10-23 PE

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ECHO

HIT THE BOOKS

FAMILIAR FACES AND NEW ARRIVALS START A NEW CHAPTER FOR THE PRINCETON CHILDREN’S BOOK FESTIVAL. PAGE 4

Who’s on the ballot for school board and council, page 2; Preventative Health special section, see insert.

PRINCETON
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Who’s on the ballot this November?

Voters in Princeton this November will be electing three school board members and two council members.

In the latter race, the two Democratic incumbents, Leticia Fraga and David Cohen, are running unopposed. The Republican party did not field any candidates for the June primary. For both Fraga and Cohen it will be their third consecutive three-year term on council.

In the school board race there are five candidates for three open seats. Incumbents Beth Behrend and Michele TuckPonder are running for re-election, while Adam Bierman, Eleanor Hubbard, and Rene Obregon Jr. are seeking election to their first term on the board. Incumbent Jean Durbin is not seeking re-election. Behrend, seeking her third term, is a past president of the school board. She is a retired attorney.

Tuck-Ponder, a former mayor of Princeton Township, is seeking her second term on the board. Trained as a lawyer, she is currently CEO of Destination Imagina-

tion, a nonprofit that teaches children problem solving skills through STEAM projects.

Bierman, who has previously campaigned for seats on both the school board and council, is a Princeton native and social studies teacher for the state Division of Children and Families’ Mercer – Project TEACH.

Hubbard, a first-time candidate, holds undergraduate and graduate degrees from Harvard and taught history at Princeton for 10 years. She has been involved with the board of trustees at the Princeton University-associated University NOW nursery school and with the Riverside School PTO.

Obregon, also a first-time candidate, is the CEO of Numis Securities Inc., the New York CIty-based U.S. arm of a British investment bank.

The League of Women Voters hosts a board of education candidate panel on Thursday, October 12, at 7:30 p.m. at Princeton Public Library. Questions may be submitted in advance to lwvprinceton@gmail.com with the subject line “Princeton BOE” until October 9 or during the event.

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Children’s Book Festival returns to Princeton Public Library

Authors and illustrators convene in the creative space under the tents on the Albert E. Hinds Memorial Plaza adjacent to the Princeton Public Library for the Princeton Children’s Book Festival, a free event for young readers that marks the return to an outdoor, inperson event of all things literary on Saturday, October 7, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The day’s programming will proceed as scheduled no matter the weather, as the almost 50 participants and child-toteen audiences come together for a true reader’s paradise of literary proportions, whether rain or shine.

The event is co-sponsored by jaZams, an independent retailer of books, puzzles, toys, and more with a Princeton storefront at 25 Palmer Square East and another in the Bucks County shopping mall known as Peddler’s Village. As the festival’s book vendor, jaZams will oversee all on-site sales, a share of which will benefit and be donated to the Princeton Public Library. The authors and artists in attendance will sign books purchased at the event, and both cash and credit cards are accepted at

the plaza registers.

Attendees can meet and greet the guests, select a title, have it signed, and smile all the way to the registers, knowing that the spirit of reading is alive and well through this Princeton tradition. They are also allowed to go beyond autographs and spend time chatting candidly with the authors and illustrators whose names have leapt off the page to participate in this community-wide event, each of them selected to represent and support a broad array of voices.

For those who are more interested in hands-on activities, PPL will offer various arts and crafts opportunities between noon and 2 p.m. PPL employees will also staff a table at the event to distribute information, such as festival maps and book lists, answer questions, and recommend titles specific to age groups or other criteria.

A full list of participating authors and illustrators set to attend the 2023 Princeton Children’s Book Festival can be found online at the event page on the PPL website, princetonlibrary.org/bookfestival.

For general program information and available services at PPL, call 609-9249529 or visit princetonlibrary.org. Any

additional inquiries about the event itself can be directed by email to bookfestival@ princetonlibrary.org or Susan Conlon at sconlon@princetonlibrary.org.

The artist whose work is featured in this year’s festival poster is Mika Song, an award-winning illustrator and the author of “Norma and Belly,” an early chapter graphic novel series with playful, punny food-related titles such as “Donut Feed the Squirrels,” (2020) “Apple of My Pie” (2021), “Pizza My Heart” (2022), all published by Random House Graphic. The latest, “One Smart Cookie,” came out in August of this year.

According to Song’s website at mikasongdraws.com, the titular animals are based on a pair of real-life squirrels she spotted in Brooklyn’s Fort Greene Park, the two eagerly splitting a scavenged-for granola bar under the shade of a stroller. These furry friends make an appearance in the festival’s promotional poster, eager to sign books with coffee-dipped footprints.

Prior to becoming a writer-illustrator, Song used to work in children’s educational animation. Song lives in Queens, New York, where she runs a comic club for young readers. While she is not based in Princeton, Song illustrated local children’s

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Illustrator Mika Song created the poster for this year’s Princeton Children’s Book Festival, pictured on the cover of this issue.

RWJUH Hamilton October Healthy Living / Community Education Programs

LADIES NIGHT OUT: PAINTING WITH PURPOSE

Thursday, Oct 5; 6:00 – 7:30 p.m.

Meet the physician, learn the facts and myths when it comes to early detection and breast cancer, and enjoy a fun painting project. Join our featured presenter, Firas G. Eldaoumikdachi, MD, FACS, specialist in Breast Surgical Oncology, at RWJUH Hamilton Cancer Center. Concluding the physician’s presentation, all participants will engage in a painting project guided by local artist, Yun Li. Light fare and refreshments will be provided. This program is sponsored by I Believe In Pink and RWJUH Hamilton.

REIKI REFRESHER

Monday, Oct 9; 6:00 - 7:30 p.m. Have you been Reiki certified but it’s been so long ago you wonder if you’ve “still got it?”

Come out and play with other practitioners in the same boat. This is a safe space to come out and explore the energy! Patti McDougall, Integrative RN, Reiki Master/Teacher. Bring a small sheet and a pillow. $5

THE LINK BETWEEN HEARING LOSS AND DEMENTIA-CAN HEARING AIDS SAVE YOUR BRAIN?

Tuesday, Oct 10, 10:00 – 11:00 a.m.

According to several major studies, older adults with hearing loss are more likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease and dementia, compared to those with normal hearing. Prevention is key. Audiologist, Dr. Lorraine Sgarlato, Au.D., discusses your options.

DANCE IT OUT!

Monday, Oct 16; 1:00 – 2:00 p.m. When it doubt, just dance! Join us for this spooky dance session with all your favorite Halloween hits.

FERMENTATION: IT’S ALIVE!!

Tuesday, Oct. 17th at 2:00-3:00pm Curious about fermented foods? Come and uncover the history and science behind fermentation! We will examine the microorganisms responsible for fermenting some popular favorites and taste the results. $5 fee per person. Taryn Krietzman, RDN

MINDFULNESS MEDITATION FOR BEGINNERS

Wednesday, Oct. 18; 1:00 to 2:00 p.m. Meditation has been shown to quiet your restless mind and help your entire body to relax. Come experience what all the buzz is about. Beginners welcome. Patti McDougall, BSN, Integrative Therapies Nurse. Free

HEALTHRYTHMS® DRUMMING CIRCLE

Wednesday, Oct. 18; 7:00 to 8:00 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

SACRED BREATHWORK EXPERIENCE

Thursday, Oct 19; 6:00 - 7:30 p.m. Join Kim Huston, Reiki Master and Certified Breathwork facilitator is passionate about sharing this modality with anyone looking for true healing. Sacred Breathwork can help release negative patterns and fears that keep us stuck. Bring a yoga mat and blanket, chairs will also be available. Fee: $15

CRYSTAL BOWL SOUND BATH

Thursday, Oct 23; 6:00 - 7:30 p.m. Sound healing uses special instruments like singing bowls, gongs, drums and chimes to create a therapeutic atmosphere promoting deep rest, nervous system rebalancing, and emotional release. Participants sit or lay in a comfortable position while the practitioner takes you on a sound journey for mind, body and spirit. Please bring a yoga mat, blanket, pillow or anything that makes you comfortable, chairs will be available. Andriana Hansen, RYT200, SHA1 of the Learning Cooperative. $15

REIKI SHARE

Wednesday, Oct 25; 6:30 - 8:30 p.m. For folks who have been Reiki certified (at any level) to come share the gift with fellow practitioners. Give a session, get a session. Please bring a sheet and small pillow. Fee: $5

RECIPES FROM BEYOND THE GRAVE

Friday, Oct 27; 1:00 - 2:00 p.m.

Do you have a recipe that can stand the test of time? These folks sure thought so! We are tasting our way through some gravestoneetched recipes. Print your own tried-andtrue recipe to share! Fee: $5 per person.

Taryn Krietzman, RDN

KIDS IN THE KITCHEN

Thursday, Nov 2; 5:00 - 6:00 p.m.

Falling (Veggie) Leaves Healthy eating starts early! Empower kids with culinary skills and nutrition knowledge to become their healthiest selves! For children 5 years and older. All children must be accompanied by an adult. Fee: $5 per person. Taryn Krietzman, RDN

BRAIN HEALTH-LEARN PROVEN METHODS TO KEEP YOUR BRAIN YOUNG

Tuesday, Nov 7; 10:00 - 11a.m. With so much information out today on brain health what methods really work? Join Dr. Lorraine Sgarlato, Au.D. to learn more about how to keep your brain young and turn back the clock on your aging brain.

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

Better Health Programs/Complimentary Membership at 65+ Years Old

YOGA CLASSES

Tuesday, Oct; 3 & 17; 10:00 to 11:00 a.m.

MEDITATION CLASSES

Tuesday, Oct; 3 & 17; 11:15 to 11:45 a.m.

LET’S TALK, A SENIOR SOCIAL GROUP

Wednesday, Oct. 4, 11, 18, & 25; 10:00 to 11:00 a.m.

SOCRATES CAFÉ,

Thursday, Oct; 5; 1:00 to 2:00 p.m.

Scan the QR code to register and become a member or call 609-584-5900 or email bhprogram@rwjbh.org to learn more.

*Registration and free Membership required to attend the Better Health Programs

“Socrates Café” is about discussing a topic, sharing our thoughts, our beliefs, our ideas, and experiences. 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.

GAME TIME

Tuesday, Oct. 10; 1:00 to 2:30 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.

TAI CHI CLASS

Thursday, Oct; 12 & 26; 1:00 to 2:00 p.m.

