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Community

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Power at the plate

Ewing Township hoping to see cannabis tax windfall

Ever since the state of New Jersey legalized the sale of adult cannabis in 2021, Ewing Township has been among the first municipalities to approve such facilities in town.

One major factor making such facilities attractive to local officials is the fact that municipalities are allowed to tax cannabis businesses located in town.

The income can be pretty significant. Lawrence Township, which had one of the first retail adult use dispensaries in the area in 2022, estimated that it would have realized almost $1 million in additional tax revenues if the business had been open for the full year.

Ewing Observer editor Bill Sanservino recently sat down with Mayor Bert Steinmann to talk about issues impacting the township.

The first article resulting from the interview ran in the May issue of the paper and dealt with the reconstruction of the Ewing Senior and Community Center, which suffered a serious fire last year. The mayor also discussed the economy and municipal budget in the article.

Development and redevelopment in town was covered in the June issue/ Both stories

See CANNABIS, Page 3

Ham radio club reaches out to the community with monthly events

The Delaware Valley Radio Association hopes to be heard loud and clear during events scheduled during the month of August.

Established in 1930, the all-volunteer amateur station based in Ewing is one of the oldest in the nation and has approximately 150 members. First up is a “Fox hunt” event, set to beheld on Saturday, Aug. 5. In a fox hunt—also known

as transmitter hunting, bunny hunting and bunny chasing— the participants use radio direction finding techniques to locate one or more radio transmitters hidden within a designated search area.

The DVRA holds several fox hunts during the course of the year. The August session is scheduled to start at 9 a.m., and hunts are usually done by noon.

The starting point for this hunt is the Chapin School south parking lot located at 4101

Princeton Pike in Princeton. Also this month is a picnic/ open house on Sunday, Aug. 15. More information on the event is set to be posted on the club’s website atw2zq.com.

The August events offer an opportunity for area residents to see the club in action and consider signing up.

On a recent afternoon at the group’s headquarters — a World War II-era U.S. Navy radio shack right off U.S. 295 —

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Ewing resident Jordan Everett, who played for League Lawrence Post 414 of the Mercer County American Legion League this summer, batted .345 with three doubles, three triples, a leaguehigh four home runs and a team-high 24 RBI. For more on Everett, turn to Page 17. (Photo by Rich Fisher.) InTerVieW by Bill SanserVino
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RWJUH Hamilton August Healthy Living / Community Education Programs

RAISED BED, FLAT BREAD

Fri., August 4; 12:30 to 1:30 p.m.

Spend your ‘Pizza Friday’ celebrating fresh produce that grows right here in New Jersey! Get hands-on by personalizing your own nutritious flat-tastic masterpiece for take-out! All ages welcome. Children must be accompanied by an adult. Fee: $5 per person. Taryn Krietzman, RDN

THE AARP DRIVING COURSE

Tue., August 8; 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Be a safer, better driver. Bring your NJ or PA driver’s license. Fee: $20 for AARP members presenting a valid AARP card; $25 for nonmembers. Cash or check only to AARP.

OVER THE COUNTER HEARING AIDS-FAQ-WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW

Tues., August 8; 10-11 a.m.

Get the facts on the latest in over-thecounter hearing aids. Learn the facts and get your questions answered by Dr. Lorraine Sgarlato, Au.D. A.B.A. a clinical audiologist with over 40 years of experience in the field of hearing science.

DANCE IT OUT!

Tues., August 8; 6 to 7 p.m. When in doubt, dance it out! Have fun and de-stress with this interactive program. No experience required, all ages welcome.

CREATE YOUR OWN VISION BOARD WORKSHOP

Wed., August 9, 6 to 8 p.m.

What is your deepest desire for what you would like to be, do or have? Come create your own vision board to help bring your dreams to life. Please bring scissors, all other materials provided.

OSTEOPOROSIS SCREENING

Thurs., August 10; 10 a.m.-noon

Ultrasound of heel and personalized information. Appointment required.

ASK THE DIETITIAN

Mon., August 14; 3 – 6 p.m.

Do you have a question about diet and nutrition? Join a community education dietitian for a one-on-one Q&A. Registration is required. Taryn Krietzman, RDN

MINDFULNESS MEDITATION FOR BEGINNERS

Wed., August 16; 1 to 2 p.m. Learn how to rest your body and quiet your mind with the simple (although not always easy) practice of meditation. No experience necessary.

TAKE HOME COLORECTAL SCREEN KIT AND LECTURE

COLOR ME HOOPY! FUN AND FITNESS WITH HOOLA HOOPS!

Tues, August 22; 1 to 2:00 p.m. Yes, you can hoola-hoop. It’s much easier to find your rhythm and flow using a “grown up” size hoop. Learn skills and techniques and have a lot of fun. Hoops provided. Fee $15. Angela Ritter, certified Hoop Love Coach and Hoola-Fit instructor.

SUPPORT GROUPS

To learn more about these groups visit www.rwjbh.org/HamiltonPrograms

CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP

Wed., August 2; 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.

WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS

OF MEDITATION?

Mon, August 14; 6-7:30 p.m.

The practice of focused concentration, known as meditation, brings yourself back to the moment over and over again. Explore the benefits of meditation in this informational session with optional demonstration. Matt Masiello, CCH, founder of Esteem Hypnocounseling, will guide the group through this practice.

PREDIABETES 101

Tue. August 15; 11 to 12 p.m.

What you need to know and do if you have been diagnosed with prediabetes.

WHAT’S IN THE BOX? **VIRTUAL**

Tue., August 15th 2023; 12 - 1 p.m.

All things seasonal, all the time! Learn what wonderful fruits and vegetable are up to this time of year and how to make them shine!

Wed., August 16; 5 to 6 p.m. Learn how to use a simple take-home test to screen for colorectal cancer and take part in a lecture about how to reduce your risk. Registration required.

DESTROY THE CLOTS: INTERVENTIONS FOR DEEP VEIN THROMBOSIS AND PULMONARY EMBOLISM

Wed., August 16; 6 to7:30 p.m. Lasanta Horana, MD, Emergency Department Chair and a Medical Staff Officer at RWJUH Hamilton will discuss the importance of timely interventions when faced with “blood clots”

HEALTHRYTHMS® DRUMMING CIRCLE

Wed, August 16; 7 to 8 p.m. Join our drumming circle and help drum your cares away. This evidence-based program is shown to reduce blood pressure, calm stress and increase the fun in your life. Drums provided. Fee: $15. Mauri Tyler, CTRS, CMP

MEET LOCAL WRITER JESSICA WILSON, AUTHOR OF HEALING JOURNEY’S.

Tues., August 22; 6 to7 p.m. Join Jessica Wilson, author of “Healing Journeys” for a book talk on toxic relationships, where we’ll delve into the different types of abuse and explore what constitutes a toxic relationship. I’ll share strategies to guide you through these challenging situations and empower you on your healing journey.

FEELING BURNED OUT AT WORK?

Tue., August 22; 6 to 7 p.m. Job burnout can affect your physical and mental health. Learn about signs of burnout and what you can do about it.

PICTURE THIS: CRAFTY CREATIONS

Thurs., August 31; 6 to 7:30 p.m. Bring your favorite summertime memories and a creative spark. Craft the night away with family and friends as the summer dwindles down. Fee: $5 per person

*All programs require registration and are held at the RWJ Fitness & Wellness Center, 3100 Quakerbridge Rd., Hamilton, NJ, unless otherwise noted.

GRIEF & LOSS SUPPORT GROUP

Thu., August 3, August 17; 1:30 to 2:30 p.m.

CARING FOR LOVED ONES WITH CHRONIC CONDITIONS

Mon., August 7, August 21 10:30 to 11:30 a.m.

ADULT CHILDREN CARING FOR PARENTS

Mon., August 7, August 21st 5:30 to 7 p.m.

LETTING GO OF CLUTTER

Tue., August 8; 1:30 to 2:30 p.m.

ALZHEIMER’S SUPPORT GROUP

Wed., August 16; 6 to 7 p.m.

MANAGING STRESS AND DIABETES

Wed., August 23; 3 to 4 p.m.

WISE WOMEN DISCUSSION GROUP

Thu., August 24; 1:30 to 2:30 p.m.

Better Health Programs/Complimentary Membership at 65+ Years Old

LET’S TALK, A SENIOR SOCIAL GROUP

Wed., August 2, 9, 16, 23, & 30; 10 to 11 a.m.

Please join us for our ongoing program “Let’s Talk, a Senior Social Group,” gathering in a collaborative setting to exchange thoughts, feelings and experiences amongst peers.

This is a safe-zone designed to be welcoming and understanding of all attendees while exploring this season of our lives – the ups and the challenges. This group is a partnership between RWJUH Hamilton and PyschHealth Associates here in Hamilton. This is a weekly program. Please feel free to attend one or all.

OVER THE COUNTER HEARING AIDSFAQ-WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW

Tues., August 8; 10-11 a.m.

Get the facts on the latest in over-the-counter hearing aids. Learn the facts and get your questions answered by Dr. Lorraine Sgarlato, Au.D. A.B.A. a clinical audiologist with over 40 years of experience in the field of hearing science.

SOCRATES CAFÉ,

Wed., August 9; 2 to 3 p.m.

“Socrates Café” is about discussing a topic, sharing our thoughts, our beliefs, our ideas, and experiences. An unofficial mantra describes that we (people) learn more when we question, and question with others. This is a “safe zone” to share where all views are accepted. Come with an open mind, respect for one another, and a willingness to see where it takes us.

TAI CHI CLASS

Thu., August 10 & 24; 1 to 2 p.m.

Tai Chi is recommended for seniors because it improves balance, strengthens muscles in the legs and increases flexibility and stability in the ankles. It can help reduce falls and back pain. Beginner’s welcome.

GAME TIME

Thurs., August 10; 2 to 3:30 p.m.

Join us for game time, snacks and some wholesome fun. A variety of board games will be available or you are welcome to bring your own

YOGA CLASSES

Tue., August 15 & 29; 10 to 11 a.m.

Krystal Loughlin, certified RYT, will be leading this gentle yoga class using traditional postures and breathing techniques offering modification of the poses for your body so that you can confidently participate. Beginner’s welcome.

MEDITATION CLASSES,

Tue., August 15 and 29; 11:15 to 11:45 a.m.

Krystal Loughlin will lead this meditation class focusing on reducing stress and bringing inner peace. See how you can easily learn to practice meditation whenever you need it most. Beginner’s welcome.

TECHNOLOGY CLASS

Wed., August 16; Noon to 1 p.m.

Frustrated navigating online registration for Better Health Programs? Can’t figure out how to text your grandkids. Back to help us with our technology challenges are our friends from “Camp Fire NJ, Teens on Fire.” Whether you have questions about your

mobile device, a laptop, or iPad, bring your device and learn how to complete simple tasks.

PREDIABETES 101

Tue. August 15; 11 to 12 p.m.

What you need to know and do if you have been diagnosed with prediabetes.

ANTIQUES ON THE ROAD

Thu., August 17; 2 to 3:30 p.m

We ask all attendees to arrive promptly at 2 p.m. and be ready for a fun and informative program. Each attendee can bring only ONE item to have appraised. Together we will learn some history about our treasures and find out what’s hot and what’s not in the antique and collectables market. Thomas Petrino will lead this program. He has been a full-time Personal Property Appraiser and is Certified by the Appraisers Guild of America. He also serves as acting appraiser for the NJ Treasury, consults with banks, attorneys and insurance companies to authenticate and appraise estates.

Scan QR code to view, learn more & register on-line for the programs listed above. Or visit rwjbh.org/HamiltonPrograms Email CommunityEdHam@rwjbh.org or call 609-584-5900 to learn more
the QR code to register and become a member or call 609-584-5900 or email bhprogram@rwjbh.org to learn more
Scan
2  Ewing Observer | August 2023

can be read on the Observer’s website at communitynews.org.

In this month’s Q&A, the mayor discusses the state cannabis sales in town. A lightly edited version of that Q&A appears below.

Ewing Observer: Under state’s cannabis regulations, towns can now raise a substantial amount of income. I know the township has seen a number of applicants and did some endorsements. What do you have coming within the next year or so?

Steinmann: We have two micros are another retailer coming online. We’re going to wind up with three major suppliers. I’m talking about a grow area of 100,000-plus square feet.

Observer: That’s a grow facility?

Steinmann: Grow, manufacture, and then obviously they sell to retailers. In those particular situations— if it if it’s strictly going to be for adult use—then our revenue stream is greatly improved. Basically, once they’re growing plants, they sell the plant to the manufacturer, who is going to make it into whatever form that they’re going to put it in.

We get 2% of that sale. Okay. Then the manufacturer does what they need to do. They sell it to the retailer. We get 2% of

Observer Ewing

that sale. Then once the retailer has it, it walks out the door. We get 2% of that. So that is where we can see significant increases in revenue to the town.

Observer: How many companies does this involve?

Steinmann: Currently, there’s five companies. There’s currently a moratorium until October, and then we kind of revisit to see what we can do. I think we should cap the number of retailers at five. As far as the growers and the manufacturers, I don’t think we should have a limit as long as we can put them in industrial areas, because basically it has no effect on the public.

The public can’t visit these places and it’s a very good revenue stream for any community, and people have to remember that. Some people say we shouldn’t be doing it in Ewing Township. They have that belief and that’s fine, but at the end of the day, what they forget is that people can just go across the border to another town and get it anyway. It’s not like they’re going to stop it from coming into the township. You know, that doesn’t happen.

