It’s Back to School Next Week, with COVID Restrictions Eased Summer construction, maintenance, and cleanup projects are essentially fin ished; teachers will be winding up class room preparations, professional days, and lesson planning this week; and new students and faculty are completing their requisite orientation sessions. It’s back to school time, with classes beginning at Princeton University and Princeton Public Schools (PPS) on Tuesday, September 6 and at most local private schools a day or two later. At Johnson Park Elementary School (JP) last Thursday, 55 new kindergar teners and their parents participated in a safari-themed orientation program. The JP PTO provided decorations and refreshments.“Itwasadelight to see our youngest learners arrive with excitement for what is to come,” wrote JP Principal Angela Siso Stentz in an August 29 email. “Our kindergarten parents had an opportunity to mingle a little while the students par ticipated in activities with the kindergarten team of four teachers. We can’t wait until the first day of school.” She continued, “We are really looking forward to the new school year, with re duced COVID restrictions and returning to some normal procedures.
Over the next three service days teachers and staff members will plan, coordinate, engage, and prepare for our students’ September 6 arrival.” PPS Interim Assistant Superintendent
Merchants Express Frustrations Over Construction and the Princeton University lots that are free during evening hours. This week, it was announced that posters, banners, and sandwich board signs are being in stalled along Witherspoon Street in the first phase of the “Making Witherspoon” initiative, a collaboration of the municipal ity and Princeton University. The idea is “to inform residents and visitors about the construction project cur rently underway along Witherspoon Street between Nassau Street and Green Street, including the amenities that will be created as a result of the construction, and to pro vide awareness of the project schedule,” according to a press release.
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A series of events in support of the Mayor’s Wellness Campaign, focused on the mental wellness of families, children, and individuals of all ages, is about to get underway in and around the Princeton PublicFromLibrary.bookdiscussions and readings to a hula hoop party and bracelet-mak ing, the schedule encompasses many approaches to maintaining mental health. The project has grown from an original idea for three book discussions to be come the library’s major focus for the fall and“Itbeyond.wasa simple concept that bal looned,” said Janie Hermann, the li brary’s adult programming manager. “We are committed to it until May 2023 and it could go on after that, but we don’t knowTheyet.”Mayor’s Wellness Campaign is a voluntary program of the New Jersey Health Care Quality Institute in partner ship with the New Jersey State League of Municipalities. Back in 2018, the cam paign rated Princeton a “Healthy Town,” the highest of three rankings. But over the past three years, the municipality has slipped down to “Healthy Town to Watch,” and the idea is to boost it back up to the “Mayorstop.can choose to join, and not all towns do,” said Hermann. “It is my under standing that the mayor is trying to get us to the next level.” Mayor Mark Freda will be on hand for the book discussions, the first of which is September 21 when the topic is Maybe You Should Talk to Someone by psycho therapist Lori Gottlieb. “This series builds on the Mayor’s Wellness Campaign initiative our Health Department staff started last year to combat social isolation in Princeton,” Freda said in a press release. “With help from the Arts Council of Princeton and the Princeton Senior Resource Center, we facilitated community connections through art and gardening. I’m pleased that, with help from the library and other local partners this fall, we will continue to engage residents through discussions of books that focus on mental health and shared human experiences. I encourage everyone to read along with us and join in the Everydiscussions.”sessionwill be led by a library
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Continued on Page 11 Volume LXXVI, Number 35 www.towntopics.com 75¢ at newsstands Wednesday, August 31, 2022
Johnson Park Elementary School will welcome close to 100 new families across all grade levels.
“We need to be doing everything we possibly can to make it as easy as possi ble to get people into, out of, and through
Library Launches Program Promoting Activities For Mayor’s Wellness Campaign
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MOVE-IN DAY: Students in the Princeton University Class of 2026 arrived on campus last Friday. Fall term classes begin on September 6. Newcomers share where they are from and what they look forward to studying in this week’s Town Talk on page 6. (Photo by Charles R. Plohn) While the merchants welcome those efforts, they say more needs to be done. Specifically, they want a new traffic study, since the most recent one did not include Palmer Square streets, it assumed a two-way Chambers Street, and was con sidered using pre-pandemic traffic data that does not represent current patterns. They have also suggested such ideas as changing the schedule of work on With erspoon Street, making Tulane Street one way going toward Nassau Street, and pro viding some free parking as an incentive.
During the public comment portion of last week’s Princeton Council meeting, Andrew Siegel, president of the Princeton Merchants Association (PMA), voiced the organization’s frustrations with the way the town has man aged traffic problems stemming from ongo ing construction projects on Witherspoon Street and the Graduate Hotel. With six of the central business dis trict’s seven streets now directing motor ists north and only one going south, he said, the system is not working and area businesses are suffering as a result. At that same meeting, a campaign was announced for new signage directing driv ers looking for parking to area garages
www.cedarcreeklandscapes.comtoday. CUSTOM POOLS • HARDSCAPING OUTDOOR LIVING • LANDSCAPING COMMERCIAL SNOW REMOVAL Insect Festival Will Celebrate “Bugs Need Homes, Too!” 5 Rosedale Road Intersection Reopens 10 YWCA Princeton Marks 100 Years of Supporting Women, CommunityServing 12 Rebounding WinningSoccerGroup,BuoyedFairfieldWomen’sShermanInjury-PlaguedfromSeason,StarsasPUSoccerDefeats28bySophomorePHSBoys’AimstoContinueWays32 Art 24 Books 14 Calendar 26 Classifieds 36 New To Us ......... 27 Obituaries 35 Performing Arts ..... 23 Police Blotter 16 Real Estate 36 Sports 28 Topics of the Town 5 Town Talk .......... 6 King Henry V, Who Died 600 Years Ago Today, Lives Again in This Week’s Book Review 17 Back PagesSchoolTo18-22
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2•202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN art + culture food + wine work + play 10060_ARTOF_08_29_22_FINAL.indd 1 8/29/22
202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN•3 FAMILY A AMILY FRIENDLY RIENDLY ACTIVITIES CTIVIITIEES FOOD FOOOD D TRUCKS RUUCKS S RAFFLES AFFFLE &ES PRIZES PRIZEES LIVE LIIVVE E MUSIC MUUSSIIC C F R E E B L O C FK R E E B L O C K K P A R T Y P! A R T Y ! ! YWCA PRINCETON CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION Saturday, September 17th 12 - 5 p.m. YMCA Field, 59 Paul Robeson Place Learn more at: ywcaprinceton.org/BlockParty
Volunteers Needed for CASA : Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) for Children of Mercer & Burlington Counties — Mercer County location needs volunteers. The organization recruits, trains, and supervises community volunteers who speak up in Family Court for the best interests of Mercer County children that have been removed from their families due to abuse and/or neglect and placed in the foster care system. A virtual information session is on September 8 at 11 a.m. Visit casamb.org.
Visit newjerseyamwater.com for details.
“More powerful climate driven occurrences are hap pening across the U.S. than ever before,” said Rosie Taravella, CEO, American Red Cross New Jersey Re gion. “In fact, there have been more climate-related disasters in the nation over the past two decades than in any other country. It’s vital that everyone take steps to beTheprepared.”RedCross recom mends building an emer gency kit with a gallon of water per person, per day, non-perishable food, a flash light, and a battery-powered radio. Also include a first aid kit, medications, supplies for infants or pets, a multipurpose tool and personal hygiene items, copies of im portant papers, cell phone chargers, blankets, maps of the area, and emergency contact information. Plan what to do in case family members are separated, and include pets in emergency plans.Visit redcross.org/prepare for more information.
DASH ’N’ SPLASH: Nassau Swim Club will be holding a Dash ’n’ Splash event on September 3 (rain date September 4) — a 2K Dash through the Institute Woods and a 200-yard Splash in the Nassau pool. The event starts at noon at the Nassau Swim Club, 2 Lower Springdale Road.
COVID-19 Care Kits for Princeton Families: Low/moderate income families in Princeton can get these kits, which include tests and materials to respond to COVID-19, such as one-use thermometers, an oximeter, and extra household items. They are available for pickup at Princeton Human Services by calling (609) 688-2055. Certain eligibility requirements apply.
Conserve Water: Due to the warm weather, New Jersey American Water is asking customers throughout central Jersey to adopt an even/odd outdoor watering schedule.
Topics In Brief A Community Bulletin
Survey on Food Waste and Organics : The municipality is considering changes to the residential waste collection system to contain costs and decrease the carbon footprint. A survey to share feedback is available at accessprinceton@princetonnj.gov.
4•202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN TOWN TOPICS Princeton’s Weekly Community Newspaper Since 1946 DONALD C. STUART, 1946-1981 DAN D. COYLE, 1946-1973 Founding Editors/Publishers DONALD C. STUART III, Editor/Publisher, 1981-2001 ® LAURIE PELLICHERO, Editor BILL ALDEN, Sports Editor DONALD GILPIN, WENDY GREENBERG, ANNE LEVIN, STUART MITCHNER, NANCY PLUM, DONALD H. SANBORN III, JEAN STRATTON, WILLIAM UHL Contributing Editors FRANK WOJCIECHOWSKI, CHARLES R. PLOHN, WERONIKA A. PLOHN Photographers USPS #635-500, Published Weekly Subscription Rates: $60/yr (Princeton area); $65/yr (NJ, NY & PA); $68/yr (all other areas) Single Issues $5.00 First Class Mail per copy; 75¢ at newsstands For additional information, please write or call: Witherspoon Media Group 4438 Route 27, P.O. Box 125, Kingston, NJ 08528 tel: 609-924-2200 www.towntopics.com fax: 609-924-8818 (ISSN 0191-7056) Periodicals Postage Paid in Princeton, NJ USPS #635-500 Postmaster, please send address changes to: P.O. Box 125, Kingston, N.J. 08528 LYNN ADAMS SMITH Publisher MELISSA BILYEU Operations Director JEFFREY EDWARD TRYON Art Director VAUGHAN BURTON Senior Graphic Designer SARAH TEO Classified Ad Manager JENNIFER COVILL Sales and Marketing Manager CHARLES R. PLOHN Advertising Director JOANN CELLA Senior Account Manager, Marketing Coordinator Finding the right solution for you in Family Law Services are provided in the following areas: • Claims of Cohabitants/PalimonyUnmarried • Post Judgment Enforcement and Modification • Mediation • Appeals • Adoption • Surrogacy • Divorce • Custody and Parenting Time • Marital Settlement Agreements • Prenuptial Agreements • Domestic Violence • Child Relocation Issues • Civil Unions and Domestic Partnerships www.pralaw.com609-520-0900 *Pellettieri Rabstein & Altman was selected to The Best Lawyers® Best Law Firms list. The Best Law Firms list is issued by U.S. News & World Report. A description of the selection methodologies can be found at https://bestlawfirms.usnews.com/methodology.aspx. No aspect of thi s advertisement has been approved by the Supreme Court of New Jersey. John Hartmann,A. III Chairman KeephartFabbroLydia HaythornJenniferHuckerbyNicole KalyanFrostJillian * 989 Lenox Drive, Suite 101 Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 getforky.com STARTERS THE FREEDMAN PRETZEL BOARD ASSORTED MUSTARDS AND WARMED BEACH HAUS SEASONAL CHEESE SAUCE FRIED PICKLE CHIPS W/ CAJUN REMOULADE DEVILED EGGS W/ DEBRIS TRIO (ONE EACH CHARCUTERIE AND CHEESE PLATTER CURED DUCK, SPECK, BRESAOLA, WILD BOAR, SAN DANIELE HARD SALAMI, AGED CHEDDAR, BRIE AND BLUE. SERVED WITH FIG COMPOTE, TRUFFLE HONEY AND GRILLED FLATBREAD HAND CUT CHIPS W/ BLUE CHEESE SAUCE UNION BOIL SEAFOOD COMPANY AT THE PENNINGTON SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER 25 R oute 31 S outh P ennington , n J. 08534 FRIDAYSUNDAY-THURSDAY11:30AM-9PMANDSATURDAY11:30AM-9:30PM 3522 Route 1 North, Princeton (next to Trader Joe’s) We have a proper PASSION for cooking. LOVE is the secret ingredient that makes all our meals taste better and MAGICAL. ” “ Coming Soon! Pizzeria and Forneria COMING SOON!
Fall Interns Needed : The Sourland Conservancy is looking for fall stewardship interns to help plant trees, install fencing, and restore the forest. Visit sourland.org/ join-our-team to apply. Library Card Sign-Up Month: The American Library Association is urging people to patronize libraries. Through September, everyone who signs up for a Princeton Public Library card can receive a bingo card. The first 100 adults, teens, and children who complete their card can redeem it at the library for a prize. Vouchers redeemable for a $1 book from the library’s bookstore will also be distributed to those who sign up, and children can pose in front of a special banner to have their photograph shared through the library’s special media. Visit princetonlibrary.org for more information.
Free Vision and Dental Services for Low Income Residents : The municipality is offering these services for low-income Princeton residents impacted by the pandemic.
People everywhere are feeling the impacts of cli mate change with more fre quent and intense weather events threatening our com munities. September is Na tional Preparedness Month and the American Red Cross New Jersey Region urges ev eryone to get ready for these emergencies now. Just last year, more than 40 percent of Americans — some 130 million people — were living in a county struck by a climate-relat ed disaster, according to analysis from the Washing ton Post. Disasters can hap pen anywhere, anytime.
For application information, visit Princetonnj.gov.
New Jersey Red Cross Urges Preparedness
On September 10, for the first time since 2019, before the start of the pandemic, the Rutgers Master Garden ers of Mercer County will be hosting their annual In sect Festival with the theme “Bugs Need Homes, Too!” to celebrate those billions of creatures who share this planet with us. The festi val, where participants will learn, through entertaining hands-on activities, about the importance of insects and how to protect their habitats, is free to all and will take place from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Mercer Educa tional Gardens, 431A Fed eral City Road in Hopewell Township.Educational activities for visitors of all ages will in clude the popular scavenger hunt, the metamorphosis game Bugs in Water, car nivorous plants, and a Q&A with Mercer County Horti culturalist Kathryn Homa. Children will participate in the Insect Hunt in the Mead ow, a catch-and-release pro gram where they will use nets to catch insects in the meadow, identify them with the help of a Mercer County Park naturalist, then return the insects to their natural habitat.Local environmental agen cies and experts will be offering displays, demon strations, and information, including presentations by Mercer County Mosquito Control, New Jersey Bee keepers Association, The Watershed Institute, the New Jersey Department of Agriculture, and the Mercer County naturalist. At the event, organized and mostly staffed by the Mercer County Master Gar deners, visitors can also view the six demonstration gardens on site — butter fly, herb, native plant, weed identification, annuals, pe rennials — and learn how different plants provide safe habitats for a wide variety of insects. The public can also learn about various meth ods of composting, and the Mercer County Stables will be conducting tours of the horse barns on site.
Insects are the most com mon animals on the planet, with 200 million times as many bugs as people. More than 1.5 million differ ent species of insects have been named, three times the number for all other animals combined. Without insects humans would face the complete collapse of most ecosystems, and humankind would probably not survive. And bugs also make this planet more interesting.
Insect Festival at Mercer Educational Gardens Will Celebrate “Bugs Need Homes, Too!” the Town
“I can say from past ex perience, the children don’t want to leave,” said Carol Bencivengo, publicity co ordinator and a member of the Master Gardeners of Mercer County since 2004. “They’re just so happy to explore the world of insects all around them. There’s something for children of every age. They’re in awe of it. And it’s done on a level where children can truly un derstand the importance of the world of insects. It’s a great family day out.”
Homa emphasized the im portance of insects to our world. “Insects are extremely
(Photo by Jeffrey Tryon)
Continued on Next Page One-Year Subscription: $10 Two-Year Subscription: $15 Subscription princetonmagazine.comwitherspoonmediagroup.com609.924.5400Information:ext.30orsubscriptions@ HOME.ATONLINE.PRINT.IN 202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN•5 www.princetonmagazinestore.com Featuring gifts that are distinctly Princeton NEW ADDEDPRODUCTSWEEKLY! www.princetonmagazinestore.comShopPrincetonMagazineOnlineStoreforallyourPrincetongifts! Family Fun Fall Weekends Saturdays and Sundays, Sept. 17-Oct. 30 10am-5pm Corn Maze • Hay Bale Maze • Children’s Activities & Play Area • Adventure Story Barn • Live Music • Pumpkin Picking & Painting • Country Food • Wine • Pony Rides • Tons of Fun! Admission Tickets Required • www.terhuneorchards.com YOURPICKOWNOPENDAILY9-5September-OctoberAt13VanKirkRoad APPLE VARIETIES CRIMSON CRISP EARLY GOLDENEMPIREFUJIFUJIGALADELICIOUSGRANNYSMITHHONEYCRISPJONATHANMACOUNMcINTOSHREDDELICIOUSSTAYMANWINESAP APPLES PRINCETON, NJ 08540 SPRUCE STREET TRENTON FARMERS MKT 609-924-2310
HOMES FOR INSECTS: The 2022 Insect Festival, organized by the Rutgers Master Gardeners of Mercer County, will take place on Saturday, September 10, at the Mercer Educational Gardens in Hopewell Township with educational activities and entertainment for visitors of all ages. In this photo from 2018, visitors investigate Bugs in Water, one of many highlights that will be featured again in this year’s festival.
TOPICS Of
“I’m looking forward to studying physics and I am particularly interested in theoretical astrophysics.”
Question of the Week:
—Donald Gilpin New Jersey Tax Holiday
—Kevin McAllister, Ellicott City, Md., Class of 2026 NJ 08530
“While the School Sales Tax Holiday may not make it any easier getting your kids out of bed and ready for the bus, it might help ease the expense of buying back-toschool supplies,” said Frei man.“This initiative will make back to school shopping more affordable for families, and I’m proud that our team was able to help provide help for residents within the 16th district and throughout New Jersey,” said Jaffer. The Sales Tax Holiday will apply to items bought both in-store and online. For more details on quali fying items, visit state.nj.us/ treasury.
— Nadine Allache, Washington, D.C., with Callum Boyagoda, Amersham, Buckinghamshire, U.K., both Class of 2026
“I plan to do a concentration in operations research and financial engineering and maybe go for certificates in Italian language and culture and computer science.”
“Where are you from and what are you looking forward to studying?
—Matthew Benton, Jasper, Ga., Class of 2026
getforky.com 243 NORTH UNION STREET LAMBERTVILLE,
Insect Festival Continued from Preceding Page valuable to earth,” she said. “They can be found in every habitat and are more preva lent than any other creature on earth. They pollinate most of our food crops in addition to providing other valuable products such as honey, beeswax, and silk.” She continued, “Insects also serve many other ben eficial functions such as breaking down organic mat ter, disposing of waste (dead animals/plants), and helping keep pest populations (in sects/weeds) down. Insects also serve as a critical food source for many amphib ians, reptiles, birds, and mammals. In short, without insects, we would not exist!”
STuguWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWNA31,2022•6
—Aniruh Hjith, Bangalore, India, graduate student Nadine: “I am planning on studying anthropology. I think that learning about people and communities will help me have a better understanding of the world around me so I can get to my goal of working in educational policy.” Callum: “I plan on majoring in physics, so probably the most interesting to me would be quantum mechanics because I don’t think anybody truly understands quantum mechanics.”
The Rutgers Master Gar deners of Mercer County is a volunteer educational outreach program of Rut gers Cooperative Extension, participating in many volun teer programs throughout theForCounty.more information about the Insect Festival and the Master Gardeners, visit mgofmc.org.
For School Supplies
To save families money, State Sen. Andrew Zwicker, Assemblyman Roy Freiman, and Assemblywoman Sadaf Jaffer want to raise aware ness of the statewide backto-school Sales Tax Holiday that the legislators fought for in the recently passed state budget.
TOWN TALK©
ONLINE www.towntopics.com
(Asked Friday at Princeton University Class of 2026 Move-In Day) (Photos by Charles R. Plohn)
“I’m not sure yet, but I am in the engineering program so I am thinking computer science at the moment.”
“I’m going to be doing a two-year master’s program in computer science. I’ll most likely be leaning towards deep learning and natural language processing and topics like that.”
Pizzeria and Forneria COMING SOON!
“As we get ready for the start of another school year, the Sales Tax Holiday on school supplies will keep more money in the pockets of families. I encourage ev eryone to shop and save on all of your back-to-school supplies during the 10 days that are tax-free,” said Zwicker.Back-to-school supplies are tax-free in New Jersey through Monday, September 5. Tax-exempt supplies and equipment include school supplies such as pens and pencils, notebooks, and binders; school art supplies; school instructional materi als, such as reference books, reference maps, globes, textbooks, and workbooks; computers with a sale price less than $3,000; and school computer supplies such as computer storage equipment, printers, and personal digital assistants.
—Ines Robertson-Lavelle, Morristown, Class of 2026
A forum for the expression of opinions about local and national issues.
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“It has been a week of orientation, exploration, meeting new colleagues, learning about the Princeton area, new software programs, security, time in their buildings, and so much more,” she said. “Our leadership team has done an amazing job of presenting and working with new hires.” In a national environment of teacher shortages, PPS has been fortunate to attract qualifi ed teachers for positions that are traditionally difficult to fi ll, Gold pointed out, adding that PPS’s involvement in the Central Jersey Program for the Recruitment of Diverse Educators, known as CJ Pride, has also been advantageous for hiring.Jeff Lucker and Joyce Jones, who were honored at an August 30 gathering, are two Princeton High School (PHS) teachers who did not need to be oriented this year, having oriented themselves quite successfully at PHS over the past 50-plus years.
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Back to School continued from page one for Human Resources Rebecca Gold described the busy scene in the district last week as PPS welcomed about 60 new staff members.
Reading by Colm Toibin Presented by Lewis Center In a special event opening the 2022-23 Fund for Irish Studies series, novelist, playwright, and poet Colm Toibin will read, for the fi rst time, his new short story, “The News from Dublin,” and several of his recent poems on Friday, September 9 at 4:30 p.m. at the James Stewart Film Theater, 185 Nassau Street on the Princeton UniversityToibincampus.willbeintroduced by Fintan O’Toole. Born in Enniscorthy, Ireland, in 1955, Toibin has won awards for his novels The Master, Brooklyn, and Nora Webster. His short story collections include Mothers and Sons, and his most recent novel is The Magician. He has recently published his fi rst collection of poems, Vinegar Hill Coibin taught at Princeton University from 2009-2011 and was a professor of creative writing at the University of Manchester in 2011. He is Colm Toibin
SPECIAL VISIT: Congresswoman Bonnie Watson Coleman, top center, visited the Bayard Rustin Center for Social Justice (BRCSJ) on Stockton Street on Tuesday to engage in conversation with Chief Activist Robt Martin Seda-Schreiber and a gathering of BRCSJ volunteers, board members, community leaders, partner organizations, elected officials, and dignitaries. She also presented a Proclamation from the United States House of Representatives recognizing the center, in part, “for its positive impact as a premier community activist center, educational bridge, and safe space for our LGBTQIA youth, families, and allies.” (Photo by Robert Zurfluh)
Preaching Sunday, September 4, 2022 Rev. Alison L. Boden, Ph.D. Dean of Religious Life and of the Chapel, Princeton University Music performed by the Princeton University Chapel Choir with Nicole Aldrich, Director of Chapel Music and of the University Chapel Choir, and with Eric Plutz, University Organist. The Chapel Choir presents the premiere of Shawn Kirchner’s Missa Misericordia, written for them and dedicated to Penna Rose, Director of Chapel Music from 1992 to 2021. First Z.
—Donald Gilpin currently Mellon Professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University and Chancellor of Liverpool University. He has been named as the Laureate for Irish Fiction for 2022-24 by the Arts Council of Ireland. He lives in Dublin and New York. Admission to the reading is free. Visit arts.princeton.edu for more information.