CAMPFIRE POETRY CIRCLE

Friday, Oct. 13th at 10:00 - 11:00 a.m. Gather round as we share bewitching and enchanting poems to get us in the fall spirit! Bring your own Halloween-themed or autumnal poem to share and discuss with peers. Taryn Krietzman, RDN

FROM A TO Z: APOCALYPSES TO ZOMBIES

Monday, Oct. 20; 1-2:30 p.m. Explore the world of first aid and readiness for injuries. Join Wendy Jones, RN, for this hands on approach to refresh your memory when it comes to preparedness.

THE GREAT PUMPKIN: PUMPKIN PAINTING EVENT

Monday, Oct. 23; 10:30 - 12:00 p.m. Join us for some a ghoulish good time while we paint our own pumpkins! All supplies provided, bring clothes that can get dirty.

TAKE CONTROL OF YOUR HEALTH/ CHRONIC DISEASE MANAGEMENT

Tuesday, Nov 7, 14, 21, & 28, Dec 5 & 12; 1:00 - 3:00 p.m.

Chronic Disease Self-Management Program (CDSMP) is a cost effective evidence-based health promotion program for people with chronic illness. CDSMP is a 6 session workshop designed for people with any ongoing health condition, such as arthritis, diabetes, heart disease, and similar conditions. During the course participants will learn how to problem solve, set goals, and relaxation techniques to help manage chronic conditions. It is expected that participants will attend all 6 classes.

ALZHEIMER’S SUPPORT GROUP

Wednesday, Oct 11, 6:00 - 7:00 p.m.

CARING FOR LOVED ONES WITH CHRONIC CONDITIONS

Mondays, Oct 2 & 16th, 10:3011:30 a.m.

ADULT CHILDREN CARING FOR PARENTS

Monday Oct 2 & Oct 16th, 5:30 - 7:00 p.m.

CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP

Wednesday Oct 4; 5:30 - 6:30 p.m.

GRIEF & LOSS SUPPORT GROUP

LUNCH AND LEARN: HEALTHY HEART CLUB

Monday, Oct. 23; 12:30-1:30 p.m.

Dine in with Edward A. Wingfield, MD, Medical Staff President, Director M. Ghusson Cardiac Catheterization Lab at RWJUH Hamilton and Marie Bernardo, MD, Cardiology, while they discuss “hearty” topics. Bring your appetite for knowledge with these two top doctors. A heart healthy lunch will be provided.

PLAN TODAY FOR TOMORROW

Thursday, Oct; 26; 10:00 to 11:30 a.m. The panel will breakdown our choices, discuss the healthcare system, financial, social, and care needs and how to make it work for you. Please welcome, Randi Goldberg, Archer Law Office, Rachal Baillie, Bear Creek Assisted Living, Gina Barnett, Springpoint at Home, and Kelly Aylward, The Elms of Cranbury Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center. Refreshments will be served.

WHAT’S NEW WITH MEDICARE?

Thursday, Nov; 2; 10:00 to 11:30 a.m. Open Enrollment is here! Learn what you need to know about your Medicare benefits for 2024 and how to compare plans to find the best coverage and save money. Mary McGeary, the director of the NJ State Health Insurance Assistance Program and Michele Lee, Medicare and Program Specialist, will be the presenters.

Thursday Oct 5 & 19th; 1:30 - 2:30 p.m.

LETTING GO OF CLUTTER

Tuesday Oct 10; 1:30 - 2:30 p.m.

WISE WOMEN DISCUSSION GROUP

Thursday Oct 26; 1:30 - 2:30 p.m.

MANAGING STRESS AND DIABETES

Wednesday Oct 18; 3:00 - 4:00 p.m.

WHAT’S EATING YOU?

Wednesday Nov 1; 11:00 – 12:00 p.m.

GOT STRESS?

Monday Nov 6; 2:00 – 3:00 p.m.

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

October 2023 | Princeton Echo5

book author Anica Mrose Rissi’s “Love, Sophia on the Moon” (2020, Little, Brown Books for Young Readers), described as a story of “unconditional love” in a motherdaughter relationship.

Song will present an interactive story time in the PPL CoLab Space on the third floor of the library from 10:30 to 11 a.m. as a “prologue” of sorts to introduce the festival.

Here is a list of the authors and/or illustrators who live in or around Princeton, some of whom are well-known and repeat favorites of readers, as well as others whose attendance at the Princeton Children’s Book Festival marks the beginning of an exciting new chapter

Anica Mrose Rissi

Book pictured: “Wishing Season” (2023)

Anica Mrose Rissi writes across genres and mediums. In addition to the more than a dozen assorted picture, chapter, and middle grade books, Rissi is a lyricist and fiddle player in the “electro-country” band Owen Lake and the Tragic Loves. The group is headed by her husband, Princeton University’s director of electronic music, Jeffrey Snyder, a.k.a. Owen Lake, a composer and instrument designer with connections across the regional music

scene.

But Rissi is perhaps best known as the author of the “Anna, Banana” illustrated chapter books, a series that tackles early age friendships. The most recent, “Anna, Banana, and the Magic Show Mix-Up” (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers), came out in 2019.

The Skillman resident was previously featured in the September 2017 Princeton Echo story by Dan Bauer alongside her

late dog and writing companion Arugula, affectionately nicknamed “Rooga,” who served as the inspiration for Anna’s weiner dog, Banana. While Arugula passed away in 2021, Rissi’s current dog, Sweet Potato, or “Tato,” continues the food-related naming trend.

“Wishing Season,” Rissi’s most recent book, is a middle-grade story exploring “the enduring bond between twins” even when faced with the greatest loss. The

Quill Tree Books publication focuses on a protagonist who must cope with grief after losing her beloved brother.

She has also branched out to young adult novels such as “Nobody Knows But You” (2020), a thriller set in a summer camp revolving around murder and friendship, but as told through letters. Rissi published a collection of short stories in the same vein as Alvin Schwartz’s “Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark,” and her anthology, “Hide and Don’t Seek: And Other Very Scary Stories” (2021), serves as a fittingly frightful friend for the classic.

Rissi, a former editor for children’s book publishing giants like Scholastic, Simon & Schuster, and Harper Collins, is also an essayist with bylines in The Writer magazine and The New York Times.

Patrick McDonnell

Book pictured: “Heart to Heart: A Conversation on Love and Hope for Our Precious Planet” (2023)

Patrick McDonnell is the creator and illustrator behind the long-running “MUTTS” daily comic strip, which, since its debut in 1994, has been printed in “over 700 newspapers across 20 countries.” In just under 30 years, McDonnell has made more than 10,000 of them.

The heart of its success comes down to

6 
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BI-MONTHLY NEWS FROM CAPITAL HEALTH

Capital Health’s Trenton Neighborhood Initiative Transforming the Community

In 2022, Capital Health joined community partner Trenton Health Team to launch the Trenton Neighborhood Initiative (TNI). As part of Capital Health’s mission to improve the health and well-being of the urban and suburban populations it serves, TNI works to drive $10 million of investment in the neighborhoods surrounding Capital Health Regional Medical Center in Trenton to address the societal factors that affect the overall health of the city’s residents.

Boosted by an initial $2.5 million leadership gift from the Bristol Myers Squibb Foundation, TNI introduced a transformative plan that seeks to make significant strides in housing and neighborhood improvements, workforce education and employment, child and family support services, and technology training and tools for residents.

“As the health care landscape continues to evolve, it is our responsibility to understand and embrace our changing role in the community,” said Al Maghazehe, president and CEO of Capital Health. “TNI goes well beyond the walls of our hospitals and medical offices to look at societal factors that impact the health of our community. Based on input from community residents, data and recommendations from existing neighborhood plans, and industry best practices, TNI programs have been developed to have a lasting positive impact on the well-being of our neighbors and complement the health care services Capital Health offers.”

TNI’s Homebuyer Assistance Program, in partnership with New Jersey Community Capital, is making a difference with Address Yourself, an affordable homeownership program that provides financial counseling and up to $20,000 in down payment assistance (as a forgivable loan) to applicants seeking to become first-time homeowners in Trenton. Since its launch, this program has provided financial guidance for almost 30 first-time home buyers and helped facilitate seven home purchases, with more in process as of this writing.

TNI works with Mercer County Community College (MCCC) to provide educational scholarships of up to $5,000 per year per student

for a limited number of Trenton residents (including those who work at Capital Health) who attend short-term credentialing or associate’s degree programs in health-related fields at MCCC. So far, more than 30 scholarships have been awarded to Trenton residents.

Capital Health and community partner Arm in Arm host a Mobile Food Pantry for Trenton residents from 9:30 a.m. to noon on Wednesdays at Capital Health – East Trenton (first and third Wednesdays) and Capital Health Family Health Center (second and fourth Wednesdays). Offerings include non-perishable items, fresh produce, and meat and/or eggs and dairy. Since March 2023, more than 3,000 people have been served at more than 14 Mobile Food Pantry events.

Additionally, the TNI Family Support Program connects North Trenton families with a community health worker to achieve housing and economic stability and improve health outcomes for children, their parents, and seniors. TNI Family Support assists families by purchasing emergency supplies (such as food, diapers, car seats), facilitating communication with health care and social service providers, and providing guidance for routine appointments, records, and prescriptions. As of June 2023, 85 individuals have received assistance and more than $111,000 in material support.

TNI is also generously supported by Allied Universal, Bank of America, Investors Bank, Janssen/Johnson & Johnson, Labcorp, Citizens Bank Philanthropic Foundation, the George H. Sands and Estelle M. Sands Foundation, Sodexo, the Wawa Foundation, and many other corporate and private foundation partners.

For more details, visit tnitrenton.org.

Health Headlines by Capital Health | Princeton Echo7 @capitalhealthnj
OCTOBER 2023

Capital Health Now Offers Minimally Invasive Aortic Valve Replacement

As part of the growing full-service cardiac program available at Capital Health’s Heart and Vascular Institute, physicians and staff from the Institute’s Structural Heart Program recently performed their first transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) procedure at Capital Health Regional Medical Center in Trenton, New Jersey.

TAVR is a minimally invasive treatment option for patients with severe aortic stenosis (narrowing of the aortic valve opening) or those with a failing surgical aortic valve who are at elevated risk for complications during open surgery. Experts from Capital Health’s Structural Heart Program perform procedures like TAVR to manage and treat heart valve conditions and other structural issues of the heart.

When severe aortic stenosis occurs, the heart needs to work harder to pump blood to the rest of the body, which in turn can limit your daily activity. With TAVR, an artificial valve is delivered to the heart through a thin, flexible tube (catheter) that is inserted into one of

Vaping: Get the Facts

Thursday, November 2, 2023 | 6 p.m.

