakespearenj.org. Outdoor double bill featuring classic comedies. Register. $20 per person; groups up to 5 per 8-foot pod. 7 p.m.

Carillonneur Lisa Lonie performs Sunday, August 9, from the Princeton University carillon in Cleveland Tower. The free afternoon concert can be heard from the lawn of Princeton’s graduate college. Wellness Penn Medicine: Holistic Approach to Anxiety, Mercer County Library. www.mcl.org. Perry Herman MD, board certified in physical medicine and rehabilitation, discusses holistic ways to manage anxiety. Free. Registration required. 7 p.m.

over Zoom by Greenway CEO Linda Mead. Register by email to dkilmer@drgreenway.org. 5 p.m.

Friday August 7

Lectures

In Person

American Nation, American Nature: Nurturing Each in the Anthropocene, Princeton University Art Museum. artmuseum. princeton.edu. American art curator Karl Kusserow explores the questions of how has nature’s representation, literally and figuratively, broadly conditioned American culture, even as nature, too, is under unprecedented stress? And how has each of these concepts — liberty, democracy, and nature — influenced the other? What is their future in a time of extraordinary challenges to bedrock values? Via Zoom. Free. 5:30 p.m. Tastes of Shabbat, Beth El Synagogue of East Windsor, , 609443-4454. www.bethel.net. Interactive progressive Shabbat Dinner discussion on different courses of the perfect Friday night meal. Hear from various Beth El cooks on tips and tricks of their favorite Shabbat recipes via Zoom. 7 p.m.

Kayak Nature Tours, Mercer County Park Commission, Mercer County Marina, 334 South Post Road, West Windsor. www. mercercountyparks.org. Participants will kayak along the lake shore and in the coves to encounter basking turtles, feeding songbirds, and even carnivorous plants. Boats, binoculars, and life vests provided. Basic kayak instruction is provided before the tour. For ages 16 and up. Register. $30; $25 for Mercer County residents. 9 a.m. to noon. Sunset Sips & Sounds, Terhune Orchards, 330 Cold Soil Road, Princeton, 609-924-2310. www. terhuneorchards.com. Live music by Mark Miklos, light fare, and wines by the glass. Face masks required on premises. 5 to 8 p.m. Music and Vino, Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-737-4465. . Rick Winow with acoustic rock. 6 to 9 p.m. Wine and Music Series, Crossing Vineyard & Winery, 1853 Wrightstown Road, Newtown, PA. www.crossingvineyards.com. Still Surfin’ Beach Boys tribute band performs. Wine by the bottle, cocktails, bottled beer, and lite bites menu available. Bring your own glasses, tables, and chairs. $20. 7 p.m.

Socials

Virtual Happy Hour, D&R Greenway Land Trust. www.drgreenway.org. Virtual happy hour featuring women making lasting impacts to protect Mother Earth and celebrating the 100th anniversary of women’s suffrage. Moderated

Open Mic/Open Jam Music, Hopewell Valley Bistro & Inn, 15 East Broad Street, Hopewell. Plug and play outdoors. Amps provided. House band available for backups. 7 to 9:45 p.m. Park-In Movie, Music Mountain Theater, 1483 State Route 179, Lambertville. www.musicmountaintheatre.org. Parking lot film screening of “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” to be viewed from your car via FM radio frequency. Register. $25 per vehicle. 8 p.m.

Pop Music

A Night at the Movies, Summer Music Series, Bristol Riverside Theater. www.brtstage.org. A Night at the Movies celebrates your favorite songs from Tinsel Town’s greatest musicals and movies. From Casablanca to Goldfinger, the music from the silver screen will have you singing along. Concert via YouTube. $35. 7 p.m.

On Stage

‘Blithe Spirit’ Live Reading, Somerset Valley Players. www. svptheatre.org. Actors dial in via Zoom to read Noel Coward’s 1941 play about the complications married Charles Condomine faces after an eccentric medium conjures the spirit of his deceased first wife during a seance. Register. 8 p.m.

Literati

Backyard Bird Identification, The Watershed Institute. www. thewatershed.org. Discover more about the feathered friends around your home with education director Jeff Hoagland and Anna Stunkel. Learn how to identify

Outdoor Flea Market, Princeton Elks, 354 Route 518, Blawenburg, 609-466-9813. Weather permitting. Vendor spots are $10 each. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Farmers Market, Montgomery Friends of Open Space, Village Shopping Center, 1340 Route 206 South, Skillman, 609-915-0817. www.montgomeryfriends.org. Jersey Fresh produce and farm products, baked goods, chicken, eggs, sausage, and more. One person per family. Face covering and social distancing required. 9 a.m. to noon. Pennington Farmers Market, Rosedale Mills, 101 Route 31, Pennington. www.penningtonfarmersmarket.org. Face masks required for everyone over age 2. Social distancing measures in place. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. West Windsor Community Farmers’ Market, Vaughn Drive Lot, Princeton Junction Train Station. www.westwindsorfarmersmarket. org. Vendors sell fresh produce, meats, baked goods, and more. Yes We Can! food drive ongoing. Face masks required. Bring your own bags. Limit of two shoppers per family. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Summer Music Series, Palmer Square Green, Princeton. www. palmersquare.com. Swingadelic 4 plays swinging versions of blues, jazz and pop tunes. pianist/ vocalist John Bauers, guitarist/vocalist Andy Riedel, upright bassist and bandleader Dave Post and drummer Colby Inzer Free. Noon to 2 p.m. Courtyard Cabaret, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, PA. www. buckscountyplayhouse.org. Free 30-minute show featuring a mix of traditional and contemporary musical theatre and popular classics. Take-out food available from the Deck Restaurant and Gazebo Bar. 1 and 4 p.m. Sangria Weekends, Terhune Orchards, 330 Cold Soil Road, Princeton, 609-924-2310. www. terhuneorchards.com. Live music by Mike & Laura. Wines by the glass with outdoor seating in the apple orchards. Sangria available with Terhune’s own wine and fruit. Limit of two hours and six guests per table. Face masks required on premises. 1 to 4 p.m. Music and Vino, Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-737-4465. www. hopewellvalleyvineyards.com. Got 35 performs. 6 to 9 p.m. Continued on page 10


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Off the Presses: ‘Analogia’ by George Dyson

S

cience and technology historian George Dyson’s new book, “Analogia: The Emergence of Technology Beyond Programmable Control,� traces 300 years of the interaction between people, nature, and technology and how a new age is unfolding. Newly released by Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, it joins the author’s series of other sciencethemed works: “Baidarka the Kayak (1986), “Darwin Among the Machines� (1997), “Project Orion: The Atomic Spaceship 19571965� (2002), and “Turnings Cathedral� (2012). The son of familiar Princeton figures, the late theoretical physicist Freeman Dyson and mathematician Verena Huber-Dyson, the 67-year-old writer unsurprisingly occasionally turns his attention to Princeton and the Institute for Advanced Study, his father’s longtime academic home, as he does in the following excerpt:

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owhere in postwar America was there more electronics, and better electronics, than in New Jersey. From RCA’s vast Camden works and Princeton laboratories to the Bell Telephone Laboratories in Murray Hill, it was New Jersey that led the way in electronics just as Thomas Edison, and the city named after him on the shores of the Raritan River, had led the way in delivering electric light. Princeton, New Jersey, was only 20 miles from Edison, yet a world apart. Founded by a syndicate of Quaker families fleeing the 18th century gentrification of Philadelphia and New York, it remained protective of its prerevolutionary architecture, surrounded by farmland reverting back to forest or undergoing development now that food could be gown more efficiently at refrigerated distances from New York. Its central feature was a university, founded as the College of New Jersey in 1746, with a number of laboratories and institutions in its orbit, some devoted to the cultivation of ideas and others devoted to the development of stuff. The laboratory most devoted to stuff be-

longed to the Radio Corporation of America (RCA). Successor to the American Marconi Company and parent to the National Broadcasting Company (NBC), RCA was established under a government order to keep the radio industry, nationalized during the wartime emergency, under U.S. control in the aftermath of World War I. RCA, and its subsidiary RCA Victor, formed through a merger with the Victor Talking Machine Company, whose trademark fox terrier, Nipper, was adopted by RCA in one of the most successful branding exercises of all time, became the dominant provider of both radio equipment and programming: a vertical monopoly that survived the transition from radio to television without missing a step. RCA, masterminded by the Russian immigrant David Sarnoff, was also the progenitor of a trend among American technology companies to separate their research facilities, requiring a permanent staff of well-compensated scientists, from their manufacturing facilities, located wherever labor was available at the lowest cost. RCA’s Princeton laboratories, 40 miles from the dense, low-income Camden neighborhoods that were home to the 10,000 workers who build the products the engineers in Princeton designed, were established in 1941, shortly after a period of violent labor unrest at the Camden plant. The 2.5-million-squarefoot Camden facility was supplied with raw materials, ranging from coal for its generating station to lumber for radio cabinets, by its own railroad and barge terminals. Up to 5,000 radio sets per day were shipped out. The institution most devoted to ideas was the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS). Proposed in 1924 by the Norwegian American topologist Oswald Veblen, whose uncle Thorstein had coined the term “conspicuous consumption� in his 1899 “Theory of the Leisure Class,� the institute was founded in 1930 through the generosity of the Newark dry-goods merchant Louis Bamberger and his sister Carrie (Mrs. Felix Fuld) and launched into the aftermath of the Great De-

pression by the high school teacher turned educational reformer Abraham Flexner, who described the thinking behind his project in an essay for Harper’s Magazine titled “The Usefulness of Useless Knowledge� in 1939. The Bambergers had retired to devote themselves to philanthropy, selling their operations to R.H. Macy & Co. just weeks in advance of the 1929 stock market crash. The result was an educational institution that neither required advanced degrees nor awarded them. It was intended, as Flexner describe it, to serve as “a paradise for scholars who, like poets and musicians, have won the right to do as they please.� The scholars were divided into two classes: visiting members in residence, with rare exceptions, for one year or less, and permanent members, in residence for life. Salaries were kept high for the permanent members so they would stay, while stipends were kept low for the visitors so they would not. No reports were required, and no classes were taught. Committees and faculty meetings were outlawed because, according to Flexner, “once started, this tendency toward organization and formal consultation could

George Dyson’s ‘Analogia’ comes out August 18. never be stopped.� The institute, whose first appointments were Flexner, Veblen, and Albert Einstein, opened with a school of mathematics, followed by a school of history, including archaeology and art, and a short-lived school of economics and politics that the Bambergers hoped would “contribute not only to knowledge of these subjects but ultimately to the cause of social justice which we have deeply at heart.� Physics and astronomy remained under the wings of mathematics until the School of Natural Science was established in 1966. During World War II most of the physicists, with the exception of Einstein, left to join the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos or its ancillary labs. Everything was different when they returned. “Analogia: The Emergence of Technology Beyond Programmable Control,� by George Dyson, $28, 304 pages, Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

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U.S. 1

AUGUST 5, 2020

New Trent House President Speaks Past, Present and Future

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by Dan Aubrey

he Trent House repre- about the makeup of the board. sents where we began as Trenton- When she heard it was primarily ians,” says newly elected board older Caucasians, she agreed. president Princess Hoagland about “I was honored to be asked. the 1719 brick mansion that was Having the opportunity to learn the home of Trenton’s namesake, about my history as a Trentonian William Trent. and our history of our country was “It is a place for us to go and appealing to me,” she says. learn how we came to be here,” she A National Historic Landmark, continues layering the plot of land’s the 11-room American-Georgian history from the Leni Lenape to the style structure built by wealthy British colonization. “We just don’t Scottish-born businessman Wilknow who we are if we don’t look liam Trent later housed both Loyalback. The land that (the Trent ists and Revolutionaries during House) sits on tells us a story.” Revolutionary War, was visited by To argue her point, Hoagland General George Washington, and mentions a July, 2020, archaeology was the home of three New Jersey dig conducted by Hunter Research Governors. in Trenton. She said that experiPrivately owned until 1929, the ence showed how history is hidden Trent House was donated to the from everyday living. “Just two City of Trenton, which partners feet deep, we were looking at arti- with the Trent House Association facts that the Leni Lenape had left to operate the building as a musebehind. Higher than that were those um. from the British and enslaved peoYet despite its gloss, the house ple. I am fascinated by how we can has a dark foundation. Trent’s tell a story by the artifacts we wealth came in part from his infound.” volvement with the slave trade, and Hoagland says her interest in the slaves were kept at the house. Trent House came several years “It is not that we didn’t expect ago when she brought her children it,” says Hoagland about the reality. and grandchildren to an ice cream And since the slavery aspect of social and took Trent’s history advantage of a was not well tour of Trenton’s known and ‘We need to be sensioldest building. missing from the “It took me regular school tive that we do not until my 50s uncurriculum, the group people as intil I got involved. Trent House ventory but as human board and adBut I think that is the experience ministration are beings who were enof many Trentolooking for ways slaved. We need to nians,” she says. to tell a fuller yet think about how they “Many people more nuanced are not aware of story. survived and their rewhere it is. And “We need to siliency. We want to it is hidden bebe sensitive that make those people hind state buildwe do not group ings. We don’t people as invencome to life and let understand its tory but as huthem tell a story that significance. We man beings who connects with current were enslaved. take it for granted. We need to think African-Americans.’ “I lived in about how they Trenton all my survived and life. I heard of their resiliency. the Trent House, but I didn’t under- We want to make those people stand its significance.” come to life and let them tell a story Yet, she says, what she heard that connects with current Africanduring the tour about the personal Americans. It helps us connect the lives of the Trents and how objects dots and is forcing us to understand and materials in the house desig- a timeline that tells a story that innated status got her interested in cludes the Great Migration” and learning more and opening a new how they connected with people of chapter of her own history. African ancestry already in TrenReferring to herself a “lifelong ton. learner” engaged in several comShe also says the museum “realmunity projects, Hoagland says she ly needs to learn what happened to got interested in the house and the people that Trent had who were made several return visits. Then in enslaved. We know of one man 2017, after her interest was noticed who was sold in New York and who by the former board president, Car- escaped and was brought back. But olyn Stetson, she was asked if she we don’t if they went with Trent’s was interested in participating on wife or Trent’s son (after Trent died the board. suddenly in 1724). There are a lot A person of African ancestry in a of missing pieces. city populated mainly by people of “The whole narrative of what the same heritage, Hoagland asked life was like for slaves we’re going