8•202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN
Lucker started teaching history at PHS in 1969, and Jones, teacher of physical education, health, and peer group, started in 1970. “Jeff Lucker is extremely dedicated, knowledgeable, and seeks to bring out the best in his students,” said PHS Principal Frank Chmiel. “His classroom is a cognitively vibrant place. Students consider and discuss history from myriad viewpoints and grapple with what this information means for them as global citizens of the 21st century.”Hecontinued, “As students leave Mr. Lucker’s class, they are empowered not only with copious content knowledge but relevant skills enabling them to read about events, discern perspectives, develop their own insights, and share them in courageous and civil ways. The impact that Jeff Lucker has had on generations of students from the Vietnam era to our current times cannot be overstated. His work has changed lives, including the lives of my own children, and has made our community a betterChmielplace.”also had high praise for Jones and the impact of her contributions to PHS over the past fi ve decades. Having attended a celebration in her honor last spring, he recalled the numerous PHS alumni from different decades who “shared beautiful memories of how she impacted their lives as students and athletes.” Describing the tributes as “astounding and inspiring,” he noted, “Ms. Jones’ teaching and coaching enriched the lives of thousands of PHS alumni, and her passionate commitment to teaching continues to inspire students today.”Many students, teachers, and staff are looking forward to attending school under conditions that resemble pre-pandemic conditions, with COVID-19 restrictions eased somewhat in accordance with the CDC’s revised guidance.PPSwill not require masks for students or staff “although in certain specific instances masks may be necessary,” according to the PPS Health Protocols for School Year 2022-2023 on the district website. PPS will follow the guidance of the Princeton Health Department and the district physician and will update its protocols in accordance with revised bulletins from the New Jersey Department of Health and the CDC. The district encourages students and staff to stay up-to-date with vaccinations and boosters and recommends the use of masks, especially for those who are immunocompromised or at risk for getting very sick. “PPS does not anticipate mandatory masking,” an announcement reads. “Though, during times of high community transmission level and increased spread in classes or schools, masking decisions will be made following the advice of the Princeton Health Department and our school physician.” New policies on COVID-19 testing are also posted on the district website at www. princetonk12.org. Ventilation, purifi cation and close monitoring of the schools’ indoor air quality remain a key part of the PPS preventative protocols.
Tradition Worship Service in the University Chapel Sundays at 11am Orchid auction 3x5.indd 1 8/22/22 7:49 PM A Legacy of Craft For CommunityOurSince1985 PDGUILD.COM609.683.1034 Renata
202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN•9
Taggart, a native New Jer seyan, comes to HSP from the New Jersey Vietnam Vet erans’ Memorial Foundation, where she served in various positions, including curator and executive director, over the past 12 years. With de grees from Mercyhurst Uni versity, The University of the Arts, and Rutgers University, she has worked with muse ums and cultural organiza tions across the Philadelphia region. Taggart will oversee all of HSP’s operations and will guide the organization through its future chapters of “Princetongrowth. has such pow erful, relevant history and an incredible sense of com munity,” said Taggart. “As a social historian, I value the diversity of these stories and am excited to be a part of the town’s historical stewardship. The community has placed a Sarah Taggart lot of trust in HSP and I am excited to build on our part nerships and engagement.”
Taggart’s first public event will be HSP’s annual “A Night Under the Stars” benefit on September 24. Tickets are available princetonhistory.org. town historian Rick Epstein will lead the hour-long walk, and share information about the borough’s past including how Frenchtown got its name, how the Queen of Bridge Street demolished a car in 1935, why Annie Oakley and Mary Tyler Moore came to town (not at the same time), and why Dr. Deemy’s horse was suspected of starting the Great Frenchtown Fire of 1878.Tickets are $15. To register and to learn the point of de parture, visit hunterdonhisto ry.org by Friday, September 9.
Named a Best Regional Hospital in Central Jersey. Penn Medicine Princeton Medical Center is proud to be ranked a Best Regional Hospital for the 7th year by U.S. News & World Report We tied for the No. 6 ranking in New Jersey. In addition, we were rated High Performing in one specialty — orthopaedics — and seven procedures and conditions: COPD, heart failure, hip fracture, hip replacement, kidney failure, knee replacement, and stroke. These results reflect our commitment to pursuing excellence, achieving higher standards of care, and providing the best experience we possibly can for you — our patients. Learn more at RECOGNIZEDprincetonhcs.org AS ONE OF NEW JERSEY’S BEST homesteadprinceton.com609.688.0777 300 Witherspoon Street Shop local in store, curbside schedule private shopping Monday-Saturday before we open. Complimentary homesteadprinceton.com609.688.0777 300 Witherspoon Street | Princeton Shop local in store, curbside pick up available and/or schedule private shopping Monday-Saturday 9-10 am before we open. Complimentary gift wrapping! HOLIDAY GIFT IDEAS! Fun Ornaments & Holiday Decor Best Selling Nautical 3-D Wood Maps & Princeton Decor NJ Local Cookbooks & Made To Order Baskets Adorable Baby & Kid Gifts Handmade Pottery & Candles Holiday Masks, Soaps & Hand Sanitizers And Much, Much More. 609.688.0777 | homesteadprinceton.com 300 Witherspoon Street | Princeton Furniture • Gifts • Design
FOLLOW THE LEADER: Historian Rick Epstein will take visitors on an hour-long walk through Frenchtown in a tour on September 10 at 2 p.m.
Walking Tour of Frenchtown Benefits Historical Society
A guided tour of historic downtown Frenchtown will be held on Saturday, September 10 at 2 p.m. Proceeds help support the Hunterdon Coun ty Historical Society (HCHS). HCHS trustee and French
Historical Society of Princeton Names New Executive Director The Historical Society of Princeton (HSP) has named Sarah Taggart as its new executive director. Taggart joined HSP late this summer after an extensive retained search following the 15-year
“We are very excited and fortunate to welcome Sarah to the HSP family as we continue the work and com munity partnership built by our outstanding longtime ex ecutive director, Izzy Kasdin,” said Paul Pessutti, president of the Society’s board of trustees. “The pandemic, while challenging for all non profits, gave us the oppor tunity to reimagine and cre ate new and additive virtual programming to complement the rich physical experiences we have always provided at HSP, something Sarah will continue to expand.”
Both Siegel and von Moltke have overheard comments from residents and visitors to their stores — not exactly complimentary. “Certainly, we’ve heard from customers,” said Siegel. “People who live in Princeton are not coming into town. If you walk the streets, and I do, you just listen to what people are saying about what a pain it is to get here and get around.”“It’sa disaster,” said von Moltke. “We hear conversations every day about how difficult it is, and whether it’s worth coming back. For two years, we’re supposed to wait this out? It’s not like there aren’t other nice towns to visit where you can park and walk around. There is also a safety issue. I have witnessed so many things — cars turning the wrong way, making U-turns. People get irritated and it makes them moreAftercareless.”thetown removed Witherspoon Street’s Bradford pear trees in March when it was deemed that they were destructive, the University donated planters and crepe myrtle trees that will remain for the duration of the construction. The trees have been maintained by the town’s Department of Public Works through the dry summer months. Many merchants were disappointed when the Council voted in June 2021 to keep Witherspoon Street one way, which it had been during the pandemic.
202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN•11 Exploring new opportunities and ways of experiencing the world builds resilience Having empathy for yourself and others promotes grace and openness and fosters communication with oneself and others Life is complicated. Accepting and exploring complication allows for curiosity and developing new options Resilience R R Empathy E E cceptance cceptaanc cce Aceptance A A As people return to school and work and re enter routines this fa f All, s p peeoopplle e r reettuurrn n t to o s scchhooool l a annd d w woorrk k a annd d r re e e enntteer r r roouuttiinnees s t thhiis s f fallll,s people return school and work and routines this fall, we want you to know that at wTCS, e w waannt t y yoou u t o k knnoow w t thhaat t a at t T TCCSS, w, e want you to that at TCS, WE ARE WHERE E A ARRE E H HEERRE WE E ARE HERE at 353 aNassau at t 3 3553 3 N Naassssaau au t 353 Nassau Street and via social media platfo f rms, providing mental health Sand Sttrreeeet t a annd d v viia a s soocciiaal l m meeddiia a p pllaattf to tfo forrmmss, , p prroovviiddiinng g m meennttaal l h heeaalltth h a anndtreet and via social media platforms, providing mental health and wellness support to our wcommunity: ellnness suppport our coommuni wity: ellness support to community: We We We ARE ARE ARE Here Here Here w w w t r i n i t y c o u n s e l i n g o r g Facebook: @TrinityCounselingService Instagram: @TrinityCounselingService Twitter: @TCSPrinceton Construction continued from page one Wellness Campaign continued from page one staff member and a local community leader proficient in the field. Hermann leads on September 21 at 11 a.m. (a virtual discussion will take place at 7 p.m. via Google Meet), along with Dave Errickson, executive director of Corner House Behavioral Health. The focus of the second book discussion, on November 17 at 7 p.m., is Together: The Healing Power of Human Connection in a Sometimes Lonely World, by Dr. Vivek Murphy. Whitney Ross, executive director of Trinity Counseling, will lead along with a library staffLastmember.spring, Hermann became aware of Freda’s efforts to end social isolation due to the pandemic through partnerships with the Arts Council and Princeton Senior Resource Center. When she ran into him at an Earth Day event in Herrontown Woods, they began to chat about collaborating on some book Hermanndiscussions.brought the idea back to library staff, and it grew. A committee was put together to help select the books. “We wanted to be sure to have a youth component, and in between the months when there are book discussions, which are every other month, we wanted to have an activity,” sheThesaid.first of those related activities is a “Mindful Moments Storytime” on Saturday, September 10 at Community Park North/Pettoranello Gardens. Intended for children ages 3-8 and their families, it will include books, songs, rhymes, and activities focused on various town, and get them to shop and dine while they’re here,” said Siegel, chief operating officer of Hamilton Jewelers. “Current traffic patterns are very difficult to navigate. I continually tell the town I look forward to working with them. A lot of work needs to be done to make it more palatable during and after the construction period.”
“We understand that whether we like it or not, one way is the way it is going to be,” said Siegel. “If that is the case, Council has a duty and responsibility to understand how that affects traffic in town, and undertake a remedy.”
—Anne Levin well
According to Councilwoman Michelle Pirone Lambros, who works closely with the business community, Council’s September 12 agenda will include an ordinance to provide a free hour of parking at the Spring Street Garage, which is the town’s one municipal parking facility. But another traffic study is not“Welikely.don’t need to spend more on consultants,” said Aubrey Haines, president of the recently formed Princeton Business Partnership (PBP). “Instead, we are looking at whether or not we can change the directions [of streets], and timing at the traffic lights along Nassau Street and at VandeventerMerchants[Avenue.]”say they appreciate efforts of Council and municipal staff to help the situation. But there are frustrations. “Several of us have been trying to sound the alarm for months because we started talking on the [former] Economic Development Committee about the simultaneous construction projects a year ago,” said Dorothea von Moltke, owner of Labyrinth Books. “We were asking, ‘What is being done to prepare?’ So here we are.”
—Anne Levin
sincewellandlovedread1946
KEEPING WELL: Mayor Mark Freda will join book discussions focused on mental wellness as part of upcoming Mayor’s Wellness Campaign events at the Princeton Public Library. aspects of mindfulness and nature.TheVirtual Storyroom on the library’s YouTube channel will feature a special edition Storytime Shorts focusing on mental wellness and emotional literacy for young children and their families beginning September 15 with Hurry Up! A Book About Slowing Down by Kate Dopirak. Additional releases include When Sadness is at Your Door by Eva Eland on October 13, and Allie All Along on NovemberTwo10.events on Saturday, October 1 mark World Hoop Day – a class for children age 8 and up in the Community Room, and an all-ages hula hoop party on Hinds Plaza. The events are designed to encourage fun and physical activity as a way to increase a sense of well-being. Teens and adults can make a diffuser lava bead bracelet in the Community Room on Saturday, October 22 at 1:30 p.m. On Sunday, December 4 at 10:30 a.m., Hermann and Linda Willmer will lead a workshop on making greeting cards. “Research has shown that writing and receiving letters or cards boosts feelings of well-being and lessens social isolation,” reads the listing for the event on body’sgetheratHermann.volvestivehaslibrary.org/wellness.princeton-“Whatstartedoutsmallbecomeamajorinitia-forthelibrarythatin-alldepartments,”said“Wearelookinghowallofthesethingsto-canassistwithevery-senseofwell-being.”
In the meantime, “It is getting eerie to be in the downtown because of how empty it is,” said von Moltke. “First-year students [at Princeton University] moved in this past weekend, but you’d never know it. This is a moment where we are all part of welcoming everyone back to campus and back to town. But it’s really hard right now.”
With the ordinance for some free parking scheduled to be introduced at the next Princeton Council meeting, and an executive director being hired to head the PDP starting October 1, there is hope that the situation will improve, said Haines. “This person is going to take a very active role to jump in on these things,” he said. “We’re looking forward to working with the merchants, who are all essentially shareholders in the PDP, to increase the vibrancy of the downtown and help their businesses to thrive.”
Some merchants had hoped the town would allow an hour of free parking at meters, and two hours free at garages, during the construction projects. “You have to have something that is a welcoming gesture, acknowledging that this is not a great situation,” said von Moltke. “I’m so worried. People don’t understand how serious this is, and how serious it will stay.”
Performing Sept 15, 2022 David Simon St. Michael’s Choir School, Toronto, Canada At Its America’s color has hometown BACK.
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“The program is open to anyone with a bachelor’s degree and a sincere desire to pursue a rewarding ca reer in cybersecurity,” said Hawthorne. “Students who graduate with a master’s in cybersecurity will have an abundance of opportunities for them after they graduate with average salaries near or over $100,000.”
“Cybersecurity students will have the technical skills to ‘lift the hood’ off a com puting system, so to speak, to find the digital smoking gun,” she Hawthornesaid.joined Rider in 2020 as an adjunct assis tant professor of computer science and cybersecurity before becoming the fulltime director of the online master’s program in cyberse curity. In addition to teach ing at Rider, she is an edu cator of the Association for Computing Machinery, the world’s largest educational and scientific computing so ciety, and a charter member of the nonprofit organization Women in Cybersecurity. The University offers a bachelor’s program and ful ly online master’s program in cybersecurity. For more information, contact Haw thorne at ehawthorne@rid er.edu. To learn more about the master’s program, rider.edu/cybersecurity.visit
booklet
2022 Princeton
—Donald Gilpin to succeed at the master’s level.”The program is set to begin in fall 2023 and will include online self-paced modules supervised by a faculty member. Depending on a student’s undergradu ate major, the program will take approximately six to 12 weeks to complete.
After PrincetonThursdaysConcertNoonSeriesat12:30pmUniversityChapelPerformingSept8,2022EricPlutz
Princeton University, Princeton, NJ
As a cyber forensic ex pert, Hawthorne teaches her cyber warriors (her fa vorite nickname for her stu dents) how to both thwart cybercrimes and investigate the ones that do occur.
highlights. IT’S
CUTTING THE RIBBON: At a recent ice cream reception, Citizens opened its first branch in Princeton, the latest in a series of New Jersey investments for the bank following its union with Investors Bank. Mayor Mark Freda, right, cut the ribbon. Also on hand were the Phillie Phanatic and the Princeton Tiger. The new branch is at 182 Nassau Street. have been with us for de cades, and they’ve even recruited their children to work or volunteer with us, too,” she said. “It’s so spe cial to have multiple genera tions of families contributing to our
Celebrating 100 years of service, YWCA Princeton will be hosting a free block party at the YMCA field on Paul Robeson Place on Sat urday, September 17, from noon to 5 Activitiesp.m.and entertain ment will include a DJ and live performances, face painting, balloon art, glit ter tattoos, hula hooping, yard games, and more, with such giveaways as tote bags, pop-sockets, pins, stickers, colored pencils, and other YWCA merchandise. There will also be raffle baskets donated by local businesses and nonprofit partners, free snacks, and a variety of food items for Princetonsale.Mayor Mark Fre da will be speaking, along with YWCA Princeton CEO Tay Walker and Board Presi dent Leslie Straut Ward. Walker commented on the upcoming Centennial Block Party, which will be the first in-person public event hosted by YWCA Princeton since the start of the CO VID-19 pandemic. “We are beyond excited to celebrate 100 years of impact with our community,’ she said. “This milestone is a culmination of all we’ve accomplished together thus far, and the future we can pave for our children and the next gen eration.”Walker went on to empha size the YWCA’s legacy as a result of “the efforts of women and men who knew they had something to offer, and often offered it freely for the better ment of our community.”
Rider Cybersecurity Program Is Bridge to Master’s Degree Rider University recently secured a $66,500 grant from Northeastern Universi ty. The funds will go toward implementing a technical bridge program for Rider’s master’s program in cyber security. The program, In clusive On-Ramp to Cyber@ RiderU, will allow students with a bachelor’s degree in any field to study cyberse curity.Elizabeth Hawthorne, pro gram director for the mas ter’s program in cybersecu rity, secured the funding. She says a bridge program is crucial to fill a projected gap in cybersecurity workers. “According to workforce statistics, there are 3.5 mil lion cybersecurity profes sionals needed by 2025,” Hawthorne said. “The program will help bridge that urgent workforce gap by providing students who did not study cybersecurity or computer science at the undergraduate level with the foundational skills needed
become a Princeton tradition, showcasing our
YWCA Princeton Commemorates 100 Years of Supporting Women, Serving the Community Citing the example of one of the many YWCA pro grams that has changed the lives of thousands of people in the Princeton area and beyond, Walker told the sto ry of Helen Kohut, a dance instructor and breast cancer survivor who in 1972 started an aquatics class for women who had undergone mastec tomies.Theprogram, which ben efited the women’s recovery process, became increas ingly popular and was ad opted as a national program by YWCA USA and also YWCA Australia. At YWCA Princeton, the program was expanded and has become known as the Breast Cancer Resource Center (BCRC). “That sentiment of sup porting women and creat ing community has touched thousands of lives over 50 years and it all started with Helen,” said Walker. The BCRC provides guidance through difficult decisions and supports clients through mentoring, fitness and well ness activities, transporta tion, and “Whethermore.you are newly diagnosed, a longtime sur vivor, coping with metastatic disease, a support person, or anyone in between, the compassionate profession als of the BCRC are here to guide you through the toughest challenges,” states the YWCA Princeton web site.Walker emphasized the importance of the YWCA’s volunteers over the years. “Some of our volunteers
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The Friends of Princeton University Library Small Talk series returns on Wednesday, September 7, with Emeritus Professor of German and Comparative Literature Stanley Corngold and a discussion about Nobel Prize-winning author Thomas Mann’s “pivotal time” in Princeton. The event will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Princeton Senior Resource Center, 101 Poor Farm Road in Princeton. The in-person talk is open to current Friends members; the talk will be followed by light refreshments. The virtual event, with 336 online seats, is open to the public. For registration information, visit ThomaswaitingareWhileRegistrationlib.cal.princeton.edu.isrequired.noin-personseatsavailable,thereisalist.InSeptember1938,Mann,authorof Death in Venice and The Magic Mountain , fled Nazi Germany for the United Books States. Heralded as “the greatest living man of letters,” Mann settled in Princeton, where, for nearly three years, he was “stunningly productive as a novelist, university lecturer, and public intellectual.” In Princeton, Mann exercised his “stupendous capacity for work” in a circle of friends, all “highly accomplished” exiles, including Hermann Broch, Albert Einstein, and Erich Kahler.Mann’s time in Princeton is the subject of two recent books by Corngold, The Mind in Exile: Thomas Mann in Princeton (Princeton University Press), which was discussed in Town Topics (“Looking Behind the Facade,” April 20), and Weimar in Princeton: Thomas Mann and the Kahler Circle (Bloomsbury). Reviewing The Mind in Exile , the Washington Post’s Costica Bradatan comments, “The picture of Mann that emerges from his book is rich, multilayered and always fascinating.” Among other books by Stanley Corngold are Walter Kaufmann: Philosopher, Humanist, Heretic and Lambent Traces: Franz Kafka (both Princeton).
Stanley Corngold Talks About Thomas Mann in Princeton Sept. 7 ONLINE www.towntopics.com We are Town PRINCETON.WeTopics.are How can we help you... Plan Your Weekend? Grow Your Business? Sell Your Items? Reach a Digital Audience? Share Your Story? We do it all. And we reach all of Princeton. Every Wednesday. Town Topics IS Princeton’s weekly community newspaper since 1946! Your source for WEEKLY important local news, art happenings, local sports and real estate. A trusted source to learn about local business, services and offers. (609) wmgsales@witherspoonmediagroup.com924-2200
14•202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN JUDITH BUDWIG Sales Associate Cell: 609-933-7886 | Office: judith.budwig@foxroach.com609-921-2600 Thinking of selling your home? Call me! 253 Nassau St, Princeton NJ 08540 Specialists 2nd & 3rd Generations MFG., CO. 609-452-2630 Nelson Glass & Aluminum Co. Mirror Installations Still the Best in Custom 741 Alexander Rd, Princeton • 924-2880
This visionary modern residence on almost 7 acres was brought to life by Princeton-schooled architect Phil Holt and the master builders of Lasley Brahaney. The striking primary spaces of the home lined with floor-to-ceiling glass walls make up a 90 degree curve. Maple flooring, cherry cabinetry and rolling barn doors bring warmth and movement to the expansive spaces, which include a 20-ft. high family room. The main suite is in a wing of its own, with a spa-like bath wrapped in clerestory windows and a room that can be used as an office or gym. An open-air loft study is upstairs along with 3 generously sized bedrooms. by Phil HoltPhil Blackwell, 609.915.5000 NJ 08542 general, Each office is independently owned and operated. Subject to errors, omissions, prior sale or withdrawal without notice. Battle Road the elegant cornerstone of one of the town’s most prominent While some interior spaces are magnificently adorned with carved marble mantles, delicate picture the overall scale surprisingly livable and welcoming. Architect Glen Fries oversaw a renovation of the gourmet kitchen, marble bathroom, splendid Above the 3-car garage is a charming guest cottage.
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The Pride of Princeton’s Battle RoadPrinceton’s Barbara Blackwell, Broker Associate c 609.915.5000 | o 609.921.1050 | bblackwell@callawayhenderson.com callawayhenderson.com 4 Nassau Street, Princeton, NJ 08542 more information about properties, the market in general, or your home particular, please give me a call. Each office is independently owned and operated. Subject to errors, omissions, prior sale or withdrawal without notice. Battle
The Pride of Princeton’s Battle RoadThe Pride of Princeton’s Battle Road Barbara
12 Battle Road Princeton, New Jersey 08540 | callawayhenderson.com/NJME2006388 $3,000,000
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Princeton University’s Graduate College and serving as the elegant cornerstone of one of the town’s most prominent residential streets, this stately house was built for the 93rd Mayor of NYC. While some interior spaces are magnificently adorned with carved marble mantles, delicate picture molding and fanciful hardware, the overall scale is surprisingly livable and welcoming. Architect Glen Fries oversaw a renovation of the gourmet kitchen, marble bathroom, and splendid outdoor terraces and gardens. Above the 3-car garage is a charming guest cottage.