Location: Zoom Meeting

The use of e-cigarettes skyrocketed in recent years under the incorrect thought that they were safer and contained fewer toxic chemicals than regular cigarettes. We now know that once inhaled, these harmful products have ingredients that can damage the lungs and can also cause many other physical and psychological symptoms from cardiovascular effects to nausea, flu-like symptoms and decline in sexual performance.

Join DR. DIANA KOLMAN, director of Interventional Pulmonology at Capital Health, to get the facts about vaping.

several possible access routes and placed into the diseased valve. The procedure typically takes one hour or less to complete.

“Patients who get transcatheter aortic valve replacement experience all the benefits of minimally invasive procedures, including less pain, shorter hospital stays, and a lower risk for major bleeding,” said DR. DAVID DRUCKER, medical director of the Structural Heart Program and board certified, fellowship trained interventional cardiologist at Capital Health Cardiology Specialists. “The biggest benefit for many TAVR patients is that they usually start feeling better right away. With a heart valve that is working properly, they breathe normally, have more energy, and can go back to everyday activities.”

Following the TAVR procedure, patients are monitored in the intensive care unit (ICU) for a few hours before being moved to a standard patient room. Patients usually begin walking the same day as their TAVR procedure and are typically discharged within one or two days.

To make an appointment at Capital Health Cardiology Specialists, or to find an office near you, visit capitalhealthcardiology.org.

This event will be taking place virtually using Zoom. Register online at capitalhealth.org/events and be sure to include your email address. Zoom meeting details will be provided via email 2 – 3 days before the program date. Registration ends 24 hours before the program date.

8  Princeton Echo | Health Headlines by Capital Health

SIX09

Music to the Body and Soul

The melody of movement has never been sweeter for the American Repertory Ballet’s “Dance for Parkinson’s” program than when shared together in classes that not only build a circle of positivity, but also give its participants the chance to perform onstage at a joint ARB and Princeton University Concerts event next March.

ARTS > FOOD > CULTURE thesix09.com OCTOBER 2023
SPECIAL SECTION Preventative HealtH StartS On PG 6

Dance for Parkinson’s at ARB Leads a Choreography of Change in Class & Concert

Dancing can benefit those living with Parkinson’s disease, a neurodegenerative disorder, through rhythmic motions that reclaim movement and demonstrate their resilience.

Over two decades ago, the Mark Morris Dance Group in Brooklyn developed the “Dance for PD®” model, which brings people with the condition and their caretakers together in a dance class setting.

Since then, it has been adapted for over 300 affiliates in 42 states and 25 countries, each iteration moving us one step closer to redefining our understanding of the progressive disease.

Participants from one of these local chapters, American Repertory Ballet’s “Dance For Parkinson’s” program, will take the stage at a live event hosted in partnership with Princeton University Concerts on Sunday, March 3, from 3:00 to 4:30 p.m. at the Richardson Auditorium in Alexander Hall in Princeton.

American Repertory Ballet’s Dance For Parkinson’s initiative is an extension of the Dance for PD® framework, offering

attendees of all skill levels or abilities the opportunity to express themselves in a community-based, creative environment at the Princeton Ballet School—known as ARB’s official school—that routinely incorporates live music accompaniments into classes across its Princeton, Cranbury, and New Brunswick studios.

ARB and PUC have invited these attendees to dance onstage to an adapted version of Mark Morris’ “Falling Down Stairs” choreography number, which is set to the “Bourrée” section from Johann Sebastian Bach’s “Suite No. 3 for Unaccompanied Cello.”

Anyone from the sessions who does not wish to join the concert can instead receive

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Rachel Stanislawczyk, opposite page and above center, is the director and founder of the American Repertory Ballet’s “Dance for Parkinson’s” program and the lead teacher at the Middletown Arts Center, above. Dance for Parkinson’s is an affiliate of the Mark Morris Dance Group’s “Dance for PD®” model, which offers classes for individuals with the neurodegenerative disorder and their caregivers.

a complimentary ticket to the show.

According to the Princeton University Concerts event page at concerts.princeton. edu, cello soloist Joshua Roman will provide live accompaniment to the piece as part of PUC’s ongoing “Healing with Music” series, which showcases the “restorative role” of music through engagements that are equal parts concerts and opportunities for conversation.

ARB and PUC’s collaboration aims to examine “the intersection of music, dance, and Parkinson’s” and includes a panel featuring Dance for PD®’s founding teacher and program director, David Leventhal, in discussion with members of Princeton University faculty.

The Princeton Garden Theatre will also show a special screening of the documentary film “Capturing Grace,” a film by David Iverson about the Dance for PD® program, on Monday, March 4, at 7 p.m. Iverson is set to participate in a live Q&A following the movie, which ties into his own personal history with Parkinson’s disease and the Dance for PD® classes.

Tickets are $15 each for the general public, $10 for students, and free to Princeton University students through the Passport to the Performing Arts program.

Due to popular demand, the Princeton Ballet School has expanded from its initial plan for a 5-week summer session and will hold courses throughout the school year, immediately followed by one-hour rehearsals for the March performance.

The fall season schedule runs on Thursdays from 11:15 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the Princeton location at 301 North Harrison Street in the Princeton Shopping Center with lead teacher Linda Mannheim and musician Dottie Westgate

Mannheim is a professional dancer and Pilates instructor who previously served as an assistant professor of dance at Rider University.

The ARB Dance For Parkinson’s program continues at the Middletown Arts Center on 36 Church Street in Middletown

Township on Mondays from 4:15 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. with accompanying pianist and percussionist G.G. Glazer-Armstrong

Zoom classes stream live on Thursdays from 11 a.m. to noon, headed by lead teacher Michael Vitaly Sazonov, a performer and theater maker who has worked with the Dance for PD® flagship program in New York since 2014.

Rachel Stanislawczyk is the director and founder of American Repertory Ballet’s Dance For Parkinson’s program, as well as its lead teacher at the Middletown Arts Center. She explained that the group has been meeting for nearly three years, forming a tight-knit circle that goes out for pizza together and stays in touch after class.

“If anything happens in each other’s lives, they’re always there to support each other, and it’s just a really beautiful family that has blossomed, and so I think to me, that is the most special part of the program—the relationships in the community,” she said.

For more information on the Dance For Parkinson’s program at ARB or the Zoom link to the weekly classes, email Stanislawczyk at RStanislawczyk@arballet.org or call assistant teacher Lindsay Cahill at 732249-1254, ext. 19

Stanislawczyk grew up in East Brunswick and attended the Princeton Ballet School until her sophomore year. She then split her time between East Brunswick High School and the performing arts program at the Middlesex County Vocational and Technical Schools, now called Middlesex County Magnet Schools, where she met director of dance Cleo Mack.

According to Stanislawczyk, Mack, who is also the artistic director of the Rock Dance Collective and co-owner of the Washington Rock Dance studio in Warren, “completely blew up everything” she knew about dance and led her to “fall in love with the art form.”

Mack inspired Stanislawczyk to branch

See DANCE, Page 4

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out from her ballet roots to modern and contemporary dance, and Stanislawczyk credits Mack for helping her to continue those studies into college, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in dance and choreography from Virginia Commonwealth University.

Stanislawczyk started her internship with the MMDG’s “Dance for PD®” Brooklyn program in 2017, eventually becoming the lead teacher. She brainstormed about how to implement a similar idea closer to home, believing that the project would thrive at a dance school like the Princeton Ballet School, which incorporates live music in every class.

A year later, she proposed the idea of Dance for Parkinson’s at ARB, a New Jersey-based affiliate of the MMDG’s “Dance for PD®,” with the support of ARB access and enrichment coordinator Lindsay Cahill, a longtime dance and gymnastics instructor who now serves as the assistant teacher for both in-person programs.

Stanislawczyk noted her interest in the correlation between the condition and dance came when her grandfather was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, leading her to research the topic in college and then cultivate it further at MMDG.

The concept spread beyond Princeton— influenced in part by Stanislawczyk’s personal connection to the condition—and even survived the transition to a virtual format during the pandemic before returning to all studios except Cranbury.

Stanislawczyk also returned to school, receiving an Ed.M. in dance education from Rutgers University as well as a K–12 teaching certification. The Edison resident is currently a full-time dance instructor for students at David Brearley Middle and High School in Kenilworth.

“I decided that I would go back to school for education so that I could provide students with a program similar to the one that

I went to when I was in high school,” Stanislawczyk said, noting that she went on to perform professionally with Mack’s group and still teaches at her dance studio.

“Throughout my life, I’ve always had a passion for sharing what I love about dance and sharing my own personal experience with [those] who are new to the form. That’s why I teach in a school, why I teach Dance for Parkinson’s, is to spread the humanistic response that I think dance provides to a community.”

The Parkinson’s Foundation, an organization that supports the Dance for Parkinson’s at ARB program through a community grant, describes the disorder as one

“that affects predominately the dopamineproducing (“dopaminergic”) neurons in a specific area of the brain called substantia nigra” for “more than 10 million people worldwide.”

The NIH National Institute on Aging website added that symptoms “usually begin gradually and worsen over time,” including “unintended or uncontrollable movements, such as shaking, stiffness, and difficulty with balance and coordination.”

Others experience “difficulty walking and talking,” as well as “sleep problems, depression, memory difficulties, and fatigue.”

When cells in the brain die or are unable to produce a sufficient amount of dopamine, Stanislawczyk explained, dancing can prove to be a powerful influence.

“Dopamine is the movement base, the feel-good hormone in our brain, and when you dance to live music, it naturally produces dopamine in the brain,” she said.

According to a 2021 UCLA Health article by Chayil Champion, researchers at York University in Toronto, Canada, tracked 16 people with Parkinson’s disease as they attended weekly dance classes for a three-year period between 2014 and 2017.

These participants not only saw “an improvement in speech, [a] reduction in tremors, better balance, and decreased rigidity,” but “showed no deterioration over

4  SIX09 | October 2023 From DANCE,
3
Page
All class participants will have the opportunity to perform an adapted version of the Mark Morris Dance Group’s “Falling Down Stairs” choreography at the Richardson Auditorium in Alexander Hall in Princeton on Sunday, March 3.

the three-year period, while the other 16— those who did not participate in the dance classes—experienced a decline in their motor skills.”