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to have to extrapolate. It is a painful history, but we have to talk about it so we can move in the future — all of us. We need to understand that as human beings we have done things that are crimes against humanity. Everyone is tainted by it. It’s nobody’s fault today. But we can do something about it right now so life is equitable for everyone.” That includes the people in Hoagland’s native Trenton. The daughter of a Delaval employee from Georgia and a Mercer Hospital cafeteria worker from South Carolina, Hoagland says she spent most of her preteen and early adulthood in the Miller Homes housing project. She graduated from Trenton Central High in 1981 and has an associate’s degree in business from Mercer County Community College and a B.A. and M.A. in business administration from Rutgers. In addition to pursuing a doctorate in organizational leadership at Stockton University, the business consultant, wife, and mother of five adult children served on several regional boards and committees of nonprofit organizations including the New Jersey Association of Black Educators, League of Women Voters of Lawrence Township, Locust Hill Cemetery and Interpretive Center Project, Campaign to End the New Jim CrowGreater Trenton, Trenton Civic Trust, Fisher/Richey/Perdicaris Historic District Civic Association, and Urban Mental Health Alliance.

Lifelong Trenton resident Princess Hoagland is the new president of the board of the 1719 William Trent House. She credits two organizations for building the social awareness she hopes to bring to Trent House programming. Not In Our Town Princeton’s First Monday Conversations were “the first time I was engaged in learning about how the history in our country affects oppressed people. Because I had never taken an African American history class I was never aware of the particulars — realizing that people are being intentional about oppressing other people. And how unbeknownst to ourselves we’re helping to perpetuate the oppression of others.”

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he Urban Mental Health Alliance allowed her to explore the trauma experienced by oppressed people and their attempt to normalize it by taking on roles like the “strong black mother” or learning to ignore feelings in order to accommodate the oppressive dominate culture. She is also grateful for social media. “There is a chance for misinformation that can be shared. But we have the opportunity to research for ourselves,” she says. Talking about the challenges she faces at the Trent Houses, she says, “Technology is one. We have to upgrade our Wi-Fi services. We also have to make sure our building has the proper HVAC system. We’re looking at the challenges most museums have: low visitorship.

She says another challenge “is how we tell the whole story, the complete story. Generally we tell the story from the male perspective and look at everything connected to him as property — including his wife and children. We’re trying to tell everyone’s story, including people of African ancestry who were enslaved. “We want to makes sure we are respectful and sensitive. We had a community advisory committee made up of African Americans who grew up in and around Trenton. One of those members said we don’t want to be just doom and gloom, and we don’t. But we want to be truthful.” Meanwhile, in addition to updating information on the Trent House website, Hoagland and the board are busy planning for reopening and raising programming funds. “Because the Trent House is owned by the City of Trenton, we provided a proposal on how to reopen and keep our visitors safe. We are waiting for a response from the city.” They are also taking stock of what other museums are doing to prepare for reopening and begin a strategic plan for future programming — one that touches the community and increases visitors. “It is important that we be relevant to our community,” she says. 1719 William Trent House Museum, 15 Market Street, Trenton. www.williamtrenthouse.org.

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AUGUST 5, 2020

U.S. 1

Decoding the Trent House’s Hidden History

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by Hunter Research

unter Research in Trenton has been on the front lines of researching and documenting the history of the oldest building in the capital city, the Trent House, and, as mentioned in the Trent House story on page 8, recently conducted a soil study at the site When contacted for some comments regarding the Trent House, Richard Hunter, the group’s president and principal archaeologist, shared the following information from a recent study supported by New Jersey Manufacturers and conducted in partnership with Monmouth University archaeologist Richard Veit and the university’s graduate students:

kitchen wing that was located east of the Trent House and attached by means of a “gangway.” The south and east foundations of this structure have been pinpointed, allowing its 20 x 30-foot footprint, as referenced in a 1759 sale advertisement, to be delineated with reasonable confidence. The well, believed to be the original domestic water source for the Trent House and possibly predating the construction of the kitchen wing, is centrally located on the building’s northsouth axis. The footprint of the 20-footlong, 14-foot-wide gangway can he William Trent House, one also be projected, centered on the of Trenton’s premier historic sites, basement and first floor entries at is a city-owned National Historic the northern end of the Trent Landmark. Also listed in the New House’s eastern wall. With this inJersey and National Registers of formation in hand, one may reasonHistoric Places and designated as a ably begin to speculate on the City of Trenton historic landmark, kitchen’s floor plan and the locathe Trent House was originally tions of door and window openconstructed for Philadelphia mer- ings, stairway and fireplace. The chant William Trent in 1719-21. two-and a-half-story structure The house presently occupies a shown in 18th-century depictions 1.59-acre property in the heart of of the Trent House had shallow downtown Trenton, surrounded by foundations and likely had no baseState of New Jersey office build- ment (although the limited archaeings and infrastructure. It is be- ological exposure to date does not lieved to occupy approximately the preclude the possibility of some same site as the nucleus of the late form of sub-floor storage). 17th-century plantation known as The kitchen wing appears to Ballifield, established by Trenton’s have been largely demolished to founding European settler, Mahlon make way for the construction of a Stacy. new east wing of The archaeolthe house in the ogy of the Trent early 19th cenThroughout all the House property tury, with brick various archaeologihas been samrubble apparentpled on several cal campaigns conly being used to occasions over fill the well. The ducted at the Trent the past quarter foundations for House over the past century, often in the east wall and conjunction quarter century there southeast corner with restoration of the new east has been a persistent activity, and alwing are now aland growing awareways under the so well docuoversight of the ness that the historic mented. These New Jersey Hisfoundations occupation sits atop toric Preservawere set down evidence of a deep tion Office. deeper into the It is now well and prolonged Native ground than the established that kitchen wing American occupation the site holds an foundations and from the Late Archaic exceedingly their construchigh potential through Late Woodtion resulted in for yielding sigthe removal of land and Contact penificant buried portions of the riods. remains of both kitchen wing the Stacy and footings. BeTrent family occause of its posicupations along tion relative to with abundant evidence of the the footprint of the new east wing property’s other mid-18th through (at the junction of two sections of early 20th-century residents, nota- the building), the well is presumed bly: Governor Lewis Morris; Dr. to have been abandoned in the early William Bryant, a Loyalist physi- 19th century and then resurrected cian, and John Cox, an Assistant as part of the mid-1930s WPA site Quartermaster General to the Con- restoration. tinental Army (successively resiThe excavations in the south dents here during the Revolution- yard in front of the Trent House ary War); the de Woofoin family found no evidence of structural re(French-Haitian refugees); Daniel mains of buildings, despite the reW. Coxe, a wealthy Philadelphia covery of considerable quantities merchant; and the locally promi- of early and mid-18th-century donent Redmond and Stokes fami- mestic artifacts. lies. The historic site in its entirety overlies stratified cultural deposits ith this somewhat disapthat have yielded substantial traces pointing outcome, one must conof Native American occupation clude that the location of Mahlon from the Late Archaic through Late Stacy’s home, the predecessor to Woodland periods. A ground-pene- the Trent House, is still uncertain, trating radar (GPR) survey of the although it is very likely — based south and east yards was performed on the survey map of 1714, the site in 2016 resulting in the mapping of topography and the distribution of numerous subsurface anomalies late 17th/early 18th-century artithat may or may not relate to cul- facts — to lie within 50 to 100 feet tural features. of the main block of the Trent The 2019 archaeological exca- House, probably within the presvations have succeeded in clarify- ently defined walled property. ing and expanding our understandSeveral thousand historic artiing of the mid-18th-century brick facts have now been recovered

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from the various episodes of arRichard Hunter, left, the principal archaeologist chaeological exploration around with Hunter Research, led a soil study at the Wilthe Trent House. These materials liam Trent House in collaboration with Monmouth date predominantly from the 18th and early/mid-19th centuries, with University archaeologist Richard Veit and gradusmaller quantities of late 17th and ate students in archaeology. later 19th-century artifacts. The assemblage bears excellent witness to the wealth and living habits of the property’s occupants, atop evidence of a deep and pro- can cultural deposits and has yieldreflecting intensive domestic activ- longed Native American occupa- ed an abundance of lithic debris, ity over almost two centuries. tion from the Late Archaic through mostly reflecting tool mainteThere is very little in the way of Late Woodland and Contact peri- nance, along with smaller quantities of thermally altered rock and ods. 20th-century This has be- pottery. cultural materiThe prehistoric component at come especially als, these being Several thousand his- apparent in this the Trent House site holds immense confined mostly toric artifacts have most recent research potential, including the to the uppermost possibility of deposits and artifacts round of excavanow been recovered soil layer across tions as the dig- from the critical 17th-century perithe site, which from the various epiging in (several od of Native American/Eurowas laid down in sodes of archaeologie x c a v a t i o n American interaction. the mid-1930s The quest continues to pin down units) proceeded cal exploration and, except for the main focus of Ballifield, the through the enlimited gardenaround the Trent tire soil se- plantation established by Trenton’s ing and tree House. quence into the founding father, Mahlon Stacy. As planting, has reculturally sterile a tantalizing and unresolved mismained minision of archaeological exploration, subsoil. mally disturbed In the limited area examined, there is ample opportunity for fursince that time. Throughout all the various ar- few convincing features have been ther fieldwork in pursuit of Stacy’s chaeological campaigns conducted found in the form of pits, hearths, estate and its component buildings. Hunter Research, Inc., 120 at the Trent House over the past working floor surfaces or house quarter century there has been a patterns, but these very likely sur- West State Street, Trenton. 609persistent and growing awareness vive. The site has close to two feet 695-0122 or www.hunterrethat the historic occupation sits of broadly stratified Native Ameri- search.com.


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U.S. 1

AUGUST 5, 2020

Art of Quarantine

Opportunities

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rtists responded to U.S. 1’s invitation to share visual thoughts, feelings, and discoveries during our current health crisis. This week Frenchtown-based artists David Horowitz and Judith Marchand share their quarantine-produced continuation of a collaboration project begun in 2016, “Modern Fossils.” In a statement, they say: Mankind’s interaction with its natural environment is the basis and subject of this work. Just as natural fossils are the imprints of prehistoric life on earth, we have created “Modern Fossils”: pieces that ponder the substances we are currently leaving behind in our environment, to be unearthed far in future. We were inspired by the embellished metal manhole and storm drain covers that are found on the streets of their local cities and towns. With these in mind, we create original plaster castings, which represent their community’s impact on the waterways which sustain us and give us life. The message on these castings, “Dump No Waste, Drains To Waterways,” proclaims the clear truth that our waterways’ health is key to our local community’s existence and future. During clean-ups of local waterway environments, we collect both natural materials and manmade detritus, which they then use to design the images in their castings and visually illustrate this message. The resulting wall hangings embody the modern dilemma of mankind’s struggle to maintain a balanced relationship with nature, and also proclaim the vital environmental message stressing the necessity of keeping our waterways clean and healthy. Modern Fossils have their roots in my, Judith, love for the environment and her local rivertown community, combined with my, David, 20-plus years of experience in creating and casting environmental sculptures in NYC (“Urban Fossils”) and in cities around the world. Submit artwork to dan@princetoninfo.com.