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This visionary modern residence on almost 7 acres was brought to life by Princeton-schooled architect Phil Holt and the master builders of Lasley Brahaney. The striking primary spaces of the home lined with floor-to-ceiling glass walls make up a 90 degree curve. Maple flooring, cherry cabinetry and rolling barn doors bring warmth and movement to the expansive spaces, which include a 20-ft. high family room. The main suite is in a wing of its own, with a spa-like bath wrapped in clerestory windows and a room that can be used as an office or gym. An open-air loft study is upstairs along with 3 generously sized bedrooms. Arc” Designed by Phil HoltDesigned by Phil
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Overlooking Princeton University’s Graduate College and serving as the elegant cornerstone of one of the town’s most prominent residential streets, this stately house was built for the 93rd Mayor of NYC. While some interior spaces are magnificently adorned with carved marble mantles, delicate picture molding and fanciful hardware, the overall scale is surprisingly livable and welcoming. Architect Glen Fries oversaw a renovation of the gourmet kitchen, marble bathroom, and splendid outdoor terraces and gardens. Above the 3-car garage is a charming guest cottage. Line Road New Jersey 08540 (Hopewell Township) callawayhenderson.com/NJME2017460
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$3,000,000 the elegant cornerstone of one of the town’s most prominent residential While some interior spaces are magnificently adorned with carved marble mantles, delicate picture overall scale livable Architect Glen Fries oversaw a renovation of the gourmet kitchen, marble gardens. Above the 3-car garage is a charming guest cottage. Province Line Road Princeton, New Jersey 08540 (Hopewell Township) | callawayhenderson.com/NJME2017460
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This visionary modern residence on almost 7 acres was brought to life by Princeton-schooled architect Phil Holt and the master builders of Lasley Brahaney. The striking primary spaces of the home lined with floor-to-ceiling glass walls make up a 90 degree curve. Maple flooring, cherry cabinetry and rolling barn doors bring warmth and movement to the expansive spaces, which include a 20-ft. high family room. The main suite is in a wing of its own, with a spa-like bath wrapped in clerestory windows and a room that can be used as an office or gym. An open-air loft study is upstairs along with 3 generously sized bedrooms. Arc” Designed by Phil HoltArc” Designed by Phil Holt of Princeton’s Battle Roadof Barbara Blackwell, Broker Associate 609.915.5000 | o 609.921.1050 | bblackwell@callawayhenderson.com Subject
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This visionary modern residence on almost 7 acres was brought to life by Princeton-schooled architect Phil Holt and the master builders of Lasley Brahaney. The striking primary spaces of the home lined with floor-to-ceiling glass walls make up a 90 degree curve. Maple flooring, cherry cabinetry and rolling barn doors bring warmth and movement to the expansive spaces, a 20-ft. high family The main suite is in a wing of its own, with a spa-like bath an An open-air loft study is upstairs along with 3
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Princeton High School rising senior Katherine Monroe is shown working on her aquaponics project.
Princeton Medical Center Honored for Rehab Services Penn Medicine Princeton Medical Center (PMC) earned its way onto the America’s Best Physical Rehabilitation Centers 2022 list that was published online August 23 by Newsweek. The Best Physical Reha bilitation Centers list was Jennifer Rose Joyce and James Francis Mahon III
Founded in late 2021, Green Matters is a 501(c) (3) nonprofit and registered charity in the State of New Jersey that funds New Jer sey high school-age stu dents’ efforts to increase awareness of and respond to climate change. Appli cations for grants of up to $2,500 are currently being a rolling basis, with prior ity given to those address ing Environmental Justice issues. Visit green-matters. org for more information.
16•202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN
Rose B. Simpson, Tusked (detail), 2019. Collection of Steve Corkin and Dan Maddalena. © Rose B. Simpson. Courtesy of the artist and Jessica Silverman, San Francisco. Photo: John Wilson White
Art@Bainbridge is made possible through the generous support of the Virginia and Bagley Wright, Class of 1946, Program Fund for Modern and Contemporary Art; the Kathleen C. Sherrerd Program Fund for American Art; Joshua R. Slocum, Class of 1998, and Sara Slocum; Barbara and Gerald Essig; and Rachelle Belfer Malkin, Class of 1986, and Anthony E. Malkin. Additional support is provided by Sueyun and Gene Locks, Class of 1959; the Humanities Council; and The Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative at Princeton (NAISIP).
Green Matters’ First Grant Funds Promising Results Green Matters, a newly launched nonprofit that funds teens’ green projects, is seeing the early results of its first grant (of $1,650) given to Princeton High School rising senior Kath erineWithMonroe.thehelp of advi sor Mark Eastburn, she is undertaking an ambitious aquaponics project that will spread awareness of environmental and social GREEN MATTERS:
compiled by Newsweek and Statista Inc., a global market research and con sumer data firm. The list includes 255 hospitals and other inpatient rehabilita tion centers nationwide that were evaluated on quality of care, service, and follow-up care, as well as accommo dations and amenities.
Princeton | 609 921-2827 | eastridgedesign.com REFINED INTERIORS
Friday, September 9, 5:30 p.m. artist conversation Simpson, whose exhibition Witness is on view at Art@Bainbridge through Sunday, September 11, will participate in a live Zoom conversation about her artistic practice, which spans ceramics, attire, performance, and custom cars.
On August 22, at 11:28 p.m., an individual report ed that an unknown person used her debit card, which she possessed, to fraudu lently withdraw $503 from an ATM on Nassau Street. The Detective Bureau is in vestigating. Unless otherwise noted, individuals arrested were later released.
BlotterPolice
Weddings
On August 25, at 8:41 p.m., an individual reported that she saw a male, later identified as a 26-year-old from Trenton, enter her Mountain Avenue backyard and take off his clothes. The male then walked to her sunroom and attempted to enter her residence through a locked back door. He was apprehended by patrol, and was in possession of drug paraphernalia at the time. He was placed under arrest and transported to the hos pital. He was subsequently charged accordingly on a complaint warrant.
Rose B. Simpson
Stream it live
The evaluation reflect ed recommendations and quality rankings offered by physicians, therapists, and other physical ing.”tioncare.experiencevidetheHealth.ofJamesalspists,physicians,programs.tionforearnNewPMCtiondailycantheapartment-styletingsofon-siteandhelpserioustoandindividualizedwhichAcutetheties).tionCommissionInternationalorganizationsadvancedicaidterspublishedmanceprofessionals;rehabilitationkeyperforindicator(KPI)databytheU.S.CenforMedicareandMedServices(CMS);andaccreditationsbysuchasCARF(formerlytheonAccreditaofRehabilitationFaciliPMCearneditsplaceonlistthankstoits17-bedRehabilitationUnit,providesintensive,therapiesmedicalmanagementpeoplerecoveringfrominjuryorillnesstothemregainfunctiontransitiontohome.Careisprovidedinangymandavarietypublicandhome-likeset—includingaunique,suitewithinunit—wherepeoplepracticelifeskillsandactivitiesinpreparaforreturninghome.isoneofonlynineJerseyhospitalstoCARFaccreditationitsinpatientrehabilitaandstrokespecialty“Congratulationstoournurses,theraandotherprofessioninAcuteRehab,”saidDemetriades,CEOPennMedicinePrinceton“Ourgoalacrossorganizationistoproanexceptionalpatientandhigh-qualityIndependentrecognilikethisisverygratify
FREE ADMISSION 158 Nassau Street
Jennifer Rose Joyce was married to James Francis Mahon III on May 7, 2022 at Saint Patrick’s Cathedral in the city of New York, NY. The reception was held at the Harvard Club of New York City. Father Paul Anel, of the Parish of St. Paul and St. Agnes in Brooklyn, NY, officiated the nuptial mass. The Matron of Honor was Jessica Bessler and the Brides maids were Jules Lee, Theresa Pilgrim, and Candace Yorioka. The Best Man was James’ brother Denis Ma hon and the Groomsmen were Russell Koff, Paul Vi shayanuroj, and Mark Shepard. The Bride was granted permission to have a choir perform at the nuptial mass, comprised of friends from Downtown Voices, Church of St. Paul the Apostle, and the broader musical community. The choir performed “The Lord Bless You and Keep You” and “A Gaelic Blessing,” both by John Rutter, accompanied by Ange lina Savoia on harp and Dr. Jennifer Pascual on organ. Mark Heimbigner cantored the nuptial mass and Aine Hakamatsuka sang “Ave Maria” by Bach/Gounod as a soprano soloist. Jennifer works as Lead Designer at Columbia Uni versity and is a graduate student in the MPS Branding program at the School of Visual Arts. She holds a Certificate in Graphic and Digital Design from Parsons School of Design, as well as a BM in Vocal Performance from the University of Denver and a BA in English from Gonzaga University. Jennifer graduated from Aquinas High School in Augusta, Georgia. James works as a Senior Manager at Deloitte Tax LLP. He holds a PhD and MA in Political Economy and Government from Harvard University and a BA in Economics and Political Science from Columbia Uni versity. James graduated from Princeton High School in Princeton, NJ. Jennifer is the daughter of Linda and Dr. Anthony Joyce COL, DC, USA (ret.) of Yelm, WA. The bride’s father served 33 years in the U.S. Army and received the bronze star for his service in Afghanistan. James is the son of the late Mairead and James Francis Mahon Jr. of Princeton, NJ. The groom’s father is a certified public accountant and attorney, and is a partner in the New York office of Citrin Cooperman. The happy couple spent their honeymoon in the south of France, exploring the Côte d’Azur, Provence, Monaco, and Northern Italy. They reside in the Upper West Side neighborhood of Manhattan, half a block from Central Park. inaccessibility of fresh food in urban areas, as well as the potential of cityscapes to ab sorb carbon, grow food, and combat climate change.
In Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human, Bloom begins his conspicuously brief chapter on Henry V with a devastating quote from W.B. Yeats in Ideas of Good and Evil: “He has the gross vices, the coarse nerves, of one who is to rule among violent people, and he is so little ‘too friendly’ to his friends that he bundles them out of door when their time is over. He is as remorseless and undistinguished as some natural force, and the finest thing in his play is the way his old companions fall out of it broken-hearted or on their way to the gallows.”
A fter moving to Belgium in 1864, Baudelaire continued smoking opium, drank to excess, and in 1866 suffered a massive stroke that left him paralyzed. He died in Paris a year later. He was 46. I should mention Kenneth Branagh’s excellent fi lm of Henry V (1989) and David Michôd’s The King (2019), which I haven’t seen; apparently it merges Henry V with both parts of Henry IV, and stars Timothée Chalamet as Henry and Joel Edgerton as Falstaff.
SchraderHaraldbyPhotographMonteiroAldeir
Wooing Kate
creeping onto the stage to remind them that “intoxication is the negation of time, like every violent state of the spirit, and that, consequently, all the results of the loss of time must pass before the eyes of the drunkard.”
While Van’s “stretching time” with Sally in the alley, spinning and turning like a whirling dervish, repeating “blah blah blah” 60 times, his Parisian alter ego is conjuring visions of Jeanne Duval and “the undulations of dreams,” as Falstaff brings down the curtain, “Let us be Diana’s foresters, gentlemen of the shade, minions of the moon; and let men say we be men of good government, being governed, as the sea is, by our noble and chaste mistress the moon, under whose countenance we steal.”
ALEIDOSC P
Endings King Henry was 35 when he died of dysentery, which, according to thehistoryjar.com, means he would have endured “stomach cramps, a fever, vomiting, and exhaustion.”
Choreographyarballet.orgDirectorby:ClaireDavisonDa’VonDoanein collaboration with visual artist Grace Lynne RyokoEthanHaynesStiefelTanaka in collaborationpianist-composerwithIanHowells
BOOK REVIEW Learning from Falstaff — King Henry and the August 31 Gang
—Harold Bloom (1930-2019) King Henry V of England (1386-1422) died on this day, August 31, 600 years ago, and I’m writing about him because Shakespeare found enough in Henry’s sketchy history to create Falstaff and Prince Hal, later Henry of Monmouth, the warrior king immortalized in the 1599 play Henry V, titled The Life of Henry the Fifth in the First Folio. An “Amiable Monster” Although noted essayist and critic William Hazlitt (1778-1830) gives Shakespeare credit for presenting Henry V as “the king of good fellows,” the honor is one he “scarcely deserves.” All we know of Henry, says Hazlitt, is that he was “fond of war and low company,” as well as being “careless, dissolute, and ambitious” and “determined to make war upon his neighbours.” Thus, “because his own title to the crown was doubtful, he laid claim to that of PonderingFrance.”what there is to like about the man, Hazlitt turns again to Shakespeare’s play, where Henry is “a very amiable monster, a very splendid pageant. As we like to gaze at a panther or a young lion in their cages in the Tower, ... so we take a very romantic, heroic, patriotic, and poetical delight in the boasts and feats of our younger Harry.”
We do not need Henry V, and he does not need us. Falstaff needs an audience, and never fails to find it.
The August 31 Gang
More in the spirit of that moment in the play, however, is this joyous rhapsody, which, even in translation, has a Shakespearean flow — “whether you’re drunk on wine, poetry or virtue, as you wish, be drunk. And if sometimes, on the steps of a palace or the green grass of a ditch, in the mournful solitude of your room, you wake again, drunkenness already diminishing or gone, ask the wind, the wave, the star, the bird, the clock, everything that is flying, everything that is groaning, everything that is rolling, everything that is singing, everything that is speaking . . . ask what time it is and wind, wave, star, bird, clock will answer you: ‘It is time to be drunk!’ “ Now here comes Sir Van, the Belfast cowboy, singing “Behind the Ritual” in a voice almost as big as Falstaff, “Drinking wine in the alley, making time, drinking that wine, out of my mind in the days gone by.”
A Student of Genius Harold Bloom makes no secret of his disapproval of Hal while pointing out that “(much as I dislike him),” he is “almost as much a student of genius as Falstaff is a teacher of genius.” As Bloom puts it, “Henry V is an authentic charismatic, who has learned the uses of charisma from his disreputable but endlessly gifted teacher. It is one of Shakespeare’s harshest dramatic ironies that Falstaff prepares his own destruction not only by teaching too well but by loving much too well. Henry V is no man’s teacher and loves no one, he is a great leader and exploiter of power, and destroying Falstaff causes him not an iota of regret.”
Olivier’s “Henry V” Hazlitt’s “amiable monster” was redeemed by Laurence Olivier’s performance in his film Henry V, which opened in the U.S. in the spring of 1946, a year and a half after its inspirational run in wartime England. Contrary to Hazlitt’s Henry declaring his resolution to bend France “to his awe, or break it all to pieces,” Olivier’s Henry declares his affection for Catherine of Valois in a spirited bilingual love scene. When Olivier was advised to film the picture in “battledress,” he said, “No, it’s got to be beautiful.” And it was. Reviewing the film in Time, James Agee called it one of the movies’ “rare great works of art,” brought to the screen “with such sweetness, vigor, insight, and beauty that it seemed to have been written yesterday.”
The closing scene of Henry V, wherein Henry woos the French king’s daughter (“la plus belle Katherine du monde”), shows how much Hal learned about “the uses of charisma” from Falstaff. The sheer energy of Henry’s opening gambit, which would be totally incomprehensible to the princess, has a spirit and verve that finds its way into some of Keats’s most charismatic letters. He begins, “Marry, if you would put me to verses, or to dance for your sake, Kate, why you undid me; for the one, I have neither words nor measure, and for the other I have no strength in measure, yet a reasonable measure in strength. If I could win a lady at leap-frog, or by vaulting into my saddle with my armour on my back, under the correction of bragging be it spoken, I should quickly leap into a wife.” Then this parody of manly modesty: “If thou canst love a fellow of this temper, Kate, whose face is not worth sunburning, that never looks in his glass for love of anything he sees there, let thine eye be thy cook. I speak to thee plain soldier. If thou canst love me for this, take me; if not, to say to thee that I shall die, is true; but for thy love, by the Lord, no; yet I love thee too.” Speaking as “a fellow of plain and uncoined constancy; for he perforce must do thee right, because he hath not the gift to woo in other places,” Henry delivers a coda on “these fellows of infinite tongue” that would make Hal’s teacher proud: “What! a speaker is but a prater: a rhyme is but a ballad. A good leg will fall; a straight back will stoop; a black beard will turn white; a curl’d pate will grow bald; a fair face will wither; a full eye will wax hollow; but a good heart, Kate, is the sun and the moon; or rather the sun and not the moon; for it shines bright and never changes, but keeps his course truly.”
202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN•17
—Stuart Mitchner
The disease was common among soldiers and fatal “more often than not,” given that they “marched long distances, lived off the land and weren’t prone to being overly fastidious in their hygiene. Damp ground and heat also helped to spread the disease.”
Ethan Stiefel, Artistic Director Julie Diana Hench, Executive
In their fi rst scene together, in London, “in an apartment of the Prince’s,” a simple question (“What time of day is it, lad?”) leads to Hal’s “What a devil hast thou to do with the time of the day? Unless hours were cups of sack and minutes capons and clocks the tongues of bawds and dials the signs of leaping-houses and the blessed sun himself a fair hot wench in flamecoloured taffeta,” which prompts Falstaff to come back with a line that presages the fate of the relationship, so gracelessly terminated when Hal becomes King Henry. “And, I prithee, sweet wag, when thou art king, as, God save thy grace, — majesty I should say, for grace thou wilt have none.”
At this point I need to make room for two other members of the August 31 Gang, the poet Charles Baudelaire, who died August 31, 1867, and the singer Sir Van Morrison, who was born August 31, 1945. Reading the exchange between Hal and Falstaff in which hours were “cups of sack,” I could imagine that “hypocrite lecteur” Baudelaire
KALEIDOSCOPESeptember23-25,2022NewBrunswickPerformingArtsCenter
Hal and Falstaff In the two Henry IV plays (1596-1598), the future king’s reputation benefits from the reflected theatrical glory of his scenes with Sir John Falstaff. Infused with Shakespeare’s genius, Prince Hal is empowered to go one on one with the great Falstaff, and since Sir John obviously enjoys his company, so does the audience, at least until the prince cruelly denounces his friend on his way to the throne. While Hazlitt assumes the real-life prince actually did have a wild youth, he notes that Henry’s political opponents may have inflated the legend of his dissolute behavior to discredit him. All that ultimately matters is the earthy human poetry Shakespeare makes of the prince’s youthful relationship with the real-life Sir John Oldcastle, who died a Protestant martyr and was freed to glory and greatness as Falstaff when Oldcastle’s descendants complained about the use of the family name.
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202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN•19 6832 Phillips Mill Road • New Hope, PA 18938 215.862.5261 • Solebury.org Open House October 23 • 1:00-4:00pm An all-gender college preparatory boarding and day school. In person - come see our beautiful campus BACK TO SCHOOL A Leading Research-Based College Preparatory Day School Where Teachers Champion Students Who Learn DifferentlyTM Pre-K through High School, Post Graduate, and Gap Year Programs For Application and Program Availability, Please Contact Us at 609-924-8120 or info@lewisschool.org 53 Bayard Lane, Princeton, NJ • www.lewisschool.org
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For a free phone consultation and/or more information about PSLLC please visit our website, psllcnj.com or call 609-924-7080.
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SERVING STUDENTS BETWEEN THE AGES OF 2.5 - 5 YEARS, PNS IS AN EDUCATIONAL PRESCHOOL AND CHILD CARE FACILITY OFFERING: SERVING STUDENTS BETWEEN THE AGES OF 2.5 - 5 YEARS, PNS IS AN EDUCATIONAL PRESCHOOL AND CHILD CARE FACILITY OFFERING: HighScope Academic Curriculum: Supports each child through active learning experiences with people, materials, events, and ideas, rather than through direct teaching or sequenced exercises. Health and Wellness Programming: Daily nutritious meals, oral hygiene supplies, personal hygiene bags, counseling support, and physical fitness. Music and Arts: Weekly storytime by the Princeton Public Library, bi-weekly arts education with the Arts Council of Princeton.
For a free phone consultation and/or more information about PSLLC please visit our website, psllcnj.com or call 609-924-7080.
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Princeton Speech-Language & Learning Center is New Jersey’s leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological and now occupational therapy services for children of all ages. Now OccupationalOfferingTherapyServicesservicesTeletherapyprovidedbyallofourtherapists!
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Jersey’s leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological and now occupational therapy services for children of all ages. Now OccupationalOfferingTherapyServices 615 Executive Drive Princeton, NJ 08540 609-924-7080 | info@psllcnj.com • Executive Function Therapy • Handwriting difficulties Receptive & Expressive Language Sensory Processing Therapy • Social Communication Groups For a free phone consultation and/or more information about PSLLC please visit our website, psllcnj.com or call 609-924-7080. Princeton Speech-Language & Learning Center is New Jersey’s leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological Now OccupationalOfferingTherapyServicesservices provided New Jersey’s leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological, and occupational therapy services for children of all ages. Follow Us SocialonMedia @Princeton Speech-Language & Learning Center @Princetonspeechies615Executive Drive Princeton, NJ info@psllcnj.com609-924-708008540 615 Executive Drive Princeton, NJ 08540 609-924-7080 | info@psllcnj.com • Articulation • Autism Spectrum Disorders • Coordination difficulties • Evaluations: &Neuropsychological,Speech-Language,Psychoeducational,Occupational • Executive Function Therapy • Handwriting difficulties • Receptive & Expressive Language • Sensory Processing Therapy • Social Communication Groups For a free phone consultation and/or more information about PSLLC please visit our website, psllcnj.com or call 609-924-7080. leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological servicesTeletherapyprovidedbyallofourtherapists! 615 Executive Drive Princeton, NJ 08540 609-924-7080 | info@psllcnj.com • Articulation • Autism Spectrum Disorders • Coordination difficulties • Evaluations: &Neuropsychological,Speech-Language,Psychoeducational,Occupational • Executive Function Therapy • Handwriting difficulties For a free phone consultation and/or more information or call 609-924-7080. leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological servicesTeletherapyprovidedbyallofourtherapists! 615 Executive Drive Princeton, NJ 08540 609-924-7080 | info@psllcnj.com Executive Function Therapy Handwriting difficulties Reading/Writing Tutoring Receptive & Expressive Language Sensory Processing Therapy • Social Communication Groups a free phone consultation and/or more information about PSLLC please visit our website, psllcnj.com or call 609-924-7080. Princeton Speech-Language & Learning Center is New Jersey’s practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological and now occupational therapy services for children of all ages. Teletherapyprovidedourtherapists! New Jersey’s leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological, and occupational therapy services for children of all ages. Follow Us SocialonMedia @Princeton Speech-Language & Learning Center @Princetonspeechies615Executive Drive Princeton, NJ info@psllcnj.com609-924-708008540615ExecutiveDrive Services include, but are not limited to the following: • Articulation • Autism Spectrum Disorders • Coordination difficulties • Evaluations: &Neuropsychological,Speech-Language,Psychoeducational,Occupational • Executive Function Therapy • Handwriting difficulties • Neuromuscular therapy • Parent training and support • Psychological Services • Reading/Writing Tutoring • Receptive & Expressive Language • Sensory Processing Therapy • Social Communication Groups For a free phone consultation and/or more information about PSLLC please visit our website, psllcnj.com or call 609-924-7080. Princeton Speech-Language & Learning Center is
RING: H A V E N U E P R N C E T O N N J PRINCETONNURSERYSCHOOL
leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological and now occupational therapy services for children of all ages. servicesTeletherapyprovidedbyallofourtherapists! 615 Executive Drive Princeton, NJ 08540 609-924-7080 | info@psllcnj.com Services include, but are not limited to the following: • Articulation • Autism Spectrum Disorders • Coordination difficulties • Evaluations: &Neuropsychological,Speech-Language,Psychoeducational,Occupational • Executive Function Therapy • Handwriting difficulties • Neuromuscular therapy • Parent training and support • Psychological Services • Reading/Writing Tutoring • Receptive & Expressive Language • Sensory Processing Therapy • Social Communication Groups For a free phone consultation and/or more information about PSLLC please visit our website, psllcnj.com or call 609-924-7080. leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological and now occupational therapy services for children of all ages. Now OccupationalOfferingExecutiveservicesTeletherapyprovidedbyallofourtherapists!FunctionTherapy Handwriting difficulties • Neuromuscular therapy Parent training and support Psychological SensoryReceptiveReading/WritingServicesTutoring&ExpressiveLanguageProcessingTherapy • Social Communication Groups For a free phone consultation and/or more information about PSLLC please visit our website, psllcnj.com or call 609-924-7080. Princeton Speech-Language & Learning Center is New Jersey’s leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological and now occupational therapy services for children of all ages. Now OccupationalOfferingTherapyServicesservicesTeletherapyprovidedallofourtherapists! Princeton Speech-Language & Learning Center New Jersey’s leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological, and occupational therapy services for children of all ages. Follow Us SocialonMedia @Princeton Speech-Language & Learning Center @Princetonspeechies615Executive Drive Follow Us on Social 615MediaExecutive Drive Princeton, NJ 08540 609-924-7080 | info@psllcnj 615 Executive Drive Princeton, NJ 08540 609-924-7080 | info@psllcnj.com Services include, but are not limited to the following: • Articulation • Autism Spectrum Disorders • Coordination difficulties • Evaluations: &Neuropsychological,Speech-Language,Psychoeducational,Occupational • Executive Function Therapy • Handwriting difficulties • Neuromuscular therapy • Parent training and support • Psychological Services • Reading/Writing Tutoring • Receptive & Expressive Language • Sensory Processing Therapy • Social Communication Groups For a free phone consultation and/or more information about PSLLC please visit our website, psllcnj.com or call 609-924-7080. Princeton Speech-Language & Learning Center is New Jersey’s leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological and now occupational therapy services for children of all ages. Now OccupationalOfferingTherapyServicesservicesTeletherapyprovidedbyallofourtherapists! 615 Executive Drive Princeton, NJ 08540 609-924-7080 | info@psllcnj.com Services include, but are not limited to the following: • Articulation • Autism Spectrum Disorders • Coordination difficulties • Evaluations: &Neuropsychological,Speech-Language,Psychoeducational,Occupational • Executive Function Therapy • Handwriting difficulties • Neuromuscular therapy • Parent training and support • Psychological Services • Reading/Writing Tutoring • Receptive & Expressive Language • Sensory Processing Therapy • Social Communication Groups For a free phone consultation and/or more information about PSLLC please visit our website, psllcnj.com or call 609-924-7080. Princeton Speech-Language & Learning Center is
STUDENTS BETWEEN THE AGES OF 2 5 5 YEARS, PNS IS AN EDUCATIONAL PRESCHOOL AND CHILD CARE FACILITY OFFERING: A V E N U E , P R I N C E T O N N J
For a free phone consultation and/or more information about PSLLC please visit our website, psllcnj.com or call 609-924-7080.