“Dance triggers the brain in a different way so that they’re able to waltz, they’re able to march out of the room, because instead of just reaching and trying to pick up a pencil or to do a daily task like pouring a cup of coffee, when you’re doing that and you’re dancing, and you think about sweeping the arm up overhead and grabbing onto something, pulling and pushing, and using that imagery, it triggers the brain in a different way; it provides agency to the people sitting in the room that’s unfortunately being stripped away from them,” Stanislawczyk said.

While participants may feel varying levels of therapeutic relief throughout the course, Stanislawczyk stressed that the class is not dance movement therapy. In fact, the topic of Parkinson’s disease is rarely discussed, with the emphasis instead placed on the core values of creativity and choreography at the heart of any traditional dance class.

“We treat the participants like artists,” she said. “We don’t want them to feel like they’re coming here and going to another doctor’s office. We strip that all away.”

Each class lasts around one hour and fifteen minutes. Participants begin by sitting in a circle of folding chairs with the lead and assistant teacher in the center, the latter of whom modifies the exercises as everyone moves through the motions against the backdrop of live instrumental music.

Throughout the session, attendees have the option of progressing to standing or remaining seated, with Stanislawczyk adding that if something she’s doing doesn’t feel right to them on that particular day, they are encouraged to adjust the exercise in any way they need.

When learning the basic steps of the Dominican Republic social dance known as bachata, for example, participants started at the bar and were subsequently given “the option of moving freely through the space without” relying on structural support.

“We start with a sun salutation exercise, and then we use a lot of percussion to warm up our feet. We use movement from a variety of different dance styles and forms, so one week we might have a salsa dance focus, the next week we might do a ballroom waltz, and the next week we might do jazz, ballet,” and other types that incorporate a variety of cultural influences, Stanislawczyk added.

“We play a lot with the seasons, or if a holiday is coming up, then we might create movements for Valentine’s Day, or we’re going to be incorporating a lot of apple picking and pumpkin picking and leaves falling from the trees,” she explained, noting that every day tends to follow a theme.

The Princeton University Concerts “Healing with Music” event features live accompaniment by cellist Joshua Roman, left, while the founding teacher and program director of the Mark Morris Dance Group’s Dance for PD®, David Leventhal, right, takes part in a panel discussion on the intersectionality of “music, dance, and Parkinson’s disease” with Princeton University faculty.

“There’s a lot of guided imagery that drives the class,” she said. “The visualization, I think, helps for this population, [because] if they are thinking about squeezing toothpaste out of their leg or tracing like they’re inside of a pumpkin and they’re carving the pumpkin from the inside out, it adds a different dynamic quality to their movement.”

“We do a lot of mirroring in this class, a lot of improvisation, and traveling through the space, and then we always end class with a reverence that we call ‘Passing of the Gift,’ and participants get to improvise, and they create their own ‘gift,’” she added.

It’s almost like charades, Stanislawczyk explained, where a first person “might blow a balloon with their hands and then show how it’s floating” before passing it onto the next individual standing in the circle, who then “has the power to transform that into anything they want.”

“Maybe they turn it into a flower, or maybe they bake cookies, and it goes around the room,” she continued. “We incorporate a lot of circles in this class for community. Circles have been traditionally used in dance throughout history to make sure that everybody is inclusive. You’ll see circles in a lot of ritualistic dances, and it means that we’re all equal and we’re all in this together.”

Stanislawczyk strives to create a “very casual and warm learning environment” through her teaching style, taking participants on a journey of exploration and vulnerability that hopefully “resonates in the room and makes everybody feel comfortable to take risks.”

While the physical aspects of the class are valuable in their own right, Stanislawczyk believes that the emotional rewards of being able to “equally nourish their soul[s] with dance” are felt on both sides of the instructor-dancer relationship.

“It’s one thing to teach children, but when you teach an adult, they are coming to the class for themselves, and they’re so grateful for the opportunity to dance, and so it’s a community that I really resonate with

because they’re so appreciative. As much as they love me, I love them,” she said.

“I get just as much from these classes as they do, and I truly believe that—that this is my happy place that I come to for the hour and 15 minutes that we spend with each other each week. It fuels me as a human being.”

Stanislawczyk finds it refreshing that the class fosters such close relationships between people from different backgrounds, each of them coming with their own unique mosaics of life experiences, in a communal space where bonds are forged through mutual respect and rhythmic activity.

“I constantly think about how, in our society as a whole, we’re constantly attached via technology. We’re not really having these human-to-human relationships, and so when you meet somebody and you’re moving together—I mean, it’s scientifically proven that your mirror neurons are turned on and that it develops empathy for one another—and I think that it develops a really strong foundation for a community of trust.”

Stanislawczyk emphasized that it is more important than ever to be engaged and present with others, a lesson she reiterates in class: “Look around and see the people that you’re moving with and that you’re dancing with, and that goes a long way.”

“It’s not often that we come together and we move together, and I think that it’s a powerful thing—a group of people moving in unison in today’s world [where] we’re just constantly with our heads down and typing on the computer and not making eye contact, etc.,” she continued. “We’re really listening to each other and responding to each other authentically.”

“When people are diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, it can be very isolating. A lot of people lose agency to do simple tasks that we take for granted,” Stanislawczyk explained. “When I’m designing the classes, I try to incorporate everyday movements that we can practice and rehearse in here to live musical accompaniment, and then participants can adopt those movements into their daily lives. I use a lot of imagery, for instance, about flicking water off of the hands. I try to think about the relationships of how that relates to a common hand tremor that you may see with Parkinson’s disease.”

“I think that this class breaks away that sense of isolation, and it makes everybody feel included, including myself,” Stanislawczyk added. “I feel like I get as much out of the class as all of the participants, because it feeds my soul.”

***

Dance For Parkinson’s, American Repertory Ballet. Fall sessions available at the Princeton Ballet School, 301 North Harrison Street, Princeton; Middletown Arts Center, 36 Church Street, Middletown; and via Zoom. arballet.org/access-enrichment/programs-2/ dance-parkinsons-program.

“Dance for PD® (Parkinson’s Disease) A Mark Morris Dance Group Program: Exploring the Intersection of Music, Dance & Parkinson’s,” ARB and Princeton University Concerts, Sunday, March 3, 3:00 to 4:30 p.m., Richardson Auditorium in Alexander Hall, Princeton. concerts.princeton. edu/events/23-24-dance-for-pd

609.849.5999

October 2023 | SIX095

Radiology Affiliates Imaging

Here for You for More Than Half a Century Radiology Affiliates Imaging Here for You for More Than Half a Century Radiology Affiliates Imaging has been here for you for over 50 years, and we will continue to be here for you when you need us most. Today more than ever before, we know health should never be taken for granted. Screening exams are an important part of keeping you and your family members healthy. Early detection has always been and remains key to diagnosis, treatment, and survival.

Delayed diagnosis leads to the identification of disease at later stages. With more advanced diseases, the prognosis usually is not as good, and the care needed is more expensive and disruptive to patients’ lives. Radiologists, who identify and diagnose diseases, are helping to remind patients about how important it is to schedule well visits, screenings, and follow-up appointments. RAI offers several screening studies to referring physicians and their patients. These include Coronary Calcium Score, CT Lung Cancer Screening, 3D Mammography, and Bone Density (DEXA). Preventative screening can provide physicians with valuable information before symptoms are present, which can then allow them the ability to

October 13-15

New Brunswick Performing Arts Center

successfully identify or control health issues. Annual screening studies can also turn worry into peace of mind for many patients, especially those who are high risk or have a family history of disease. RAI offers expertise in all areas of imaging for all members of your family. Our board-certified subspecialty radiologists offer expertise in women’s imaging, interventional radiology, musculoskeletal and diagnostic radiology. Whether you need an MRI, CT, Ultrasound, Mammogram, or X-Ray we offer the latest in imaging technology and interpretation. We also have a new 3T MRI available in our Lawrenceville office. In the last 50 years, RAI has earned our place amongst the largest and most respected radiology groups in our area. Continuing with our long-standing traditions, RAI will strive to provide the most up-to-date imaging technology and highest level of quality and service to our patients. One area where we closely monitor innovations is Artificial Intelligence (AI), which is still in the early stages of development. As technology matures, it will continue to enhance the radiologist’s reading capabilities, help them obtain better patient histories,

and automate our processes. We will continue to help all of the medical professionals with whom we work improve the quality and value of the care that we provide the community. Our demonstrated commitment to elevating the level of care available close to patients’ homes remains as strong as ever.

Radiology Affiliates Imaging, 2501 Kuser Road, Hamilton. 3120 Princeton Pike, Floor 1A, Lawrenceville. 609-585-8800. www.4rai.com. See ad, page 8.

SIX09

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Hamilton Dental Associates

Halloween Scares and Oral Care all in one month!

Halloween is just around the corner; a scary time for kids, and a scarier time for their dentists. Your friends at Hamilton Dental Associates suggest, It’s OK to eat that candy on Halloween but it’s important to have a plan. Here’s what families can do to keep their teeth healthy during the spooky season. October is also National Dental Hygiene Awareness Month so here is a plan to help oral care during the scare season!

Sticky Situations. Chocolate is one of the most common candies during Halloween. Fortunately, chocolate washes off your teeth easily, and darker chocolates have less sugar. For the stickier treats, however, stay picky. Candy like taffy, gummy bears, and hard candies stay in your mouth much longer than chocolate, which gives cavity-causing, tooth-decaying bacteria more time to

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Free Trade. Always inspect the loot after trick-or-treating for anything unsafe (allergens, tampered wrappers, choking hazards, etc.). We also recommend proposing trades for downsizing the children’s sugary stashes. For sticky candies, especially, try trading them for new toys, movie tickets, or your pieces of chocolate. Family fun and health are

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Blowing Bubbles. Chewing gum might be your best friend this Halloween. Find your favorite sugarfree gum and keep it handy. Gum stimulates saliva production, naturally rinsing the mouth and preventing plaque. Chew after each meal or snack for optimized oral health.

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toothpastes and most bottled water. For additional supplements, talk to us at Hamilton Dental Associates about fluoride mouthwash, tablets, or gels.

Increasing your children’s fluoride intake can help combat any sweet tooth this season.

Practice Makes Perfect. With all of the pumpkin flavoring and sweet treats, it’s hard to think about oral hygiene.

For the best long-term outcomes, though, it is necessary to establish a strict, consistent routine. This means brushing and mouthwash at least twice a day, cleaning in-between teeth, limiting sugary beverages and snacks, and drinking plenty of water. Have the kids pick out their favorite toothbrush and 3-minute tune for a family-fun, tooth-brushing time.