Observer: Where are the approved locations for each of these types of businesses—grow, manufacturing and retail?

Steinmann: You’ve got Philips Boulevard, Whitehead Road Extension, one

more on Olden Avenue, and one that’s coming on Spruce Street in the old Randall Furniture. You’ve got one on Eggerts Crossing Road, which is a micro grower, and one on Jane Street, which is a micro grower. And then there’s one on Olden Avenue across from Capital Plaza. I’m dating myself now—it’s where the old Korvette’s store was and a movie theater. That was many, many, many years ago.

Observer: Those are all grow facilities?

Steinmann: No. The one on Olden Avenue is a retailer. The Old Randall Furniture store is a retailer. The one on Jane Street—the micro—is a grow and retail, but they’re doing as a designertype drug. They try to make it specifically for the customer.

The one on Eggerts Crossing Road is a micro that’s just grow. The bigger ones are the one on Whitehead Road extension, which is grow and manufacture. The one on Philips Boulevard is actually going to be two or possibly three under one roof, and they are going to be grow manufacturer.

Observer: I understand you have a committee that kind of has vetted the business who want to locate in town. Is that correct?

See CANNABIS, Page 4

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CANNABIS continued from Page 1
August 2023 | Ewing Observer3

CANNABIS continued from Page 3

Steinmann: Yes, we have a committee that screens everybody, and we have a lot of companies come in. A lot of them just failed. Some of them just don’t have the whereabouts to run that type of business. They just think, “It’s easy money for us, just go ahead and do it,” but there’s a lot of hoops that you have to jump through.

Members of the committee include a representative from the Ewing Drug and Alcohol Alliance. We have a local businessperson on the board. We have Rev. Darrell Armstrong from Shiloh Baptist Church—he lives in Ewing Township. We also have a member of the township council and the police chief on the committee. I’m also on the board, as well as our attorney and township planner.

We vet these individuals, we say yes or no, and then we give the recommendations to the council and council votes on them.

Observer: And then ultimately that must go to the state for another level of approval?

Steinmann: Right. But you can’t even get to the state unless you went through those steps with the township.

The first one in town, which used to be called Justice Grown, just changed its name to Bloc. Not The Bloc, just Bloc, whatever that means, I have no idea. So

we just went through that particular process with the name change.

Now they have the flags flying outside and they’re starting to advertise more. We rode past the other day and there were maybe seven cars in the parking lot.

Observer: Don’t they have retail, grow and manufacturing facilities in town?

Steinmann: That’s right. Their grow and manufacturing is on Prospect Street.

Observer: And they’re open now?

Steinmann: Yes. Retail for medical customers was opened last year—late summer or early fall. The adult retail use opened a few weeks ago. We haven’t seen lines yet like they did when the one Lawrence Township first opened, but there should be more customers coming as a result of the advertising.

Observer: Yeah, I heard when they first opened, there were some pretty long lines at Zen Leaf in in Lawrence Township, which was the first one in this area.

Steinmann: Oh, yeah. That’s starting to die down though. As soon as people find dispensaries that are closer to their homes, they’re going to gravitate there. Not that I go look for it, but I don’t I don’t think there’s significant pricing difference from one to the other. I could be wrong though.

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Saturday, September 30 10 a.m.–4 p.m. on TCNJ’s campus

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Fun for the whole family!

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To learn more, become a vendor, or volunteer, visit communityfest.tcnj.edu.

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FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
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club president Bob Bowden and former president Dom DiClementi share the club’s past and present.

Playfully introducing themselves with their official ham names — respectively KB3BB and N3DD — the two beam-in on one of the most obvious question about the group that goes by the ham name W2ZQ: “What’s the ‘ham’ stand for?”

“It is an unflattering fact that we don’t know,” says Bowden. “No one really knows.”

That fact is made clear when they reference a list of unsupported theories found on a variety of radio history websites.

Nevertheless, ham has become synonymous with amateur radio and the class of people communicating on the same frequency as professionals.

But what the duo do know is that ham radio started around 1917 and that soon after people began to create radio clubs in geographic areas.

DVRA got its start in 1930 when former World War I naval radio operator Ed Raiser brought local ham operators together. Originally meeting and incorporating in Morrisville, Pennsylvania, the club held meetings in Trenton and eventually the “Wireless Hill” site in the 1940s.

“Not many clubs have a facility like this,” says DiClementi about the vintage masonry structure with banks of new equipment inside and antennas of vari-

ous heights outside.

When the war ended, the property was deeded to Mercer County, which, in turn, developed a long-term agreement with nonprofit DVRA.

The club pays for utilities, upkeep, and securing equipment, including a grant to install a five-meter dish to bounce radio beams from space.

“This building was quite run down, but (DiClementi) was the leader who turned the club around,” says Bowden. That included improving the building to appeal to its members and attract new ones.

If numbers prove anything, it was a winning move. Over the past several years, membership has jumped from 30 to 150.

DiClementi says part of the attraction is the club’s “wide footprint” — that includes the headquarters and its adjacent radio towers seen from Interstate 95, a transmitter on the towering Bakers Basin antenna, and its monthly meeting space at Our Lady of Good Counsel Catholic Church in Ewing.

“It’s not like the average ham operators in their home,” DiClementi says. “They don’t have 100-foot towers. If you want to operate state-of-the-art equipment, this is where you come.”

Since the club is also one of the sites approved by the 109-year-old AARL, the Amateur Radio Relay League, which is the national association for amateur radio, people also come to get help in obtaining the FCC license to broadcast.

Bowden says the big appeal for ham radio operators is its emergency communication aspect and readily points out that the ham operators became the eyes and ears of Puerto Rico when Hurricane Maria swept the island in 2017.

Another appeal is members finding

the opportunity to communicate with people around the world.

Bowden and DiClementi, both residents of Lower Makefield, Pennsylvania, say that the first thing a person has to do to become a ham radio broadcaster is to take and pass a mandatory FCC test to get on the air. The cost is $15.

And while a person doesn’t need to join DVRA to do so, the annual $50 membership connects beginners with experienced operators who can share information on equipment and expenses.

But before anything else, says DiClementi, a ham beginner needs to ask, “What do I want to do with the hobby? The interest dictates the equipment. And the budget should dictate whether to get used or new equipment.”

That said, he and Bowden say a new member could get on the air with a $30 backyard short-range walkie-talkie-like device or set up a home station with wire antennae for $200. Additionally, DVRA membership for the first year is free.

“Basically, it isn’t much money to get into the hobby,” says Bowden, who got into ham radio in Long Island, New York, and recalls its “magical allure — just the idea of communicating with people through the air.”

His interest was helped by his father, whose World War II military work involved working on radios in the United Kingdom.

DiClementi’s story is similar. He was a South Philadelphia kid whose Uncle Joe was a World War II “communications guy” who worked in television repair.

“There are so many facets to this hobby,” says DiClementi. “It doesn’t lose its magic. We talk to people by bouncing beams off the moon.”

In fact, moon bouncing is part of the regular activities

“On a weekly basis, we run an emergency network where everybody checks their equipment through an emergency report,” says Bowden. “And we work with the Boy Scouts earning merit badges (in radio).”

“We also do social stuff, public service events, like the New Jersey Triathlon (in Mercer County Park) and relay information” to help with bicycle repairs.

They also offer workshops as standalone events, special events like a “War of the Worlds” radio broadcast, and live and Zoom guest-speaker presentations at their monthly meetings.

Elaborating on Zoom and digital technology, Bowden says, the “technology that was making us obsolete is expanding our membership.”

The two say club membership is a balance of New Jersey and Pennsylvania residents.

While core of the group is made up of

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DVRA president Bob Bowden and past president Dom DiClementi outside the radio shack that serves as the group’s Ewing headquarters.
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6  Ewing Observer | August 2023
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older men of European descent, the two say that there has been a noticeable increase of women (about 8 percent), people of other racial and ethnic backgrounds, and youth.

Some of that change is related to the club’s connection to educational institutions, such as The College of New Jersey and its mutual interest in radio astronomy.

And promotional materials related to radio astronomy note the involvement of one of the club’s members, Nobel laureate and retired Princeton University astrophysicist Joe Taylor.

“The goal for us is to increase diversity, especially with young people,” says Bowden. “They get involved with the hobby and then get involved in STEM projects.”

However, they can just be there to enjoy broadcasting and learning. “Fifty percent or our club members are not technicians or engineers,” says Bowden, who worked with marketing and statistics at Bristol-Myers Squibb.

While Bowden and DiClementi’s upbeat words suggest marketing hype, their claims have been matched by some upbeat recognition.

During the recent Hamvention, the selfdescribed world’s largest gathering of amateur radio enthusiasts, DVRA was cited the 2023 Club of the Year.

The reasons? The club’s tripling of membership, variety of activities for both

members and community, and its “regular schedule when members and visitors use state-of-the-art equipment to get on the air and communicate with other hams around the world.”

“It’s a very prestigious honor and formal recognition of all we’ve accomplished as a

club in recent years,” says Bowden in a formal statement. “It’s a real testament to the dedication and enthusiasm of our membership, who made the award possible.”

The club will continue using that enthusiasm to power two upcoming events.

The first, of course, is Field Day. Although the official 24-hour event highlighting Cold War era communication drills starts on June 24, and continues through June 25, the free public session is set for Saturday, June 24, from 2 to 7 p.m., at the Wireless Hill station, 798 Bear Tavern Road in West Trenton.

“We’re going to have three transmitters using 100 watts, and we’re going to talk to people all over the world,” says Bowden.

The other is the Saturday, July 8, “Parks on the Air” event at Washington Crossing Historic Park in Pennsylvania. Another national effort, the event has been likened to a ham sporting activity where clubs set up in public parks and invite the community to watch them try to use radio signals to hunt down other clubs in parks across the nation.

Looking at the club and ham radio, Bowden says, “Ten years ago, you could criticize this hobby as a bunch of dinosaurs. But now, technology has advanced to the point where we have leading edge technology. More than half a billion people are involved (with ham radio). It has become a dynamic hobby again.”

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Trenton Farmers Market welcomes a new manager

New Trenton Farmers Market manager Bill Kearney is out to get the word out that the historic market is still doing what it did from the start — moving produce.

Kearney took the position as the seventh TFM manager in February, 2023. He is also the fourth in the past five years. Longtime manager Jack Ball retired in 2019. He was followed by Chris Cirkus, who still manages the West Windsor Farmers Market (2019-22), and then former Capital City Farm organizer Ludovic Andre, who left earlier this year.

Now working the produce stands and glad-handing patrons, Kearney recently talked turkey about the marketing the market.

“The Trenton Farmers Market operates pretty much like a nonprofit,” he says, getting straight to business. But “it’s a co-op. It’s run by a board of farmers... It has a president and four members. We keep it operating so local farmers can bring their produce to the market.”

Those farms include Cedarville, East Windsor; Corner Copia, Jacksonville;

Cranberry Hall, Cookstown; Pinelands, Hammonton; Russo’s Fruit and Vegetables, Tabernacle; Terhune Orchards; and Zell’s in Hillsborough.

Calling the market “one of the oldest and largest in New Jersey,” Kearney quickly sketches its history.

It started in the early 1900s on an area near the Lower Trenton Bridge — aka Trenton Makes Bridge — to service both Trenton residents and bridge users.

When discussions about creating a highway along the river started, the Trenton Market Growers Cooperative Association was formed. It then purchased its Spruce Street property on the Trenton-Lawrence Township line in 1939.

The new market opened in 1948 and operated in a combination of buildings and outdoor stands.

After one of the three main structures burned down, the remaining two were reconfigured into the cross-like structure that generations have come to know.

Kearney says his current “responsibility is vendor relations and to give them everything they need to operate.”

That includes including addressing roof leaks, garbage, and legalities related to insurance and proper registration with federal and state agencies, including the NJ Department of Heath.

“It all provides confidence and a higher level of vendor, people who are serious about their business,” he says.

Complimenting the managers who went before him and “did great things” to keep the market going for nearly a century, he notes that his role is to update to a new era.

That includes overseeing a conversion of the light to LED to enhance look of products and bring utility costs down, improving signage (including the large red electric roof sign), and addressing traffic needs.

“The state and county are going to put in a rotary, and we’re working with the DOT,” he says.

Kearney says a good deal of his job is community relations and awareness.

The Trenton “Island” resident originally from Yardley—where his dad worked for Fairless Steel and his mom taught music—also plans to use his past 25 years of various experience in the effort.

“I am an experienced marketing, advertising, and consultative sales executive with exceptional strategic, creative and sales presentation skills,” he states on his Linkedin page. “I have extensive

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Bill Kearney is the new manager at the Trenton Farmers Market.
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knowledge of, and experience in media, public relations and business development garnered from varied positions in sales, marketing, and advertising.

That translates into ad sales for Calkins Media, former owner of the Bucks County and Burlington County Times, director of strategic planning and development for Oxford Communications; a marketing director for TV Guide/TVSM Inc; and others.

In addition to work with TV Guide, the 1986 College of New Jersey graduate says he was also involved with ads and sales for Rita’s Water Ice and Toll Brothers. He is also an administrator for Trenton Orbit, a local Facebook community news site.

Now focusing on the TFM, Kearney says, “I used to handle Bucks Country tourism, and I was aware of destination marketing. We’re not just selling produce but a social experience. We’re trying to leverage that.”

One of the ways is to remind the community that it is a “local legacy destination.”

To make the point, he says, “I hope to do what some call hokey, old-fashioned attraction, like guess how many blueberries are in the container and pumpkin painting.”