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Call for Singers

Call for Art

Princeton Girlchoir (PGC) and Princeton Boychoir (PBC), both programs of Westrick Music Academy (WMA), invite children entering grades 3 through 12 to audition for the 2020-’21 season. All WMA programs, including PGC and PBC, will begin the season virtually, with small group lessons led by nationally renowned youth choir leaders. Classes will focus on choral skills, ensemble building, music theory, sight reading, song writing, rhythm training, and more, all with the individual attention that is uniquely possible in this remote environment. In addition, the choirs have a full year of virtual and potentially live events and performances planned. WMA will continue to monitor health and safety guidelines and will begin to sing together again in person when it is safe to do so. Auditioning singers will be asked to introduce themselves, sing a major scale, and perform a familiar song like “Happy Birthday.” Singers can audition live via Zoom or submit an audition video. Auditions will be scheduled throughout the month of August. To apply or for more information visit www. westrickmusic.org/auditions. In addition, WMA is launching a number of new group and individual classes for children and adults this fall, including group piano for all ability levels, vocal improvisation, piano study of chord progressions, private vocal instruction, piano beyond a solo artform, and more. Visit www.westrickmusic. org/education to learn more or register for a class.

The New Jersey Watercolor Society (NJWCS) is accepting entries for its 78th Annual Open Juried Exhibition through midnight, Thursday, October 1. The exhibition is open to non-members, 18 years or older, and to all members with paid-up dues. Artists may submit one or two entries but only one entry per artist may be accepted. Because of COVID-19, this exhibition will be presented online with reduced fees for this year only. Members of NJWCS will pay $15 for one and $20 for two jpeg entries. Non-members will pay $20 for one and $25 for two jpeg entries. Awards will be presented for participating artists at a virtual reception via Zoom on Sunday, November 29, at 3 p.m. For a copy of the prospectus and to submit your entry visit www. njwcs.org/78thProspectusEntry. htm. For assistance, contact Michael Scherfen at mike@mikescherfen.com.

Call for Dancers Roxey Ballet in Lambertville is holding in-person and virtual auditions for its made-for-television production of “The Nutcracker” running from November 26 through January 3, 2021. Auditions will be held Saturday, September 12, from 2 to 6 p.m. Dancers must pre-register by Sunday, September 6, at www.roxeyballet.org/auditions. There is $35 fee. For more information email roxeyoutreach@gmail.com.

August 8 Continued from page 6

Aria da Capo/The Love Doctor, Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, Great Lawn, Thomas H. Kean Theatre Factory, Florham Park. www.shakespearenj.org. Outdoor double bill featuring classic comedies. Register. $20 per person; groups up to 5 per 8-foot pod. 7 p.m. Carpool Cinema, Acme Screening Room, 204 North Union Street, Lambertville. www.acmescreeningroom.org. Parking lot screening of “Purple Rain.” Opening live music act TBA. Register. $35 per car. 8 p.m. Park-In Movie, Music Mountain Theater, 1483 State Route 179, Lambertville. www.musicmountaintheatre.org. Parking lot film screening of “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” to be viewed from your car via FM radio frequency. Register. $25 per vehicle. 8 p.m.

Live Music

Men on Broadway, Music Mountain Theater. www.musicmountaintheatre.org. Ten current male company members sing from the shows they love. Singers perform

live from the theater for a virtual audience. Register. $25 per household. 3 p.m. Summer Replays, Blue Curtain. www.bluecurtain.org. Live streaming of past performance by Okan via Facebook and YouTube in place of the traditional concert series in Pettoranello Gardens. 8 p.m.

Film

Saturday Night at the Movies: The Joy Luck Club, Mercer County Library. www.facebook. com/mclsnj. Borrow the featured title from the Hoopla catalog with a Mercer County Library card and watch it in the virtual company of your community. 8 p.m.

Sunday August 9 In Person Hopewell Farmers Market, , 62 East Broad Street, Hopewell. www.fairgrownfarm.com/ hopewell-farmers-market. Locally produced foods, plants, wines, and more. Masks and social disancing required. 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Fundraiser The nonprofit Hunterdon Land Trust invites everyone to participate in its first-ever Treasure Hunterdon Virtual Move-a-thon, running Saturday, August 15, to Friday, September 25. The event aims to raise funds to benefit HLT’s work protecting and caring for forests, fields, farms, and waterways. Participants can choose to walk, run, bike, hike, or ride a horse. They can explore an HLT preserve or other favorite trail, walk the dog around their neighborhood, or even hop on a treadmill. HLT encourages participants to reach out to family, friends, colleagues, and others to sponsor their efforts. Register at http://charity.gofundme.com/hltmoveathon2020. Participants can join solo or create a virtual team; everyone is encouraged to share photos and videos on Instagram and Facebook using the hashtag #HLTMoveathon2020. Prizes will be awarded to the individual and team raising the most money as of noon on Monday, September 21; the winners will be announced September 25 at a closing ceremony.

Courtyard Cabaret, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South Main Street, New Hope, PA. www. buckscountyplayhouse.org. Free 30-minute show featuring a mix of traditional and contemporary musical theatre and popular classics. Take-out food available from the Deck Restaurant and Gazebo Bar. 1 and 4 p.m. Summer Carillon Concerts, Princeton University Carillon, 88 College Road West, Princeton, 609-258-7989. Lisa Lonie of Bluebell, Pennsylvania. Free. 1 p.m. Sangria Weekends, Terhune Orchards, 330 Cold Soil Road, Princeton, 609-924-2310. www. terhuneorchards.com. Live music by Mags & Bud August. Wines by the glass with outdoor seating in the apple orchards. Sangria available with Terhune’s own wine and fruit. Limit of two hours and six guests per table. Face masks required on premises. 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday Afternoon Music and Vino, Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609737-4465. www.hopewellvalleyvineyards.com. Goodbye Blue Country bluegrass. 3 to 6 p.m. Verily, Madly Thine, Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, Great Lawn, Thomas H. Kean Theatre Factory, Florham Park. www.shakespearenj.org. Outdoor double bill featuring classic come-