If you are looking for a partner to help with your child’s oral care or looking for a long term plan, contact Hamilton Dental Associates to set up an appointment today!

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AllCure Spine & Sports Medicine, 140 Cabot Drive, Suite A, Hamilton. 609-528-4417. 350 Forsgate Drive, Monroe Township.

Brothers Anthony Alfieri, DC, left, and Victor Alfieri, DPT.

732-521-9222. 1101 Randolph Road, Somerset. 732-823-9392. www. allcurespineandsports.com. See ad, page 11

Saturday, October 14th 2023

12pm to 6pm

Mercer County Park

Gather your friends for a day of Food Trucks and Live Music... Purchase a Tasting Ticket to sample over a 100 di erent Beers, seltzers, wine and spirits. Purchase tickets at

www.CJBeerFest.com Today

10  SIX09 | October 2023
Preventative Healt H

The Dental Difference

Mini Dental Implants: A True Innovation in Dentistry

Mini Dental Implants (MDIs) have changed the face of implant dentistry. Unlike traditional implant placement, where multiple dental visits are often required, MDIs can eliminate the need for extensive surgery. The most common use for MDIs is the stabilization of dentures and overdentures. MDIs firmly anchor the dental prosthesis, which means there is no longer a need to suffer with ill-fitting, loose and ANNOYING dentures!

MDIs are designed to eliminate elaborate bone grafting and to expedite treatment. Traditional implants may require significant bone grafting and a longer recovery period. The latent period allows the anchor of the implant to properly embed itself into the jawbone. The smaller size of MDIs means that no recovery period is possible, and the denture can be fitted the same day.

What are the advantages of MDI placement?

MDIs are a true innovation for people who are reluctant to have invasive dental surgery and who are suffering denture wearers. One significant advantage MDIs have over traditional implants is that they offer a viable treatment choice for patients who have experienced extensive bone loss. Depending on the quality and density of jawbone available at the implant site, four or more of these mini implants may be implanted at one time. The most common use for MDIs is to stabilize a lower denture, however they can be placed anywhere in the mouth.

Other advantages associated with MDIs may include:

• Better smelling breath

• More self-esteem

• Clearer speech

• Easier chewing and biting

• Easier cleaning

• Firmer denture fit

• Good success rate

• Less denture discomfort

• No cutting or sutures

• No need for adhesives or messy bonding agents

• No rotting food beneath the

DO YOU HAVE ANY OF THESE SYMPTOMS?

PERIPHERAL NEUROPATHY

is a condition that affects millions of Americans, commonly resulting in pain, tingling, numbness, and other painful symptoms in the hands, legs and feet. This pain changes your life and affects how you work, how you play and how you live.

NEW

denture

• No slipping or wobbling

• Quick treatment time

• Reduced costs

AllCure Spine and Sports Medicine is pleased to announce their new program for treating Peripheral Neuropathy, which includes a combination of advanced FDA-cleared treatments with breakthrough technology that aids in healing the damaged nerves. The effects of this program can be felt on the first few visits. This treatment restores, stabilizes, and rebuilds the nerves in your extremities. Treatment has also been effective in addressing painful symptoms of arthritis, MS, and other forms of chronic pain. Patients generally feel relief physically throughout the treatment period and even feel better emotionally after experiencing a reduction in pain.

How are mini dental implants placed?

The whole mini dental implant placement procedure takes approximately one hour. Generally, in the case of lower jaw implants, four to six MDIs will be placed about 5mm apart. Prior to inserting MDIs, Dr. Mosmen will use many diagnostic and planning tools to find the optimal location to implant them.

HOW DO YOU KNOW IF YOU HAVE NERVE DAMAGE?

Peripheral neuropathy is the consequence of damage to your peripheral nerves. There are over 100 different kinds of peripheral nerve disorders or neuropathies – some are the result of a disease like diabetes, while others can be triggered by a viral infection. Still others are the result of an injury or compression on the nerves. No matter where the problems begin, it is imperative nerve disorders are resolved as soon as possible to prevent

PERIPHERAL NEUROPATHY

is a condition that affects millions of Americans, commonly resulting in pain, tingling, numbness, and other painful symptoms in the hands, legs and feet. This pain changes your life and affects how you work, how you play and how you live.

NEW CBD OIL TREATMENTS NOW AVAILABLE!

CBD oils Have had successful results with treating patients with Inflammation, muscle, joint, and nerve related pains. CBD is a especially promising due to its lack of any intoxicating effects and lower potential for side effects compared to many other pain medications. At AllCure, we want to maximize patients efforts in getting them back to the quality of life that they want and deserve, and CBD treatment is the newest tool to help us do so. Please call us today and we will be happy to answer any questions

AllCure Spine and Sports Medicine is pleased to announce their new program for treating Peripheral Neuropathy, which includes a combination of advanced FDA-cleared treatments with breakthrough technology that aids in healing the damaged nerves. The effects of this program can be felt on the first few visits. This treatment restores, stabilizes, and rebuilds the nerves in your extremities. Treatment has also been effective in addressing painful symptoms of arthritis, MS, and other forms of chronic pain. Patients generally feel relief physically throughout the treatment period and even feel better emotionally after experiencing a reduction in pain.

After placement, a denture will be modified and affixed to the MDIs. The rubber O-ring on each MDI snaps into the designated spot on the denture, and the denture then rests snugly on the gum tissue. MDIs hold the denture comfortably in a tight-fitting way for the lifetime of that implant.

HOW DO YOU KNOW IF YOU HAVE NERVE DAMAGE?

Peripheral neuropathy is the consequence of damage to your peripheral nerves. There are over 100 different kinds of peripheral nerve disorders or neuropathies – some are the result of a disease like diabetes, while others can be triggered by a viral infection. Still others are the result of an injury or compression on the nerves. No matter where the problems begin, it is imperative nerve disorders are resolved as soon as possible to prevent permanent damage. Many people suffer with pain for years, not realizing that their symptoms may be due to Peripheral Neuropathy. Symptoms start gradually, then get worse, including numbness, burning or tingling sensations and sharp, electrical-like pain. Treatment options have been limited to a small assortment of pain medications, which can lead to further issues. Ignoring the problem or masking the symptoms has never been a viable solution. If you suffer from any of the aforementioned symptoms, we can help.

NEW FDA-CLEARED TREATMENTS PROVIDE HOPE

732- 521- 9222

NEW CBD OIL TREATMENTS NOW AVAILABLE!

CBD oils Have had successful results with treating patients with Inflammation, muscle, joint, and nerve related pains. CBD is a especially promising due to its lack of any intoxicating effects and lower potential for side effects compared to many other pain medications. At AllCure, we want to maximize patients efforts in getting them back to the quality of life that they want and deserve, and CBD treatment is the newest tool to help us do so. Please call us today and we will be happy to answer any questions

In almost all cases, no stitching is required, and no real discomfort is felt after the procedure. When the denture placement procedure is complete, light eating can be resumed. The denture can be removed and cleaned at will. MDIs enhance the natural beauty of the smile and restore full functionality to the teeth.

If you have any questions about mini dental implants, please call Dr. Kevin Mosmen for a FREE consultation appointment to see if you’re a candidate for this procedure or traditional implants.

The Dental Difference – 2131 Route 33, Suite A, Hamilton, NJ 08690. 609-445-3577. www. thedentaldifference.com. See ad, page 12.

*Expires

allcurespineandsports.com We accept most major insurances and medicare!

AllCure Spine and Sports Medicine is pleased to announce their new program for treating Peripheral Neuropathy, which includes a combination of advanced FDA-cleared treatments with breakthrough technology that aids in healing the damaged nerves. The effects of this program can be felt on the first few visits. This treatment restores, stabilizes, and rebuilds the nerves in your extremities. Treatment has also been effective in addressing painful symptoms of arthritis, MS, and other forms of chronic pain, Patients generally feel relief physically throughout the treatment period and even feel better emotionally after experiencing a reduction in pain.

NJ 08831

FREE 15 Minute consultation for the first 30 callers!

October 2023 | SIX0911
INTERVENTIONAL PAIN MANAGEMENT • SPORTS MEDICINE • ACUPUNCTURE • PHYSICAL THERAPY • CHIROPRACTIC SERVICES • POST-SURGICAL REHABILITATION 350 Forsgate Dr, Monroe Township,
NEW FDA-CLEARED
HOPE
521- 9222 allcurespineandsports.com We accept most major insurances and medicare! Healthy Nerve Cell Damaged Nerve Cell
YOU SUFFER FROM PERIPHERAL NEUROPATHY? DO YOU HAVE ANY OF THESE SYMPTOMS? Numbness Pain when you walk Sharp, electrical-like pain Burning or tingling Difficulty sleeping from leg or foot discomfort Muscle weakness Sensitivity to touch? FREE 15 minute consultation for the first 30 callers! *Expires 8/1/19. 609-528-4417 100 Cabot Drive, Suite A Hamilton, NJ 08691 ACUPUNCTURE • PHYSICAL THERAPY • CHIROPRACTIC SERVICES allcurespineandsports.com
TREATMENTS PROVIDE
732-
DO
permanent damage. Many people suffer with pain for years,
Peripheral
INTERVENTIONAL PAIN MANAGEMENT • SPORTS MEDICINE • ACUPUNCTURE • PHYSICAL THERAPY • CHIROPRACTIC SERVICES • POST-SURGICAL REHABILITATION 350 Forsgate Dr, Monroe Township, NJ 08831
not realizing that their symptoms may be due to
Neuropathy. Symptoms start gradually, then get worse, including numbness, burning or tingling sensations and sharp, electrical-like pain. Treatment options have been limited to a small assortment of pain medications, which can lead to further issues. Ignoring the problem or masking the symptoms has never been a viable solution. If you suffer from any of the aforementioned symptoms, we can help.
FDA-CLEARED TREATMENTS PROVIDE HOPE
Healthy Nerve Cell Damaged Nerve Cell
when you walk Sharp, electrical-like pain
or tingling Difficulty sleeping from leg or foot discomfort Muscle weakness Sensitivity to touch? FREE 15 minute consultation for the first 30 callers!
Pain
Burning
8/1/19.
Preventative Healt H
Dr. Kevin Mosmen

October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month

A great time to remind women to get their annual mammogram

Annual mammograms can detect breast cancer early when the prognosis is best.

More than 85% of women diagnosed with breast cancer have no family history of the disease.

About 1 in 8 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer during her lifetime.

Male breast cancer accounts for less than one percent of all breast cancer diagnoses. Women should begin getting an annual mammogram at age 40.