Yet to do so, he says he is using some new-fashioned approaches to attract patrons who stopped shopping there during COVID or started going to other fresh produce venues.

“We started or upped our social media,” Kearney says, adding that every Saturday they add something so “people get a taste of the market.”

Pressing his marketing skills, Kearney says, “It’s great opportunity for engagement. People want to be part of the brand. People say, ‘I used to come here

20 years ago. I am here again because my children saw it on social media.’” He says he has also introduced radio ads.

While there is no current hard statistical data, Kearney understands that the market needs to attract a variety of ages and populations to sustain its future.

He then provides a quick overview of offerings, including Polish and Amish stands with various meats and deli offerings, two vegetarian restaurants, a punkrock venue, and Haitian and Spanish merchants. “There is a lot diversity in our market,” he says.

But that is just the current starting point. And while Kearney says he has also started to provide more seating to accommodate those who need to rest, there are other challenges.

One is adding additional bathrooms. At this time, there is only one station.

But another more important one is maintaining and attracting a variety of quality vendors and developing relationships with those looking to incubate a business while keeping as low as $58 a day for a table.

“I’m trying to develop a culture of ‘we’re-all-in-this together.’ And what are you doing for your business?”

He also would like to provide a place to attract more women who “control 80 percent of U.S. decision spending,” he says.

Yet the market’s potential secret sauce for success isn’t that much of a secret. “We know we’re a farmers market first and foremost. It isn’t a corporation or an office. It is a place where people go to forget the rest of life.”

Trenton Farmers Market, 960 Spruce Street, Lawrence. Hours: Wednesday to Saturday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sunday 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. thetrentonfarmersmarket.com.

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Celebrate the past at Mercer County’s history museums

The state of New Jersey is steeped in historic attractions that provide a yearround reminder of the state’s role in America’s independence and in other important events in military history.

For those history buffs looking for a refresher course or an educational and family-friendly summer excursion, below is a guide to the military museums in the Mercer County area.

Benjamin Temple House

The Benjamin Temple House at Drake Farm Park in Ewing was built circa 1750, taking its name from an early area settler and prosperous farmer. Temple was the friend, as well as the brother-in-law, of Declaration of Independence signer and Hopewell resident John Hart.

While the Temple family maintained and modified the Georgian-style house at the border of Ewing and Hopewell for 150 years, records show that the house was eventually sold in 1903 to Patrick Ryan, whose family operated a dairy there for the next half century at its spot along Pennington Road.

The Ewing Township Historical Pres-

ervation Society now operates out of the structure, which was moved and saved from demolition alongside its now-owner, Ewing Township, during the construction

WE'RE ON THE AIR & ON THE MENU!

of Interstate 95 in the early 1970s.

From its relocated spot at Federal City Road on 26 acres of parklands, the landmark, sometimes referred to as the Old Ryan Farm or the Temple-Ryan Farmhouse, is active as a museum and a central hub for Ewing history.

Benjamin Temple House, 27 Federal City Road, Ewing Township. Free. Hours: Wednesdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; open house tours held on the first Sunday of every month from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.; all other times are by appointment only with the site manager. 609-883-2455 or info@ ethps.org.

National Guard Militia Museum of New Jersey

The original National Guard Militia Museum of New Jersey is based in Sea Girt, but the secondary site at the Law-

renceville Field Artillery Annex, located on the New Jersey Army National Guard complex, uses its own military weapons, uniforms, photographs, documents, and interpretative texts to chronicle the state’s history of service from the early settlements through the present day.

It also claims to possess one of the largest collections of New Jersey-related Civil War research material in the country, including copies of diaries, letters, newspaper clippings, memoirs, regimental histories, and articles — all while paying attention to the diverse experiences of the New Jersey citizen soldier.

The NJ Militia Museum’s website recommends that visitors come prepared with a valid form of identification, such as a driver’s license, and enter the National Guard complex through Gate #3. After checking in with the security guard at the booth, follow directions to the parking lot and take note of the outdoor exhibits of historic tanks and large-caliber guns on display.

In a Facebook post, NGMM of NJ referred to the Nike Ajax missiles (see cover), co-designed by Bell Laboratories, as “the world’s first guided, surface-to-air missile system.”

The museum offers docent-led tours and educational programming in its mission to conserve and convey the nuances of the armed forces in New Jersey, an extensive legacy enriched by displays in galleries that span “over 350 years” of state history on the subject, according to its website.

The NGMM of NJ launched its Mercer County sister location at the Lawrenceville Armory in 1998. Thanks to about $1.2 million in federal and state funding, the museum expanded with new buildings and reopened in October 2021.

The approximately 6,000-square-foot facility now has “display space to better complement the impressive collection of armored vehicles and artillery surround-

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The Benjamin Temple House in Ewing, which is the home of the Ewing Historic Preservation Society.
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ing the complex,” according to the online history page for the museum.

William Kale, the volunteer co-curator of the museum, has said that the second site was chosen as part of a larger desire to highlight the important New Jersey Revolutionary War battle sites in Trenton and Princeton.

Kale, a retired lieutenant colonel who was born and raised in Trenton, worked for the state upon his return from being stationed in countries like Germany and Vietnam before stepping into similar curatorial shoes as his brother, the late Army Colonel Donald W. Kale, who helped found the Lawrenceville museum.

One of the featured exhibits is a mannequin in a “Jersey Blue” uniform worn by soldiers from the first militia regiment, which was established by provincial legislators in 1673. The blue coat and red facings remained unchanged until the early stages of the American Revolution.

In 1779, General George Washington established uniform regulations that required the facings to be buff-colored.

While the Third New Jersey Regiment refused to give up the red, other state regiments did and created an alleged connection to today’s New Jersey: “The color of the flag adopted by the newly independent state of New Jersey was supposedly patterned after the buff facing of New Jersey’s soldiers in Washington’s army,” the museum noted.

Quickly, visitors learn that there were two uniforms used by New Jersey Revolutionary War soldiers. One was the French-made uniform consisting of a blue coat with “white trim on the hat [that] depicts infantry and the white brocade [that] symbolizes the alliance with France.”

The other was the Colonial Rifleman’s uniform of flax, cotton, wool, and a rifleman’s hat. They also adopted the practice of wearing moccasins for comfort and, since riflemen often served as skirmishers and had to move quickly, mobility.

After exhibit is the Whiskey Rebellion, when the New Jersey Militia organized

See HISTORY, Page 12

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The National Guard Militia Museum of New Jersey is located on Eggerts Crossing Road in Lawrence Township. The museum also features a collection of armored vehicles and artillery on display at the Lawrenceville Field Artillery Annex.
August 2023 | Ewing Observer11

4,000 men to form three infantry and two cavalry regiments as part of a four-state militia force to address a Western Pennsylvania insurrection against the federal tax on whiskey in 1794, the next section transitions into materials on the Civil War.

Another stop focuses on the 1898 Spanish-American War, where “the declaration of war with Spain found the New Jersey National Guard ready and eager to meet the call for troops.”

Then 20th and 21st-century conflicts take over a major section of the exhibition area with objects from World Wars I and II and the Vietnam War, which yielded the last U.S. military weapons on display at the museum.

The National Guard Militia Museum of New Jersey, at Lawrenceville, Lawrenceville Armory, 151 Eggert Crossing Road, Lawrenceville. Free admission and parking. Hours: Monday to Friday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Closed on state holidays. 609-213-3296 or njmilitiamuseum.org/ lawrenceville.

Washington Crossing State Park

But before the troops could successfully defeat British forces in Princeton,

General George Washington’s troops famously crossed the Delaware River on Christmas Night, 1776.

As he led his men to confront the Hessians, the future president paved the way for Washington Crossing State Park in Titusville to become another reservoir of Revolutionary War historical knowledge.

Starting May 28, the Historic Education Committee of the Washington Crossing Park Association, or WCPA, will host free guided history tours on Sundays from 1 to 2:30 p.m. at the Washington Crossing Visitor Center Museum.

According to the NJDEP website, these begin with the museum’s two galleries: one where guests can watch and discuss the NJN-produced film “Ten Crucial Days: The Road to Liberty” in the auditorium, which documents the time between Washington’s Crossing and the Battles of Trenton and Princeton, and another that houses the “over 500 authentic Revolutionary War artifacts” on loan from the Swan Historical Foundation Collection.

Other stops include Sullivan Drive and Continental Lane, the Stone Barn, and the landing overlook by the Johnson Ferry House. Tickets must be reserved in advance via the WCPA’s page on EventBrite.

The Johnson Ferry House is a circa 1740 farmhouse that overlooks the Dela-

ware River. Historians believe that Washington’s men might have stayed here prior to utilizing the transport services and making the journey across the freezing cold waters. The building is furnished with Colonial-era period pieces and reproductions, including an 18th-century kitchen garden.

Washington Crossing State Park charges a $5 cash fee will be implemented every weekend until Labor Day on September 4.

Washington Crossing State Park, 355 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, Hopewell Township. Free. Hours (Visitor Center Museum): Every day from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. 609-7370623. Hours (Johnson Ferry House): Tuesdays through Saturdays from 11 a.m. to noon, then 1 to 3:45 p.m. 609-7372515. WashingtonCrossing@dep.nj.gov.

More Sites to visit

The Old Barracks, which were originally constructed during the French and Indian War in 1758 to house British soldiers, notably sheltered the Hessian forces during the Battle of Trenton. The site now actively hosts historical tours and events.

The Old Barracks Museum, 101 Barrack Street, Trenton. Open Wednesdays through Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Admission prices: adults, $10; students and seniors, $8; active military and children under five years of age, free. 609396-1776 or barracks.org.

Hamilton’s “Pepper House,” described online as “the first Civil War Museum in New Jersey,” has yet to reopen to the public since it closed “temporarily” because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

However, the circa 1730 John Abbott II House down the road at 2200 Kuser Road remains in use by the Historical Society of Hamilton Township, with weekend hours from noon to 4:30 p.m.

The Civil War and Native American Museum, 2202 Kuser Road, Hamilton. Those looking for a one-of-a-kind trip into art, history, and New Jersey culture only need to drive less than an hour outside of the area code to join members of the Navy Lakehurst Historical Society for free tours of the Navy Lakehurst Heritage Center, which is located at the active U.S. military base that is part of Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst.

As a final note, the New Jersey State Museum in Trenton also has a formidable collection of Civil War flags recovered from military units raised in New Jersey, encompassing nearly 200 cavalry, volunteer regiment, and captured Confederate battle flags that rotate through the exhibit.

HISTORYcontinued from Page 11 REDISCOVER
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SIX09 ARTS > FOOD > CULTURE thesix09.com AUGUST 2023 Special section starts on page 10 V OICES OF THE C OMMUNITY Hear from the Indian diasporic storytellers featured in “Local Voices: Memories, Stories, and Portraits” at the Grounds for Sculpture in Hamilton, a living exhibit that opened in April as a vibrant archive of oral histories . Image courtesy of Danese Kenon.

Storytelling and Voice Sound Loud at Grounds for Sculpture

If you concentrate on a story, staying mindful of its nature as a living, breathing vessel for keeping traditions alive or unpacking trauma, then you might be able to hear when the speaker, once given the chance to share without judgment and forge interpersonal connections, exhales in relief. The words used still have meaning but no longer bear their heavy weight alone, newly empowered by a mutual sense of community and revitalized by human interaction.

Everyone has the right to express themselves in their own syntax, but only a few people have the opportunity to amplify that point of view with complete control over the language used.

Reaching that loud volume, like any tale worth telling, is always better with company.

The Grounds for Sculpture in Hamilton presents this platform to members of New Jersey’s Indian diasporic community for “Local Voices: Memories, Stories, and Portraits,” a living exhibit that opened on the ground floor of the Domestic Arts Building on April 23, 2023, and runs

through January 7, 2024.

This project, along with “Spiral Q: The Parade” on the upper level, are the first to debut in GFS’ new “Perspectives” series, which draws from the creative practices of the artists at its helm as well as the accounts of the people who bring it to life.

Madhusmita “Madhu” Bora, a folk and traditional artist, journalist, educator, writer, and dancer, organized the exhibit in partnership with co-curators Kathleen Ogilvie Greene, the chief audience officer at GFS, and Quentin Williams, the founder and CEO of Dragon Tree Media Group, to ensure personal autonomy and authenticity.

The 15 subjects actively participated in and led the process of chronicling their lived experiences, doing so through video interviews, photography, and by choosing objects that held significance to them.

This range of deep, emotive stories maintains the vulnerabilities that make them unique without being exploited, and the exhibit leaders hope to bridge the conversational gap between individuals of different backgrounds and demonstrate the importance of dialogue.

Upstairs, “Spiral Q” conveys the creativSee Local Voices, Page 4

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From Local Voices, Page 2

ity behind activism via puppets and protests, with the Philadelphia-based group organizing processions on social issues from transgender rights to affordable housing.

Virtual walkthroughs of both exhibits are available online, with the “Local Voices”

“Local Voices: Memories, Stories, and Portraits,” on display in the Domestic Arts Building at the Grouds for Sculpture, left, is co-curated by artist Madhusmita “Madhu” Bora, a journalist and dancer, right, and runs through January 7, 2024. Installation view courtesy of Bruce M. White. Bora, pictured at the storytelling retreat, courtesy of Monica Herndon.

page on the GFS website, groundsforsculpture.org/exhibitions/local-voices-memories-stoaries-and-portraits, linking to the YouTube videos and audio-only interview segments for each storyteller.