AUGUST 5, 2020

ART

FILM

LITERATURE

U.S. 1

11

DANCE DRAMA MUSIC

PREV I E W

Gallery Going: John Singer Sargent at Princeton University Art Museum

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by Dan Aubrey

ith some regional museums parents, and studied painting in Italy and, still closed and planning to reopen, we are upon his physician father’s insistence, in continuing to remind readers of their impor- Paris, where he was encouraged to explore tant collections by highlighting visual art traditional masters as well as to work with works you can visit as soon as social distanc- fresh ideas. Sargent flourished, and in 1877 was acing practices change and museum doors cepted into the prestigious Salon. Over the open. This week’s pick is John Singer Sargent’s next several years with more works accepted 1897 painting “Elizabeth Allen Marquand” and after winning several Salon awards, he began attracting clients and, according to at the Princeton University Art Museum. As the museum describes it, the painting New Jersey writer Deborah Davis’ book commissioned by the sitter’s husband, noted “Strapless: John Singer Sargent and the Fall collector Henry G. Marquand, was a turning of Madame X,” resentment from Frenchpoint in the artist’s career and that in painting born artists jealous of the American’s accomplishment. Sargent “suppresses the As Metropolitan Museconspicuously virtuosic um of Art materials say, brushwork that made him By painting a conser“Sargent’s best-known the most fashionable porvative painting of a portrait, ‘Madame X,’ traitist in England and the rich collector’s wife which he undertook withUnited States, while reout a commission, enlisted taining vestiges of the imSargent found hima palette and brushwork mediacy it affords. Mrs. self an artist in high derived from Velaz­quez; a Marquand is shown condemand in America’s profile view that recalls Tiservatively attired in a tian; and an unmodulated dark antique dress, seated Gilded Age. treatment of the face and in a chair of similarly figure inspired by the style aged design, in a compoof Edouard Manet and Japsition that reflects the emerging appeal of the Colonial Revival anese prints.” Sargent selected the subject, the Ameriwhile also implying the subject’s chaste can-born Virginie Amelie Avegno Gautreau, character.” The painting is also a peek into Sargent’s because he wanted to exploit her notorious ability and an artifact of a time in the artist’s beauty and reputation as a woman linked to numerous romantic liaisons although she career. While the museum description makes the was married to a prominent French banker. “The picture’s novelty and quality notbrief note that the Elizabeth Marquand painting was “reassuringly unlike the artist’s withstanding, it was a succès de scandale in scandalously risque ‘Mme Gautreau (Ma- the 1884 Salon, provoking criticism for Sardame X),’” it doesn’t elaborate on what ex- gent’s indifference to conventions of pose, actly happened and how the Marquand paint- modeling, and treatment of space, even 20 years after Manet’s pioneering efforts,” coning helped Sargent’s career. Although Sargent is a noted American tinues the Met. According to some art historians the critipainter, he was born in Florence, Italy, in 1856, raised in Europe by his American-born cism was also because the artist had crossed

dies. Register. $20 per person; groups up to 5 per 8-foot pod. 4:30 p.m. Aria da Capo/The Love Doctor, Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, Great Lawn, Thomas H. Kean Theatre Factory, Florham Park. www.shakespearenj.org. Outdoor double bill featuring classic comedies. Register. $20 per person; groups up to 5 per 8-foot pod. 7 p.m.

Pop Music

A Night at the Movies, Summer Music Series, Bristol Riverside Theater. www.brtstage.org. A Night at the Movies celebrates your favorite songs from Tinsel Town’s greatest musicals and movies. From Casablanca to Goldfinger, the music from the silver screen will have you singing along. Concert via YouTube. $35. 3 p.m.

Monday August 10 In Person Greenwood Avenue Farmers Market, Corner of Hudson and Greenwood Avenue, 609-278-

9677. www.greenwoodavefm.org. Fresh produce, vegetables, tropical fruit, meat, and eggs. Reserved for seniors and people with disabilities, noon to 1 p.m. Free youth meals served 1 to 3 p.m. Noon to 4 p.m.

Tuesday August 11 Lectures Writing Your New, Clutter-Free Chapter, South Brunswick Public Library. www.sbpl.info. Humorist and author Jamie Novak makes you laugh while offering helpful techniques to declutter so you can live your best life. Registration required. 6 p.m. In Conversation: Diana Weymar, Arts Council of Princeton. www. artscouncilofprinceton.org. Textile artist Diana Weymar will be in conversation with Timothy M. Andrews, art collector and major supporter of the Arts Council of Princeton’s Artist-in-Residence program, for virtual conversation. Register. Free. 7 to 8:30 p.m.

a social line. While adultery was tolerated, it was not something to put on display — especially by showing a known adulteress with a dropped dress strap suggesting she was ready to undress (Sargent later added a strap to stem the ridicule). The aftermath was devastating for Gautreau, who had remained in Paris. Sargent, however, was able to escape to England, where he labored to rebuild his career as a portrait artist and found noted subjects, including author Henry James. Then there was the career changing invitation from Henry Marquand to paint his wife. Marquand was a financier, art collector, and one of the founders of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He also was a benefactor to Princeton University, where his son, Allan, studied and later taught archaeology and art. Sargent, who had visited America when he was in his early 20s, preferred to stay in Europe, but he also did not want to offend a noted wealthy collector. In order to discour-

John Singer Sargent’s ‘Mme Gautreau,’ left, and ‘Elizabeth Allen Marquand.’ age the collector, the artist said he would only come to America if Marquand agreed to an outlandishly high price — one that Sargent believed Marquand would refuse. When Marquand agreed, the surprised Sargent found himself wealthy, and by painting a conservative painting of a rich collector’s wife found himself an artist in high demand in America’s Gilded Age. It was also one of the most productive periods of his career — creating the noted murals and artworks for the Boston Public Library and Museum of Fine Arts. He also gave the region a well-executed painting that connects to Princeton history and plays a part of a fun story.

Wednesday August 12 Literati Black Voices in Theater Book Club, Princeton Summer Theater. www.princetonsummertheater.org. Themed meetings with two paired plays. This week’s theme is Breaking the Theatrical Form featuring “For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/ When the Rainbow is Enuf” by Ntozake Shange (1976) and “What to Send up When it Goes Down” by Aleshea Harris (2018). Register. 7 p.m.

Lectures

Summer Scholar Spotlight Series, Princeton Senior Resource Center. www.princetonsenior.org. Eight-part series featuring academics from across the country via Zoom. Sara Abercrombie of the education department at Northern Arizona University presents “The Role of Risk Taking in Creativity and Learning,” exploring the psychological factors involved in academic risk-taking, and how risk-taking influences creative outputs and learning. Register. $10 per lecture. 10 a.m.

Sangria Weekends return with live music and locally produced wine, produce, and baked goods, Saturdays and Sundays in August at Terhune Orchards. Top 10 Cost Effective Home Renovation Projects, Mercer County Library. www.facebook. com/mclsnj. Online workshop with tips and tricks for implementing home changes as well as top home improvement trends for 2020. Register. Free. 3 p.m.

Colleges Information Session, Mercer County Community College. www.mccc.edu. Information about in-person, online, and hybrid course offerings for the fall semester. Register. 6 to 7:30 p.m.