Dense breasts may increase your risk for breast cancer.

There are more than 3.8 million breast cancer survivors in the United States. Having your first menstrual period before age 12 or starting menopause after age 55 increases your risk for breast cancer.

Let’s beat breast cancer together.

12  SIX09 | October 2023 Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey is the state’s only NCI-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center. Together RWJBarnabas Health and Rutgers Cancer Institute offer the most advanced cancer treatment options close to home.
Learn more and schedule your mammogram at rwjbh.org/mammo
40
HAVE YOU BEEN TOLD YOU NEED DENTAL IMPLANTS TO REPLACE MISSING TEETH OR TO SECURE LOOSE DENTURES? Let our office introduce you to one of the fastest growing dental products in North America: • Mini Dental Implants are great for stabilizing loose, uncomfortable dentures & replacing some missing teeth. • This quick,minimally invasive procedure will give you back your smile. MINI DENTAL IMPLANTS! I.V. and Oral Sedation available! Our office is specialty permitted for SEDATION DENTISTRY Imagine having all of your dental work completed in as quickly as ONE VISIT with little to NO memory of the appointment! (609)445-3577 Call TODAY for your free consult! ASK US ABOUT OUR FINANCING OPTIONS Contact us today and ask about a FREE MINI DENTAL IMPLANT EVALUATION $230 Value www.thedentaldifference.com Kevin Mosmen, DMD, MS Sedation Permit #ESP0006 2131 Route 33, Suite A • Hamilton, NJ 08690 Across Route 33 from 7 Eleven and Hamilton Bagel and Grill in the Lexington Square business complex

A Happy and Healthy You

Specializing in Self-Care

My name is Chrissy Kohut and I am a self-care specialist. I coach women on how to create an attainable and sustainable self-care practice for their whole-self; mind, body, and spirit so they no longer are muttering the words “What about me?”.

When you create a daily self-care practice you can alleviate or even eliminate anxiety, stress, emotional breakdowns, burnout, and possibly avoid illness during the difficult seasons of your life.

But, what I love the most about having a daily self-care practice is that through your daily practice you learn how to stay grounded and in gratitude while being fully present when you are going through good seasons of life. Daily self-care creates a journey to healthy and happy lifestyle.

I also own a wellness boutique in Pennington, NJ that offers self-care classes, self-care workshops, gentle yoga, reiki, and self-care coaching. These offerings are available to help you on your journey to “A Healthy and Happy You.”

I created, “A Healthy and Happy You” to empower women to find a deeper knowing with in themselves that it’s ok to be imperfect. We are all so imperfectly perfect! The world needs you to be that unique and special person you were born to be. There is a way to get the healthy and happy life you’ve always wanted. And the secret to that life is simple…You!

I know it sounds too good to be true, but you are the secret. I am here to help you create the life you’ve wished for by teaching you daily self-care practices and offering services that can help nourish, heal, and relax your mind, body, and spirit.

As a mother, wife, grandmother, dog mama, and former teacher I can relate to being overwhelmed. The feelings of burn out, being completely stressed and living on emotional roller coaster are things I’ve experienced. I want to share the tips and tools I have learned that have helped me to create a daily self-care practice for my wholeself. Am I always happy and smiling? Hell No! But I have learned through the years from various teachers, coaches and mentors how to build my own self-care toolkit of rituals and habits to elevate my life. This toolkit helps to pull myself out of feelings of despair and back into aligned happiness. It’s because of my daily practice that I no longer mutter the words, “What about me?” But instead enjoy living a healthy and happy lifestyle.

It’s ok if you feel like you’re falling and have lost your way. You are not alone. Those thoughts and feelings have happened to most of us. It may not be easy and it will take some work. But in time, you will find your way back to, “A Healthy and Happy You” and I am here to help you along your way.

A Happy and Healthy You,1613 Reed Road Suite A-1, Pennington. 609-493-7599. www.ahealthyandhappyyou.com. See ad, page 7

Hamilton Township Division of Health Tips for You and Your Family to Prevent Respiratory Illnesses This Fall and Winter

The Hamilton Township Division of Health wants you to protect yourself and your family this fall and winter from respiratory illness such as flu, COVID-19 and RSV.

Practice healthy habits such as washing your hands, staying home when you are sick, avoiding close contact with others who are sick and staying up-to-date with your vaccines!

The new RSV vaccine is available for certain individuals, including adults over the age of 60 and pregnant people, talk to your doctor for more information about the RSV vaccine. Everyone ages 6 months and up is eligible for the updated COVID-19 vaccine, visit vaccines.gov to find a provider near you!

Also, remember to get your annual flu vaccine this fall!

Hamilton residents can come to the public flu vaccine clinics hosted by the Hamilton Township Division of Health. Visit www.HamiltonNJ.com/flushots or call 609-890-3884 for the schedule.

October 2023 | SIX0913 Puzzle solution on pg 14 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 10/11 Easy Sudoku PuzzleJunction.com Solution To solve the Sudoku puzzle, each row, column and box must contain the numbers 1 to 9. 3 56 96 72 5 8 6 8 1 6 4 1 3 3 2 27 57 7831 492 56 9645 728 13 5126 834 79 4 2 7 3 9 6 5 8 1 6358 149 27 8912 573 64 1 4 8 9 6 5 7 3 2 SPECIAL OFFER Waiving All Installation Costs * *Add’l terms apply. Offer subject to change and vary by dealer. Ends 9/30/23. CALL NOW 866.753.9521 YOUR BATHROOM. YOUR WAY. IN AS LITTLE AS
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ONE DAY
Preventative Healt H
14  SIX09 | October 2023 Advertise for $69 a month. For more information call 609-396-1511 at your service 609-672-4145 www.twobrothersmasons.com • Mason Restoration • Brick Pointing • Chimney Repair • Foundations & Steps • Waterproofing • Powerwashing •Painting Two Bro T hers r es T oraT ion D. Smith Electric LLC RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL 609•499•4774 609•883•3009 Fax: 609•499•8322 DAVID M. SMITH NJ LIC# 12736 JOHN S. PAVLOVSKY, JR. 609.298.8229 Certified Public Accountant • Public School Accountant Chartered Global Management Accountant Tax Compliance and Planning Services Payroll Services • Bookkeeping Audit, Review and Compilation Services www.pavlovskycpa.com • john@pavlovskycpa.com P S J VICTOR’S LANDSCAPING » CLEAN UPS » LAWN CARE » TREE REMOVAL » FENCING » PAVERS & PATIOS » LAMINATE & WOOD FLOOR Fully Insured NJ LIC #13VH08094300 CALL TODAY FOR A FREE ESTIMATE 609-977-3284 VICTOR’S LANDSCAPING » FALL CLEAN UP » LAWN CARE » TREE REMOVAL » FENCING » PATIOS » LAMINATE & WOOD FLOOR Fully Insured NJ LIC #13VH08094300 CALL TODAY FOR A FREE ESTIMATE 609-977-3284 I BUY HOUSES and INVESTMENT PROPERTIES Your Local Investor® “Over 700 satisfied sellers since 1993” Fair Prices • Any Condition • 10 dAy CAsh Closings CALL: 609-581-2207 $150 OFF (Any New paving Job) $15 OFF (Any New Sealcoating Job) 22 YEARS EXPERIENCE $150.00 OFF (Any New Paving Job) $15.00 OFF (Any New Sealcoating Job) Cannot Be Combined With Any Other Offers or Credit Cards S E A L C O A T I N G P A V I N G S E A L C O A T I N G COMING SOON TO A DRIVEWAY NEAR YOU 31 YEARS EXPERIENCE Residential Driveway Experts Free Estimates - Fully Insured Quality Workmanship Guaranteed 609-439-0565 • Hamilton, NJ Residential, Commercial, Industrial chuckspaving.com Larry Feldman (609)658-5213 LarryFeldman51@gmail.com We Buy Old Books, Rare Books Also Buying Antiques, Collectibles, Jewelry, Old Postcards, Sports Cards, Pottery, Prints, Paintings, Old Toys, Coins, Stamps, Etc. Appraisals Available. Downsizing/Moving? Call Us! QUALITY Kitchens • Baths • Windows Doors & More Complete Home Improvements Licensed & Insured NJ # 13VH02464300 SCOTT MACKAY - OWNER FullY INSuRED | FREE ESTIMATES Mackay’s Tree Service (609) 577-3949 Complete Tree Service Hedge Trimming Stump Grinding Home Improvement & remodelIng Excavation • DEmolition • trEnching KitchEn • Bathroom • BasEmEnt concrEtE • Patios • WalKWay aDDitions • roofing • siDing Anthony’s hAndymAn 609-309-1501 Anthonyshandyman.com Fully Insured “one Call does It All” lic#13vh05722200 PERSONAL HOME AIDE Skilled – Consistent – Reliable AM & PM shi s available Call Nana Murphy in Ewing Township Certi ed Home Health Aide 215-626-3943 Assist with Errands, Chores and Projects Piano Tuning 609-259-7337 & Repai R s Over 30 Years Experience 609-538-8045 &Licensed Insured •Renovations •Remodeling •Decks •Kitchens/Baths •Drywall •Siding •Repairs •Snow Plowing Free Estimates! nj lic# 13vh01790800 Copyright ©2023 PuzzleJunction.com Solution 6 4 1 3 2 27 57 7831 492 56 9645 728 13 5126 834 79 4 2 7 3 9 6 5 8 1 6358 149 27 8912 573 64 1 4 8 9 6 5 7 3 2 2764 381 95 3597 216 48 Sudoku Solution Your Ad Here Call 609-396-1511 for more info Advertising Full/Part-time account Expanding Community US1, Lawrence Hopewell Trenton has WANTED WANTED Expanding Community Ewing Express, Robbinsville Advertising Full/Part-time account must. BUILDING YOUR VISIONS CALL US TODAY! 609-309-1501 supremeprosconstruction.com • Demolition • Land Clearing • Excavating • Pool Removal • Home Improvements  & Remodeling • Concrete work • Foundation &  Yard Drainage
16  SIX09 | October 2023

Is It a Cold or the Flu?

Sharing more time with family and friends during the colder months can be nice, but it can take a turn for the worse when we start sharing germs too. We’ve all felt the symptoms—sniffling, sneezing, body aches, and fatigue—but understanding whether it’s a cold or the flu can go a long way in helping you recover.