According to the exhibit materials, Grounds for Sculpture developed this project in response to the museum’s 2021 audience demographic census, which revealed a correlation between its attendees and the

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To interact and engage with a specific community from that group, GFS collaborated on an exhibit in which people could

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share their stories as a look at the Indian community in New Jersey, described as “the largest ethnic group among the Asian diaspora” in the state.

According to the Indian American Impact Project, an organization that was founded to promote the voices of Indian Americans and South Asian Americans in politics, “nearly 5% of New Jersey’s population is South Asian, more than any other state in the nation.”

The website continues that “over 1 million Asians live in New Jersey, with Indian Americans making up the largest ethnic group,” particularly concentrated in Middlesex County—Edison and Iselin’s Oak Tree Road, known as “Little India,” is a bustling shopping district at the cultural center of the community.

According to a May 2022 Washington Post analysis of Census Bureau data from 2020 in “An American life: How Asian migrants built unique communities,” Mercer County itself recorded a 48.2% growth of Asian American and Pacific Islander, or AAPI, populations since 2010.

The four storytellers from the Mercer County area are Shazard Mohammed, Hamilton/Ewing; Shivani Patel, Princeton Junction/West Windsor; Yogesh Sharma, Lawrenceville; and Shoba Panoli, Pennington.

“My whole intention was to uplift and celebrate the diverse tapestry of India,” Bora said in an interview, noting that she worked alongside the GFS team, especially Greene, to identify demographic “lenses” such as age, language, religion, economic status, immigration, ability, region, caste, and sexual orientation to incorporate a wide spectrum of storytellers.

Each subject was then liberated from these labels, symbolically unchecking the boxes, as the exhibit materials explain, and prompted to recount a story that affected their life.

“Local Voices” expanded as Bora began to see the emerging pattern of personal agency in each narrative, creating a colorful mosaic of people with roots across India and the globe who collectively followed at least seven religions and spoke more than 10 languages.

After seven months of planning, the group gathered at the Grounds for Sculpture for an all-day retreat in February that included storytelling workshops and training, as well as individual photography sessions in which the subjects “were asked to arrive in clothing [that] made them feel powerful and celebrated,” according to the GFS exhibit page.

The speakers then collaborated with female BIPOC (Black Indigenous People of Color) photographers to envision portraits capturing their most authentic selves, selecting which image would be on display.

At the end of the retreat, many of the storytellers left behind objects of significance and scheduled their respective video sessions.

Although the subjects spoke for hours at a time with Bora and photojournalist Danese Kenon, the managing editor of visuals for the Philadelphia Inquirer, the exhibit could only feature a single three- to five-minute story from each person.

Bora disclosed that the full versions would be preserved in a personal copy for the participants as well as in the archives of the exhibit partner, the South Asian American Digital Archive, or SAADA, to document the comprehensive oral histories.

“Local Voices” is a “living exhibit” focused on cultivating relationships over the program itself, but the theme of art with a pulse is familiar to Bora and a natural extension of her own craft.

Inquirer to the Tampa Bay Times

She lived in places like Washington, D.C., Iowa, and Indiana, even settling in Cape May for a three-year period where she wrote for the Press of Atlantic City.

But in 2008, Bora relocated from Florida to Philadelphia, where she has resided ever since.

While she would continue to freelance, Bora decided to experiment with her artistic inclinations and co-founded the Sattriya Dance Company with her sister-inlaw, Prerona Bhuyan, in 2009.

Sattriya is a living dance tradition that originated in the Hindu monasteries of Assam over 500 years ago.

Although the art form had been traditionally practiced by celibate monks, the Indian government recognized Sattriya as a major Indian classical dance in 2000, which led to more women “embracing” the art form, Bora said.

Now, Bora is currently an adjunct instructor at Lincoln University and has since returned to the newsroom as the managing editor of suburban coverage for WHYY, a Philadelphia public radio station.

in this world. As a trained journalist, I’m always curious about the world around me. I was raised in a household of storytellers and disruptors,” she added.

“I grew up with my grandparents in a very rural Indian town, surrounded by art and culture and discussions of politics. Both my grandfathers were freedom fighters, and so I was raised in this atmosphere where culture and stories were always part of my education in this world.”

“Then, as an immigrant living in diaspora, I’m always thinking about what it is like to be an immigrant, how important our stories are, how important identity is, [and] how important stories are in terms of also passing our experiences and wisdom to the next generation and connecting us to our habitat. Stories connect us in very, very deep ways as humans.”

“When somebody’s sharing a story with you, it has a very spiritual overtone, because it’s something very sacred that somebody’s trusting you with their vulnerabilities and their experiences,” Bora said.

“Especially when people who do not have a chance to tell their story are invited to share their story. They are transformed, and we are transformed from listening to their experiences.”

The response has been “overwhelming” from both local and Indian media, according to Bora, with the exhibit having attracted about 500 or so attendees on opening night alone.

Bora said that because of her initial focus on the practical, behind-the-scenes aspects of the project, she rarely had the time to consider the tremendous “impact and outcome” the stories might carry.

But seeing the subjects take “collective ownership” over their stories and embrace the empowerment that comes with that, she added, deeply impacted her as well.

Now, Bora noted that she takes comfort in knowing there is this extended family of people to support each other, and the resilience she has personally learned from them has been invaluable.

Originally from the Northeastern Indian state of Assam, Bora finished her undergraduate and a master’s degree at two institutions in New Delhi before continuing her studies at the Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism in Illinois, where she graduated with another master’s degree.

Bora has worked in newsrooms around the country, tackling business and technology at papers from the Philadelphia

“As a practitioner of this art form, I am drawn to stories. I’m also deeply aware of what it means to not be represented in mainstream art tapestries; it is so specific and nuanced. I guess it makes me a lot more sensitive to folks who are in the margins, because I feel like I operate from the margins, too, with my art form. My journalism is a sense of inquiry and curiosity, and that training of being objective, listening to people, and asking questions is what informed and drove this project,” she explained.

“Everything I do informs how I move

“To be on this journey with them, in sharing their joy and their sorrow and their trauma and then how they overcame so many of life’s hurdles, I was on all those journeys with them, and so it’s been really, really beautiful,” she said.

“It’s important to tell your story. It’s very crucial for each one of us to record the stories of our families, of our elderly people, [and] of our own stories. Stories are magical; stories are transformative; stories help form community and allow us to really be better people,” she said, adding that everyone should tell and claim their stories, as well as place that same value on actively listening to what others share.

See Local Voices, Page 6

August 2023 | SIX095
At its core, Bora emphasized, “Local Voices” is a “connective project.”
The 15 subjects first met at the museum retreat in February, where they took part in a series of workshops and individual photography sessions. Photo by Monica Herndon, above, from left to right: Kiran Rajagopalan, Farzana Rahman, Asha Lata Devi, and Shoba Panoli.

At its core, Bora emphasized, “Local Voices” is a “connective project.”

“It is owned by the community; it is driven by the community; and again, it’s an offering that speaks to love, loss, and resilience that connects us all as humanity,” she said. ***

Shazard Mohammed Ewing/Hamilton

Born in the island nation of Trinidad and Tobago, Shazard Mohammed, better known by his nicknames “Todd” or “Toddy,” immigrated with his family from the town of San Juan to the Mercer County area in

Mohammed lives in Ewing but owns Roti Plus Caribbean Restaurant at 1147 South Olden Avenue in Hamilton, which he opened in 2021 after helping his uncle, Ramesh Hayban—the then-owner of Trenton’s Hot on D Spot, now under new ownership and the name of Annie’s Hot on D-Spot Roti Shop—run the Trinidadian restaurant.

In his “Local Voices” interview, Mohammed explained that he had never previously traveled outside his country before deciding to take “a page out of history” and follow in the footsteps of his “forefathers who left India to come to Trinidad to become something better and make a better life for their family. They had a 90-day journey, and I was only getting on a plane for five hours.”

As a high school dropout, Mohammed shared that he was unsure about his future in America, but after landing on a Wednes-

day, by that Monday, he “started working at a factory for eight bucks an hour.”

“By the time I left in 2009, I was making almost triple digits,” he said, but the “pressure” of the workplace began to weigh on him, with the “insults” negatively affecting his state of mind.

“Being called ‘highly paid morons’ and having to do dirty work that no one else wanted to do, I felt like I was in slavery. It was taking away from my mental health, so I decided this [was] no longer going to work for me, so I left that and had no idea what I was going to do to support my family.”

After learning through reading his trusty Home Depot books and watching videos, Mohammed took up a job as a handyman, eventually becoming a self-taught licensed contractor in the construction business.

Mohammed then expanded on the troubles of his economic situation, which included veering into the restaurant industry after making an ultimately ill-fated agreement with a family member and having to pick up the pieces himself when it fell apart.

Without this person in the picture, Mohammed “was a housing inspector for hotels and multiple dwellings,” forced to “juggle both jobs, working full-time, and coming to the restaurant afterwards,” he said, starting to get visibly upset from speaking about the toll it took on him.

“There [were] days I drove home and didn’t even know how I got home. It was just all muscle memory,” he continued, breaking again with emotion. “I told my

wife, ‘I have to choose. Either we sell the business or I give up the state job.’”

In the end, Mohammed had to forfeit his retirement plan with the state and continue investing in the business, but as Bora said in her interview for Six09, he was able to create “a place that’s home away from home for so many people,” not just the local Trinbagonian population.

“At times I want to quit. I want to give up, but then I see people come in sometimes— and I’m a humanist, and I also struggle with depression—and some days I see sadness walking in the door, and I just say a few kind words, I serve them with a smile, I ask them how their day [is] going, how’s their family, is everything okay, and by the time they leave, most of them [have] a smile on their face,” Mohammed said.

“That brings joy to me to know that I’m not just running a business; I’m running a business where someone can feel safe when they come in here.”

Some speakers in “Local Voices” were asked additional questions, such as the meaning of their names and why they chose their objects.

Shazard, for example, means “prince” in Arabic, a suggestion from his mother’s best friend, who assumed a grandmotherly role for Mohammed and remarked that he “looked like a prince” at birth.

Meanwhile, his nickname, “Toddy,” came from his older brother, who gave him the title after a young Shazard would ask for a milkshake of the same name.

“Coming to America, people just started calling me Todd. Because I was intimidated

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Shazard “Todd” Mohammed, left, the owner of Roti Plus Caribbean Restaurant in Hamilton, and Shivani Patel, right, from West Windsor’s Princeton Junction district, shared what resilience means to them. Photos by Sahar Coston-Hardy and Erica Lee.

or shy to let people know my true name, which is Shazard Mohammed, after 9/11, I just carried the name Todd, so most people thought I was American when they [spoke] to me over the phone, not knowing that I was of an immigrant culture,” he said.

Mohammed’s object is a hoodie with the coat of arms of Trinidad and Tobago, which bears the motto “Together we aspire, together we achieve.”

When people ask what it means to him, Mohammed says that he encourages them, again, to be humanists and to tackle greater challenges as a community.

“I take that to heart, because my interpretation of it is, ‘If we unite, we can conquer; if we come together as people, we can overcome any obstacles in our way,’ so I do wear that hoodie with pride,” he said.

Shivani Patel

Princeton Junction/West Windsor

Shivani Patel, also known as “Shivu,” was born in New Jersey and spoke about her experiences as a young person with autism and epilepsy, as well as the difficulty of managing both conditions while grieving the death of her beloved “late dada” or “dadaji,” which means paternal grandfather.

“When he died, it was so tragic, and it was so sad,” Patel said, adding that it also felt “humiliating” for her because her grandmother “knew nothing” about her autism.

Without his comforting presence, Patel found it “really hard to understand everything after losing dadaji and being with only her” during visits to her grandparents’ house in London.

“But after losing him, I have learned— thank God—how to control myself, etc., how to even control my own medical issues when having a super moment, like [an] unspeakable, un-breathable type of episode

See Local Voices, Page 8

Mohammed chose to display a sweatshirt with the coat of arms of his home country, Trinidad and Tobago, because he follows the “humanist” motto of the nation he immigrated from in 2000: “Together we aspire, together we achieve.”

The red khartal, a wooden clapper consisting of blocks and jingles, above, is an ancient musical instrument that resonates with Patel.

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of high blood pressure issue when something doesn’t make me feel like, ‘Okay, I’m not comfortable in this position. I need to run away,’ or ‘I need to scream my head off, and I’m about to feel like I’m going to faint.’”

“Thanks to God and Grandpa, remembering all that and praying all that, I know how to handle those issues, because Dada used to tell me when I was younger that, ‘If you don’t calm down, you’re going to have a heart attack or a seizure, try to calm down,’ and I would manage it, I would calm down,” Patel explained, adding that in the time since his passing, she has worked on remembering the techniques he taught her to cope with stressful situations.

To Six09, Bora described Patel as “a beautiful spirit” who arrived at the retreat in “her full, glorious self,” eager to embody that strength for others.

Patel’s object is the khartal, a two-piece percussion instrument from Rajasthan, India, where a pair of “wooden blocks with small dimples are held in each hand,” then “clapped together when devotional and folk songs are performed,” she said.

The sound comes from the meeting of the cymbals, typically brass plates, adorning the two parts.

Yogesh Sharma

Lawrenceville

Yogesh Sharma founded Lawrenceville’s Radha Krishna Temple, “one of the oldest Hindu religious and cultural centers in Central New Jersey,” in 2002, according to its website.

Located at 357 Lawrence Station Road, the temple provides “Hindu and Vedic services, poojas, and ceremonies,” having expanded from one room to four buildings as the years progressed.