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Arts Council Names New Director

Edited by Sara Hastings

A

dam Welch has been named executive director of the Arts Council of Princeton, nearly two years after Taneshia Laird stepped down from the post only 20 months into the job. Past board president Jim Levine has served as interim director throughout the search for a successor. Welch, a Hightstown resident, teaches at Princeton University and serves on the Hightstown Cultural Arts Commission. He has spent the past 17 years at Greenwich House Pottery in New York City and has been its director since 2010. “It is a profound honor to be appointed executive director of the Arts Council of Princeton, an organization of major importance to the Princeton community and within the New Jersey art scene,” Welch said in a statement. “I have a deep appreciation for the ACP’s work in the community and its unwavering commitment to art and artists. I ea-

Adam Welch, left, is the new director of the Arts Council of Princeton. Barry Rabner is retiring after 18 years at the helm of Princeton Health. gerly look forward to working with the ACP’s staff, faculty, and Board of Directors.” Welch’s appointment is effective September 1.

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Rabner to Step Down from Princeton Health

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arry Rabner, who in 18 years oversaw the transformation of Princeton Medical Center from community hospital to regional leader, has announced that he will step down as president and CEO of the healthcare system effective January 1, 2021. Rabner joined Princeton Healthcare System in 2002 and oversaw the construction of the new University Medical Center of Princeton in Plainsboro, which opened in 2012. The new hospital campus, which includes an adult medical daycare, child daycare, a fitness and wellness center, assisted living and memory care, senior independent living, pediatric outpatient care, long-term care, sub-acute care, and a large park for the community, was financed by a $171 million capital campaign, the most successful in New Jersey history. In 2018 he led PHCS’ merger with the University of Pennsylvania’s healthcare network, at which point PHCS became Penn Medicine Princeton Health. He also expanded Princeton Health’s offerings in other areas, including doubling the capacity of Princeton House Behavioral Health and overseeing the creation of the Princeton Medicine Physicians, which now has 200 providers in 25 locations. “Barry’s extraordinary accomplishments over the past 18 years at Penn Medicine Princeton Health have been marked by his leadership attributes, including his integrity and his deep commitment to patients, medical staff, employees, and the community,” said Anthony Kuczinski, chairman of the Princeton Health Board of Trustees, in a statement. “The leadership attributes have guided his vision and his ability to bring about countless positive changes that will impact the organization for decades to come.” Princeton Health’s board, along with the board of the Princeton Medical Center Foundation, medical staff president Dr. Grace B. Bialy, and leaders of Penn Medicine, are leading the search for a replacement, whom they hope to have in place by the end of the year. Penn Medicine Princeton Health, 1 Plainsboro Road, Plainsboro 08536. 888-7427496. Barry Rabner, president and CEO. www.princetonhcs.org.


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Management Moves Billtrust, 1009 Lenox Drive, Lawrenceville 08648. 609235-1010. Flint Lane, founder and CEO. www.billtrust. com. Billtrust, the business-to-business payment solutions company based on Lenox Drive, has named Farai Alleyne as its senior vice president of technology operations. Alleyne will oversee the technical aspects of the firm’s software as a service (SaaS) business. “Farai comes to Billtrust with an incredible record of leading digital transformation in a variety of environments,” said Flint Lane, founder and CEO of Billtrust, in a statement. “Farai’s deep experience, leadership, and ability to innovate will enable us to further accelerate our growth.” Alleyne was previously vice president of technology operations at Travel Click, a software company serving the hotel industry.

Soligenix Reports Promising Results in Vaccine Trial Soligenix Inc., 29 Emmons Drive, Suite B-10, Princeton 08540. 609-538-8200. Christopher J. Schaber, chairman, president, and CEO. www. soligenix.com. Soligenix, one of many area pharmaceutical companies that has shifted part of its focus to the race to develop treatments for the novel coronavirus, has reported promising results from a vaccine study performed in partnership with the University of Hawaii at Manoa (U.S. 1, June 24). The Emmons Drive-based firm, which specializes in treatments for rare diseases, is involved in testing the efficacy of a novel adjuvant, CoVaccine HT in a heat-stable vaccine known as CiVax. An adjuvant’s role is to improve the body’s immune response to a vaccine, and in pre-clinical trials with no adjuvant; Alhydrogel, an existing adjuvant; and CoVaccine HT, the new adjuvant showed a rapid, strong immune response.

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to rapidly bring the HemoDefendBGA anti-A and anti-B adsorber to the markets globally to help save lives.”

Farai Alleyne is Billtrust’s new senior vice president of technology operations. The study has been submitted for peer review to the online openaccess journal npj Vaccines.

Contract Awarded CytoSorbents Inc. (CTSO), 7 Deer Park Drive, Suite K, Monmouth Junction 08852. 732-329-8885. Phillip Chan, CEO. www.cytosorbents. com. CytoSorbents, an immunotherapy company specializing in blood purification, announced July 31 that it had been awarded a threeyear federal contract worth nearly $4.5 million to complete preclinical development of the HemoDefend-BGA plasma and whole blood adsorber. The award comes from the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, endorsed by the Department of Defense office of the Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs, and supplements a Defense Health Agency Small Business Technology Transfer Phase 3 contract worth $2,897,172. The HemoDefend-BGA filter is designed to enable “universal plasma,” which can be administered to anyone regardless of blood type. The filter will also improve the safety of whole blood transfusions through the removal of certain antibodies. “Hemorrhage from battlefield injuries and civilian trauma is a

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CONTACT: KENT MANAGEMENT

(732) 329-3655

jkent@kentmgmt.com

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e c a p S Lab College Park College Park atPrinceton Princeton Forrestal at ForrestalCenter Center

College Park

�ptoto30,000 30,000contiguous contiguous s�uare �p s�uarefeet feetofofsingle-story, single-story, high-tech,first-class first-class R&D R&D space high-tech, spaceimmediately immediatelyavailable. available. For information information contact: For contact:

TomStange Stange at at National National Business Inc. at Princeton Forrestal Center Tom BusinessParks, Parks, Inc. 609-452-1300 •• tstange@collegepk.com 609-452-1300 tstange@collegepk.com

Brokers s�uare Protected �p to 30,000 contiguous Brokers Protectedfeet of single-story, high-tech, first-class R&D space immediately available. Anexceptional exceptional Princeton Princeton business An businessenvironment environment www.collegepk.com www.collegepk.com For information contact:

Tom Stange at National Business Parks, Inc. 609-452-1300 • tstange@collegepk.com


14

U.S. 1

AUGUST 5, 2020

U.S. 1 Classifieds How to order

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

OFFICE RENTALS DOWNTOWN PRINCETON FIRST LEVEL OFFICE FOR LEASE. 213 NASSAU STREET ~1000SF. WEINBERG MANAGEMENT. TEXT TO: 609731-1630. WMC@COLLEGETOWN. COM. Ewing/Mercer County OFFICE 3,000 SF. 201-488-4000 or 609-8837900. Princeton Business Park, Rocky Hill, NJ: Office/Laboratory suites from 500 to 3,200 sq. ft. starting at $12.00 and $24.00 sq. ft. Triple Net. All labs include benches, hoods, D I water and sinks. Some labs are ISO 3, VRF HVAC and back up generators. Located 5 miles north from Princeton. To inquire, call 609-683-5836. theprincetonbusinesspark.com.