“Recognizing the difference between a cold and the flu can be tricky,” said DR. AVIRAL YADAV, a board certified family medicine physician at Capital Health – Virtual Primary Care. “But there are simple steps you can take to prevent the spread of both, like washing your hands often and disinfecting commonly touched surfaces. If, despite your best efforts, you end up getting sick, scheduling a video visit with one of our providers from Capital Health – Virtual Primary Care is a good first step toward a quicker recovery.”

A cold begins when a virus attaches itself to the mucous membranes lining your nose or throat. Your body’s immune system responds by sending white blood cells to combat the invader. This is what is behind the inflammation in your throat and nose that leads to coughing, sneezing, and lots of mucus.

For most adults, the worst symptoms usually pass after a few days. Children, however, have less developed immune systems and may

Brain Fog Causes and What to Do About It

Thursday, November 9, 2023 | 6 p.m.

Location: Zoom Meeting

take longer to recover. Unfortunately, there is no specific treatment or vaccine for colds, but if symptoms persist or worsen, call your primary care doctor. You may be dealing with the flu or a bacterial infection. Seasonal flu is caused by viruses that attack the body in the same manner as a cold. Some symptoms are similar too: cough, sore throat and fatigue. Unlike cold sufferers, those with the flu usually experience high fever and body aches.

Recovery takes a week or two with plenty of rest and clear liquids. Complications, however, can develop, ranging from sinus infections to pneumonia or more serious conditions. Those most at risk for complications include young children, adults 65 or older, pregnant women, and anyone with certain chronic medical conditions, such as lung disease or heart disease.

The first line of defense against the flu is vaccination, which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend for everyone ages six months or older. Flu activity usually peaks between December and March each year, so you should get try to get vaccinated by the end of October.

Capital Health – Virtual Primary Care is a team of more than 35 primary care providers who can address a wide range of health conditions, including (but not limited to) the common cold, flu, symptoms of COVID-19, upper respiratory infection, and more. For details, or to request an appointment, visit capitalvirtualcare.org

Forgetfulness, lack of mental clarity, loss of motivation, and an inability to concentrate are associated with a non-medical condition broadly identified as “brain fog.” Join DR. EMIL MATARESE, director of the Concussion Program and board certified neurologist at Capital Institute for Neurosciences, to learn about the cognitive impact of COVID-19 and other conditions and treatment options to help dissipate the fog.

This event will be taking place virtually using Zoom. Register online at capitalhealth.org/events and be sure to include your email address. Zoom meeting details will be provided via email 2 – 3 days before the program date. Registration ends 24 hours before the program date.

Health Headlines by Capital Health | Princeton Echo9

Capital Health Regional Medical Center Ranked First in NJ for

Racial

Inclusivity in New Lown Hospital Index

Also Receives ‘A’ Grades for Health Equity, Patient Safety and Community Benefit

Capital Health Regional Medical Center (RMC) recently earned recognition from the Lown Institute as one of the most socially responsible hospitals in America. In the Lown Hospital Index, a report by the Institute that evaluates more than 3,600 hospitals across the nation, RMC received an A grade and ranked 17th out of 60 hospitals in New Jersey based on several key metrics that measure social responsibility. Among those metrics, RMC ranked number one in New Jersey for racial inclusivity and received A grades for health equity, patient safety, and community benefit. The report also ranked RMC among the top 100 hospitals nationally for inclusivity.

“Capital Health Regional Medical Center has a history of providing high-quality, equitable care to the people of Trenton and surrounding areas that goes back more than 130 years,” said Dr. Eric Schwartz, vice president of Community Health and Transformation and executive director of Capital Health’s Institute for Urban Care. “Earning this ranking from the Lown Institute for a second consecutive year validates the hard work of our staff and shows our community that

we remain committed to this tradition of health care excellence for all residents in Mercer, Bucks, and Burlington counties.”

“When communities have access to socially responsible health care, our nation grows stronger,” said Dr. Vikas Saini, president of the Lown Institute. “That’s why it’s so important to hold up these high-performing hospitals as examples for others to follow.”

The Lown Hospitals Index for Social Responsibility is the only ranking to include metrics of health equity and value of care alongside patient outcomes, creating a holistic view of hospitals as total community partners. The 2023-24 Lown Index evaluates hospitals on 50+ measures for more than 3,600 hospitals nationwide.

Capital Health Regional Medical Center has a long history of serving Central New Jersey and Lower Bucks County, Pennsylvania. The hospital includes a state designated comprehensive stroke center (part of Capital Institute for Neurosciences), the Level II Bristol Myers Squibb Trauma Center (one of only 10 designated trauma centers in New Jersey), and Mercer County’s designated Emergency Mental Health Services Center. RMC also provides general and interventional radiology services, dialysis, and numerous other medical services. To learn more, visit capitalhealth.org.

Small Step Strategies for Prediabetes

Monday, November 20, 2023 | 6 p.m.

Location: Zoom Meeting

Prediabetes puts you at increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and stroke. The good news is that by making lifestyle changes, it is possible to prevent type 2 diabetes and even reverse prediabetes. Join Mindy Komosinsky, registered dietitian/nutritionist and certified diabetes care and education specialist, to learn more about prediabetes and how small steps can make a big difference in preventing type 2 diabetes.

This event will be taking place virtually using Zoom. Register online at capitalhealth.org/events and be sure to include your email address. Zoom meeting details will be provided via email 2 – 3 days before the program date. Registration ends 24 hours before the program date.

10  Princeton Echo | Health Headlines by Capital Health

the characters — some humans but mostly animals — that convey McDonnell’s spirited advocacy for animal rights. The two initial (and most famous) pets are best friends Earl, a Jack Russell terrier, and Mooch, a tuxedo cat.

McDonnell was encouraged to name Earl after his dog at the time by friend and “Peanuts” author Charles M. Schulz, who also dubbed “MUTTS” “one of the best comics strips of all time.”

The Princeton resident, a freelance illustrator turned daily cartoonist, was the person behind last year’s Children’s Book Festival poster, which featured MUTTS tabby kitten Jules and Princeton University’s tiger mascot.

“The Super Hero’s Journey,” the second book in the “Marvel Arts” line, came out on September 26 and takes a philosophical peek into McDonnell’s own path in life to see how these classic Marvel characters and cartoonists imbued a comforting positivity that has remained with the author ever since — a graphic novel “love letter” to the best of the brand that features new artwork alongside motivational quotes and iconic comic panels.

McDonnell uses the “MUTTS” comics as a way to express his sentiments about adopting animals from shelters and how to advance issues of animal welfare, but he has also broadened his horizons to other theoretical and conservatory subjects.

As a testament to McDonnell’s range, he worked with spiritual teacher and self-help book author Eckhart Tolle and even wrote a childhood biography of primatologistanthropologist Dr. Jane Goodall, most famous for her studies of chimpanzees and work as an animal activist and environmentalist. “Me … Jane” (2011, Little, Brown Books for Young Readers) portrays a young Goodall with her toy chimpanzee, Jubilee, featuring stories referenced in the famous conservationist’s autobiography.

McDonnell’s works have also been suc-

cessfully adapted for the stage, becoming critically acclaimed productions at venues like the Kennedy Center Theater for Young Audiences.

“Heart to Heart: A Conversation on Love and Hope for Our Precious Planet” (2023, HarperOne) is uniquely co-authored by McDonnell and the 14th Dalai Lama, Tibetan spiritual leader Tenzin Gyatso. The literary graphic novel advocates for a “compassionate revolution” on climate change and our connections to the natural world.

More: mutts.com/pages/ about-patrick

McDonnell is a festival regular with a fame that reaches far beyond Central New Jersey, but the “MUTTS” creator also has a familial tie to a newcomer on the scene.

“The Light Inside” was written and illustrated by his nephew, Dan Misdea, a freelance illustrator and contract cartoonist for the New Yorker whose own work taps into a similarly quirky sense of humor akin to the offbeat style employed by his uncle.

The debut book, newly released in August under Penguin Workshop, a Penguin Random House publication aimed at young readers, tells the story of a jack-olantern who must summon the courage to traverse a foreboding, dark forest to retrieve his favorite toy before night falls.

On his website, danmisdea.com, Misdea explained that while he originally pursued his interests in economics, accounting, and finance, his impetus for joining the industry has always traced back to when his uncle, McDonnell, let him tag along to the National Cartoonists Society’s Reuben Awards at just eight years old. This transformative experience of being surrounded by celebrity-status cartoonists — that year, McDonnell won the 1999 “Outstanding Cartoonist of the Year” honor — is what See BOOK FESTIVAL, Page 12

October 2023 | Princeton Echo11
BOOK FESTIVAL, continued from page 6

he has since returned to full-time.

Herman Parish

Book pictured: “Amelia Bedelia Special Edition Holiday Chapter Book #3 (2022)”

The character “Amelia Bedelia,” a housekeeper known for her faithfulness to phrasing and loyalty to the literal applications of language, is another testament to the power of family. Peggy Parish, the original author and educator, started publishing in 1961 while working as a school teacher in Manhattan. Two years later, she released Bedelia’s eponymous first book and wrote to carry on the tradition of the stories she would create for her third grade students.

While Parish went on to release nearly a dozen “Amelia Bedelia” titles and 30 children’s books total, her unexpected death in 1988 put a pause on the character’s journey — a bookmark, placeholder, and far from a final chapter.

Several years later, nephew and copywriter Herman Parish continued the series in her memory. His first title, “Good Driving, Amelia Bedelia,” came out in 1995. Other books have since followed that focus not only on Amelia as an adult — and her job-related blunders of completing tasks to the letter — but also during her childhood.

According to both Peggy and Herman Parish, Bedelia is an amalgamation of several figures — a former maid at the center of many misunderstandings from her childhood and the oft-refreshing simplicity of children’s early perspectives — throughout her life. Bedelia follows every request verbatim, regardless of its euphemistic or idiomatic usage, but does so with an endearing earnestness that tends to

smooth over every occupational mishap.

The Amelia Bedelia books are published through Greenwillow Books, a children’s publishing imprint of HarperCollins Publishers. During the series’ 50th anniversary in 2013, HarperCollins claimed to have “sold more than 35 million copies” about the housekeeper.

More: ameliabedeliabooks.com/ authors.

Margery Cuyler

Book pictured: “The Little Fire Truck” (2017)

Margery Cuyler, a former editor and publishing executive, is a prolific Princeton author with more than 50 books to her name. Her third grade novel, “The Battlefield Ghost,” was published by Scholastic Press in 1999 and follows two siblings who move into a house haunted by the ghost of a Hessian soldier.