Sharma details that while she started the sacred space to assist priests and others in need, the temple only came to be because another living being close to her needed help—after neighborhood complaints about her dog’s barking reached the courtroom, a judge ordered its euthanization.

“I started going to another temple to pray for his life,” she recalled. “There, I met a priest who was in trouble in that temple. He asked me to help him out, and after a few days, he asked me to start a new temple where he [could] get his green card or visa, but I said, ‘Well, we don’t know anything about the temple, and so therefore we cannot do it,’” she explained.

“But he tried to convince me that, no, he will ‘take care of everything’ and ‘it will be a great thing for [the community].’”

Sharma shared that she and her husband did not have the background to run a temple, but the priest insisted, beginning a pattern of broken promises from people she assumed to be “very honest and honorable people” due to their religious backgrounds.

Although they were initially shocked to encounter the opposite, the Sharmas built the place of worship together and recruited those of the faith who kept their word.

In addition to having grown the Radha Krishna Temple from these uncertain beginnings, Bora commented that Sharma “is just a force of nature and has also overcome so many challenges in her life.”

“My dog was saved with my prayers, and [the] community is very happy with that

little temple,” Sharma reflected, noting that now, “We are like one big, huge family. We all love each other in that temple and try to do the best for the community.”

Sharma stated that in the future, she hopes to bring in even more priests, particularly Indian women—a new addition for most temples—as part of her mission to keep growing the community at Radha Krishna.

Sharma’s objects are “a silk sari and figurines of Rama and Sita,” the latter being two figures from the Sanskrit epic poem “Ramayana” who are incarnations of the Hindu gods Vishnu and Lakshmi

As the most common adaptation of the story goes, Rama rescued his wife, Sita,

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From Local Voices, Page 7
Both Yogesh Sharma of Lawrenceville, above, the founder of the Radha Krishna Temple, and Shoba Panoli of Pennington, opposite page right, reflected on the transformative power of religion and love. Speaker photos by Roshni Khatari and Erica Lee.

Sharma loaned GFS a pair of figurines depicting Rama and Sita, the avatars of Hindu deities Vishnu and Lakshmi, above, while Panoli chose her prayer book and photo card of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, a “central figure” in her Baha’i faith and the son of its founder, Bahá’u’lláh, pictured on the following page.

The tale is a classic testament to the triumph of light over darkness, or good over evil, as conveyed through holiday legend.

Shoba Panoli Pennington

In her interview, Shoba Panoli introduces herself as “a Malaysian American of Sri Lankan and Indian heritage” who dreamed of settling down in Australia like her aunts but would end up in the United States as the result of an unexpected romance.

“But life sometimes has surprising twists, and you end up in a different place,” she said, sharing how their paths first crossed. “One day I was bored, and I was surfing the web, trying to look up the place that my dad was visiting in India. As I was reading up on Kerala, I stumbled upon a chat room, and there were only a handful of individuals in that room.”

“A guy said hello to me, and we started a small conversation, and he was attracted to my Sri Lankan Malayali background, and he found that a bit unique since he hasn’t met anyone with that background; little did I know that this would be the guy that I would one day get married to.”

Even when Panoli moved to Switzerland, she “continued chatting every day” with him, exchanging “hundreds of emails” that the two never deleted and still treasure

See Local Voices, Page 10

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today.

“After finally chatting for about two years, we decided to meet face-to-face, so I flew to New York to meet him, and as the plane was touching down, I was feeling very nervous, and I was thinking to myself, ‘What if everything that he’s told me was a big lie?’ ‘What if he was a fake?’” Panoli said. This worry escalated as she spent over an hour searching for his face among the airport crowd, unable to find the man she was supposed to meet until Panoli spotted him—dressed in the exact outfit he had described to her—and immediately recognized her future husband.

“I was in the United States for only a week, and he took me places; we saw a lot of things, and he took me to the top of the Empire State Building and asked me to

marry him,” she remembered fondly.

“I believe this was fate. If my dad wasn’t visiting India, I wouldn’t have gone online that day trying to look up the place that he was visiting, and we’ve been married for 23 years and have two wonderful boys.”

Panoli, characterized by Bora as a mother with “a very tender, sweet family,” received her name, meaning “light,” from her great-grandfather.

Panoli’s object is a prayer book and photo card of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, an important figure to her as a lifelong member of the Baha’i Faith.

“‘Abdu’l-Bahá is the master of the Baha’i faith, and he showed us how a Baha’i should live his life. I always carry that picture with me to remind myself of how a Baha’i should act,” Panoli explained in the audio interview.

Panoli added that prayer has always been an “important component” of her life, connecting her with God and guidance, and she has had this book for at least 15 to 20 years, which contains prayers for a variety of purposes and applications.

On the exhibit page for “Local Voices,” Panoli said that the following quote from the founder of the Baha’i Faith, Bahá’u’lláh, is always an inspiration for her:

“Do not be content with showing friendship in words alone; let your heart burn with loving kindness for all who may cross your path.”

***

“Local Voices: Memories, Stories, and Portraits” runs through January 7, 2024, in the Domestic Arts Building at the Grounds for Sculpture, 80 Sculptors Way, Hamilton.

For more information, call 609-586-0616 or visit www.groundsforsculpture.org

Back to School

The Cambridge School

Where children who learn differently can thrive

Children who learn differently deserve to be educated in a school where they can thrive. For over 20 years, Cambridge School, in Pennington, NJ, has been that place, an extraordinary K-12 school that specializes in educating students with language-based learning differences. The guiding principle of the Cambridge School, since its founding, has been that every child deserves the opportunity for an excellent education.

Cambridge is committed to providing that education in a warm, nurturing and individualized learning environment for children who learn differently. Our mission is to prepare each student with the necessary academic, personal and social skills to succeed.

Students diagnosed with languagebased learning differences such as dyslexia, dysgraphia, ADHD, auditory processing disorder, or executive function challenges, typically struggle in traditional academic settings. Cambridge teachers are highly trained language specialists who utilize a student-centered approach to provide a personalized, yet comprehensive educational experience. When taught using research based methods that target their unique learning difference, these

bright children achieve measurable academic success. The Cambridge language curriculum is supported by the use of evidence based programs. Utilizing explicit, direct and systematic instruction, our teachers are able to scaffold and support the unique needs of each child. As educators, we believe that multisensory teaching strategies create more engaging, concrete and meaningful learning experiences. Enhanced by small classes, our approach allows each student to progress at his or her own pace. The result? Students increase their learning skills, gain confidence and self-esteem; and learn that they can thrive.

Cambridge School also has an impressive staff of highly qualified Speech and Language Pathologists and Occupational Therapists. For students who require these additional services our therapists design an individualized and comprehensive therapeutic program. They work with the student individually in therapy as well as collaboratively with his or her teacher to ensure that the therapy goals generalize into the academic classroom.

If you feel your child might benefit from a Cambridge School education, we invite you to come for a personal tour. Our campus is located in the Princeton, NJ area, though our students come from all over New Jersey and parts of Pennsylvania, particularly Bucks County. Discover how your child can thrive at thecambridgeschool.org

From Local Voices, Page 9
Looking for more local news? Visit our website communitynews.org to get updates about your community all month long communitynews

Back to School

Princeton Ballet School

Beyond technique: Empowering dancers

Princeton Ballet School is the official school of the American Repertory Ballet, celebrating over 65 years of excellence in dance education.

Classes are designed for all ages to build confidence, artistry, discipline, and foster students’ love of dance. Its world class faculty is dedicated to helping each student reach their full potential, with spacious studios, new state-of-the-art dance floors, and live music. The perfect environment to learn and grow.

What Sets the School Apart.

Founded in 1954 by Audrée Estey, Princeton Ballet School is one of the nation’s finest non-profit dance schools. Many things set Princeton Ballet School apart from the usual dance school, the most important being: its philosophy, its faculty, its affiliation with a professional ballet company, its dedication to live music in the classroom and its facilities.

The School’s Philosophy

Princeton Ballet School is known for nurturing developing dancers in a safe and progressive way. The school teaches age and developmentally appropriate ballet technique classes from a syllabus that allows younger students more time for movement exploration while providing advanced students with the tools to become professional dancers, if they so choose. As a result, all students develop self-esteem, self-discipline, and a strong fitness level that will provide a powerful edge in any future endeavor.

Outstanding Faculty. Princeton Ballet School has more than 20 specialized faculty members. Many have attained graduate degrees in dance education and have won major teaching awards. All are committed to the school’s philosophy of dance education and to helping students

St. George Preschool

Enroll now for the 2023-2024 school year

Classes for 3 year olds and 4 year olds

Potty trained

Full- 1/2 day, early morning drop off, late pick up schedules available Competitive tuition rates - secure environment indoor gym - outdoor playground - qualified educators

achieve their best. Members of the outstanding faculty have performed professionally with companies including American Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet, Cuban National Ballet, and American Repertory Ballet.

Live Music. The school’s ballet classes have live musical accompaniment. This is particularly fun for the children’s classes, where frequent improvisational exercises provide an opportunity for students to interact and collaborate with the staff of professional musicians.

Facilities. Princeton Ballet School has studios in Cranbury, New Brunswick, and Princeton,

New Jersey. All locations are wheelchair accessible and feature sprung dance floors and marley from Harlequin Floors. The striking Princeton and Cranbury facilities were designed by the late Ralph Lerner, an internationally known architect and former Dean of the School of Architecture at Princeton University. The studios in New Brunswick are part of the state-of-the-art New Brunswick Performing Arts Center, which opened in 2019.

More information: arballet.org/ princeton-ballet-school/. See ad, page 12.

August 2023 | SIX0911
Excellence in Early Education St. George Greek Orthodox Church 1200 Klockner Road, Hamilton, NJ 08619 www.stgeorgepreschool.org
(609)586-ABCD (2223)
Call for more information:
“Building a foundation for a lifetime love of learning”
www.tbsbarbershops.com The Barber Shop 1959 Route 33, Hamilton 609-586-6029 Fully staffed with 7 experienced, Master Barbers Availability and Convenience Open 7 days a week Walk ins or Appointments available!

St. George Preschool

A Safe Place for Growth

At St. George Preschool, we believe that each child has an innate drive for exploring, discovering, communicating, and learning. Our purpose is to provide a safe, warm, and nurturing environment for children to develop this innate drive to the fullest, and become life-long learners. Our goal is to help each child develop his/her individual interests, creativity and potential at their own pace by providing a wide variety of fun and ageappropriate activities and materials. In addition to the developmental goals in the areas of math, language, science, cognitive skills, motor skills, etc., stipulated by the state, the school aims to promote learning skills for life.

At the same time, we aim to enhance the child’s social, moral, cultural and spiritual growth through group interactions, uplifting stories, cultural events and gentle guidance. Since “a healthy mind is in a healthy body” as the Ancient Greeks said, we provide a huge indoors gym and a beautiful play ground with regular physical activities.

We offer high quality academic English programs for Preschool (3 years and potty trained) and Pre-K (must be 4 years old by October 1 of school year). Early morning care, after care, and enrichment programs are also available. We are part of the Saint George Greek Orthodox Church and state

licensed by the New Jersey Division of Youth and Family Services. Our experienced staff has a passion building a foundation for a life-long love of learning. We are truly a family and we treat your children as such. For more information regarding

our program, please visit our website.

Saint George Preschool, 1200 Klockner Road, Hamilton. 609-586-2223. Contact director Angela Gering at director@stgeorgepreschool.org. See ad, page 11

Classes are designed for all ages to build confidence, artistry, discipline, and foster students’ love of dance. Our world class faculty is dedicated to helping each student reach their full potential, with spacious studios, new state-of-the-art dance floors, and live music. The perfect environment to learn and grow!