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leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological and now occupational therapy services for children of all ages. Now OccupationalOfferingTherapyServicesservicesTeletherapyprovidedbyallofourtherapists! 615 Executive Drive • Executive Function Therapy • Handwriting difficulties • Neuromuscular therapy Parent training and support Psychological SensoryReceptiveReading/WritingServicesTutoring&ExpressiveLanguageProcessingTherapy • Social Communication Groups For a free phone consultation and/or more information about PSLLC please visit our website, psllcnj.com or call 609-924-7080. Princeton Speech-Language & Learning Center is New Jersey’s leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological and now occupational therapy services for children of all ages. Now OccupationalOfferingTherapyServicesservicesTeletherapyprovidedbyallofourtherapists! Princeton Speech-Language & Learning Center New Jersey’s leading practice for a variety of language, social, academic, psychological, and occupational therapy services for children of all ages. Follow Us SocialonMedia @Princeton Speech-Language & Learning Center @Princetonspeechies615Executive Drive Princeton, NJ 609-924-708008540 BACK TO SCHOOL MontessoriPrincetonSchool Nurturing Potential. Igniting Passion.
SERVING STUDENTS BETWEEN THE AGES OF 2.5 - 5 YEARS, PNS IS AN EDUCATIONAL PRESCHOOL AND CHILD CARE FACILITY OFFERING: 78 LEIGH AVENUE, PRINCETON PRINCETONNJNURSERYSCHOOL H gh m Supp ve earning experiences w th people, mater a s events, and ideas rather than through direct teach ng or sequenced exercises Health and We lness Programming Da ly nutr t ous mea s ora hyg ene supp ies persona hygiene bags counsel ng support and phys ca f tness
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202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN•21The Burke Foundation Early Childhood Center at YWCA Princeton Discover a Place to Go and Space to Grow Now enrolling for fall with spots open for infants 8 weeks to 12 months old Start early: prepare for Kindergarten and beyond Program Highlights • Bilingual learning environment • Partner of Princeton Public Schools • Before and after care available Register today: ywcaprinceton.org/childcare 59 Paul Robeson Place, Princeton, NJ 08540 Best Daycare/Preschool • Financial aid and scholarships W e h o n o r w h o h e i s a n d f e e Wl e h o n o r w h o h e i s a n d f e e l b l e s s e d t o b e a p a r t o f h i s j o u r n e b. l e s s e d t o b e a p a r t o f h i s j o u r n e y . K-8, All-boys | www.princetonacademy.org D e l i v e r i n g o n o u r p r o m i s e t o b r i n g o u t t h e b e s t i n e a c h b o y . Fall Open House Dates: OCT. 8 | NOV. 19 Register: princetonacademy.org/visit BACK TO SCHOOL UGG® Australia, Dansko, Merrell, Nike, Adidas, Naot, Birkenstock, Fit Flops, Vionic, New Balance, Asics, Full line of Block and Capezio Dance products, plus more… 1340 Rt. 206 Skillman, NJ thevillageshoes.com609-683-441108558 2x7 $10.00 off any purchase of $50.00 or more with this ad. BACK TO SCHOOL season is here $5 off your purchase with this ad VILLAGE SHOES In the Montgomery Shopping Center 1325 Route 206, Unit 11, thevillageshoes.comSkillman(609)683-4411 Womens - Kids - Mens - Dance - Accessories
22•202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN Register Now - Classes are filling fast! Fall Semester Starts Sept. 11th A lifetime of music begins hereTM Classes for Babies, Toddlers, Preschoolers… and the grown-ups who love them!® Classes available in Princeton, Hopewell, Hamilton, Yardley, East Brunswick & New Hope (609) 924-7801 www.MusicTogetherPrinceton.com From preschool through professional and every level along the way The Official School of American Repertory Ballet OPEN HOUSE DATES: NOV. 8 • JAN. 10 at 9:30 am Presentation of Curriculum Tour of School Admission Process Question & Answer Session Please RSVP 609 844 0770 1958B Lawrenceville Road • Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 609 844 https://thebridgeacademynj.org0770 NJ state approved ♦ After school tutor program Multi sensory curriculum w/3:1 student to staff ratio Summer program ♦ OG Summer Teacher Training Serving students with average to above average potential from New Jersey and Pennsylvania with learning disabilities such as dyslexia, auditory processing, ADHD, dysgraphia. The only accredited Orton Gillingham program in NJ. OPEN HOUSE DATES: NOV. 8 • JAN. 10 at 9:30 am Presentation of Curriculum Tour of School Admission Process Question & Answer Session Please RSVP 609 844 0770 1958B Lawrenceville Road Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 https://thebridgeacademynj.org NJ state approved ♦ After school tutor program Multi sensory curriculum w/3:1 student to staff ratio Summer program ♦ OG Summer Teacher Training Serving students with average to above average potential from New Jersey and Pennsylvania with learning disabilities such as dyslexia, auditory processing, ADHD, dysgraphia. The only accredited Orton Gillingham program in NJ. OPEN HOUSE DATES: NOV. 8 • JAN. 10 at 9:30 am Presentation of Curriculum Tour of School Admission Process Question & Answer Session Please RSVP 609 844 0770 1958B Lawrenceville Road • Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 609 844 https://thebridgeacademynj.org0770 NJ state approved ♦ After school tutor program Multi sensory curriculum w/3:1 student to staff ratio Summer program ♦ OG Summer Teacher Training Serving students with average to above average potential from New Jersey and Pennsylvania with learning disabilities such as dyslexia, auditory processing, ADHD, dysgraphia. The only accredited Orton Gillingham program in NJ. OPEN HOUSE DATES: NOV. 8 • JAN. 10 at 9:30 am Presentation of Curriculum Tour of School Admission Process Question & Answer Session Please RSVP 609 844 0770 1958B Lawrenceville Road • Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 609 844 https://thebridgeacademynj.org0770 NJ state approved ♦ After school tutor program Multi sensory curriculum w/3:1 student to staff ratio Summer program ♦ OG Summer Teacher Training BACK TO SCHOOL
KITTY AT KELSEY: M. Kitty Getlick, artistic director of Kelsey Theatre, is planning a roster of shows to celebrate the organization’s 50th anniversary.
The last concert of this summer’s season of concerts on the Princeton University carillon is Sunday, Septem ber 4 at 1 p.m., at Cleveland Tower. Audience members listen from outside the tow er on the Graduate Campus, where is the plenty of room for social distancing. The upcoming concert will feature Robin Austin, who was University carillonneur from 1992-2012. During his tenure he was involved with the carillon’s renovation and fundraising. He also initiated the summer series and estab Concerts are performed
Band presents: Il Fattore XX Highlighting female Italian composers of the Baroque era SEPTEMBER 10 @ 6 PM FOR DRINKS AND LIGHT FARE. CONCERT BEGINS AT 7 PM GLEN OAKS FARM, SOLEBURY, PA FREE OPEN REHEARSAL | FRIDAY,
Kelsey Theatre Celebrates Five Decades of Performances Mercer County Communi ty College’s Kelsey Theatre celebrates its 50th anniver sary during the 2022-23 season with 17 full-length adult and family productions and 10 productions for chil dren, in addition to concerts and dance performances. M. Kitty Getlik, artistic di rector of Kelsey Theatre, is marking the milestone with shows that will run from September 23 through Au gust 6. The theatre will offer live, in-person performances as well as online streaming of several mainstage events. In addition to musicals, mys teries, dramas, and com edies, the series will spot light concert events, dance productions, and children’s shows.Getlik, who has been ar tistic director at the Kelsey for 33 years, said, “This is Kelsey Theatre’s 50th anni versary which is quite a mile stone. It is amazing to see how far we have come since I started as artistic direc
A Gutsy, Plucky SEPT
Theatre is home to 10 re gional theatre companies, as well as the Kelsey Players and the Academic Theatre and Dance Program; and each and every one of our companies is committed to delivering quality shows.” New amenities include curtains, restrooms, carpet ing and seats. In addition, the theatre now has a stateof-the-art T-Coil Assisted Listening System. The curtain goes up on Kelsey’s 50th season in September with the awardwinning musical Once, A Musical, presented by Play ful Theatre followed by Mau rer Productions OnStage production of Something Rotten . Yardley Player’s production of Neil Simon’s first Broadway comedy Come Blow Your Horn fol lows.For a full schedule atre.org.beKelsey.mccc.edu.TicketsvisitcanpurchasedatKelseyThe Jazz Ambassadors Perform Free Concert in Allentown The U.S. Army Field
Performing Arts Italian and artistic director of“IL’Avant-Scène.couldn’tbe more thrilled to resume the fes tival in person after virtual editions in 2020 and 2021,” said Masse. “This year we’ll present compelling recent works of contemporary French theater, highlighting diversity and female artists, and extending invitations to artists hailing from the Fran cophone world, all the while celebrating the festival’s tenth anniversary. Since its inception in 2012, ‘Seuls en Scène’ has been a joyful ride every year. I’m delighted by the festival’s trajectory from its humble beginnings to the ways it’s grown over the years, uplifting students and localAdmissionaudiences.”is free and open to the public, but ad vance tickets are required through tickets.princeton. edu at or at the Frist Cam pus Center ticket office.
Final Summer Carillon Concert To Be Performed This Sunday
202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN•23 2022ChamberFest C PlayersChamberoncordia TICKETS ONLINE AT CONCORDIAPLAYERS.ORG OR AT THE DOOR (CASH OR CHECK ONLY) • INFO@CONCORDIAPLAYERS.ORG
CARILLONNEURS: On Sunday, August 28, the Princeton Carillon Summer Carillon Bell Festival was performed at Princeton University’s Cleveland Tower by Studio Carillon members under the direction of University Carillonneur Lisa J. Lonie, fourth from left.
9TH @ 2 PM | FREE LIBRARY OF NEW HOPE
French Theater Artists To Converge on University “Seuls en Scène” Prince ton French Theater Festival, featuring renowned and emerging French writers, ac tors, and directors in eight productions of contempo rary works recently pre sented on stages in France, comes to Princeton Univer sity September 9-23. Mostly performed in French with English super titles, the productions take place at various venues on the University campus. The festival is presented by Lewis Center for the Arts, L’Avant Scène and Depart ment of French & Italian at Princeton University, and organized by Florent Masse, senior lecturer in the Department of French and “SEULS EN SCÈNE”: Yannick Kamanzi in “Radio Live – La relève,” part of the Princeton French Theater Festival. (Photo by Herve Veronese) Band’s Jazz Ambassadors will perform a free concert in Allentown on Saturday, September 17, at 3 p.m., behind the Allentown Unit ed Methodist Church, 23 Church Street. In case of rain, the concert will be held on the same date and time in the Allentown High School Auditorium at 27 High Street. The band is coming to Allentown at the invitation of The Allentown Village Initiative (TAVI) through its “Allentown Arts” program, a series of performances and exhibits throughout the year designed to highlight the artistry of Allentown and Upper Freehold in the historic setting of the village ofEstablishedAllentown. in 1969, the 19-piece Jazz Ambassadors orchestra has performed in all 50 states and around the globe. From Carnegie Hall to London, the ensemble has brought America’s original art form – jazz – to audi ences of all ages. For more information, visit allentown vinj.org.
Hopewell Theater Announces Fall Music, Comedy, Films A mix of music, live per formance, comedy, films, discussions, and more is planned for the upcoming season at Hopewell Theater. The season begins Septem ber 16 with an appearance by musician Karen Casey. On September 18, Sunny War performs. The RT’s on September 22, Dar Williams on October 15, Christine Havrilla and Gypsy Fuzz on October 28, and Vance Gilbert on November 4 are among other artists. Under the heading of live performance, comedy, and special programs, an open mic hosted by Michelle Klein is September 15; Progres sively Funny starring John Fugelsang and Friends is October 8, “The Music of the Night” with John Smith erman is October 9, the play Somebody’s Daughter writ ten and performed by Zara Phillips is October 21, and Salami’s East Coast Comedy presents Gemini and Friends is November 25. The theater is located at 5 South Greenwood Avenue in Hopewell. For more details on performances and tickets, visit hopewelltheater.com.
The Center for Contemporary Art (The Center) in Bedminster will hold its fall fundraiser, “Off the Wall,” on Friday, September 16 from 7-10 p.m. This unconventional party and art auction will be an evening filled with avant-garde appetizers, chic cocktails, live music, a 50/50 raffle, and a chance to go home with an original work of art created by The Center’s community of exhibiting and visiting artists, faculty, members, and students from the well-established to the up-and-coming. In addition to 2D and 3D works of art in the silent auction, 8”x8” works created by a wide variety of artists from The Center’s community will be available for $100 each. While bidding on their favorite works of art, guests will enjoy bites from Continental Cookery in Bernardsville, a signature cocktail from Claremont Distillery in Fairfield, as well as a variety of other refreshments and beverages.Inkeeping with the unconventional theme of the party, guests are encouraged to wear their most eccentric ensemble. Cash awards will be given for the least conventional attire.
24•202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN “DARK HORSE, STORM APPROACHING”: This painting by Carole Doerr Allen of Flemington was named Best in Show, Overall, at the “Ellarslie Open 39,” on view through October 2 at the Trenton City Museum at Ellarslie Mansion in Cadwalader Park. Thirty-one of 134 exhibiting artists received awards in this year’s juried exhibition. For more information, visit ellarslie.org. Art TOPICS ANNE AKIKO MEYERS TICKETS princetonsymphony.org 609/ 497-0020 Dates, times, artists, and programs subject to change. FANDANGO ROSSEN MILANOV, conductor ANNE AKIKO MEYERS, violin Saturday September 10 8 pm Sunday September 11 4 pm Richardson Auditorium, Princeton University Campus Joaquín TURINA / Danzas fantásticas, Op. 22 Arturo MÁRQUEZ / Fandango Violin Concerto Marcos FERNÁNDEZ / America US PREMIERE Ruperto CHAPÍ / Prelude to La Revoltosa Nikolai RIMSKY-KORSAKOV / Capriccio Espagnol ROSSEN MILANOV Music Director SEASON OPENING CONCERT! 11 Hulfish Street FREE ADMISSION Hiroshi Sugimoto 杉本博司 Imperial, Montreal 1995. Courtesy of the artist and Bruce Silverstein Gallery, New York. © Hiroshi Sugimoto open house Saturday, September 10, 1–4 pm Time’s Relentless Melt Explore how art can mourn, chronicle, or celebrate the passage of time. 41 Leigh Avenue, Princeton www.tortugasmv.com Available for Lunch & Mmm..Take-OutDinner Events • Parties • Catering (609) 924-5143 LIMITED-EDITION STEIN: Every ticketholder for the Arts Council of Princeton’s Pop-Up Beer Garden will receive a limitededition ceramic beer stein, handmade by Executive Director Adam Welch especially for the event. The September 10 fundraiser supports the Arts Council’s community programs.
“Off the Wall” Fundraiser For Contemporary Art Center
Tickets are $50 per person in advance or $60 at the doo r (must be 21 or over to attend). All proceeds directly support The Center’s mission and programs including education, exhibitions, and community partnerships which support accessibility to the arts. For more information, to view the auction catalog, or purchase tickets visit
visitster.Burntrary2345.periodphonewillanyourofduringVisitthewall.ccabedminster.org/off-Can’tmakeittotheevent?TheCenter’sgalleriesthepreviewperiodSeptember12-15toplaceproxybidsorpurchase8”x8”canvas.Proxybidsalsobeacceptedbyduringthepreviewbycalling(908)234-TheCenterforContempo-Artislocatedat2020MillsRoadinBedmin-Formoreinformation,ccabedminster.org.
Arts Council of Princeton Hosts Pop-Up Beer Garden
“We are witness to a time of deepening connection with the handmade,” said Welch. “Everyone who attends our Beer Garden will walk away with a handcrafted reminder that every gathering is a celebration of the moment. Join us in sharing the experience that we are all part of one glorious magnumTheopus!”ACPis located at 102 Witherspoon Street. For more information and to reserve tickets, visit cilofprinceton.org.artscoun-
The Arts Council of Princeton (ACP) will host a PopUp Beer Garden in partnership with local brewer, Old Hights Brewing Company, on September 10 from 2 to 5 Thep.m.event raises funds for the Arts Council’s longstanding community outreach programs, public art initiatives, and year-long community events and projects. Tickets promise attendees an afternoon in celebration of community, complete with Old Hights’ hand-crafted beers, snacks, and lawn games. The Sourland Mountain String Band will provide live music. Every attendee will receive a ceramic beer stein made especially for the event by ACP Executive Director Adam Welch.
“THE WORK PARTY”: This work by David Z. Orban is featured is featured in “TAWA Past Presidents,” on exhibit September 2 through October 1 at the Trenton Free Public Library. An opening reception is scheduled for September 2 from 5 to 7 p.m.
“LOWER FERRY CONRAIL BRIDGE”: This painting by Robert Lowe is part of the “TAWA Past Presidents” exhibit, on view September 2 through October 1 at the Trenton Free Public Library. “TAWA Past Presidents” Exhibit At Trenton Free Public Library
Check websites for information on safety protocols. Art@Bainbridge, 158 Nassau Street, has “Witness / Rose Simpson” through September 11. artmuseum. princeton.edu. Artists’ Gallery, 18 Bridge Street, Lambertville, has “Light & Shadow” through September 4. Gallery hours are Thursday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. lambertvillearts. com. Art on Hulfish, 11 Hulfish Street, has “Time’s Relentless Melt” through November 6. artmuseum. princeton.edu. Ellarslie, Trenton’s City Museum in Cadwalader Park, Parkside Avenue, has “Ellarslie Open 39” through October 2. ellarslie.org. Gourgaud Gallery, 23-A North Main Street, Cranbury, has “Not To Be Forgotten: Some of the People Who Helped Make Cranbury What it is Today” September 2 through September 26. cranburyartscouncil.org. Grounds For Sculpture, 80 Sculptors Way, Hamilton, has “Roberto Lugo: The Village Potter” through January 8, 2023, and “Fragile: Earth” through January 8, 2023, among other exhibits. Timed tickets groundsforsculpture.org.required.
The Trenton Artists Workshop Association (TAWA) and the Trenton Free Public Library will present the exhibition “Tawa Past Presidents” at the Trenton Free Public Library September 2 through October 1. An opening reception is set for Friday, September 2, from 5 to 7 p.m. The opening night for the exhibit will be a part of the city’s First Fridays events.
Historical Society of Princeton, Updike Farmstead, 354 Quaker Road, has “Einstein Salon and In-
“Tawa Past Presidents” features work by six former TAWA leaders: Elizabeth Aubrey, Robert Girandola, Aubrey Kauffman, Robert Lowe II, Dave Orban, and MaryAubreyYess.has been president since 2012. She is a Bordentown-based painter known in part for her works depicting abstract interpretations of nature, open space, and industrial sites. She has exhibited at the Prince Street Gallery in NYC, Muse Gallery in Philadelphia, Ellarslie, and The Center for Contemporary Art, Bedminster. Her work is in private collections and the Mercer County Cultural & Heritage Commission.Girandolalives in Yardly, Pa., and was president from 2009-2011. He has exhibited at Ellarslie, Artists of Yardley, and the TAWA exhibit at the Prince Street Gallery. A Columbia University graduate, he is best known for his 2006 bronze of NYC Firefighters for Kauffman9/11.is a Mercer County-based photographer who focuses on urban landscape and man’s impact on the environment. He was president of TAWA from 1987-1996. His work is included in the collections of New Jersey State Museum, Rider University, and Johnson & Johnson’s Corporate Headquarters in New Brunswick. Kauffman lives in Ewing. Lowe was an active force with TAWA from 2005–2015. He is a Trenton-based painter known in part for his works in watercolors and oils. He has exhibited throughout Bucks County and Greater Trenton Area and is a signature member of the Garden State Watercolor Society. His work is in private collections and the County of Mercer. Orban, president from 1985–1987, is a Hamiltonbased artist who works in oil on canvas or wood. He describes his work as “painterly realism.” He enjoys the juxtapositions of unusual objects and the dramatic effects of theatrical lighting to push the compositions even further into abstraction. His work can be found in the collections of Mercer County Cultural & Heritage Commission, Mercer County Community College, The College of New Jersey, and Brooklyn College.
Yess was the first elected TAWA president and served from 1979-1983. She is a Hamilton-based artist and works in oil/oil pastel/mixed media Her work focuses on “Old industrial buildings — from all over the U.S., but mostly along the Route 1 corridor near Trenton,” she said. Her work is in numerous public and private collections, including Ellarslie/ Trenton City Museum and the Mercer County Cultural & Heritage Commission.
TAWA is a Greater Trenton nonprofit organization and has a 40-year history organizing exhibits in such venues as the New Jersey State Museum, Trenton City Museum, Artworks Trenton, Prince Street Gallery in New York City, and more. The Trenton Free Public Library is located at 120 Academy Street in Trenton and is in the new Creek2Canal Trenton Arts District. Hours are Mondays through Thursdays, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., and Friday and Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information on the library, call (609)More392-7188.information on the Trenton Artists Workshop Association can be found on the organization’s Facebook page.
“GARDEN ROSE”: This mixed media piece by button mosaic artist Helene Plank will be on display at the New Jersey State Button Society Show on Saturday, September 10 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Union Fire Company and Rescue Squad, 1396 River Road in Titusville. The show will be open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Button historian Johnson Frazier will give an illustrated talk on work buttons at 1 p.m. Admission is free by donation. For more information, visit newjerseystatebuttonsociety.com or email ButtonsInNewJersey@gmail.com.