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

HOME Maintenance

Remodel, renovate, repair. Prompt, professional detail service. Replacement windows, doors, decks, kitchens, baths, basement finishing, concrete work, all major/minor repairs. Fully insured, lic. #13VHO2183600. Call 732752-1287.

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

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

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

classified by e-mail class@princetoninfo.com

Music Services

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

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

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

men seeking women

jobs wanted

Singles Exchange

Employment Exchange

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

lenging opportunities for years now. We know this because we often hear from the people we have helped. We reserve the right to edit the ads and to limit the number of times they run. If you require confidentiality, send a check for $4 with your ad and request a U.S. 1 Response Box. Replies will be forwarded to you at no extra charge. Mail or Fax your ad to U.S. 1 Jobs Wanted, 15 Princess Road, Suite K, Lawrenceville, NJ 08648. Fax to 609-844-0180. E-mail to class@ princetoninfo.com. You must include your name, address, and phone number (for our records only).

I Buy Guitars and All Musical Instruments in Any Condition: Call Rob at 609457-5501.

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

WANTED TO BUY

HOW TO RESPOND

Buying Baseball & Football cards,1909-1980 - Comic books, 1940-1980. All sports memorabilia, collectibles, and related items. Don 609203-1900; delucadon@yahoo.com.

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

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

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

JOBS WANTED Job Hunters: If you are looking for a full-time position, we will run a reasonably worded classified ad for you at no charge. The U.S. 1 Jobs Wanted section has helped people like you find chal-

Home security and home maintenance all in one. Retired police officer available for security and home maintenance. Power washing. Indoor/outdoor house painting. Also do lawn and garden, siding, new construction, replace doors and windows and door locks and house sitting, personal security and driving. Call 609-937-9456 or e-mail dra203@aol.com. I am looking for an internship in the Greater Princeton Area. My skills include: Intermediate Programming in C++, C#, Javascript, Python, HTML, Lua, Web Design, Serach Engine Optimization (SEO), Microsoft Office, WordPress, Pinegrow, Google Docs, Sheets, Google Sites, Github, Adobe Photoshop, OS X, Lunux (Debian), Windows. Call 646-258-0013 or email nathaniel. ramos.a@gmail.com.

l o o h c S o t k Bac (& Back to Business) With U.S. 1 Newspaper

Call NOW to Reserve Space! Take advantage of free advertising features.

Reach working parents throughout the greater Princeton area by placing your ad in U.S. 1.

Take advantage of our

For more information, call

609-396-1511

Back-to-School specials: U.S. 1 – August 12 & 19 issues


AUGUST 5, 2020

U.S. 1

SPACE FOR LEASE RETAIL • OFFICE • MEDICAL

MANORS CORNER SHOPPING CENTER

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

SPACE AVAILABLE:

160 Lawrenceville-Pennington Road Lawrenceville, NJ • Mercer County

1,910 sf (+/-)

Retail • Office • Medical

PRINCESS ROAD OFFICE PARK

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

SPACE AVAILABLE:

4 Princess Road Lawrenceville, NJ • Mercer County

Office • Medical

MONTGOMERY PROFESSIONAL CENTER

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

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

Route 518 and Vreeland Drive Skillman, NJ • Somerset County

SPACE AVAILABLE:

Office • Medical

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

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

15


16

U.S. 1

AUGUST 5, 2020

PENNINGTON BORO (.57 acres) Brinton H West $169,000 MLS# NJME292430

FRANKLIN TOWNSHIP Wendy Neusner $455,900 MLS# 3568197

LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP Susan A Cook $799,900 MLS# NJME296474

PRINCETON Norman T Callaway $1,250,000 MLS# NJME276250

Age Restricted PLAINSBORO TOWNSHIP Merlene K Tucker $315,000 MLS# NJMX122970

EWING TOWNSHIP Roberta T Canfield $565,000 MLS# NJME296952

HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP Kathryn Baxter $875,000 MLS# NJME294212

Robin McCarthy Froehlich $1,259,000

PRINCETON MLS# NJME295936

introducing

Age Restricted PLAINSBORO TOWNSHIP Merlene K Tucker $320,000 MLS# NJMX122418

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

WEST WINDSOR TOWNSHIP Kathryn Baxter $950,000 MLS# NJME299156

PRINCETON Norman T Callaway $1,950,000 MLS# NJME283852

MONTGOMERY TOWNSHIP Janet Stefandl $330,000 MLS# NJSO113280

NORTH BRUNSWICK TWP Lauren Adams $650,000 MLS# NJMX124148

PRINCETON (2.24 acres) Susan L DiMeglio $1,099,000 MLS# NJME277084

PRINCETON Jennifer E Curtis $2,095,000 MLS# NJME286738

introducing

HOPEWELL TWP (6.97 acres) Norman T Callaway, Jr $350,000 MLS# NJME295262

WEST WINDSOR TOWNSHIP Susan A Cook $699,000 MLS# NJME299168

SOUTH BRUNSWICK TWP Danielle Spilatore $1,100,000 MLS# NJMX124212

Barbara Blackwell $2,285,000

PRINCETON

HAMILTON TOWNSHIP Janet Stefandl $350,000 MLS# NJME288934

MONTGOMERY TOWNSHIP Jennifer E Curtis $725,000 MLS# NJSO112968

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

PRINCETON Norman T Callaway $2,700,000 MLS# NJME295330

MLS# NJME296102

commercial

OH

HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP Brinton H West $425,000 MLS# NJME297128

MONTGOMERY TOWNSHIP Thomas J McMillan $750,000 MLS# NJSO112582

MONTGOMERY TOWNSHIP Yakenya Songea Moise $1,159,000 MLS# NJSO112688

PRINCETON Michael Monarca $2,725,000 MLS# 1000261801

Open House this weekend Call for date and time!

CallawayHenderson.com

LAMBERTVILLE 609.397.1700

MONTGOMERY 908.874.0000

PRINCETON Donna S Matheis $450,000 MLS# NJME296498

PRINCETON Linda Twining $795,000 MLS# NJME293604

Realtor® Owned MONTGOMERY TOWNSHIP Birchwood Drive $1,199,999 MLS# NJSO112738

PENNINGTON Realtor® Owned PRINCETON Christina M Callaway $2,990,000 MLS# NJME287688

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

609.737.7765

PRINCETON 609.921.1050


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