12  SIX09 | August 2023
Back to School
August 2023 | SIX0913 Puzzle solutions on pg 14 & 15 Copyright ©2023 PuzzleJunction.com Solution
solve the Sudoku puzzle, each row, column and box must contain the numbers 1 to 9. 38 9 52 5 4 9 4 68 3 7 1 9 93 7 5 27 9 6 9 2 1 3 7 6 19 4 75 3849 652 17 6527 184 39 7912 435 68 4 3 5 8 7 6 1 9 2 9683 217 54 2174 596 83 8 7 6 5 9 2 3 4 1 5431 1296 soduku To solve the Sudoku puzzle, each row, column and box must contain the numbers 1 to 9. Copyright ©2023 PuzzleJunction.com Community News Service 8/23 Easy Sudoku PuzzleJunction.com To solve the Sudoku puzzle, each row, column and box must contain the numbers 1 to 9. 4 9 17 9 25 7 2 3 1 9 8 769 3 6 3 1 2 8 6 14 9 8 8261 1573 3498 9 7 4 2 8 3 5 6 1 2639 514 78 Puzzle A Puzzle B ©2023 PuzzleJunction.com Community News Service 8/23 Crossword PuzzleJunction.com 39 Brackish 42 Kind of hand 43 Gibson garnish 44 Land on Lake Victoria 46 Brook 48 Free (from) 51 Furry pinnipeds 52 Indian grackle 53 Like Death Valley 54 Maître d’s offering 56 Scots Gaelic 57 Dampens 60 “___ Doubtfire” 62 Lion’s home 63 Windsor, for one 123 4567 89101112 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 Across 1 Anita Brookner’s “Hotel du ___” 4 Garden party? 8 Hindu aristocrats 13 Dutch treat 15 “Nana” author 16 Dangerous bacteria 17 Robot 19 Pungent 20 Type of beagle? 21 Potato feature 23 Itinerary info 24 Cease-fire 25 Dovetail 27 ___ apso (dog) 30 Enclose 33 Baja bread 35 Hold the floor 37 Go public with 38 French vineyard 39 Besmirches 40 Mole 41 Average 42 Discussion group 43 On the ___ 45 Ethically neutral 47 It’s a sin 49 Short shot 50 Unwholesome atmosphere 53 Emphatic agreement 55 Fine-grained wood 58 Bank contents 59 Empire 61 Superfluous 64 Kind of tube 65 British gun 66 Jai ___ 67 Cleans house 68 Lord’s worker 69 “Thar ___ blows!” Down 1 Untilled tract 2 Ticket category 3 Provide food for 4 Flowering shrub 5 URL part 6 ___ vera 7 Umpteen 8 New Deal org. 9 Admission 10 Maine’s position 11 Hip bones 12 Caesar and others 14 Tycoons 18 Hardly wimpy 22 Throws off 26 Hydrocarbon suffix 28 In a minute 29 Disney mermaid 31 Tears 32 Give it a whirl 33 Baby buggy 34 Swedes, e.g. 36 Confederate 38 Balancing pro crossword Prepare for power outages today WITH A HOME STANDBY GENERATOR *To qualify, consumers must request a quote, purchase, install and activate the generator with a participating dealer. Call for a full list of terms and conditions. REQUEST A FREE QUOTE CALL NOW BEFORE THE NEXT POWER OUTAGE (866) 643-0438 $0 MONEY DOWN + LOW MONTHLY PAYMENT OPTIONS Contact a Generac dealer for full terms and conditions FREE 7-Year Extended Warranty* A $695 Value! Get a new shower or bath installed in as little as ONE DAY CALL NOW 866.753.9521 FREE INSTALLATION + NO INTEREST NO PAYMENTS FOR 12 MONTHS * *Call for complete terms and conditions.
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GET PAID DAILY! WORK FROM HOME WORK FROM ANYWHERE PART-TIME/ SPARE TIME FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CALL: 609380-3124

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LEGAL SERVICES Wills, Power of Attorney, Real Estate, Federal and NJ Taxes, House calls available. Bruce Cooke, Esq. 609-7994674, 609-721-4358.

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Cash paid for World War II military items. Helmets, swords, medals, etc. Call 609-581-8290 or

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August 2023 | SIX0915 classified
Copyright ©2023 PuzzleJunction.com Solution solve the Sudoku puzzle, each row, column and box must contain the numbers 1 to 9. 38 9 52 5 4 9 4 68 3 7 1 9 93 7 5 27 9 6 9 2 1 3 7 6 19 4 75 3849 652 17 6527 184 39 7912 435 68 4 3 5 8 7 6 1 9 2 9683 217 54 2174 596 83 8 7 6 5 9 2 3 4 1 5431 879 26 1296 348 75 Puzzle solutions Copyright ©2023 PuzzleJunction.com Solution To
the numbers 1 to 9. 4 9 17 9 25 7 2 3 1 9 8 769 3 6 3 1 2 8 6 14 9 8 8261 457 93 1573 296 84 3498 671 25 9 7 4 2 8 3 5 6 1 2639 514 78 5184 769 32 6 3 1 5 9 2 8 4 7 7826 143 59 4957 382 16 Puzzle A Puzzle B
solve the Sudoku puzzle, each row, column and box must contain

The best kind of back support is spine care close to home. Do it right. Here.

Find relief with our board-certified specialists just minutes away.

When you need treatment for spinal problems, even the thought of traveling out-of-state for care can be painful. At RWJBarnabas Health, our orthopedic surgeons and neurosurgeons work with you to create a personalized treatment plan, right in your own community. We offer non-surgical treatments in addition to the latest surgical techniques, such as reconstruction and minimally invasive robotic surgery. Learn more at rwjbh.org/spine

16  SIX09 | August 2023
RWJ-169 SYSTEM_Ortho_ManWashingCar_9.375x10.375.indd 1 7/19/23 12:43 PM

Capital Health Regional Medical Center Earns National Awards for Excellence

Capital Health Regional Medical Center (RMC) recently received the American Heart Association’s Gold Plus Get With The Guidelines® – Stroke Quality Achievement Award. This award recognizes the hospital’s commitment and success in ensuring stroke patients receive the most appropriate treatment according to nationally recognized, research-based guidelines based on the latest scientific evidence.

The American Heart Association also awarded Capital Health Regional Medical Center its Target: StrokeSM Honor Roll Elite award. To qualify for this recognition, hospitals must meet quality measures developed to reduce the time between a patient’s arrival at the hospital and treatment with the clot-buster tissue plasminogen activator, or tPA, the only drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat ischemic stroke.

Capital Health Regional Medical Center earned these awards by meeting specific quality achievement measures for the diagnosis and treatment of stroke patients at a set level for a designated period. These measures include evaluation of the proper use of medications and other stroke treatments aligned with the most up-to-date, evidence-based guidelines with the goal of speeding recovery and reducing death and disability for stroke patients. Before discharge, patients also receive education on managing their health and have a follow-up visit scheduled, as well as other care transition interventions.

“For many years now, our community has come to rely on Capital Health to provide the most advanced stroke care possible,” said Dr. Dustin Rochestie, director of the Stroke Program and director of Neurology and Neuro Critical Care at Capital Institute for Neurosciences. “By meeting and exceeding the standards established by the American Heart Association’s Get With The Guidelines initiative at RMC—which is home to Capital Institute for Neurosciences and our Stroke and Cerebrovascular Center—we demonstrate our ongoing commitment to ensuring more stroke patients in Central New Jersey and Lower Bucks County can experience longer, healthier lives.”

in Stroke Care

Additionally, Capital Health Regional Medical Center received the Association’s Target: Type 2 Diabetes Honor Roll award. Hospitals that qualify for this recognition ensure patients with Type 2 diabetes, who might be at higher risk for complications, receive the most up-to-date, evidence-based care when hospitalized due to stroke.

Stroke is a time-sensitive emergency. If you suspect you or a loved one is experiencing a stroke, B-E F-A-S-T to know the signs of a stroke and call 911 immediately.

— Balance

Is the person experiencing a sudden loss of balance? B

— Eyes

Has the person lost vision in one or both eyes? E

Face Drooping

Does one side of the face droop, or is it numb? F

A— Arm Weakness

Is one arm weak or numb? Ask the person to raise both arms. Does one arm drift downward?

S— Speech Difficulty

Is speech slurred? Is the person is unable to speak or hard to understand? As the person to repeat a simple sentence, like “The sky is blue.” Is the sentence repeated correctly?

T

— Time to call 911

If someone shows any of these symptoms, even if the symptoms go away, call 911 and get the person to the hospital immediately. Check the time so you’ll know when the first symptom appeared.

@capitalhealthnj BI-MONTHLY NEWS FROM CAPITAL HEALTH AUGUST 2023
Health Headlines by Capital Health | Ewing Observer13

UNDERSTANDING CLINICAL TRIALS

In the medical field, researchers are constantly looking for new information to prevent and cure diseases, treat symptoms, and provide a better quality of life to those who are suffering. One way of gathering this information is through conducting clinical trials.

Capital Health Medical Center – Hopewell is now an NCI Community Oncology Research Program (NCORP) affiliate site. As a participating site, Capital Health Cancer Center now offers residents in the greater Mercer and Bucks County region access to new and innovative NCI-sponsored clinical trials in the cancer prevention and control, screening, care delivery, and treatment areas. DR. CATALDO DORIA, medical director of Capital Health Cancer Center, leads a team that is dedicated to working with patient volunteers in order to achieve the best outcomes of the studies.

“I think the best way that we achieve the goal is to be one hundred percent honest with the patient and to describe the important details,” said Dr. Doria. “One session might not be enough. One single conversation might not be enough. Sometimes you have to give the patient the time to digest the information. You have to be in the position of giving the patient some materials that he or she can read. And then sometimes you have to follow up with another phone call or with another visit.”

People participate in clinical trials for different reasons. Patients with cancer may want to have access to the latest drugs or treatments. By doing so, they receive added care and attention by the physician and care team. Others may want to help researchers and help patients with the same disease in the future.

After a promising drug has been tested in the lab, it needs to be tested in a clinical trial. As an NCORP participating site, Capital

Health Cancer Center’s team of providers and researchers help patients gain access to clinical trials across a broad range of cancer care benchmarks, including symptom management, prevention, screening, surveillance, care delivery and quality of life.

When participants volunteer for a study, they are informed about the risks and benefits of the study. To best understand the potential risks, it’s important for participants to have a conversation with the researchers or points of contact in the study. These professionals are always open to communicating and begin by sharing what is known as clinical trial protocol, which includes:

… The goal of the study

… Who qualifies to take part in the trial

Details about tests, procedures, and treatments

… The expected length of the trial

… What information will be gathered

In addition to the clinical trial protocol, it’s crucial for volunteers to always ask questions so they have a full understanding of the study and can determine if it is a good fit for them.

To learn more about open clinical trials at Capital Health Cancer Center, visit capitalhealthcancer.org/ncorp to sign-up for email updates or call 609.537.6363 to schedule a consultation with a Cancer Center physician.

Gynecologic (GYN) Cancer Support Group

Second Tuesday of Every Month

| 10 − 11 a.m. | Location:

Zoom Meeting

Our newest support group is designed specifically for women diagnosed with gynecologic cancers (ovarian, uterine, cervical, vulvar, vaginal). Our support group offers a safe space to share experiences, learn from one another and obtain the social support needed to develop a healthy sense of well-being. This group is open to all from diagnosis to survivorship regardless of where you are receiving your treatment. Meetings will be held virtually via Zoom.

There is no cost to participate, but pre-registration is required. To register, scan the QR code or visit capitalhealth.org/events.

@capitalhealthnj

capitalhealthcancer.org

14  Ewing Observer | Health Headlines by Capital Health

CAPITAL HEALTH MEDICAL CENTER – HOPEWELL REDESIGNATED AS A BABY-FRIENDLY HOSPITAL

ONE OF 13 BABY-FRIENDLY HOSPITALS IN NEW JERSEY

Capital Health Medical Center – Hopewell in Pennington, New Jersey has again achieved the international Baby-Friendly designation after a rigorous review process conducted by Baby-Friendly USA, the organization responsible for bestowing this certification in the United States.

Being Baby-Friendly means Capital Health meets the highest standards of care for breastfeeding parents and their babies. These standards are built on the “Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding,” a set of evidence-based practices recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) for optimal infant feeding support in the precious first days of a newborn’s life.

“I would like to congratulate our entire team for their extraordinary commitment to our patient community. This third Baby-Friendly® designation ranks us among a select group of facilities that demonstrate an abiding commitment to ensuring every parent feels confident and comfortable feeding their new baby,” said Alexandra Nelson, divisional director of Maternal Child Health Services, Capital Health.

“From the prenatal setting, to inpatient care, and into our pediatric clinic, our teams are wholly committed to providing excellent clinical care grounded in compassion and responsiveness to each family’s unique goals,” said Melanie Miller, manager of Lactation Services at Capital Health. “We are proud to have maintained this designation throughout the COVID-19 pandemic and to have grown our services to include expanded in-house lactation support and increased access to human donor milk.”

The positive health effects of breastfeeding are well documented and widely recognized by health authorities throughout the world. According to the Surgeon General’s 2011 Call to Action to Support

Breastfeeding, “breast milk is uniquely suited to the human infant’s nutritional needs and is a live substance with unparalleled immunological and anti-inflammatory properties that protect against a host of illnesses and diseases for both mothers and children.”

Maternity Services at Capital Health Medical Center – Hopewell is the most comprehensive maternity program in the area. From routine deliveries to high-risk needs, services at the Josephine Plumeri Birthing Center provide a full range of prenatal, obstetrical, postpartum, and neonatal care options so newborns have the greatest chance for a healthy start. In addition, the Regional Perinatal Center at Capital Health Medical Center - Hopewell provides neonatal care, including Mercer County’s only Level III Neonatal Intensive Care Unit for at-risk births. To learn more, visit capitalhealth.org/maternity.

FREE UPCOMING CHILDBIRTH AND PARENT EDUCATION CLASSES

For more information, or to register, visit capitalhealth.org/childbirth.

NEW PARENT SUPPORT GROUP

Capital Health Medical Center – Hopewell

One Capital Way

Pennington, NJ 08534

August 7, 2023 | 1:15 p.m.

August 14, 2023 | 1:15 p.m.

BABY CARE BASICS CLASS

Capital Health Medical Center – Hopewell

One Capital Way

Pennington, NJ 08534

August 8, 2023 | 6 p.m.

August 22, 2023 | 6 p.m.

September 12, 2023 | 6 p.m.

UNDERSTANDING BIRTH ONE-DAY CONDENSED PREPARED CHILDBIRTH CLASS

Capital Health Medical Center – Hopewell

One Capital Way

Pennington, NJ 08534

August 12, 2023 | 9:30 a.m.

August 26, 2023 | 9:30 a.m.

September 9, 2023 | 9:30 a.m.

UNDERSTANDING BREASTFEEDING CLASS

Zoom

August 7, 2023 | 6 p.m.

August 16, 2023 | 6 p.m.

August 21, 2023 | 6 p.m.