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ONLINE www.towntopics.com
LATE THURSDAYS! This event is part of the Museum’s Late Thursdays programming, made possible in part by Heather and Paul G. Haaga Jr., Class of 1970. Additional support for this program has been provided by the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, a partner agency of the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Curtis W. McGraw Foundation.
LATE. LATE THURSDAYS. ANI RAMEN HOUSE • ARLEE’S RAW BLENDS • THE BENT SPOON • FICUS • FRUITY YOGURT • JAMMIN’ CREPES • MCCAFFREY’S • MISTRAL • OLIVES • PJ’S PANCAKE HOUSE • SMALL WORLD COFFEE • THOMAS SWEET • WHOLE EARTH CENTER Food • art making • raffles prizes • student performances Sept.Thursday5-8pm8 2022 Art@ Bainbridge + Art on GYMDILLONHulfish WITH
ExhibitsArea novator’s Gallery,” “Princeton’s Portrait,” and other exhibits. Museum hours are Wednesday through Sunday, 12 to 4 p.m., Thursday to 7 p.m. princetonhistory.org James A. Michener Art Museum, 138 South Pine Street, Doylestown, Pa., has “(re)Frame: Community Perspectives on the Michener Art Collection” through March 5, 2023. michenerartmuseum.org Morven Museum & Garden, 55 Stockton Street, has “Ma Bell: The Mother of Invention in New Jersey” through March 2023 and the online exhibits “Slavery at Morven,” “Portrait of Place: Paintings, Drawings, and Prints of New Jersey, 1761–1898,” and others. morven.org. The Nassau Club, 6 Mercer Street, has “The Glittering Outdoors” through October 2. helenemazurart.com. Small World Coffee, 254 Nassau Street, has “Naneen Art” through September 6. smallworldcoffee.com. West Windsor Arts Center, 952 Alexander Road, West Windsor, has “Trenton Community ATEAM” through October 29. westwindsorarts.org.
Tuesday, September 6 7-8:30 p.m.: Continuing Conversations on Race, pre sented via Zoom by Princ eton Public Library. Clinical psychologist Dr. Nathalie Edmond discusses “The So matics of Being a Racial Be ing.” Princetonlibrary.org. Wednesday, September 7 3-5:15 p.m.: The film Downton Abbey is screened in the Community Room of Princeton Public Library, 64 Witherspoon Street. Princ etonlibrary.org.4p.m.: The Mind in Exile: Thomas Mann in Princeton, with Princeton University emeritus professor Stanley Corngold, virtual lecture via Zoom. Free. Libcal.princ eton.edu. Thursday, September 8 10 a.m.-2 p.m.: Princeton Farmers’ Market is at the Dinky train station parking lot, across from the Artmuseum.princeton.edu.ties,andPrincetonSampler,com.Princetonfarmersmarket.Wawa.5-8p.m.:NassauStreetatDillonGym,University.Fooddrink,art-makingactivimusic,raffles,prizes.6:45p.m.:“LearnPublicSpeakingwithMercer’sBestToastmastersClub,”
Wednesday, September 21 6 p.m.: Princeton Public Library Board of Trustees meet either in the Library’s Community Room or via Zoom. Princetonlibrary.org. 7 p.m.: “Frida Kahlo: Dreams, Demons, and De votion,” virtual lecture pre sented by Mercer County Li brary System. Janet Mandel is the speaker. Email hopep rogs@msl.org to register.
Friday, September 9 10 a.m.-2 p.m.: Monthly meeting of the Hunterdon County Rug Artisans Guild at Raritan Township Police Department, 2 Municipal Drive, Flemington. Hcrag. com.5-8 p.m.: Laundrymen per forms at Terhune Orchards, 330 Cold Soil Road. Part of Sunset Sips & Sounds series. Wine, music, light bites. Ter huneorchards.com.7-10p.m.:Dancing Under the Stars at Hinds Plaza. Members of Central Jersey Dance demonstrate and lead, to recorded music. If it rains, the event moves inside Princeton Public Li brary’s Community Room. Brtstage.org.ater,BristolBankformsstarringPrincetonlibrary.org.8p.m.:Herman’sHermitsPeterNooneperattheWilliamPennSummerMusicFest,TownshipAmphitheBristol,Pa.$35-$75.
FALL50% Name Brands Always Discounted Living Room, Dining Room, Bedroom, Home Office, Area Rugs, Etc. Design Service Available Non commissioned Sales Staff Rider Furniture. com Where quality still matters. Name Brands Always Discounted Living Room, Dining Room, Bedroom, Home Office, Area Rugs, Etc. Voted FurnitureBestStore 4621 Route 27 Kingston, NJ 609-924-0147 Monday -Friday 10-6; Saturday 10-5; Sunday 12-5 Rider Furniture. com Where quality still matters. Name Brands Always Discounted Living Room, Dining Room, Bedroom, Home Office, Area Rugs, Etc. Design Service Available Non commissioned Sales Staff Voted FurnitureBestStore 4621 Route 27 Kingston, NJ 609-924-0147 Monday -Friday 10-6; Saturday 10-5; Sunday 12-5 VOTE FOR US ON TOWNTOPICS.COM 609.688.0777 | homesteadprinceton.com 300 Witherspoon Street | Princeton Furniture • Gifts • DesignGifts • Home • Design WAREHOUSE SALE HOMESTEAD PRINCETON WAREHOUSE SALE IN SKILLMAN! MAKING ROOM FOR THE FALL INVENTORY! Two days only: This Saturday, September 3rd and Sunday, September 4th 9-1 pm. Warehouse is located at 416 Georgetown Franklin Turnpike, Skillman NJ. Shopping in Princeton Labor Day weekend? Take advantage of our in store Labor Day sale as well. We are located at 300 Witherspooon Street, Princeton. Homesteadprinceton.com609-688-0777 26•202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN
Sunday, September 11 9 a.m.-1 p.m.: Hunterdon Land Trust Farmers’ Market at Dvoor Farm, 111 Mine Street, Flemington. Fresh, organic offerings from 20 farmers and vendors. Morn ing yoga; music. Hunterdon landtrust.org.1p.m.:Tour of Princeton Battlefield, 500 Mercer Road, led by historical interpreter. Learn about the Battle of Princeton, soldier and civil ian experience. $5 donation; children under 16 and veter ans free. Register at org/battlefield-tours.Pbs1777.2p.m.:“9/11DayofRemembrance:TheHistoryoftheAmericanFlag,”atMorven,55StocktonStreet.FreetalkbyflaghistorianJ.RichardPierce.Morven.org.4p.m.:PrincetonSymphonyOrchestraisatRichardsonAuditorium.ViolinistAnneAkikoMeyersissoloistandRossenMilanovconducts;musicbyArturoMárquez,MarcosFernan
Saturday, September 10 8 a.m.-2 p.m.: Household hazardous waste collection and electronics recycling, at Dempster Fire School, 350 Lawrence Station Road. For Mercer County residents. Visit mcianj.org for list of accepted materials. 9 a.m.-4 p.m.: Cranbury Day on North Main Street in Cranbury. Free. Food trucks, music, vendors, face painting, balloon
Thursday, September 1 10 a.m.-2 p.m.: Princeton Farmers’ Market is at the Dinky train station parking lot, across from the com.Princetonfarmersmarket.Wawa.
Mark Your Calendar Town Topics
Thursday, September 15 10 a.m.-2 p.m.: Princeton Farmers’ Market is at the Dinky train station parking lot, across from the Ewing.Market,braryatcom.Princetonfarmersmarket.Wawa.11a.m.-2p.m.:FirstlookFriendsoftheEwingLiBookSaleandFlea61ScotchRoad,Free.
Friday, September 16 9:30 a.m.- 4:30 p.m.: Friends of the Ewing Library Book Sale and Flea Market, 61 Scotch Road, Ewing. Free. 10 a.m.-12 p.m.: Preview sale of Friends and Foun dation of Princeton Public Library Book Sale, in the Community Room, 65 With erspoon Street. $20 for first 25 tickets, $5 for next; free for Friends of the Library. Available starting at 8 a.m. Opens to the public at 12 p.m. Princetonlibrary.org. 10 a.m.: Friends of the Lawrence Library book sale. Free. 2751 Brunswick Pike, Lawrence Township. Free. Held during the library’s regular hours. Mcl.org. Saturday, September 17 8 a.m.-1 p.m.: Ewing Township Historic Preserva tion Society Flea Market, at Benjamin Temple House, 27 Federal City Road, Ewing. 9 a.m.: Mountain Lakes Run and Walk, to benefit Princeton First Aid and Rescue Squad. A 5K course includes paved park trail, single track, unimproved service right-of-ways. Reg ister at Pfars.org. 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.: Bag day at Friends of the Ewing Library Book Sale and Flea Market, 61 Scotch Road, Ewing. Free. 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m.: Friends and Foundation of Princeton Public Library Book Sale, in the Community Room, 65 Witherspoon Street. Free. Princetonlibrary.org.10a.m.:Friends of the Lawrence Library book sale. Free. 2751 Brunswick Pike, Lawrence Township. Free. Held during the library’s regular hours. Mcl.org. 12 p.m. Fall block party at the YM/YW field of the YWCA Princeton, 59 Paul Robeson Place. Free music, live performances, activities for kids and families, and more. blockparty/.Ywcaprinceton.org/3p.m.:TheJazzAmbassadorsperformbehindtheAllentownUnitedMethodistChurch,23ChurchStreet,Allentown.Allentownvinj.org.
Lawrence Community Cen ter, 295 Eggerts Crossing Road, Lawrence sclubs.org.Mercersbest.toastmasterTownship.
Friday, September 2 5-8 p.m.: Kindred Spirit Duo performs at Terhune Orchards, 330 Cold Soil Road. Part of Sunset Sips & Sounds series. Wine, music, light bites. Terhuneorchards. com. Saturday, September 3 9 a.m.-1 p.m.: West Wind sor Farmers Market, Vaughn Lot of Princeton Junction train station. Enter from 877 Alexander Road. Wwfm.org.
Tuesday, September 20 9 a.m.-12 p.m.: At the Trenton Area Soup Kitchen, 72 ½ Escher Street, Tren ton, Young Professionals “Give Back” in event spon sored by Princeton Mercer Regional Chamber. Assist with duties; must be fully vaccinated and masked. To register, visit skiandsail.org.Free.threeRussellRockyInn,meetingSailcerchamber.org.princetonmer7p.m.:PrincetonSkiandClubholdsitsgeneralattheRockyHill137WashingtonStreet,Hill.FilmmakerSamwillpresentvideoofpreviousclubevents.Programs@princeton
Cranburytownship.org.twisting.9a.m.-3p.m.:NewJerseyStateButtonShowandCompetition,freebydonation,atUnionFireCompanyandRescueSquad,1396RiverRoad,Titusville.“ButtonsGotoWork”talkat1p.m.NewJerseyStateButtonSociety.com.10:30-11a.m.:Mayor’sWellnessCampaign:MindfulMomentsStorytime.AtCommunityParkNorthAmphitheater.Princetonlibrary.org.11a.m.-2p.m.:RutgersMasterGardenersofMercerCountyhostanInsectFestivalatMercerEducationalGardens,431AFederalCityRoad,HopewellTownship.“BugsNeedHomesToo”isthetitle.Educationalactivitiesforallages,scavengerhunt,andQ&Awithhorticulturalist.Mgofmc.org.2p.m.:GuidedwalkingtourofFrenchtown,benefitsHunterdonCountyHistoricalSociety.$15.Hunterdonhistory.org.3-5p.m.:WelcomingWeek:Loteria.SpinonthetraditionalMexicanbingogame,intheCommunityRoomatPrincetonPublicLibrary,65WitherspoonStreet.Princetonlibrary.org.8p.m.:Herman’sHermitsstarringPeterNooneperformsattheWilliamPennBankSummerMusicFest,BristolTownshipAmphitheater,Bristol,Pa.$35-$75.Brtstage.org.8p.m.:PrincetonSymphonyOrchestraisatRichardsonAuditorium.ViolinistAnneAkikoMeyersissoloistandRossenMilanovconducts;musicbyArturoMárquez,MarcosFernandez,JoaquinTurina,RupertoChapi,andNikolaiRimsky-Korsakov.Princetonsymphony.org.
Yes We CAN Fresh/Stable Food Drive to Benefit Arm in Arm; music by Stibol stu dents. Sunday, September 4 9 a.m.-1 p.m.: Hunterdon Land Trust Farmers’ Market at Dvoor Farm, 111 Mine Street, Flemington. Fresh, organic offerings from 20 farmers and vendors. Morn ing yoga; music. Hunterdon landtrust.org.1p.m.:Robin Austin, for mer Princeton University Carilloneur, is soloist in the carillon concert from Gradu ate Tower on Princeton Uni versity’s Graduate Campus, rain or shine. Listen from outside the tower. Free. (609) 258-7989.
dez, Joaquin Turina, Ru perto Chapi, and Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. Princ etonsymphony.org.
SEPTEMBER
Monday, September 12 Recycling 7 p.m.: Hopewell Public Library Book Club meets over Zoom. redlibrary.org. Wednesday, September 14 8-10:30 p.m.: Princeton Mercer Regional Cham ber presents the Regional Healthcare Symposium at Mercer Oaks Catering, 725 Village Road West, Princ eton Junction. Princeton mercer.org.7p.m.:“RediscoveringJosephBonaparte’sPointBreezeEstateinBordentown,”virtualprogrampresentedbyMercerCountyLibrarySystem.MonmouthUniversityProfessorRichardVeitisthespeaker.Emailhopeprogs@mcl.orgtoregister.
Sunday, September 18 9 a.m.-1 p.m.: Hunterdon Land Trust Farmers’ Market at Dvoor Farm, 111 Mine Street, Flemington. Fresh, organic offerings from 20 farmers and vendors. Morn ing yoga; music. Hunterdon landtrust.org.10a.m.:Friends of the Lawrence Library book sale. Free. 2751 Brunswick Pike, Lawrence Township. Free. Held during the library’s regular hours. Mcl.org. 11:45 a.m.-3:30 p.m.: Young Patriots Day at Princ eton Battlefield. Cannon musket firing and drilling with the New Jersey Greys, appearances by George Washington and Benjamin Franklin, Colonial presen tations and demonstrations, tours of the Battlefield and Thomas Clarke House, and more.12-5:30Pbs1777.org.p.m.:Friends and Foundation of Princeton Public Library Book Sale, in the Community Room, 65 Witherspoon Street. Free. Princetonlibrary.org. Monday, September 19 10 a.m-4:30 p.m.: Friends of the Lawrence Library book sale. Free. 2751 Brunswick Pike, Lawrence Township. Free. Held during the library’s regular hours. $5 bag day. Mcl.org. 8 p.m.: “1619, 1654, 2022: Jews, Race and His tory,” Zoom talk by Marc Dollinger, professor of Jew ish studies and social re sponsibility at San Francisco State University, presented by The Jewish Center Princ eton. gmail.com.Linda.oppenheim@
The spacious store, with its two floors filled with books of every kind, is con veniently arranged with plenty of room to roam. Cus tomers of all ages are seen browsing and taking time to make a favorite purchase.
“I am always excited to see all the new books coming in, and we are continually surprised by the wealth of cultural programing in town both on campus and off. It really is exceptional, and of fers endless opportunities for Lcollaboration.”abyrinthBooks is open Monday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Tuesday through Sunday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. (609) 497-1600. Web site: labyrinthbooks.com.
TEAM WORK: Staff members at Labyrinth Books always ready help customers with in personal As owner Dorothea von Moltke says, wonderful staff. My are really the backbone
attention.
“Books are a uniquely por table magic.”—Stephen King I t certainly is true that a book can take the reader to a magical place, on an exciting adventure, or into a territory filled with new, perhaps unexpected, ideas andAstreasures.Dorothea von Moltke of Labyrinth Books explains about the store’s name, “We think of it as getting lost in order to find what you didn’t expect.”Opened in 2007 at 122 Nassau Street, the store is owned by brothers Cliff and Peter Simms and Dorothea vonAfterMoltke.anumber of years in New York City, with a loca tion near Columbia Universi ty, Labyrinth had an oppor tunity to become the official bookstore for Princeton University. Princeton seems to be the perfect match not only for the academic books, but also for an independent bookstore offering a wide variety of books for all read ers, notes von Moltke. All Categories “So many people here support an independent bookstore and see its value in the community,” says von Moltke. “What is differ ent about Labyrinth is the combination we offer. We are both a community and scholarly bookstore, and carry new books across all genres and disciplines, used and rare books, kids’ books, remaindered and bargain books, as well as course books. Because of how we source many of our books, I would estimate that about 70 percent of what we sell is discounted in some way.” Readers will find books in all categories: contempo rary and classic literature, poetry, current events, his tory, philosophy, theology, mysteries, cookbooks, and comic books. A constantly changing inventory ensures that customers will always discover both the latest — and unexpected — reading opportunities.Keepingup-to-date with this is a challenge, adds von Moltke. “So many books are being published in the U.S. that the book buying is an ongoing, big task, and books are never one-sizefits-all. At Labyrinth, this work is shared: our general manager Virginia Harabin is also our front list buyer. Our office manager Annie Far rell is also our kids buyer; our floor manager Stephen Walter is also our remainder buyer. He and my husband Cliff Simms together are our used book buyers. “So you can see that I am not exaggerating when I say that our staff is the back bone pf the store. Without exception, and whether they are on the floor and custom er-facing, or working in re ceiving or the office, they are discerning readers and ‘people of the book.’ Every Section “In the past year, we have bought several extraordi nary large private collec tions, which we have begun to work into our used and rare book offerings,’ con tinues von Moltke. “So the supply of used books coming in is going to enrich every section in the store in the monthsPerhapsahead.”less known is the fact that the company also owns and runs a bookremainder wholesale busi ness in Pennington — Great Jones“Here,Books.we buy the best of publishers’ overstock in large quantities, which we sell to bookstores all over the U.S. and the world, but we keep the best for Laby rinth,” she explains. “In fact, Labyrinth could not be the store that it is without us also being wholesalers with the supply of quality books that gives us books that have disappeared from the shelves of bookstores else where. It is meaningful to us that in this way, we both ex tend the life of these books and make them affordable to readers.”Labyrinth has many reg ular loyal customers who support the store with en thusiasm, and this was also evident during the height of COVID-19, reports von Moltke.“We were closed from March to August of 2020, but we had an online opera tion and also curbside pickup. We are very grateful for the continuing community support we experienced.
Gift Items In addition to its book se lection, Labyrinth provides a selection of stationery, greeting cards, puzzles, games, mugs, tote bags, and other gift items. A membership program, available for $15 a year, of fers 10 percent discounts on purchases, advance no tice of upcoming events, and special holiday gifts. The store’s extensive web site will soon be upgraded, reports von Moltke, and member discounts will also be offered online. In addi tion, gift cards are available.
BEST BOOKS: “We are an independent, family-owned book store, with books, new and used, both of general and of specialized interest, including many books you can’t find elsewhere. As an official bookstore for Princeton University, we also specialize in academic books for students and scholars.” Dorothea von Moltke, an owner of Labyrinth Books, is shown in one of her favorite places. more difficult. Increasingly, residents and visitors are staying“Goodaway.ideas have been put forward for how to improve the situation, but so far the town is not taking them up. Before all of this, business was beginning to return to pre-COVID levels. We really want and need to get beyond this construction debacle, and be able to do the work we love to do.” As she looks ahead, von Moltke is pleased that Laby rinth is continuing its special events programs, consisting of author lectures, conversa tions, and signings. “I always look forward to these, and it has also been a way to partner with the pub lic library and other com munity organizations,” she says. “We try to have two or three events each week.” Labyrinth also has strong commitments to social jus tice work. The store has built libraries in New Jersey prisons, and continues to look for ways to extend this engagement. It supports the work of Princeton Mutual Aid, and collects food and clothing for Arm In Arm and the Rescue Mission of Tren ton year-round. The events programming, too, reflects these commitments.
—Jean Stratton
“So much of our success is due to our
A special Discovery Den offers a cozy kids’ section, a wonderful spot indeed for the youngest readers to dis cover the joys of reading. Dorothea von Moltke is happy to be able to do the work she loves and in a town that she admires.
A Complete Range of Reading Opportunities Is the Hallmark of Acclaimed Labyrinth Books IT’S NEW To Us
Many Challenges The book business, espe cially for bricks and mortar establishments, is filled with many challenges. Online competition, certainly, is an ongoing major threat, but in addition, von Moltke points out a new and local consid eration that is creating its own“Currently,issues. there are the challenges of multiple, si multaneous construction projects downtown, which are expected to last two years. Merchants, Laby rinth included, are already seeing the impact of this up heaval. It is really a serious problem, which not all of us with businesses downtown are likely to survive, since traffic cannot circulate and parking has gotten even
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“We also have a core com munity of colleagues with other businesses in town, and this is an enjoyable part of being here.”
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With 7:43 left in regu lation, Princeton came through as junior midfielder Aria Nagai blasted a volley into the net for her first ca reer goal and the final score of the night as Princeton prevailed 2-0 and improved to“Our2-0. team is definitely a grind team and I knew that we are never going to give up,” said Sherman. “We are never going to stop working hard, it is just getting the win and moving on.”
—Bill Alden
The score felt particularly good since Sherman would have been unable to do that a year ago as she was side lined for much of the season after suffering a leg injury on the first day of preseason.
“I have been waiting for this moment for so long, I played a little bit last year but was never truly healthy,” said Sherman, who made only nine appearances last season. “I was never truly ready. I had the summer and now I am ready.” Despite Sherman’s tally, Princeton struggled to find the back of the net, cling ing to 1-0 halftime lead even though it had outshot the Stags 10-0. “We have been working on possession this week in prac tice, just being able to keep composure and have confi dence to keep the ball,” said Sherman. “We were pretty proud of the ability to keep the ball. It is frustrating not to score more but I know that will come.”
Bouncing Back from Injury-Plagued 2021 Season, Sherman Stars as PU Women’s Soccer Tops Fairfield
While the Tigers didn’t play great this weekend, Driscoll saw progress. “I think we definitely made some strides, we are learn ing more about the players,” said Driscoll. “We have to find the right pieces and rotations and how to keep people fresh and healthy. That is part of what today was, how do we keep every body still invested and fresh so we are not incurring more injuries.”Someof the team’s young guns came through as soph omore MacNab scored three goals in the opener and was named the Ivy Player of the Week while freshman Kelsee Wozniak had a goal and two assists against Colgate and was named the Ivy Rookie of the Week. Two other fresh men, Drew Coomans and Pietra Tordin, also showed flashes.“Heather had a big week end,” said Driscoll. “Kelsee was really, really good this weekend. She just gives you another look because of her physicality, she doesn’t look like a freshman. I think all of the freshmen in general when they went out and played, gave us something. Drew had her moments, Pi etra is Seniorcrafty.”defenders Morgan Wiese, Kamryn Loustau, and Gracyn Kuerner, sophomore goalie Tyler McCamey, and junior midfielder Jen Estes also gave the Tigers some solid play over the weekend.