The idea came from Cuyler’s childhood growing up in the historic Princeton property known as “The Barracks” at 32 Edge-

hill Street, where the rumored apparition lingered long after the farmhouse was said to have been used as a military shelter during conflicts such as the French and Indian War and the Revolutionary War.

As one of the oldest structures still standing, the 17th century home saw a revolving who’s-who of significant Princeton figures, owned at one point by Richard Stockton and housing guests such as Alexander Hamilton and James Madison.

The title went out of print in 2005, yet while Cuyler herself has noted she does not believe in the spirit’s existence, she reissued the story in 2011 through CreateSpace, an Amazon-owned self-publishing service, with new illustrations by her sister, Juliana McIntyre.

Younger audiences can enjoy the picture books “The Little Fire Truck” (2017, Henry Holt & Company), part of the “Little Vehicles” series — others including a dump truck and school bus — with illustrations by Bob Kolar. This one follows a firefighter and her trusty fire truck as they tackle the town’s flames. “Little Vehicles,”

according to her Macmillan Publishers author biography, was inspired by her sons’ early affinities for everything related to “cars, trucks, and trains.”

More: margerycuyler.net

Sudipta Bardhan-Quallen

Book pictured: “Roxie Loves Adventure (2022)”

Sudipta Bardhan-Quallen discusses her journey as an unlikely writer in her Amazon author biography, noting that after graduating from the California Institute of Technology with a bachelor’s degree in biology in 1998, she moved briefly to Boston before returning to Caltech as a Ph.D. candidate in developmental biology. She paused her academic pursuits to raise two daughters and found herself enraptured by the joys of parenting, debuting her first published piece in a 2003 issue of the Highlights for Children magazine.

She then used her previous studies of life as a “springboard” for nonfiction works about science fair projects and experiments, history, and health, even penning biographies on everyone from Franklin Delano Roosevelt to — in another parallel to McDonnell — Jane Goodall.

Bardhan-Quallen’s first picture book, “Tightrope Poppy the High-Wire Pig” (2006), is a tale about an acrobatic circusperformer pig who learns the importance of trying again after a high-wire stunt goes haywire, with illustrations by Sarah Dillard.

Her love for animals can be seen in titles from “The Hog Prince” to “The Hampire,” as well as in series such as “Mermicorns” and “Purrmaids,” starring two different species of mermaid hybrids between uni-

12  Princeton Echo | October 2023
DIVORCE CAN BE AN AMAZING OPPORTUNITY THAT DREAM LIFE IS YOUR REALITY WAITING FOR YOU LEARN THE SECRETS TO SELF LOVE MASTERING EMOTIONAL PAIN CO PARENTING WITH EASE DESIGNING YOUR BEST LIFE JENA
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SPACE IS LIMITED EMAIL OR CALL TODAY! Jenajake@me.com 732-682-3111 THE BEST ATHLETES HAVE COACHES TO SPEED UP THEIR PROCESS WHY NOT YOU? See BOOK FESTIVAL, Page 14 BOOK FESTIVAL, continued from page 11
JAKE, MA, NCC LICENSED THERAPIST. CERTIFIED COACH. PODCAST HOST.
October 2023 | Princeton Echo13 TH
Award
Ann
Good Neighbor Award
Michele McCullough
Brian,
Nancy Lucash Bishop Thomas J. Walsh
The Church of St.
Rosary Altar Society
Received by
& Barb Rowcotsky The College of New Jersey Student Athletes Good Neighbor Award
Judy, Abby & Nate Duff Community Service Award
Good Neighbor
St. Gregory the Great Knights of Columbus
Award Received by John Zubricky
F r i d a y O c t o b e r 2 0 , 2 0 2 3 | 6 : 0 0 p m T r e n t o n C o u n t r y C l u b P l e a s e j o i n u s a s w e c e l e b r a t e t h e i m p a c t M o u n t C a r m e l G u i l d c o n t i n u e s t o m a k e i n T r e n t o n , a n d l o o k p u r p o s e f u l l y t o w a r d t h e f u t u r e . www.mtcarmelguild.org | gala@mtcarmelguild.org | 609.392.5159 Ext. 111 r e t n n d l o p u s u l l y t w t
Laura and Joe Sarubbi Guild Appreciation Award

corns and cats, respectively.

Bardhan-Quallen’s works have been read aloud by celebrities like Kristen Bell and Jennifer Garner. She has written about a Paleolithic protagonist who loves playing his own version of baseball, called “baseskull,” penned Disney and Pixar’s “Brave” (2012) tie-in chapter books starring Scottish princess Merida, and touched on “a celebration of girl power and community action” with “Chicks Rule!” (2019), a companion piece to “Chicks Rock!” (2021), both illustrated by Renée Kurilla under the publisher Abrams Books for Young Readers.

Her featured book is “Roxie Loves Adventure,” illustrated by Leeza Hernandez and published through Abrams Books for Young Readers, which centers on “a spoiled pug and her unexpected run-in with the great outdoors.” Roxie is inspired by Bardhan-Quallen’s own pampered “pug influencer” of the same name, who has nearly 13,000 followers on her Instagram page, instagram.com/ foxyroxiethepug.

More: sudipta.com

Maggie Edkins Willis

Book pictured: “Smaller Sister”

(2022)

Author-illustrator Maggie Edkins

Willis’ debut middle grade graphic novel, “Smaller Sister,” was published in 2022 through Roaring Brook Press, an imprint of Macmillian.

On her website, she described the work as emphasizing themes “about body image, confidence, and the everlasting bond of sisterhood.” In a June 2022 interview on the blog KidLit411, Edins Willis spoke about the inspiration behind the book, which is loosely based on her experiences:

“‘Smaller Sister’ is a story of two sisters, Lucy and Olivia, who are close as kids but start to drift apart

when they get a little older and Olivia develops an eating disorder. The story that follows is one about family, body image, and surrounding yourself with people who value you for who you are,” she said. “Like Olivia, my older sister dealt with an eating disorder while we were growing up. I struggled with how that illness changed both my relationship with her and my understanding of where I fit into my family, and it all had a big impact on how I saw my own body.”

“In those days, there were a few books that dealt with eating disorders, but most of them understandably focused on the person with the disease — I really wanted something that I could relate to as a sibling trying to make sense of it all,” Edkins Willis ex-

The County of Mercer will be accepting applications for the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) for the 2023-2024 beginning October 2, 2023. Mercer County will continueaccepting applications for the Universal Service Fund (USF) Program throughout the year. Residents who pay their own heating costs, and meet the following income guidelines, may be eligible to receive financial assistance with their winter heating bill. Residents with medical conditions may also beeligible to receive cooling assistance:

PROGRAM EXTENDED UNTIL MAY

2 $2,369 $2,707

3 $2,978 $3,404

4 $3,588 $4,100

5 $4,198 $4,797

6 $4,807 $5,494

7 $5,417 $6,190

8 $6,026 $6,887

9 $6,636 $7,584

10 $7,245 $7,935

* Federal income limits are subject to change during the program year.

To request an application please contact the Mercer County Housing and Community Development Office at (609) 989-6858 or (609) 989-6959. Applications can also be obtained by visiting the Housing office at 640 South Broad Street, 1st floor, Room 106, Trenton, NJ 08650.

Hamilton Office - County Connection

Hamilton Square Shopping Center 957 Highway 33 at Paxson Avenue Hamilton, NJ 08690

Tues & Thurs 10:00am-12:00pm (by appt. only)

until 6:30pm)

Saturdays – 4/7 & 5/5 10:00am-1:00pm (walk-ins)

Board of Chosen Edward Pattik Freeholders

Housing Director

Brian M. Hughes, County Executive

14  Princeton Echo | October 2023
339 Witherspoon s t. p rinceton, n J 08540 (609) 921-8041 pizza and bar www.contespizzaandbar.com ConTE’s Voted TOP 33 PIZZERIAS IN NATION by Thrillest™ • Pizza • Salads • Sandwiches • Pasta • Full Bar Private Parties Available • Reunions • Birthdays • Anniversaries • Office Parties • Special Accommodations NOW SERVING GLUTEN FREE PIZZA AND PASTA! On-air: @107.7 FM Online: @www.1077TheBronc.com On-app: @Apple, Google Play, Alexa, Audacy and TuneIn on WRRC1. 2023 National Association of Broadcasters Marconi Radio Award NomineeCollege Radio Station of the Year Listen To One Of The Best College Radio Stations In The Nation! The public is permitted to enter the building without an appointment at this time. If an in-person appointment is necessary, clients can call 609-337-0933 or email heatingappt@mercercounty.orgto schedule an appointment. Applications can be sent by regular mail to 640 S. Broad Street Room 106, PO BOX 8068 Trenton, NJ 08650by regular mail, fax, email and in person. Applications, forms, and information can be accessed at this site:http:// www.mercercounty.org/departments/housing-community-development/housing-and-communityCommissioners Edward Pattik Housing Director Brian M. Hughes, County Executive MERCER COUNTY 2017-2018 ENERGY ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS
31
Low-Income
cooling assistance. MONTHLY INCOME GUIDELINES Household Size USF Program LIHEAP Program 1 $1,759 $2,010
The County of Mercer will be accepting applications for the
Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) until May 31, 2018. Mercer County will continue accepting applications for the Universal Service Fund (USF) Program throughout the year. Residents who pay their own heating costs, and meet the following income guidelines, may be eligible to receive financial assistance with their winter heating bill. Residents with medical conditions may also be eligible to receive
Locations & Hours: Trenton Office 640 South Broad Street – Rm 106 Trenton, NJ
M-F 8:30am
4:30pm
08650
(Wednesday open
BOOK FESTIVAL, from page 12

plained, striving to do so responsibility and with extreme care to the subject matter.

In that same conversation, Edkins Willis said she thought she needed to pick between her love of writing and drawing, choosing to study communication design at the University of Pennsylvania.

But after graduation, Edkins Willis came back around to the literary world at in-house design departments for major companies Little, Brown Books for Young Readers and Penguin Young Readers. She

stayed in these art director roles for about seven years, where she was constantly reading in order to create covers. Eventually, Edkins Willis left for her passion, now a full-time, freelance author-illustrator.

Her debut picture book, “Little Ghost Makes a Friend,” is expected to come out with Paula Wiseman Books / Simon & Schuster in 2024, while her second graphic novel, “Baby Steps,” is another Roaring Brook/Macmillian publication set for 2026.

More: maggiemadethis.com.

We’re so proud to offer our residents the nationally ranked best of the best – from quality dining to active social calendars –because we don’t just care for you, we care about you. Visit us and see why The Landing of Hamilton was named a Best

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