Health Headlines by Capital Health | Ewing Observer15

FIND A CAPITAL HEALTH MEDICAL GROUP PRIMARY CARE OFFICE NEAR YOU

1. Capital Health Primary Care – Bordentown 100 K Johnson Boulevard N., Suite 101, Bordentown, NJ 08505 609.298.2005 | capitalhealth.org/bordentown

2. Capital Health Primary Care – Browns Mills 6 Earlin Avenue, Suite 290, Browns Mills, NJ 08015 609.303.4560 | capitalhealth.org/brownsmills

3. Capital Health Primary Care – Brunswick Avenue 832 Brunswick Avenue, Trenton, NJ 08638 609.815.7400 | capitalhealth.org/brunswickavenue

4. Capital Health Primary Care – Columbus 23203 Columbus Road, Suite I, Columbus, NJ 08022 609.303.4450 | capitalhealth.org/columbus

5. Capital Health Primary Care – East Windsor 557 US Highway 130 North, East Windsor, NJ 08520 609.303.4480 | capitalhealth.org/eastwindsor

6. Capital Health Primary Care – Ewing 51 Scotch Road, Ewing, NJ 08628 609.883.5454 | capitalhealth.org/ewing

7. Capital Health Primary Care – Hamilton 1445 Whitehorse-Mercerville Road, Suite 103, Hamilton, NJ 08619 609.587.6661 | capitalhealth.org/hamilton 1401 Whitehorse-Mercerville Road, Suite 218, Hamilton, NJ 08619 609.689.5760

8. Capital Health Primary Care – Hopewell Two Capital Way, Suite 359, Pennington, NJ 08534 609.303.4440 | capitalhealth.org/primarycarehopewell

9. Capital Health Primary Care – Lawrenceville 133 Franklin Corner Road, Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 609.815.7270 | capitalhealth.org/lawrenceville

10. Capital Health Primary Care – Levittown 4533 New Falls Road, Levittown, PA 19056 267.540.8220 | capitalhealth.org/levittown

11. Capital Health Primary Care – Mountain View 850 Bear Tavern Road, Suite 309, Ewing, NJ 08628 609.656.8844 | capitalhealth.org/mountainview

12. Capital Health Primary Care – Newtown 3 Penns Trail Road, Newtown, PA 18940 215.504.1761 | capitalhealth.org/primarycarenewtown

13. Capital Health Primary Care – Nottingham 1700 Nottingham Way, Suite 18, Hamilton, NJ 08619 609.303.4870 | capitalhealth.org/nottingham

14. Capital Health Primary Care – Princeton 300 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, NJ 08540 609.303.4600 | capitalhealth.org/princeton

15. Capital Health Primary Care – Quakerbridge 4056 Quakerbridge Road, Suite 101, Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 609.528.9150 | capitalhealth.org/quakerbridge

16. Capital Health Primary Care – Robbinsville 2330 Route 33, Suite 107, Robbinsville, NJ 08691 609.303.4400 | capitalhealth.org/robbinsville

17. Capital Health Primary Care – Washington Crossing 1240 General Washington Memorial Boulevard, Suite 3 Washington Crossing, PA 18977 267.573.0670 | capitalhealth.org/washingtoncrossing

18. Capital Health Primary Care – West Windsor 352 Princeton-Hightstown Road, Suite A6 West Windsor, NJ 08550

609.537.7400 | capitalhealth.org/westwindsor

19. Capital Health Primary Care – Yardley 1690 Big Oak Road, Yardley, PA 19067 215.736.9362 | capitalhealth.org/yardley

206 206 206 295 295 295 295 95 295 295 295 195 195 1 1 1 1 1 NewJerseyPennsylvania NewJerseyPennsylvania 95 95 95 206 130 130 130 130 130 130 95 276 276 2 1 8 4 11 15 18 5 19 10 6 12 16 3 9 14 7 13 17 16  Ewing Observer | Health Headlines by Capital Health

sports Everett excels in the 2023 Legion baseball season

Asked what he hit for Lawrence Post 414 in the 2022 season, Jordan Everett thought for a second, then smiled.

“Nothing worth remembering, let’s put it that way,” Everett said with a laugh.

A year later, his memory bank has filled up with pleasant facts and figures about his final Mercer County American Legion League campaign. During the regular season the former Ewing High player batted .345 with three doubles, three triples, a league-high four home runs and a teamhigh 24 RBI.

In a District 4 state playoff win over Washington Township, Everett had a double and three RBI in the game that sent Lawrence to the Final 8 for the fourth straight year.

“This is his third year with us,” manager Jason Zegarski said. “I would say it’s definitely his best, and I think he would too.”

On top of all that, he was Lawrence’s winner of the Team Sportsmanship Award. Zegarski feels that was a by-product of Everett going away to school at Vil-

lanova for a year.

“You’re on your own, you gotta learn to be an adult, manage your time,” the skipper said. “That’s the biggest thing. He put the work in in the off-season and it showed this season. If they have questions they can always go to him and ask.”

Everett had a solid career with the Blue Devils, batting .281 with good gap power, as indicated by four doubles and seven triples. After graduation in 2022, he entered Villanova as a business major. Although not recruited to play, Jordan joined the club baseball program, which actually helped sharpen his game for legion.

“I was able to stay active, and that kept my skills intact so I was able to come back here and have a great summer,” said Everett, who noted that club baseball can be extremely competitive.

“Especially the schools that have Division I baseball teams,” he said. “They don’t make the team and they come play club. Those guys are pretty good, they could play somewhere else at another school. So it gets pretty competitive depending on what school you’re going to. I think people

think it’s a little less than it actually is.”

Along with his club experience, Everett worked on his own with former Blue Devil star Kyle Elder. The result was more power along with a higher average.

“The first couple practices I could see he gained a little size and put on some weight in the weight room,” Zegarski said. “When he started with us he was down in the lineup but he started working his way up and he’s driving in some runs.

“Jordan is aggressive at the plate. He’s definitely a guy that can work the count. He’s got a lot of confidence in himself that with two strikes he can put the ball in play. He can also beat one out in the sixth hole, so it’s pretty nice to have a guy with power and speed.”

Both of those attributes were on display at Hamilton’s DeMeo field this season when he hit an inside-the-park home run. As for the ones that leave the park, Everett says it has nothing to do with trying to hit home runs.

“Oh no,” he said. “You do that and you go 0-for-30.

“It’s just focusing on staying back on the

baseball and that just translated to me hitting the ball a little further than I usually do. Pretty much my legs are turning faster and I’m putting as much as I can in each swing and it results in the ball going over the fence.”

Everett came up through the Ewing Little League before playing in the EwingHopewell Babe Ruth program. He was hoping to play legion for Ewing and when the team folded, it disappointed him.

“Especially coming from Ewing High School and not being able to see a lot of the talent come up from Ewing Little League,” he said. “They all went to travel ball and other teams around us. So it does kind of stink not being able to have a competitive team anymore.”

He was definitely happy to have Lawrence as an option.

“It’s been a really good experience,” said Everett, who is joined on the roster by recent Ewing grad Zaire Lowe. “I was glad I was able to stay so close, meet people and build strong relationships through the league, who are still close friends now.”

See EVERETT, Page 18

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Unlike so many others, Everett never played travel ball, as he opted for strictly legion.

“Legion is just a completely different experience,” he said. “It’s a great combination of fun and competitiveness and being with the guys that come from the different schools it’s amazing to be around. They bring more out of you and you want to not only win for yourself but the team; and that just brings us together a lot more. We’re able to have a great team chemistry and a fun time.”

Lawrence has become a true melting pot for Mercer County legion, as it now draws players from the Lawrenceville School, the Pennington School, Lawrence High, Hopewell Valley Central, Ewing and Notre Dame. It’s a large talent pool but it needed to mesh.

“It’s always all about the chemistry,” Zegarski said. “We tell them the most important thing is to start coming together as a team. The quicker we start gelling as a team the quicker we put those wins in the win column. This was probably one of the quickest teams I’ve had to gel in my 10 years in charge.”

The cohesiveness was helped by mature leaders such as Everett, who was looked up to even as a newcomer.

“I didn’t know a lot of the guys because I was in college for the year,” he said.

“But meeting these guys was pretty cool, they’re all really good at the game. It was just fun to meet them, play with them and hear stories about the high school season.

“I felt from the very first practice we all meshed, we made jokes introducing ourselves to each other. We all have a love and passion for this game so it brought us together pretty quickly and we were able to mesh pretty well together.”

That camaraderie resulted in a 15-7 record and third-place finish during the regular season. After losing its first game in districts, Post 414 came back to win two straight to gain another berth in the Final 8, which began July 21.

The fact that team results still matter is a major reason why Everett has always opted for legion over travel ball.

“I think a lot of people get mixed up about legion and think it lacks competitiveness,” he said. “That’s not really the case. It’s just a fun way to play baseball, stay competitive but not break the bank.

“It also is a nice way to meet people. It’s really fun. I feel like travel ball sometimes takes the fun out of baseball. They’re just playing inning after inning. There’s more team play in legion rather than individual play. I think legion does the fun part as well as making it super competitive.”

And this year, Everett competed with the best of them.

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continued from
18  Ewing Observer | August 2023
Customer Reviews

Nursing Home Neglect

For over 15 years, Ms. Warfel’s practice has focused on assisting victims of nursing home abuse and negligence. She has been a featured speaker and panelist regarding issues in nursing home litigation and has worked to obtain favorable decisions on behalf of nursing home residents, including a notable case involving forced arbitration. Her efforts have resulted in millions of dollars for her injured clients. Together, PR&A and Ms. Warfel will provide unrelenting representation to nursing home clients to ensure they are compensated fairly.

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Contact

Did you get enough sleep last night?

Ask The Doctor

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about one in three American adults do not get enough sleep on a regular basis.

A lack of sleep or poor quality sleep has been linked to chronic diseases and conditions, such as Type 2 Diabetes, obesity, depression, and heart disease.

From preventing minor mistakes at work to an increased risk of injury, good sleep is important to your health. Kevin Law, MD, RWJBarnabas Health Medical Group, who specializes in pulmonology, critical care and sleep medicine, answers some key questions regarding sleep disorders and the first steps in determining the cause of

sleep disturbance.

What are the most common types of sleep disorders? The most common sleep disorder is sleep apnea, which affects as many as 18 million Americans. Sleep apnea is a breathing disorder that disrupts a person’s sleep and usually is accompanied by snoring. Men and people who are obese are at greatest risk. Restless leg syndrome is often referred to as “the most common problem you have never heard of.” It is a neurological movement disorder characterized by an uncomfortable sensation in the legs. Because it occurs most frequently late in the day or at night, especially when lying down, restless leg syndrome is a leading cause of sleep problems.

Narcolepsy, another prevalent sleep disorder, is a chronic neurological disorder that is characterized by involuntary sleep attacks at inappropriate times, such as falling asleep at your desk or during a business meeting.

How can sleep disorders impact

your health?

If untreated, sleep disorders can increase a person’s risk for heart attacks, stroke, hypertension, diabetes, heartburn and depression. Lack of sleep also can lead to “drowsy driving,” which is a dangerous situation for everyone on the road. In addition, sleep disorders can impact your work productivity and personal relationships.

What should I do if I suspect that I have a sleep disorder?

Talk to your doctor. “Snoring, insomnia, sleep apnea and other sleep disorders are more common than you think. They can be a sign of a serious health condition and put you at risk for high blood pressure, heart attack, stroke and the inability to maintain a healthy weight,” says Dr. Law. An overnight sleep study may be needed to pinpoint the cause of your sleep disturbance. RWJUH Hamilton ‘s Sleep Center is an accredited Medical Center by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) and offers a full range of services used in the evaluation, diagnosis and management of many sleep-related disorders in adults and children. The Center offers customized scheduling for your convenience and is located at 1 Union Street, West Lake Building, in Robbinsville.

To learn more about Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital Hamilton, visit rwjbh.org/Hamilton or call 609-586-7900.

Coming up this month at RWJU Hospital Hamilton

For more information, call (609) 584-5900. To register for a program or for schedule changes go to rwjbh.org/ events.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 8

Dance It Out! 6 to 7 p.m. When in doubt, dance it out! Have fun and destress with this interactive program. No experience required, all ages welcome.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9

Create Your Own Vision Board Workshop. 6 to 8 p.m. What is your deepest desire for what you would like to be, do or have? Come create your own vision board to help bring your dreams to life. Please bring scissors, all other materials provided.

MONDAY, AUGUST 14

Ask the Dietitian. 3 to 6 p.m. Do you have a question about diet and nutrition? Join a community education dietitian for a one-onone Q&A. Registration is required. Taryn Krietzman, RDN

What Are The Benefits Of Meditation? 6 to 7:30 p.m. The practice of focused concentration, known as meditation, brings yourself back to the moment over and over again. Explore

the benefits of meditation in this informational session with optional demonstration. Matt Masiello, CCH, founder of Esteem Hypnocounseling, will guide the group through this practice.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST

16

Prediabetes 101. 4 to 5 p.m. What you need to know and do if you have been diagnosed with prediabetes.

Destroy The Clots: Interventions For Deep Vein Thrombosis and Pulmonary Embolism. 6 to7:30 p.m. Lasanta Horana, MD, FACEP, Director of Emergency Medicine, will discuss the importance of timely interventions when faced with “blood clots”

TUESDAY, AUGUST 22

Healing Journeys: Discussion with Author Jessica Wilson. 6 to 7 p.m. Join Jessica Wilson, author of “Healing Journeys” for a book talk on toxic relationships, where we’ll delve into the different types of abuse and explore what constitutes a toxic relationship. I’ll share strategies to guide you through these challenging situations and empower you on your healing journey. Feel free to ask any questions in a safe and supportive environment. Let’s unravel the complexities of toxic relationships together. Free.