S ports
W ith the soccerUniversityPrincetonwomen’steamknot ted in a scoreless draw with visiting Fairfield University last Sunday evening in the first half, Grace Sherman got free in the box and took advantage.Princeton senior forward Sherman took a pass from Heather MacNab, calmly dribbled past Fairfield goalie and slotted the ball into the net to give the Tigers a 1-0 lead at the 13:22 mark of the contest played at Class of 1952 Stadium. “I just saw space behind behind their back line so I decided to make a cutting run through,” said Sherman. “Heather [MacNab] played the ball to me and I took a touch and I tried to stay calm. I took a touch around the goalkeeper and I knew I was going to finish it.”
goal was also a highlight for Driscoll. “It tells you how hard it is to score in this game, Aria is a unbelievably talented play er, both of them are,” said Driscoll. “It is really hard to get goals in this sport. To see both of them, as talented as they are who haven’t had a lot of goals, get goals, was really great.” NJ 08502 908-359-8131
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With the Tigers starting the season with a 4-2 win over Colgate last Friday, Sherman saw the opening weekend as a good step for ward.“Iam proud of it, there are definitely some things that we need to get sorted out,” said Sherman. “That is part of non-conference play. Our team is very un derclassmen-heavy so just getting them exposure is re
STATE OF GRACE: Princeton University women’s soccer player Grace Sherman celebrates after scoring a goal against Fairfield University last Sunday night at Class of 1952 Stadium. The Tigers ended up prevailing 2-0 to improve to 2-0. In upcoming action, Princeton plays at Rhode Island (0-3-1) on September 1 and at No. 3 Rutgers (4-0) on September 4. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski) allyAsimportant.”ateamcaptain, Sher man is looking to set a posi tive example for the younger players.“Iknow what it is like to have the sport taken away from you,” said Sherman. “I want to make the most of these amazing people that I am around. I want to win some games and have some fun doing it. That is my men tality this Princetonyear.”head coach Sean Driscoll had fun see ing Sherman come through with her goal. “It was a really nice finish, it was great ball on the top from Heather,” said Driscoll. “Grace had great compo sure. She just took it down and dribbled the keeper and made a great shot. She worked really hard tonight. I thought she worked on both sides of the ball really well. She leads with her passion. Her skill set is very good but she leads with such energy. It was really great to see her getNagai’sthat.”
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“In terms of upperclass men, I thought Morgan was very steady,” said Driscoll. “Kammie got a lot of min utes and did really well as a left back, that is not her nor mal position. Tyler made an unbelievable save tonight, we needed that. She was disappointed with how she performed the other night. She bounced back and had a really good performance tonight. Gracyn looks really good at right back, she has done really well. Jen is a for ward and is playing midfield now for us because of the injuries we have. There are so many good players, it is a matter of how you piece it together.”Driscoll tipped his hat to Fairfield, where he coached before coming to Princeton. After the game, he joined the Stags’ team huddle to address them and praise them on their effort. “I was really impressed with Fairfield, I thought they worked extraordinarily hard,” said Driscoll. “I said to them that my favorite team of course is Princ eton but my second favor ite will always be Fairfield because my mom and dad both went to school there and I coached there for five years. It is a place that means a lot to me. I had a re ally, really good experience there and it took a lot for me to move down here even though Princeton is such a great school. I have lived in Fairfield all of my life; to leave was a big, big step and there is a lot of sentimental value.”With Princeton playing at Rhode Island (0-3-1) on Sep tember 1 and at No. 3 Rut gers (4-0) on September 4, the Tigers will have to work hard to keep on the winning track.“We have got a lot com ing up and we have a lot to figure out; we have to figure out how to best set ourselves up to have success,” said Driscoll. “The game with Rutgers last year was an un believable game (a 4-3 win for Princeton). The game against Rhode Island will be interesting, it is our first road game. We traditionally are a good road team. We have so many young kids and it is not knowing how they are going to respond. We can only learn. It is a great team, I love the team. There are a lot of positives, we are just going to get bet ter.”Sherman, for her part, is bringing a positive mentality into the road swing. “It is just composure, be ing strong and confident that we can do this, that we can beat Top 10 opponents,” said Sherman. “We have the grit, the grind and the men tality to do it so we might as well do it.”
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“They are two teams that beat us last year in two very even games,” said Barlow, whose team fell 1-0 to Rut gers and 2-0 to the Cata mounts. “I think we felt as the season went on that we would love to have another shot at those two teams and now we get another shot at them. Rutgers is a fun one — it is a good crowd and a local rivalry.” —Bill Alden
Best Pizza could not have reached this accomplishment without our dedicated employees and customers. Thank you from the owners of Conte’s
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KNIGHT MOVES: Princeton University men’s soccer player Ryan Clare, left, battles for the ball against Rutgers last year. Senior midfielder/forward Clare should help spark the Tiger offense this fall. Princeton starts its 2022 season by facing the Scarlet Knights (1-1) on September 2 in Piscataway. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski) to 8:30 pm Sessions beginning September 12 through Mid-November
After Rolling to the Ivy League Title Last Year, Princeton Men’s Soccer has Target on its Back
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Last Saturday, the Princ eton players had a good learning opportunity as they traveled to Philadelphia for scrimmages against Swarth more and Penn. “I think it was really good for the guys, a third of our team is new so it was good for those guys to get their feet wet in what a college soccer game looks like,” said Barlow. “Our incoming guys have played at really high levels but nothing compares to college soccer with the frenetic place and the com peting and the physicality. From that standpoint it was reallyBarlowgood.”isexpecting some high level play at forward from senior Daniel DiazBonilla (4 goals, 6 assists in 2021) and junior Walker Gil lespie (4 “Thosegoals).twoguys contrib uted a lot to our attack last year,” said Barlow. “I think it is safe to say that they are going to be really important.” Others in the mix up top include senior Ryan Clare (4 assists), freshman Danny Ittycheria, and junior Ryan Winkler.“Ryan Clare can play on the wing,” said Barlow. “We have some new guys that look pretty good, especially out wide. The kid from War ren, N.J., Danny did well in the Swarthmore game. Ryan Winkler has a lot of potential but we just haven’t been able to see him in games. He had major surgery last year and then there was COVID the year before so he has not done much for two years. He
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After rolling to the Ivy League title last year, going 12-6 overall and 7-0 Ivy, the Princeton University men’s soccer team knows it can’t rest on its laurels as it heads into the 2022 campaign.
Mon – 11:30-9 · Tues-Fri – 11:30-10:30 Sat – 4-10:30 had his moments in pre season where he has looked pretty solid.” In the midfield, sopho more James Wangsness (1 goal, 3 assists) and junior Malik Pinto (2 gold, 2 as sists) figure to do a lot.
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“Those two guys were pretty much regulars in the middle of the midfield all of last year,” said Barlow.
A pair of sophomores, Will Watson and Khamari Hadaway, are competing at goalie.“They were two freshmen last year who were very good keepers that didn’t get min utes because we had two very talented seniors,” said Barlow. “They are battling it out, they are both talented.”
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“We do have a first year guy who has looked very good at defensive midfield so far in Gabriel,” added Barlow. “Jack played for the Philadelphia Union reserve team as a high schooler as a midfielder. He can play pret ty much anywhere. Probably somewhere in the middle of the midfield is going to be his best spot.”
The Tiger defense fea tures some battle-tested performers in senior Ben Bograd, sophomore Issa Mudashiru, junior Francis Akomeah-Sirleaf (3 goals, 1 assist), and senior Lucas Gen (2 goals), along with a pair of freshmen Giuliano Whitchurch and Sam Vigi lante.“Ben, Issa, Francis, and Lucas will all play in the back for us,” said Barlow. “ Giuliano has been really solid so he will probably finding himself getting a lot of minutes. Sam, whose his dad (Jason Vigilante) is the cross country coach here is a really versatile player. He can help us in the back and the midfield.”
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“I think one of the things that we have been talking about with these guys since the season ended last year is that there has never been a Princeton team that has won back-to-back Ivy titles,” said Princeton head coach Jim Barlow. “It is such a com petitive league and when you win, the target is just on your back so much. I think our guys have tried to think of themselves with the mentality that they had last year that they are the underdogs. They are going into every game, competing like crazy to get better. That is going to be a really important mentality.”
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The Tigers face a com petitive opening week as they kick off the season by playing at Rutgers (1-1) on September 2 and then host Vermont (1-0) on September 5 in their home opener. “We are trying to make the most out of every ses sion and take care of our little details,” said Barlow, whose team was picked first in the Ivy preseason media poll. “We know that all of our games come down to a play here or a play there and not taking a break defensively and being alert enough to pounce on a mistake from the other team. All of these things start to come along when you play more games — we are going to learn where we stand.”
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For the Tigers, the match ups against Rutgers and Ver mont present an opportunity for some pay back.
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A pair of freshmen, Gabri el Duchovny and Jack Jasin ski, should make an impact in the middle of the pitch.
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Featuring Battle-Tested Veterans, Talented Freshmen, Princeton Field Hockey Primed for Stellar Campaign
Another first-team All-Ivy selection last year, Ali Mc Carthy is a captain who will lead a forward line that is fast and athletic. McCarthy was second on the team in assists (7) and third in goals (6) last season. “Ali has been having a great preseason,” said Ta gliente. “I didn’t play her a ton in the scrimmage, main ly because I don’t need to see a lot of her. She and Ta lia (Schenck) have been the top two forwards out there. I’ve been pretty happy with her. I don’t want to push her too much, like in the scrim mage. We need her in the longBethhaul.”Yeager is another headliner for the Tigers. The Ivy League Rookie of the Year and Ivy Offensive Player of the Year set the Princeton freshman record for goals in a year with 16. She will have the chance to play a more offensive role that suits her better than last year’s defensive mid fielder“Bethspot.istoo attacking to play in that role,” said Ta gliente. “She’s like a dog and a ball, wherever the ball is that kid wants to be there and wherever the goal is that kid wants to be there. You can’t really rewire that, and why try? She’s one of our better players and she has the skill set to play a de fensive midfielder, but when you pull her back that hurts us. If we push her up, we’re a lot better on the attack side and we’re also a lot bet ter than the defensive side.”
“You need someone that really puts this team on their back — not in terms of performance, but in terms of belief — and doesn’t let them stop believing,” said Tagliente.“It’ssuch a long road. You hit a couple hiccups here and there, what are you go ing to do? I need that kid in the locker room that says, ‘Forget it, we’re moving on, this is what you need to do.’ And they keep knocking on the door. You can’t really groom that player, it organi cally has to come out. I’m kind of waiting to see if we have that. And if we don’t have that one, do we have that collective resilience to push through? It’s not al ways going to be smooth sailing for us.”
Taking care of Princeton’s trees
The Tigers are excited about the potential of their freshmen to contribute dur ing their careers. Ella Thor burn may have a chance to rotate in goal with return ing starter Robyn Thomp son. Both are tall keepers, and Thorburn moves well in the cage. Ella Hampson will aid the defense with a hardworking attitude. Helena Grosse and Ava Dempsey can shore up the midfield, and Grace Anne McCooey will work toward giving the forward line even more depth.
Not with a schedule that does not let up for a month. Princeton will remain in North Carolina to take on Louisville there on Sep tember 4. Beyond that is a murderer’s row of Syracuse (at home September 9), Rutgers, Delaware, North western, and Maryland. All come before the Tigers open Ivy play by hosting Penn on September 23. Harvard, with which the Tigers have split every other Ivy title for the last five years, will come to Bedford Field on October 23.“We were in every game last year,” said Tagliente. “We were up against Louis ville by two or three goals and lost the game. We were up against Maryland by a couple goals and lost the game. If we win those games, we go to the tour nament. That’s my discus sion with these guys — stop worrying about the record. Start worrying about the game you’re in and putting it away. And game by game, we’ll start building our port folio for the committee and we don’t have to worry about Harvard anymore and we’ll get in.”
Carla Tagliente has seen a different confidence about her Princeton University field hockey team through itsMuchpreseason.ofit stems from having everyone back from a Tiger squad that had no seniors last year plus adding a freshman class that bring necessary depth as they prepare to open at secondranked North Carolina on September 2. “ You wouldn’ t think on paper it would make much of a difference because they’re the same people, but in terms of experience it’s a huge difference,” said Ta gliente, who is starting her sixth season as Princeton head coach. “ You look at it last year and we had missed the year as well and it kind of resets things back in terms of where we’re at and what we need to go over. The recency of things is not there because they haven’t played in so long. It’s a way different feel this preseason than last year in terms of the confidence across the board.”Princeton went 10-7 over all and 6-1 Ivy League a year ago after Ivy teams did not compete in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Tigers lost a heartbreaker in overtime to Harvard to finish second in the league standings and had a couple
Yeager missed the final three games due to a stress fracture. She is healthy and playing better than ever after a summer in the U21 training camp. “She looks good,” said Tagliente. “Her drag flick, I didn’t think she could make it that much better in one summer. But wow, it’s pretty good. I say we can’t live and die by penalty corners but if we draw them, her drag flick is probably the best in the country. She has that ability.”Schenck is a local product who could help the Tigers offense in her first season. The Lawrence High graduate set the New Jersey record with 113 goals in a season last year, and her transition to college has been quick.
“She’s exceeded my ex pectations — not that I didn’t think she could do it,” said Tagliente. “I always think I’m a little hard on Talia because I’ve known her for so long. I think it’s a good thing and it might be tough for her at times. I’ve known the kid since she was like 12. A couple first days, typical first-years, they look like chickens with their heads cut off. But she has really come along quickly in the preseason. I don’t want to put the cart before the horse, but she’s been play ing very well. She doesn’t look like a first-year player. She’s confident on attack. She’s probably top two in terms of technical ability on the front line in terms of what she can do with the ball. She’s come such a long way — her development in the last year and a half has come so rapidly. I hope she has a great season. I think sheSchenckcan.” is part of a sixperson class of freshmen that will be a big help to the Tigers. Even if they’re not all on the field immediately, they bring depth, something that was sorely lacking last year.“If we stay healthy, we have a nice rotation,” said Tagliente. “The hard part last year was we were so thin in numbers, that Beth had to play too many min utes, Hannah had to play too many minutes. These fresh men coming in will give us a healthy rotation in the mid field. It’s a long season. We can’t lean on them to play 60 minutes a game.”
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“The freshmen will play a vital role, but I don’t think we have a high need that they come in Game 1 and contribute,” said Tagliente. “Not to say that they won’t play, but in past years you’re graduating big shoes and you’re relying on some kids to come in and fill those and it’s a lot. I don’t feel like we have to. It’s like we have the luxury that most of them will play.”Princeton will be a seniordriven team this year, and the Tigers are counting on their experience to set the tone. The benefits of expe rience have shown through with not only seniors like Davey, Popper, and Mc Carthy excelling, but also Ophelie Bemelmans and Zoe Shephard making key jumps and enjoying terrific preseasons in their final year at Princeton. The Ti gers need more than just their seniors’ playing skills as they look to return to the NCAA tournament.
POP STAR: Princeton University field hockey player Sammy Popper controls the ball in a game last season. Senior tri-captain Popper will be looking to shore up the Princeton backline this fall as she is moving to the center back spot. The 13th-ranked Tigers open their 2022 campaign by playing at second-ranked North Carolina on September 2. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski) narrow losses cost them a bid to the NCAA tourna ment. That season may not have ended the way Princ eton wanted it to, but the experience has value as the Tigers prepare to start this season.“That’s the big difference between this year and last year with so many back,” said Tagliente , whose team is ranked 13th nationally. “The sophomores hadn ’ t really played a game so we had 10-11 players that were having their first experi ence with it and we’re go ing over such basic things. Whereas this year, it ’ s just the six freshmen that we ’re having to bring on board and the older play ers, they ’ve checked those boxes and they ’re not tak ing steps backwards. So I’m really happy in that regard, that we’re not taking a step back collectively and having to go over certain things. I really feel like we can lean on these returners to come back and perform and lead thePrincetonway.” scrimmaged St. Joseph ’s on August 23 in their only look outside of the program before the season opener. St. Joe ’s, which is ranked 16th in the preseason, gave Princeton strong competition to help evaluate where they stand. “ We’re a lot further along than we were last year,” said Tagliente. “In terms of some of the things that we always find we ’re trying to clean up after the scrimmage — the defensive organization, some pressing, and some areas — we think we don’t have to touch on as much and we’re focusing on other things.”Statistically last year, the Tigers were among the best in the country offensively. They ranked second in as sists — partly due to a reli ance on scoring off penalty corners — and eighth in goals scored. No opponent shut them out all year. At the other end, Princeton ranked 31st in goals against average.“What really hung us up last year was our defensive organization and transition,” said Tagliente. “ We loved to attack, attack, attack, but we left no one home to protect the house a lot of the time and we can’t play like that all the time. Just some small structural things need to change. We do need to grow a lot in our goalscoring ability in the field of play. We were OK in scor ing, but we didn’t score a lot of field goals. I think the jury is out with this group yet. We haven’t seen enough competition yet to know how good we’ ll be in the field of play. We can t live and die by penalty corners, it’s just notPrincetonsustainable.”has eight seniors, three of whom are captains. Hannah Davey was a 2021 first-team All-Ivy se lection. She has played both offense and defense for the Tigers in her career, but this year will be doing a bit of both as she moves to midfield. “I do think that will help shore up the defensive tran sition,” said Tagliente. “It’s pivotal where she plays, she has a presence where she plays. She’ll probably slide into the middle. Her first year she played outside right. Last year she played right back. This year, she’ll probably play defensive cen ter mid which I think has been a long time coming. I don’t think she was quite ready for it. I think she’s fi nally ready to play there and that will help on both sides of the Anotherball.”captain, Sammy Popper, is making an even bigger move. She will slide back to center back, though she is quite an offensive threat. She was second on the Tigers in goals (8) a year ago, but moves back to help the Tigers fill in for first-team All-Ivy defender Gabby“SammyAndretta.has a skill set where she can hit a ball 75 yards just on a pinpoint la ser,” said Tagliente. “Her defensive ability is nowhere near Gabby’s but her abil ity to outlet and break lines is way better than Gabby so we’ve been rolling with it. Gabby is still not fully cleared to be back so we kind of don’t have a choice. She may miss opening week end, but she sneakily might force her way in and get cleared. Even if that’s the case, I’ll probably put Gabby on the outside back where Hannah was last year. Pop per has a whole new posi tion and I think it suits her.”
Available for Lunch & Mmm..Take-OutDinner Events • Parties • Catering (609) 924-5143 associate head coach the last fourSheyears.started her coaching career at Rutgers in 2004, and she was with the Scarlet Knights until she left for West Chester prior to the 2010 sea son. While at West Chester, she also earned a master’s de gree in public administration, with a graduate certificate in sports management and ath letics.Inaddition to her college coaching, she also has spent considerable time in the high school, U.S. Field Hockey As sociation, camp, and club lev els, including most recently at Seneca High School in South Jersey, where she coached during the 2021 season. She is a member of the United States Over-35 national team. The Tigers are ranked 13th in the preseason by the NFCHA, and the schedule includes seven of the top 10 teams, including the season opener at No. 2 North Caro lina September 2. Princeton Football’s Iosivas Named to Senior Bowl Watchlist.
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Men’s Volleyball Alum Kessel Competing for National Squad
Princeton University men’s volleyball team alumnus Cody Kessel ’15 made the U.S. Men›s National Team that is currently competing in the 2022 FIVB World Champi onships in Katowice, Poland. The U.S. started pool play in the competition by defeating Mexico 3-0 (25-18, 25-20, 2512) on August 26. Two days later, the U.S. topped Bulgaria (25-20, 25-23, 26-24).
Princeton University wom en’s hockey senior Maggie Connors and sophomore Sar ah Paul competed for Hockey Canada’s National Women’s Development Team as it faced Team USA in a three-game series earlier this month in Calgary,CanadaAlberta.went1-2 in the se ries, defeating the U.S. 4-3 on August 17 and then losing 4-1 to the U.S on August 18 and 2-1 in the finale on August 20. Connors tallied the lone goal for Canada in the 4-1 setback. Both Tigers have previ ous experience wearing the Canadian sweater. Connors, for her part, competed in a series against the U.S. with the NWDT in 2019 and won a bronze medal with the Ca nadian U-18s at the 2018 IIHF U-18 World Championship. Paul was part of Canada’s 2021 Development Camp and helped Canada to a silver medal at the 2020 IIHF U-18 World Championship.
Connors, Paul, and rising junior Sarah Fillier, a 2022 Olympic gold medalist with Canada, will make their Hobey Baker Rink return this fall. Tiger fans’ first chance to see the 2022-23 Tigers will be on October 9, with the Uni versity of Montreal coming in for an exhibition game, and the regular season will start October 28 at Baker against Colgate.
Women’s Hockey Stars Compete for Canada Development Team
Princeton Field Hockey Adds Gillern to Staff
PREMIER PERFORMER: Former Princeton University men’s lacrosse standout Tom Schreiber ’14 fires a shot for the Archers in Premier Lacrosse League (PLL) action. The PLL recently announced the finalists for its yearly awards and Schreiber has been nominated in three cat egories: Most Valuable Player, Midfielder of the Year, and the Sportsmanship Award. Another Princeton alum Zach Currier ’17, who plays for the Waterdogs, is also a finalist for the Mid fielder of the Year Award. Schreiber and Currier are the only players to ever win the midfielder award. Schreiber finished the regular season with 35 points (17 goals 2 two-point goals, 14 as sists), which left him sixth in the PLL. Currier had 11 goals, eight assists, and 53 ground balls.
Princeton is also represented in the Coach of the Year category as former Tiger head coach Chris Bates of the Archers is one of the finalists. (Photo provided by Princeton Athletics)
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Princeton University foot ball star receiver Andrei Io sivas has collected another accolade as he was named last week to the 2023 Re ese’s Senior Bowl Watchlist. Iosivas has already picked up Hero Sports and Phil Steele Preseason All-Amer ican honors this summer. He’s one of 29 NCAA FCS players named to the watch list.The Senior Bowl is a post season college football AllStar game that showcases the best NFL Draft pros pects of among players who have completed their college eligibility. The game will take place on February 4, 2023 at Hancock Whitney Stadium on the campus of SouthIosivas,Alabama.a6’3, 200-pound native of Honolulu, Hawaii, was selected as a second team All-Ivy performer last year after leading the squad with five touchdown catches. He was second on the Tigers with 41 catches, 703 yards receiving, and 17.1 yards per catch. He ranked third in the league in yards, fourth in touchdowns and yards per reception, and ninth in receptions. The senior also was a First-Team All-Ameri can in the heptathlon at the 2022 NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships.
The Princeton University field hockey team has added Pattie Gillern to its staff as a volunteer assistant coach, the program said earlier this month.Gillern is a 2003 Iowa grad uate whose resume includes a Division II national champion ship as an assistant coach. Gillern follows former head coach Kristen Holmes-Winn and former assistant coach Melissa Meccage, who led the Tigers to the 2012 NCAA championship, as former Iowa players who have coached at Princeton.Infact, Gillern played for Iowa when Holmes-Winn was an assistant coach there, in cluding on the Hawkeyes’ 1999 Final Four team. Gillern was a first-team All-Big Ten and third-team All-American in 2003, as well as a team captain and four-time Na tional Field Hockey Coaches Association (NFHCA) and Big Ten All-Academic honoree. Gillern brings with her a wealth of coaching experience in college field hockey, includ ing helping West Chester to the 2011 Division II NCAA title. She most recently spent eight years as an assistant coach in the Ivy League at Dartmouth, where she was
CATCHING ON: Princeton High football player Corey Woodson gets ready to make a catch last Friday against Lawrence High in the season opener for both teams. Sophomore wide receiver Woodson made three receptions for 77 yards in a losing cause as PHS fell 35-12 to the Cardi nals. The Tigers host Riverside on September 3 in their home opener. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski) running back Evan Pease sprinted 50 yards up the middle of the field for a touchdown to end the eve ning with a highlight for the Tigers.While PHS head coach Charlie Gallagher acknowl edged that his players got steamrollered by Soto, he had no qualms with their efforts. “We did a good job at the start,” said Gallagher. “They had a little bit of a formula like they did last year (in a 44-26 win), pounding the ball. Football is a tough game. It is for special people and I am proud to be coach ing all of these guys.”
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A pair of juniors, Felipe Matar Grande and Nick Ma tese, who were the captains of the PFC Barca squad, will lead the way in the midfield for the “TheyTigers.haveplayed togeth er for many years and there is an understanding there,” said Sutcliffe. “They are at their best every day.”
Charging onto the field at Lawrence High last Friday evening with some hollering and clapping as it started its 2022 campaign, the Princ eton High football team was determined to make an opening statement. Riding that wave of emo tion, PHS stopped Lawrence cold on its first possession, forcing a three-and-out, prompting some whoops on the Tiger sideline. Later in the quarter, the PHS defense recovered a fumble on the Cardinal 41 and the Tigers cashed in. Sophomore quarterback Brady Collier lofted a pass down the sideline to senior Ryan Friedman who made a leaping grab at the 10-yard line for a gain of 24 yards. Two plays later, Friedman raced for 13 yards on an end reverse for a first down at the 2-yard line. Junior run ning back Tyler Goldberg capped the drive, bursting into the end zone to make it 6-0 and then rushed over to high five student fans lined up on the fence near the end zone.Things went downhill from there, however, for the Ti gers as Lawrence’s bruising 240-pound running back Kandres Soto took over the contest. He rumbled for touchdown runs of four and 11 yards in the second quar ter as Lawrence built a 14-6 halftime lead. Soto added a third quarter TD on the way to rushing for 188 yards as the Cardi nals wore down the Tigers on the way to a 35-12 win. As Lawrence pounded PHS, a number of Tiger players headed to the sidelines with cramps, pulled muscles, and assorted knocks.
While the Princeton High boys’ soccer team features some battle-tested seniors, as usual, its group of stellar sophomores may hold the key to success this fall. “The rising sophomores had an undefeated freshman season for us,” said Sut cliffe, noting that several of the sophomores competed for the Princeton FC Barce lona team that won the 16U final in the US Youth Soc cer (USYS) 2022 National Presidents Cup tournament in July. “They are bringing both of those experiences into this season.”
Sophomores Brandon Urias and Archie Smith, two other PFC standouts, also play well “Brandontogether.isareally good technical player. he has the ability to break things open and can score,” added Sut cliffe. “He has a really good left foot. Archie is a hard working, industrious mid fielder who can play out of the middle and play wide.”
“We have to be better at tackling, the guy (Soto) was a beast to being down but we can’t be spinning off tackles and things like that,” said Gallagher. “We have to use good fundamentals when it comes to tackling, wrapping it up and bringing guys down to the ground. We have to get a little bit better on the offensive line; we tell the line we want to play on the defensive side of the ball and it was a stale mate. We have got to get someWithpush.”the Tigers hosting Riverside on September 3 in its home opener, Gallagher is confident his squad can make a jump from game one to two with some video study. “When the guys see them selves on film, that is the best type of coaching,” said Gallagher. “You could say man you have to run faster, you got to make that block and the player will swear that he did that and there is an argument. Now there is no argument. It is on film, the eye on the sky doesn’t lie.”
Two of those sophomores who played for the PFC club, Brian Donis and Azaria Bre itman, are bringing skill to the striker spot. “Azaria had a good tour nament for the Barca,” said Sutcliffe, who guided the Ti gers to a 10-2-5 record last fall and a spot in the Mercer County Tournament semifi nals. “Brian has good pace, he has the ability to break defenders down. He keeps the ball pretty well.”
Based on how things have gone so far, Sutcliffe is see ing that positive chemistry developing.“Thepreseason has been great; the quality, the work rate, the competitiveness and the teamwork within the group has been really, really good,” said Sutcliffe. “We hope to be in a good place by September 8 when we open the season.”
Senior Zach Della Rocca, who starred for the PHS track team this past spring, and junior Jamie Reynolds add speed and ability to the PHS“Theyattack.areall both working hard and doing their best to find their form,” said Sut cliffe, noting that the team’s leading goal scorer in 2021, senior Richard Wegmann, will not play this season due toIninjury.Sutcliffe’s view, PHS will need to be scoring by committee in the absence of Wegmann.“Weare going to have to
The Tigers have some special young players as sophomores quarterback Brady Collier, wide receiver Corey Woodson, linebacker Judah Marks, linebacker Leo George, offensive line man Sean Wilton, defensive lineman Leo Sarett, and receiver-quarterback Travis Petrone all contributed on Friday.“Iprobably had 15 soph omores who were starting and all of those guys played phenomenal,” said Gallagh er. “Brady had his moments. We got Corey into the mix, he had some catches (3 re ceptions-77 yards). M arks was a little bit banged up coming into the game. He is a football player, he does a good job. We got some good play from Leo, he is a second-year kid who played just a little bit of JV ball last year. Sean and Leo are also sophomores, we got some good play from those two guys. Travis came in at quar terback and made a couple of connections there.”
FANCY FOOTWORK: Princeton High boys’ soccer player Nick Matese looks to make some space near goal in 2021 action. Junior Matese should help spearhead the midfield this fall for PHS. The Tigers kick off the upcoming season by playing at Trenton Central on September 8. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski) was on our team last year. Leo has good speed and he is strong. Patrick is a great athlete. He is in his second year with us, he is left-footed and he has got a year of ex perience at this level. He is terrific. Zhibo has got good pace and a high work rate. He is an industrious player.” At goalie, senior Oleg Brennan and sophomore Nicholas Holmelunde are vying for playing time. “Oleg was one of our re serves last year and Nicholas is a full-time keeper at club level,” said Sutcliffe. “They are still working hard.” Playing hard on defense has been a calling card for PHS over the years. “Last year, I think we led the CVC in goals against, that is always a priority for us,” said Sutcliffe. “In the final four games of last sea son, we gave up only one goal.”Atthis stage of the sea son, getting everyone on the same page is a priority for Sutcliffe.“Thekeys are the chemis try of the team, having a high level of resilience and stay ing together throughout the challenges of the season,” said Sutcliffe. “This is the easy phase of it, early days. When you get into the CVC campaign and the two tour naments, things get tough.”
PHS Football Gets Off to Promising Start in Opener
“I think Tyler is our guy, he scared me there for a sec ond when he went down but he came right back on the next play,” said Gallagher. “Pease is going to be good, it is a good tandem. We have got to get both of those guys in the mix. Evan is a sec ond-year player. We have to figure out some things for him. He is playing defense right now but we don’t want to wear these guys too thin.” In reflecting on the set back, Gallagher conceded that PHS has to be stronger in the trenches.
Seniors Friedman, Jake Richter, and Jack Callahan also provided some good play.
“Ryan had a couple of nice catches, he had a good re verse,” said Gallagher. “Cal lahan and Richter did a nice job on the line.” The running back onetwo punch of Goldberg and Pease showed promise.
—Bill Alden
But Gets Worn Down as Lawrence Rolls to 35-12 Win
Flashy senior Emanuel Noyola brings plenty of skill to the “Mannymidfield.hasgot gifts that others don’t have, he is good,” said Sutcliffe. A group of veterans will spearhead the defense in senior Jack Serxner, ju nior Matthew Kim, senior Leo George, junior Patrick Kenah, and senior Zhibo Huang.“Jack has worked hard, he has a lot of experience so we are expecting a lot from him,” said Sutcliffe. “Mat thew was on Barca and he
As PHS Boys’ Soccer Aims to Continue Winning Ways, Strong Sophomore Group Could Make the Difference find a way, we have some players who have some poise around the goal,” said Sutcliffe, whose team opens the season by playing at Trenton Central on Sep tember 8. “We have to find a way to create our opportuni ties, whether it be through when the ball is live or on set piece situations.”
—Bill Alden
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In addition, McKillop got to test his game against some high-powered competition.“We played Blair three times when they had Luol Deng and Charlie Villanueva,” said McKillop, referring to the pair of stars who went on to play in the NBA. “We played against Lawrenceville, they were really talented and against St. Benedict’s when Danny Hurley was the coach. We played an unbelievably competitive schedule. I think that is really where I saw the most benefit. I was thrown into the fire. I played against high level players and felt I could compete with them. So when I arrived on a college campus the following year, I felt like I belonged.” Hun head coach Stone noted that McKillop belonged from the start upon joining the Raiders.
The challenge of Davidson’s move to the Atlantic 10 in the 2014-15 season helped accelerate McKillop’s development as a coach. “That was really a chance for growth in itself because we had to change and adapt the way we recruit, the way we operate,” said McKillop. “In many ways, that transition itself helped me grow and helped our staff grow.” McKillop’s growth was aided by his father’s decision to delegate more to his assistants.“Overthe last five years, he understood that he had some younger coaches who had aspirations of being head coaches so he gave us a lot more freedom than he had in the past,” said McKillop. “He allowed me to change our offense. He was giving us responsibilities that he had typically not relinquished to assistants in the past in recent years to allow us to grow.”
Drawing on that experience, McKillop is excited to be running the program.
McKillop’s Post-Graduate Year at Hun School
“It really wasn’t too different than being as a player; it was actually easier than playing for him,” said McKillop.“You knew his expectations and your job was to make his job as head coach as easy as possible. I think I added a lot of benefits in terms of having just recently been a player and knowing the ups and downs of being a student at Davidson College and the challenges that come with it. When it comes to recruiting, I felt like I always had a good feel for the people who would fit not only with the basketball program but the college. I think it was a great relationship that he and I had together working on staff. I had a little bit of a different niche for what I could bring to the table as an assistant.”
“I absolutely feel ready, there are the day-to-day surprises that pop up that I didn’t realize I had to think about that or take care of,” said“ToMcKillop.beagreat head coach, you need great assistants. As an assistant, I had a work ethic that was basketball 24/7 in many ways. Now this is really no different, you just have to find ways where you put your time. I have a terrific staff, four members of the staff are graduates of Davidson and know the program. We have got all of the right pieces in place. It is easy to say that now, we haven’t played a game yet. That could feel different after a great win or a tough loss.” day what it comes down to is being the most present with our players,” said McKillop. “That is really what this is all about; you walk into the gym and think about how can I help this player or that player.”Coming to the Hun gym some 21 years ago certainly helped pave the way to McKillop’s rise up the coaching ladder.“My year at Hun was so pivotal for me and my growth as a young man,” said McKillop. “I wouldn’t be where I am without that year.”
FAMILY BUSINESS: Matt McKillop, left, and his father, Bob McKillop, enjoy the moment this June when son succeeded father as the head coach of the Davidson College men’s basketball program. The younger McKillop came to the Hun School for a post-graduate year in 2001-02 and views that experience as pivotal in his path to guiding the Wildcats. (Photo provided courtesy of Davidson College Athletics)
During much of his childhood, Matt McKillop’s life centered around the Davidson College men’s basketball program.McKillop’s father, Bob, started coaching the team in1989 and helped transform the small North Carolina college into a national power, highlighted by coaching future NBA superstar, Steph Curry, and guiding the Wildcats to the NCAA quarterfinals in the 200708Thecampaign.younger McKillop hung around the Davidson gym, serving as a ball boy for his father’s teams, and then starring for Charlotte Catholic High. But, deciding that he needed more seasoning to play at the Division I level, McKillop decided to head north to the Hun School for a post-graduate year in 2001-02.Hisbuddies in North Carolina questioned McKillop’s move.“Ihad to explain to them why I am going to a different high school essentially to pursue my dreams of being a college basketball player,” said McKillop. “I was very confident in it being the right decision. It was not the easiest thing for others toThatunderstand.”decision proved to be the right move as it turned out to be a key step on a path that ended up with McKillop succeeding his father as the Davidson head coach this June. Upon arriving at Hun, McKillop made a smooth transition. “It is a smaller school, it was so easy to be comfortable and to develop relationships quickly,” said McKillop, who established himself as a sharp-shooting guard for the Raiders and served as a team captain. “I lived in a hall with all postgrads, most were in the same shoes as me. They had a specific goal in mind for why they wanted to spend the year at Hun. We were in the gym every day. I was able to compete every single day with people whose goal was to play at the college level like myself.” After his year at Hun, McKillop returned home to Davidson where he enjoyed a solid four-year career, averaging 8.2 points a game and helping the Wildcats make the NCAA tournament in his senior season in 2005-06. He ranks seventh in program history in threepointers with 227 and seventh in three-point percentage at 39.3 percent. He then had a short stint playing pro ball in the Czech Republic and returned to the U.S. where he got a marketing job with the Charlotte Bobcats. Missing being on a team, McKillop got into coaching, serving as an assistant at Emory University. In 2008, McKillop joined his father’s staff at Davidson as an assistant coach. He rose to associate head coach prior to the 2016-17 season and took the helm of the program this summer when his father, 72, retired after 33 years and posting a 634-380 overall record. As McKillop settles into his new role, he credits his Hun experience on and off
Pivotal in his Path to Guide Davidson Men’s Hoops the court with being critical to his success in the game. “It was great that I could reflect on a year that I did not spend at Davidson,” said McKillop, 39. “I got outside my comfort zone and got to meet different people. I developed some incredibly strong relationships, specifically with coach [Jon] Stone. I am very close with him and the Quirks, Bill and Kathy (who ran Hun athletics). Their son, Pat, and I were as close as could be in the year that I spent there.” Utilizing a strong work ethic, McKillop honed his skills during that year. “I was in the gym every day, you had the freedom to put in extra work,” said McKillop. “I was living on my own for the first time. After study hall, I could get down to the gym. I could wake up early and get to the gym. You had the resources, you had the access and had some freedom to find time to really work at things.”
“Matt fit in great, he was a great person,” said Stone. “From a character standpoint, he was as good as we could find. He was a tremendously hard worker as well. He really just fit in well and assumed leadership. In my time here we have had very few postgraduates that were elected captains and he was one of them. I would say in my 23 years we have had two or three.” That hard work helped McKillop progress as a player in his time in New Jersey. “I think that was testament to him and who he was; you have a gym in your backyard and you are able to use it,” said Stone. “Matt shot 50 percent from the 3; you don’t remember many statistics in 23 years but that’s one that I remember. He and Noah Savage (a former Princeton University standout) were the only two guys to shoot 50 percent from 3 for us. I think where he developed too was just in some of his speed and quickness and ability to defend higher level players. Things like that he didn’t have a chance to do in high school just because he wasn’t playing against the same kind of competition.”ForMcKillop, returning to Hun in late June for a recruiting event was a matter of coming full circle.
“It was really special, I was named head coach seven days earlier,” said McKillop. “It was my first recruiting trip as head coach at Davidson and I was going back to the place that was so meaningful to me. I spent time with coach Stone there. I went to Hoagie Haven and I grabbed lunch with Pat Quirk. I sat in Bill and Kathy’s office and was able to catch up with them and hear about their grandkids. That was really, really cool and special for me. The relationships are always the most meaningful piece of it. For me to go back 20 years later now to spend my first weekend recruiting as a head coach was meaningful.”Serving on his father’s staff for the last 14 years was special for McKillop.
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Last Friday, Stuart headed south to Bethesda, Md., for a highlight of the preseason as it scrimmaged Stone Ridge and Holton Arms. “They are two really good programs; I think those two teams were actually in the independent school final in Maryland last year against each other,” said Bruvik, whose team hosts Somer ville on September 10 to start regular season play. “It is a great one night away, it was great for bonding. We haven’t been able to scrim mage with around 19 play ers; we have been doing 7 on 7s and 8 on 8s.” The Tartans are looking for a great season from se nior Lily Harlan, who has committed to attend Boston University and play for its Division I field hockey pro gram.“Lily looks great, she put in the work over the summer to get herself ready for the season and for the future,” said Bruvik of Harlan who tallied 15 goals and 17 as sists last season. “She has done that since she got here. It is going to be the same this year. We are going to look to her to finish the plays and get that assist. She will be a part of our corner plays on both offense and defense.”
Two veterans, senior Mad isen Leggett (3 goals, 1 as sist) and senior Peighton Dwellingham, bring skill and experience to the for ward“Thisline.is Madisen’s fourth year with us, her speed looks great,” added Bruvik, noting that freshmen Jada Hutchinson, Sydney Ander son, and Sami Feldman will also be on the forward line. “She is working her stick re ally well up the sidelines. I look for her to be a finisher too. Dwellingham is going to see a lot of time on the forward line.” It will be mix and match in the midfield for the Tar tans as junior Alex Mandzij (1 goal), junior Elise Price, and sophomore Nyla Flamer
SportsLocal Rider University Athletics Adding Women’s Lacrosse Rider University Athletic Director Don Harnum re cently announced that wom en’s lacrosse will be added as Rider’s 21st NCAA Divi sion I athletic program with regular-season competition starting in spring 2024. The Broncs will join cur rent full Metro Atlantic Ath letic Conference (MAAC) members Canisius, Fairfield, Iona, Manhattan, Marist, Mount St. Mary’s, Niagara, Quinnipiac and Siena in of fering women’s lacrosse, becoming the league’s 10th program.“Weare excited to be add ing women’s lacrosse to our portfolio of sports offerings for women,” said Harnum. “Women’s lacrosse is a sport that continues to grow and thrive, both nationally and in the MAAC, and fits extreme ly well into our geographic recruiting footprint.”
The sport of women’s la crosse has grown in recent years, including a 300 per cent increase in TV viewer ship of the Division I Nation al Championship Game from 2021 to 2022. Rider will become the 61st Division I program (of 128) to add women’s lacrosse since the turn of the century, while 93 programs have been added since 1991.
With junior Emily Ix (13 goals, 2 assists) having made a big impact in 2021 as she played her first sea son of field hockey after pre viously playing tennis, she is poised for a great year. “Emily had learned all of those little things, just teach ing her the game, that is all taken care of,” said Bruvik. “She is now just able to play and execute her skills and speed. That is nice to see.”
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“The kids with experi ence just have to continue to help the younger kids with the transition from middle school hockey and help our sophomores who have now moved up after one varsity season,” said Bruvik. “The seniors need to take on that role and I think they will. I always try to start from the backfield up so we have that chemistry from our back field to our midfield.”
(2 goals, 2 assists) will be joined at times by Milley and“ItIx.will will be Emily and Isabel looking to rotate through there,” said Bruvik. “Alex is playing terrific, she will be floating between the center mid and center back. Elise will be in the mix. Nyla has really improved her skills, she can play either on the line or the midfield.”
The 14th annual Helene Cody 5-kilometer race and 1-mile fun run is taking place on September 10 with the start and finish line at Heritage Park in TheCranbury.funrun begins at 8:15 a.m. and the 5K starts at 9 a.m. The 5K is chip-timed and USATF-certified with water sta tions throughout the course. Trophies will be awarded to the top three male and female finishers overall and in each age group for the 5K. Every fun run finisher will receive a medal and trophies will be awarded to the top three boys and girls. The Cranbury Day celebration will begin immediately after the race on Main Street. Additional race information and on-line registration is avail able at helenecody.com/5k-
SKILL SET: Stuart Country Day School field hockey player Lily Harlan dribbles the ball up the field in game last fall. Senior star and Boston University commit Harlan, who tallied 15 goals and 17 assists in 2021, figures to trigger the Stuart offense again this season. The Tartans host Somerville on September 10 to start regular season play. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski)
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On defense, senior Mia Ze brauskas, sophomore Anna rose Bourgoin St. Maurice, sophomore Maya Dev, and senior Abby Snyder will lead the back line. “Mia is playing very well, she played very well in Mary land,” said Bruvik, whose defensive unit will also in clude sophomore Charlotte Gilani and freshman Najima Tahiry.“She will be in our back field. Annarose will be in the midfield and on defense. Maya will be seeing some on defense but also in the midfield. Abby will be seeing time on defense.”
34•202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN After Producing Superb Campaign Last Fall, Stuart Field Hockey Fired Up for 2022 Season
Helene Cody 5K Race Set for September 10
With the Stuart Country Day School field hockey coming off a superb 11-4-2 season last fall that saw it reach the state Prep B final, the squad’s veterans were chomping at the bit to get on the field to start prepar ing for the 2022 campaign.
“The returners were re ally excited to get preseason started, there is good ener gy,” said Stuart head coach Missy Bruvik. “They are kids that just love to play the game. I love when they start talking that they can’t wait for preseason in July.”
Junior Isabel Milley (6 goals, 6 assists in 2021) fig ures to play a key part in the Stuart attack as well. “Isabel is going to be play ing forward and midfield for us this year,” said Bruvik. “We lost five seniors and we have got to fill some really important positions on the field. Isabel is extremely ver satile so we can pretty much put her anywhere. She has great game sense.”
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While the graduation of star goalie Audrey Blandford leaves a void, sophomore Emily Harlan is ready to step up into that spot. “Emily did see some time last year, she trained with Audrey which was a great thing for the transition this year,” said Bruvik. “She played great down in Mary land. She is a great kid, re ally coachable and doing a nice job.” In order for the Tartans to have another nice season, the squad needs to stick to gether as a unit.
DREAMING BIG: Members of the Princeton Silver Sluggers Intermediate team are all smiles after they competed earlier this month in a 12U tournament at the Cooperstown (N.Y.) Dreams Park near the National Baseball Hall of Fame. The squad went 1-4 in pool play at the event and fell in the first round of the playoffs. Princeton’s lone win came when it defeated Morrisville (Pa.) on a walk-off homer by Charlie Baglio. Pictured in the front row, from left, are Asa Col lins, Matteo Mawson, Baglio, Hudson Naso, James Powers, and Jonah Sommers. In the back row, from left, are Matthew Brophy, Eli Lovett, Shivam Garg, Liam McCloskey, Ray Bellace, and Max Edgar. Not pictured are manager Matt Bellace, coach Jim Brophy, and coach Brian Lovett. Foundation, whose mission is to inspire youth to volun teer, to better their commu nities and themselves. Prior to her death in 2008, Helene Cody, a Princeton High stu dent, planned to revive the Cranbury Day 5K, a com munity event that had been discontinued in 2006, as a way to combine her love of distance running and com munity service for her Girl Scout gold award project. When she passed away, a classmate organized the first Helene Cody Cranbury 5K in memory of Helene for his Eagle Scout project. Ev ery year since, the Helene Cody Foundation has used the event to bring the com munity together and use the proceeds to sponsor youth service projects and provide scholarships. All proceeds go directly to the Helene Cody Foundation, a 501(c) (3) charity. Princeton Athletic Club Holding Trail Run Sept. 17 The Princeton Athletic Club (PAC) is holding a trail run and walk at the Moun tain Lakes Preserve, 57 Mountain Avenue, Princ eton, on September 17. The event, which is ben efiting the Princeton First Aid and Rescue Squad, will start at 9 a.m. and consists of a 5-kilometer-plus trail run and walk. The course is comprised of about 10 percent mile paved park trail, 30 percent unimproved service right-ofways, and 60 percent single track including moderately technical rocks, roots, logs, and whatever else nature has wrought in the woods. Due to the technical nature of the trail, parents should consider whether this event is appropriate for young children. The race is limited to 150 Onlineparticipants.registration and full details regarding the event are available at www. princetonac.org . The fee through September 14 is $40 with a T-shirt on an asavailable basis. Sign up at the event will be $50 and is credit card only, subject to availability.ThePAC is a nonprofit, all-volunteer running club for the community that pro motes running for the fun and health of it and stages several running events each year. call 371-1466
—Bill Alden
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John Paul D’Antonio John Paul D’Antonio, 68, died on August 27, 2022 peacfully surrounded by his family in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, from cancer. A native to the Princeton area he attended Chapin School, The Hun School of Princeton Class of 1970, and Lehigh Unversity Class of 1976. He also attend the Art Students League of New York and Rhode Island School of Design. After graduating Lehigh University, where he majored in Art History, D’Antonio attended the Art Students League of New York, studying under Xavier Gonzales, who was a leading instructor known as much for his large murals as for mentoring students like Jackson Pollock and LeRoy Neiman. John D’Antonio was an accomplished artist whose work represented a realistic interpretation of seascapes and landscapes. His art and philosophy have been shaped by influences as diverse as Academicism and the Photorealist painters of the 1970s. His work has been represented by a number of galleries worldwide.