Feeling Burned Out at Work? 6 to 7 p.m. Job burnout can affect your physical and mental health. Learn about signs of burnout and what you can do about it.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 31

Picture This: Crafty Creations. 6 to 7:30 p.m. Bring your favorite summertime memories and a creative spark. Craft the night away with family and friends as the summer dwindles down. Fee: $5 per person.

Better Health Programs

Registration required for all programs. Must be a Better Health Member. Call (609) 584-5900 or go to rwjbh.org/events.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 8

Over the Counter Hearing Aids-FAQ-What You Should Know. 10 to 11 a.m. Get the facts on the latest in over-the-counter hearing aids. Learn the facts and get your questions answered by Dr. Lorraine Sgarlato, Au.D. A.B.A. a clinical audiologist with over 40 years of experience in the field of hearing science.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16

Technology Class. Noon to 1 p.m. Frustrated navigating online registration for Better Health Programs? Can’t figure out how to text your grandkids. Back to help us with our technology challenges are our friends from “Camp Fire NJ, Teens on Fire.” Whether you have questions about your mobile device, a laptop, or iPad, bring your device and learn how to complete simple tasks.

your smartphone camera to hover over the QR code to learn more now, or call 609-245-7430. workers here and across America. To share your thanks or to support our Emergency Response Fund, visit rwjbh.org/heroes And please, for them, stay home and safe. RWJ-104 Heroes Work Here_4.313x11.25_HAM.indd 1 4/17/20 1:21 PM See our ads in SIX09 section pgs 5 and 7
Use
Dr. Kevin Law
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OCCR-622 Public Water System Identification Number NJ1111001 August 2023 | Ewing Observer21

Senior Corner

August 2023

ALL PROGRAMS HELD AT HOLLOWBROOK COMMUNITY CENTER, 320 HOLLOWBROOK DRIVE

MONDAYS

10 AM Exercise- Karen Martin

NOON Tech/Trends For Seniors 2nd and 4th Monday of the Month

1 PM Jewelry/Craft-Anne’s (Resumes 8/14)

TUESDAYS

10 AM Exercise- Karen Martin

12:30 PM Bible Study — Hiatus August

12:30 PM Bingo

1 PM Senior Scholars

WEDNESDAYS

9:30 AM Knitting/Crochet

11 AM Chair Yoga- Lisa Caruso

1 PM Mexican Train

10:30-1 PM Water Color - Ally Lyons Mercer County Library– Ewing Branch

2 PM Mahjongg - Christine Kamph

THURSDAYS

10 AM Exercise - Karen Martin

1 PM Pinochle - Mercer County Library– Ewing Branch

1 PM Rummikub

1 PM Balance Class - Bob Kirby

1 PM Bid Whist

1:30 PM Learn Chrome/OS

FRIDAYS

9:30 AM Line Dancing – Joanne Keephart

12:30 PM Circuit Training– Jeff Prunetti ( $5 session) — Hiatus August

SENIOR CITIZEN ADVISORY COMMISSION (SCAC): 3RD THURSDAY OF THE MONTH, General Body 10 AM meeting is open to the public. — Hiatus August

CLUBS: Hiatus August

Live Wires—11 AM ( 2ND Thursday of the month) RM# 201-202

Busy C’s—11 AM ( 3RD Tuesday of the month) RM# 201-202

Club D—11 AM (1st Thursday of the month) RM# 201-202

HB Seniors—1 PM (2ND Friday of the month) RM# 201-202

MERCER COUNTY NUTRITION: Seniors 60 and older or anyone married to a person 60 and older is welcome to participate in the nutrition program. The program is located at Hollowbrook Community Center. A person is asked to donate a $1. Your donation is confidential. A delicious balance meal is served. Contact Ms. Wanda (609) 883-4150.

REGISTER FOR ALL PROGRAMS AGES 60 AND OLDER

EWING RESIDENTS: HOLLOWBROOK COMMUNITY CENTER

2nd Floor Rm# 207 Senior Office

QUESTIONS: 609-883-1776

Senior Corner is paid content by Ewing Township.

Life is a journey, enjoy the ride

ILENE BLACK

BETTING ON BLACK

The last time we bought a new car was back in 2011. I bought my husband George a car for Christmas. A huge, sweeping, majestic gesture, wouldn’t you agree? I felt like a Kardashian. “Merry Christmas. Oh, here’s a little something I picked up for you.” I will never be able to top that Christmas gift, nor do I ever intend to try. For the past several years, I have been driving my dad’s car. It was a 2008 Chevy Impala and at last count, the odometer read 47,000+ miles. My dad used to drive it to Shop Rite, to church, and to buy his lottery tickets. Dad bought the car from my 95 year old great uncle. Uncle Jimmy drove like a maniac. He would whip past my house, make a K-turn down the street (we knew he was coming from the hornblowing and the line of traffic that would build up while he was maneuvering the car) and speed up to our curb. He’d get out of the car and toss his keys to George or one of our sons, ordering them to park it for him. But surprisingly, the car was in good shape, all things considered. I don’t think the back seat was ever sat on! Anyway, George and I decided that we needed a small SUV. We do craft shows, so the cargo space in an SUV would allow us to get more creative with our displays. So we researched and weighed the possibilities. Our son Donnie and his wife Michelle had just gotten a Nissan Rogue and loved it. After we checked out the cargo space in their Rogue, we decided to

get our own.

Blah blah blah….we found the SUV we liked, we test-drove it, we argued the price, we argued the junk fees, we (I) did a lot of pointing and saying things like, “Really? What exactly is THIS fee?”, we bought it.

The salesman did a not-so-brief explanation of the bells and whistles of the car. I paid attention, but I was hungry and thirsty and I wanted to go home. So after the tutorial, he gladhands us and it’s time to go. I drove the car home. Eventually.

Now you must understand, the highest automobile tech that I have ever experienced was dad’s car radio. It showed the radio station, the artist and the song title. The car required a key to start it. As a result, and despite the lengthy tutorial that our salesman conducted, I had no idea how to turn the car on. There was no place to stick the key into. And oh by the way, there WAS NO KEY!

I sat in that dealer parking lot, studying the vast airplane cockpit dashboard of tech, until I finally, after about ten minutes, saw the start button. I started the car and for the first time in my life, used a backup camera to reverse. I didn’t completely trust the camera though, so I looked behind me while reversing.

On the drive home, cars were zipping past me and coming up behind me. I could not believe the nerve of these people. Why did they have to drive near me? And also, I noticed that the road department had narrowed all the highway lanes to about a foot wide. Everyone was crowding me badly. I spent that whole drive home flinching and yelling “Back up off me” and using my brake a lot. Thank God I knew where the brake was.

Now, I find any excuse to drive the new car. “Oh, we ran out of toothpicks? I’ll go and pick some up.” “Wait, we don’t have any Sri Lankan whole nutmeg? I’ll just run out and grab a bunch.” “There’s no more Disney Mickey Mouse Exploding Creme Filled Coco Ball Cookies left? Let me drive to every grocery store I know and see if I can find some.” “Need a ride to your vacation rental in the Outer Banks? Just let me gas up.”

So if you see a gracefully aging blonde woman driving a new Nissan Rogue around town and she’s grinning from ear to ear, wave from a distance and don’t drive near her.

Black has been a resident of Ewing for most of her life and lives across the street from her childhood home. She and her husband, George, have two sons, Georgie and Donnie.

Handyman Services All Home Repairs And Renovations Ewing, NJ 609-468-0585 Fully Insured Free Estimates
22  Ewing Observer | August 2023
Ilene

Washed away: The flood of 1955 and the Ewing-Yardley Bridge

As I prepare to write this column in mid-July, there have been terrible storms and floods in the country. With family spread around in the Northeast, I’ve been particularly attentive to the storms in this part of the country. The storms have been devastating New York and Vermont, and the photos are at once horrifying and riveting.

Living here in the Trenton area for more than 40 years, I’ve certainly witnessed some awful flooding here in the Delaware Valley. It’s always a financial disaster, and an emotional nightmare. My thoughts and prayers —and often some financial support as well—go out to all those who have been affected.

In the midst of this, my mind turned to the locally devastating flood of 1955. I did not live here at the time, and even if I did, I would have been much too young to understand the impact of a flood.

But I hear it mentioned from time to time, and I’ve seen the plaques marking the bridge and the high-water marks. So, I thought I would learn a bit about it this month, and share it with others of you who also may not have lived here at the time.

According to Wikipedia and several other sources, the original “YardleyvilleGreensburg Bridge” was built in 1835, connecting “Yardleyville” in Bucks County with the old “Greensburg” section of Ewing, near Wilburtha Road. Made of wood planks supported by stone platforms, there were six sections that constituted the span of the wooden toll bridge.

Unfortunately, a flood in January of 1841 washed away three of the wooden spans. The structure was rebuilt with more wood, and lasted for six decades, while being renamed the “YardleyWilburtha Bridge” to reflect the updated village names.

But a more powerful storm came up the East Coast in October 1903, causing devastating flooding, and wiping out the bridge’s wood spans entirely. (Reportedly, this storm also delayed the first ever World Series game in Boston, and the assembling and testing of a new ‘flying machine’ by two brothers in Kitty Hawk, NC!) But this time, the bridge was rebuilt using steel

trusses supported on the original stone foundations.

That bridge lasted until the summer of 1955, in which drought and temperatures consistently in the 90s prevailed in the area.

The drought was finally broken by nearly 3 inches of rainfall on Aug. 7. But the rain didn’t stop there. On Aug. 12, Hurricane Connie came up the East Coast, and produced 10” of rain within 48 hours in the Delaware Valley, putting the river at flood stage.

A week later, Hurricane Diane followed the same path up the coast, and left another 8+” on the oversaturated land and overflowing rivers, resulting in catastrophic flooding up and down the Delaware and destruction everywhere.

Some Ninety-nine people in the region lost their lives, homes and buildings were destroyed, roads washed out, and hundreds of millions of dollars of damage was done. To this day, the 1955 Flood is considered the worst ever recorded on the Delaware.

Of course, several of the bridges crossing the Delaware were washed out, including Ewing’s Yardley-Wilburtha Bridge. While the flood waters raged over it, the bridge was mortally damaged when struck by a house which had been torn from its foundation and washed down the river.

Though declared unsafe and closed, plans were made to rebuild a temporary bridge, to again provide a river crossing at that location.

The temporary bridge lasted a few years, but the original stone foundations were later found to be compromised, and in 1961 the bridge was slated for complete demolition. By that point, the Scudder Falls Bridge nearby was nearly complete, and another river crossing was available to motorists.

Contemporaneous newspaper accounts say that the old bridge foundations did not go easily, and required dynamite, wrecking cranes and underwater earthmovers to finish off the 1835 stoneand-mortar “works of art.”

It must have been an impressive construction, to be sure.

As I prepare to submit this, three people have died and four are missing after flooding in Washington Crossing, PA. Flooding is tragically an on-going story… Be safe, all!

Ewing Recreation

August 2023

The Ewing Recreation and Community Affairs Departments are located at ESCC, 999 Lower Ferry Road. The offices are in a trailer next to the pool. The summer office hours are 8:00am –4:00pm, weekdays. The offices will move back to Hollowbrook Community Center the week of September 11th and will return to regular hours 8:30am – 4:30pm.

The Ewing Community Pool at ESCC and the Hollowbrook Pool are open daily 12:00 noon – 8:00pm through August 13, 12:00pm – 7:30pm from August 14 –September 4, Labor Day. Hollowbrook is closed Saturdays for private parties. Late season fees are available starting August 1st. Pool patrons can pay daily fees and seasonal fees. Online registration is available at communitypass.net.

Ewing Recreation and Ewing Green Team are running the 8th annual Fall Spin Bike Ride on Saturday, September 30, starting at Campus Town and benefit Meals on Wheels. In person registration starts at 8:15 am. Pre-registration can be done online at communitypass.net. Riders can register the day of the ride starting at 8:45am in the parking area. For more information go to ewinggreenteam.org/ewingfallspin or call Ewing Rec Dept.

On Saturday, October 28th, Ewing Recreation will host Trunk or Treat

starting at 3:00pm at TCNJ parking area. Activities include pumpkin decorating, arts and crafts, food, music, lots of candy and more.

Registration is being accepted online for the fall for youth tackle football and soccer. For football go to ewingjrbluedevils.com. Football games and practices are held at Moody Park and the program starts in early August. Soccer games and practices are held at Municipal Soccer Fields, next to Town Hall. The program starts in August and games start in mid- September. Go to ewingunited.com to register. Ewing Little League is accepting registration for Fall Ball online at ewingbaseball.leagueapps.com.

Ewing Recreation Department is taking applications for picnic area permits at the following parks, John Watson on Upper Ferry Rd., Higgs Park on Summerset St., Contact the office for more information.

For room rentals call Hollowbrook Community Center, 883-1199 for small groups to large parties.

For more information on these or any other programs you can contact the Recreation Office at (609) 883-1776, online at www.ewingnj.org/communityaffairs.

The Ewing Recreation column is paid content provided by Ewing Township.

Fareeda Stokes Owner/Broker of Record Licensed in NJ & PA (MWBE/SBE Certified) (609) 337-4200 1901 N. Olden Ave Ext., Suite #21, Ewing, NJ 08618 Visit www.harkesrealty.com Thinking about selling your home? Contact us Today for a complimentary property valuation Looking for a business in Real Estate? Now is the best time to begin!
EWING THEN & NOW
August 2023 | Ewing Observer23
Helen Kull serves as an advisor for the Ewing Township Historic Preservation Society.

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