Obituaries
John Paul D’Antonio is considered by some in the art world to be a leading representational artist in America today. His paintings reveal a remarkable eye for the telling detail united with a facility for composition, color, and light. The precision and clarity of his diverse scapes lend immediacy and impact to his paintings while capturing the energy and mystery of hisJohnsubjects.also held a very accomplished career as global head consultant in the Life Science industry
Doylestown,andRutkowski,threeJohnDoylestown,RebeccaBlakePetertwohisCarolina;RyderchildrenAlexlieSparta,PenelopeandD’Antonio,hissistercome.hischildrenhasingsquash,hadthroughoutinFortuneHelinesmultimillion-dollarbuildingpipe-fromthegroundup.workedfornumerous500companiesthemetropolitanareahislife.Johnmanypassionssuchashunting,andfish-inthegreatoutdoorshepasseddownontohisthatwillcarryonlegacyformanyyearstoJohnissurvivedbyhisAnnD’Antonioandfourchildren,JohnhiswifePam,theirtwochildrenandGeorgeofNewJersey;Nata-Bryenton,herhusbandBryenton,theirtwoMackenzieandofAsheville,NorthPeterD’Antonio,wifeAmanda,andtheirchildrenMichaelandofMissoula,Montana;D’Antonio,hismotherandScottSmithofPennsylvania.isalsosurvivedbyhisstepchildrenTabithaNinaRutkowski,PhoebeRutkowskiofPennsylvania.
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The son of David H. McAlpin and Nina Underwood McAlpin, Mac was predeceased by both his wives, Joan R. McAlpin and Sally D. McAlpin. He was a muchloved moral beacon to his family — including his four children and their spouses, his four grandchildren, and two great-grandsons — and his friends and community. There will be a memorial service and celebration of his life at the Witherspoon Street Presbyterian Church, 124 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, NJ, on Saturday, October 8 at 11 a.m. In lieu of flowers donations may be directed to Habitat for Humanity of Central New Jersey, 530 Route 38 East, Maple Shade, NJ 08052 or to the office address of Witherspoon Street Presbyterian Church, 112 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, NJ 08542.
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We pride ourselves on being a small, personal, and service oriented family business. With five generations of experience, we are here to help guide you through the difficult process of monument selection. We encourage you to make an appointment, with no obligation, to discuss the many options available to you.
John is preceded in death by his mother Yolanda and father Mario D’Antonio. John’s family would like to give their utmost appreciation to the Vitas Hospice team along with Rebecca and Scott Smith who opened their home to care for John through this difficultFamilyprocess.will receive relatives and friends on Friday, September 2, 2022, from 12 to 1 p.m. at Our Lady of Czestochowa Cemetery, 654 Ferry Road, Doylestown, PA (travel through the cemetery gates to the end of the road, the Red Chapel is on the left). Followed by John’s Mass of Christian Burial at 1 Inp.m.lieu of flowers donations can be made in memory of John P. D’Antonio to the American Cancer Society. Arrangements by Donahue Funeral Home, (215) 3489421. Mary Kathryn Moses Mary Kathryn Moses, 66, passed away peacefully on August 28, 2022 at her home in Princeton, New Jersey. She is survived by her loving husband of 26 years John, daughter Courtney Coyne, sister Lori Chaudhry, brother Christopher Knowles, mother Jeri Tomlin, and niece Sophie Chaudhry. She is predeceased by her father Richard Knowles.Kathryn was born in Rantoul, Illinois. She graduated from Rantoul High School where she was senior class president.Shemoved to Chicago in her early twenties where she worked in the jewelry business and also in the State’s Attorney’s office. She was married to her husband John Moses in 1996, and moved to Fox River Grove, Illinois, and later to Cary, Illinois. Kathryn and John moved to Princeton with Courtney in 2004.Kathryn was known for her wonderful sense of humor, her quick wit, and engaging personality. She was passionate about family. The traditions she created for family birthdays and holidays will be a lasting legacy. She loved to garden and created the most glorious landscapes at her home. She rejoiced in observing and caring for the multiple animals and birds that were attracted to her floralKathrynbeds. was active in a number of charitable organizations including Big Brothers, Big Sisters in Illinois and the Princeton Hospital Auxiliary where in 2010 she chaired the annual Art First funding campaign. She will be greatly missed. A visitation will be held at Mather-Hodge Funeral Home, 40 Vandeventer Avenue, Princeton 08542 on Saturday, September 3, at 2 p.m. followed by a service at 3 p.m.
Rev. David H. McAlpin, Jr. David Hunter McAlpin, Jr., born January 19, 1928, in New York City, died peacefully, surrounded by his four children on August 5, 2022, in Skillman, New Jersey after a long, full life. Widely known as Mac, he was of the generation in which frugality was a virtue and sharing your blessings was a moral imperative. After earning a BA in History from Princeton University in 1950 and a MDiv degree from The Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York in 1953, he was ordained a Presbyterian minister in 1957 at Witherspoon Street Presbyterian Church, a predominantly African American church in Princeton, NJ. As Assistant Pastor he was in charge of youth ministry. While at Witherspoon, he earned his MTh from Princeton Theological Seminary in 1961. Moving to Michigan in 1963, he led a nascent parish in East Detroit until 1970, when he and his family returned to the Princeton, where he led churches in transition and counseled fellow pastors. With Witherspoon’s Senior Pastor, Benjamin J. Anderson, Mac attended Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech in 1963 and took King’s lessons to heart. His lifelong efforts to forge a better world and a more just and desegregated society focused on providing housing to those in need and on prison reform work. In the 1950s he led efforts to establish integrated housing developments in Princeton. In 1986 he was a founder of Habitat for Humanity in the Trenton area, leading it for nearly 30 years. He also founded and was President of Capstone Corp., a nonprofit, low-income housing developer serving Mercer County communities. He initiated and oversaw in-prison programs and counseling with the New Jersey Association on Correction, a nonprofit agency serving those impacted by crime and the criminal justice system throughout New Jersey, and with the Community Network, a prison ministry serving NJ. Mac was deeply involved in the community in and around Princeton, where he lived for most of his life. Highlights are his service on the boards of the Stony Brook Millstone Watershed Association, a seminal environmental education and advocacy organization; the Princeton Blairstown Center, an outdoor education program serving at-risk youth from Princeton, Trenton, and other communities; the Historical Society of Princeton; the WitherspoonJackson Historical and Cultural Society; and the Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York. In his 80s and 90s, he was a founding board member of the Paul Robeson House in Princeton. His service to and attendance at Witherspoon Street Presbyterian Church spanned more than 65Modestyears. in both size and ego, he was surprisingly strong and capable. He led a physically active life and loved ice skating, tennis, sailing, boating, and swimming in Chatham, MA, and in the Adirondacks, as well as working on his farm outside Princeton. He also loved wearing his McAlpin plaid kilt for special occasions, including his 90th birthday celebration, and was proud that he never outgrew it.
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paintings, Oriental rugs, coins, clocks, furniture, old toys, military, books, cameras, silver, costume & fine jewelry. Guitars & musical instruments. I buy single items to entire estates. Free apprais als. (609) 306-0613. 06-28-23 TOWN TOPICS CLASSIFIEDS GET TOP RESULTS! Whether it’s selling furniture, finding a lost pet, or having a garage sale, TOWN TOPICS is the way to go! We deliver to ALL of Princeton as well as surrounding areas, so your ad is sure to be read. (609) 924-2200 ext. classifieds@towntopics.com10;ESTATELIQUIDATIONSERVICE: I will clean out attics, basements, garages & houses. Single items to entire estates. No job too big or small. In business over 35 years, serving all of Mercer County. Call (609) 306-0613. 06-28-23 WE BUY CARS Belle Mead Garage (908) 359-8131 Ask for Chris WHAT’S A GREAT GIFT FOR A FORMER PRINCETONIAN? A Gift Subscription! Call (609) 924-2200, ext circulation@towntopics.com10YARDSALE+TOWNTOPICSCLASSIFIED=GREATWEEKEND! Put an ad in the TOWN TOPICS to let everyone know! Call (609) 924-2200 ext. classifieds@towntopics.com10; DEADLINE: Tues before 12 noon tf HOME HEALTH AIDE: 25 years of experience. Available mornings to take care of your loved one, transport to appointments, run errands. I am well known in Princeton. Top care, excellent references. The best! Call (609) 356-2951 or (609) 751-1396. tf LOLIO’S WINDOW WASHING & POWER WASHING: Free estimate. Next day service. Fully insured. Gut ter cleaning available. References available upon request. 30 years ex perience. (609) 271-8860. tf HOUSECLEANING: Experienced, English speaking, great references, reliable with own transportation. Weekly & bi-weekly cleaning. Green cleaning available. Susan, (732) 8733168. I have my own PPE for your protection. 11-30 CLEANING, IRONING, LAUN DRY by women with a lot of expe rience. Excellent references, own transportation. Please call Inga at (609) 530-1169 and leave a message.09-14 SEEKING AFFORDABLE APT/ HOUSE SHARE Female, semi-retired music teach er seeks affordable room in apt. or house shared with good compa ny, school year or longer, beginning October 1 or sooner. Princeton and surrounding locations preferred. Residing locally 25 years. 609-706209, jerseylea.tu3@gmail.com.09-07 DO YOU NEED AN INTELLI GENT, EXPERIENCED, AND TRULY CARING CARETAKER? I know someone who has just be come available. For more details call Hazel Stix: 609-924-4485.08-31 HOUSE-SITTER, HOME HEALTH AVAILABLE:AIDE/COMPANION NJ certified and experienced. Live-in or live-out. Driv er’s license. References available. Please call Inez, (609) 227-9873.09-14 PERSONAL ASSISTANT/CARE GIVER FOR YOUR LOVED ELDER Years of experience. Trustworthy, reliable & highly competent. Female. Excellent references. 609-477-4671.09-21 JOES LANDSCAPING INC. OF PRINCETON Property Maintenance and Specialty OverCommercial/ResidentialJobs45YearsofExperience • Fully Insured • Free Consultations Email:Textjoeslandscapingprinceton@gmail.com(only)(609)356-9201Office(609)216-7936PrincetonReferences•GreenCompanyHIC#13VH07549500tf ONE DAY HAULING, LLC. For all your cleaning and hauling needs. The best for less! (609) 743-6065. 08-31 EXPERIENCED CAREGIVER Experienced and reliable adult caregiver available weekday morn ings. Excellent references. Greater Princeton area. Call or text 609216-5000. tf LOOKING TO BUY vintage cloth ing for period costume. 1980s and earlier. Few pieces to entire attic. Men, women and children. Call Terri: 609-851-3754. 11-23 DOG SITTER: Experienced, lov ing, responsible and fun dog sitter with great references. In the Prince ton area. For small to medium-sized dogs. Call or text 609-216-5000. tf CARPENTRY–PROFESSIONAL All phases of home improvement. Serving the Princeton area for over 30 yrs. No job too small. Call Julius: (609) 466-0732 tf DON’T FORGET FORVOTETOUSBESTKITCHEN&BATHDESIGNERCATEGORY ON TOWNTOPICS.COM 48 West Broad Street • Hopewell, NJ 08525 • p: 609.466.1445 •DISTINCTIVEtobiasdesignllc.comSELECTIONS OF WOODS, FINISHES AND STYLES INSPIRING CUSTOM DESIGNS PROJECT MANAGEMENT FROM CONCEPT TO COMPLETION RedefiningDesign 48 West Broad Street • Hopewell, NJ 08525 • p: 609.466.1445 •DISTINCTIVEtobiasdesignllc.comSELECTIONS OF WOODS, FINISHES AND STYLES INSPIRING CUSTOM DESIGNS PROJECT MANAGEMENT FROM CONCEPT TO COMPLETION RedefiningDesign West Broad Street • Hopewell, NJ 08525 • p: 609.466.1445 •DISTINCTIVEtobiasdesignllc.comSELECTIONS OF WOODS, FINISHES AND STYLES INSPIRING CUSTOM DESIGNS PROJECT MANAGEMENT FROM CONCEPT TO COMPLETION RedefiningDesign DON’T FORGET TO VOTE FOR US BEST KITCHEN & BATH DESIGNER CATEGORY ON TOWNTOPICS.COM 48 West Broad Street Hopewell, NJ 08525 p: 609.466.1445 DISTINCTIVEtobiasdesignllc.comSELECTIONS OF WOODS, FINISHES AND STYLES INSPIRING CUSTOM DESIGNS PROJECT MANAGEMENT FROM CONCEPT TO COMPLETION RedefiningDesign 48 West Broad Street Hopewell, NJ 08525 p: 609.466.1445 FROMPROJECTINSPIRINGWOODS,DISTINCTIVESELECTIONSOFtobiasdesignllc.comFINISHESANDSTYLESCUSTOMDESIGNSMANAGEMENTCONCEPTTOCOMPLETIONRedefiningDesign 48 West Broad Street • Hopewell, NJ 08525 • p: 609.466.1445 •FROMPROJECTINSPIRINGWOODS,DISTINCTIVESELECTIONSOFtobiasdesignllc.comFINISHESANDSTYLESCUSTOMDESIGNSMANAGEMENTCONCEPTTOCOMPLETIONRedefiningDesign 48 West Broad Street • Hopewell, NJ 08525 • p: 609.466.1445 •FROMPROJECTINSPIRINGWOODS,DISTINCTIVESELECTIONSOFtobiasdesignllc.comFINISHESANDSTYLESCUSTOMDESIGNSMANAGEMENTCONCEPTTOCOMPLETIONRedefiningDesign FROMPROJECTINSPIRINGWOODS,DISTINCTIVESELECTIONSOFFINISHESANDSTYLESCUSTOMDESIGNSMANAGEMENTCONCEPTTOCOMPLETIONRedefiningDesign 48 West Broad Street • Hopewell, NJ 08525 • p: 609.466.1445 •FROMPROJECTINSPIRINGWOODS,DISTINCTIVESELECTIONSOFtobiasdesignllc.comFINISHESANDSTYLESCUSTOMDESIGNSMANAGEMENTCONCEPTTOCOMPLETIONRedefiningDesign 48 West Broad Street Hopewell, NJ 08525 p: 609.466.1445 DISTINCTIVEtobiasdesignllc.comSELECTIONS OF WOODS, FINISHES AND STYLES INSPIRING CUSTOM DESIGNS PROJECT MANAGEMENT FROM CONCEPT TO COMPLETION RedefiningDesign 48 West Broad Street Hopewell, NJ 08525 p: 609.466.1445 FROMPROJECTINSPIRINGWOODS,DISTINCTIVESELECTIONSOFtobiasdesignllc.comFINISHESANDSTYLESCUSTOMDESIGNSMANAGEMENTCONCEPTTOCOMPLETIONRedefiningDesign 48 West Broad Street • Hopewell, NJ 08525 • p: 609.466.1445 •FROMPROJECTINSPIRINGWOODS,DISTINCTIVESELECTIONSOFtobiasdesignllc.comFINISHESANDSTYLESCUSTOMDESIGNSMANAGEMENTCONCEPTTOCOMPLETIONRedefiningDesign 48 West Broad Street Hopewell, NJ 08525 p: 609.466.1445 FROMPROJECTINSPIRINGWOODS,DISTINCTIVESELECTIONSOFtobiasdesignllc.comFINISHESANDSTYLESCUSTOMDESIGNSMANAGEMENTCONCEPTTOCOMPLETIONRedefiningDesign FROMPROJECTINSPIRINGWOODS,DISTINCTIVESELECTIONSOFFINISHESANDSTYLESCUSTOMDESIGNSMANAGEMENTCONCEPTTOCOMPLETIONRedefiningDesign 48 West Broad Street • Hopewell, NJ 08525 • p: 609.466.1445 •FROMPROJECTINSPIRINGWOODS,DISTINCTIVESELECTIONSOFtobiasdesignllc.comFINISHESANDSTYLESCUSTOMDESIGNSMANAGEMENTCONCEPTTOCOMPLETIONRedefiningDesign
area for over 30 yrs. No job too small. Call Julius:
HANDYMAN–CARPENTER: Painting, hang cabinets & paintings, kitchen & bath rehab. Tile work, ma sonry. Porch & deck, replace rot, from floors to doors to ceilings. Shelving & hook-ups. ELEGANT REMODEL ING. You name it, indoor, outdoor tasks. Repair holes left by plumbers & electricians for sheetrock repair. RE agents welcome. Sale of home ‘checklist’ specialist. Mercer, Hunt erdon, Bucks counties. 1/2 day to 1 month assignments. CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED, Covid 19 compliant. Active business since 1998. Videos of past jobs available. Call Roeland, (609) 933-9240. tf I BUY ALL KINDS of Old or Pretty Things: China, glass, silver, pottery, costume jewelry, evening bags, fan cy linens, paintings, small furniture, etc. Local woman buyer. (609) 9217469. 10-06
CLASSIFIEDS“un” to place an order: tel: classifieds@towntopics.come-mail:fax:924-2200924-8818 The most cost effective way to reach our 30,000+ readers. CLASSIFIED RATE INFO: Irene Lee, Classified Manager VISA MasterCard • Deadline: 2pm Tuesday•Payment: All ads must be pre-paid, Cash, credit card, or check. • 25 words or less: $15.00•each add’l word 15 cents•Surcharge: $15.00 for ads greater than 60 words in length. •3 weeks: $40.00•4 weeks: $50.00•6 weeks: $72.00•6 month and annual discount rates available. • Ads with line spacing: $20.00/inch•all bold face type: $10.00/week Ext. 10 Deadline: Noon Tuesday • Payment: All ads must be pre-paid, Cash, credit card, or check. • 25 words or less: $25 • each add’l word 15 cents • Surcharge: $15 for ads greater than 60 words in length. • 3 weeks: $65 • 4 weeks: $84 • 6 weeks: $120 • 6 month and annual discount rates available. • Employment: $35 CLASSIFIED RATE INFO: 36•202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN The Top Spot for Real Estate Advertising Town Topics is the most comprehensive and preferred weekly Real Estate resource in the greater Central New Jersey and Bucks County areas. Every Wednesday, Town Topics reaches every home in Princeton and all high traffic business areas in town, as well as the communities of Lawrenceville, Pennington, Hopewell, Skilllman, Rocky Hill, and Montgomery. We ARE the area’s only community newspaper and most trusted resource since 1946! Call to reserve your space today! (609) 924-2200, ext 27 YARD SALE + TOWN TOPICS CLASSIFIED = GREAT WEEKEND! Put an ad in the TOWN TOPICS to let everyone know! Call (609) 924-2200 ext. classifieds@towntopics.com10; DEADLINE: Tues before 12 noon tf HOME HEALTH AIDE: 25 years of experience. Available mornings to take care of your loved one, transport to appointments, run errands. I am well known in Princeton. Top care, excellent references. The best! Call (609) 356-2951 or (609) 751-1396. tf LOLIO’S WINDOW WASHING & POWER WASHING: Free estimate. Next day service. Fully insured. Gut ter cleaning available. References available upon request. 30 years ex perience. (609) 271-8860. tf
HOUSECLEANING: Experienced, English speaking, great references, reliable with own transportation. Weekly & bi-weekly cleaning. Green cleaning available. Susan, (732) 8733168. I have my own PPE for your protection. 11-30 CLEANING, IRONING, LAUN DRY by women with a lot of expe rience. Excellent references, own transportation. Please call Inga at (609) 530-1169 and leave a the Princeton (609) 466-0732 If you are looking for a phenom enal, thorough & consistent cleaning, don’t hesitate to call (609) 751-2188.04-06-23
message.09-14 SEEKING AFFORDABLE APT/ HOUSE SHARE Female, semi-retired music teach er seeks affordable room in apt. or house shared with good compa ny, school year or longer, beginning October 1 or sooner. Princeton and surrounding locations preferred. Residing locally 25 years. 609-706209, jerseylea.tu3@gmail.com.09-07 DO YOU NEED AN INTELLI GENT, EXPERIENCED, AND TRULY CARING CARETAKER? I know someone who has just be come available. For more details call Hazel Stix: 609-924-4485.08-31 HOUSE-SITTER, HOME HEALTH AVAILABLE:AIDE/COMPANION NJ certified and experienced. Live-in or live-out. Driv er’s license. References available. Please call Inez, (609) 227-9873.09-14 PERSONAL ASSISTANT/CARE GIVER FOR YOUR LOVED ELDER Years of experience. Trustworthy, reliable & highly competent. Female. Excellent references. 609-477-4671.09-21 JOES LANDSCAPING INC. OF PRINCETON Property Maintenance and Specialty OverCommercial/ResidentialJobs45YearsofExperience • Fully Insured • Free Consultations Email:Textjoeslandscapingprinceton@gmail.com(only)(609)356-9201Office(609)216-7936PrincetonReferences•GreenCompanyHIC#13VH07549500tf ONE DAY HAULING, LLC. For all your cleaning and hauling needs. The best for less! (609) 743-6065. 08-31 EXPERIENCED CAREGIVER Experienced and reliable adult caregiver available weekday morn ings. Excellent references. Greater Princeton area. Call or text 609216-5000. tf LOOKING TO BUY vintage cloth ing for period costume. 1980s and earlier. Few pieces to entire attic. Men, women and children. Call Terri: 609-851-3754. 11-23 DOG SITTER: Experienced, lov ing, responsible and fun dog sitter with great references. In the Prince ton area. For small to medium-sized dogs. Call or text 609-216-5000. tf CARPENTRY–PROFESSIONAL All phases of home improvement. Serving
BUYING: Antiques,
tf CLEANINGROSA’SSERVICE LLC Offering professional cleaning ser vices in the Princeton community for more than 28 years! Weekly, biweekly, monthly, move-in/move-out services for houses, apartments, of fices & condos. As well as, GREEN cleaning options! Outstanding refer ences, reliable, licensed & trustwor thy.
SEEKING AFFORDABLE APT/ HOUSE SHARE Female, semi-retired music teach er seeks affordable
room in apt. or house shared with good compa ny, school year or longer, beginning October 1 or sooner. Princeton and surrounding locations preferred. Residing locally 25 years. 609-706209, jerseylea.tu3@gmail.com.09-07 DO YOU NEED AN INTELLI GENT, EXPERIENCED, AND TRULY CARING CARETAKER? I know someone who has just be come available. For more details call Hazel Stix: 609-924-4485.08-31 HOUSE-SITTER, HOME HEALTH AVAILABLE:AIDE/COMPANION NJ certified and experienced. Live-in or live-out. Driv er’s license. References available. Please call Inez, (609) 227-9873.09-14 PERSONAL ASSISTANT/CARE GIVER FOR YOUR LOVED ELDER Years of experience. Trustworthy, reliable & highly competent. Female. Excellent references. 609-477-4671.09-21 JOES LANDSCAPING INC. OF PRINCETON Property Maintenance and Specialty OverCommercial/ResidentialJobs45YearsofExperience • Fully Insured • Free Consultations Email:Textjoeslandscapingprinceton@gmail.com(only)(609)356-9201Office(609)216-7936PrincetonReferences • Green Company HIC #13VH07549500 tf ONE DAY HAULING, LLC. For all your cleaning and hauling needs. The best for less! (609) 743-6065. 08-31 EXPERIENCED CAREGIVER Experienced and reliable adult caregiver available weekday morn ings. Excellent references. Greater Princeton area. Call or text 609216-5000. tf LOOKING TO BUY vintage cloth ing for period costume. 1980s and earlier. Few pieces to entire attic. Men, women and children. Call Terri: 609-851-3754. 11-23 DOG SITTER: Experienced, lov ing, responsible and fun dog sitter with great references. In the Prince ton area. For small to medium-sized dogs. Call or text 609-216-5000. tf CARPENTRY–PROFESSIONAL All phases of home improvement. Serving the Princeton area for over 30 yrs. No job too small. Call Julius: (609) 466-0732 tf CLEANINGROSA’SSERVICE LLC Offering professional cleaning ser vices in the Princeton community for more than 28 years! Weekly, biweekly, monthly, move-in/move-out services for houses, apartments, of fices & condos. As well as, GREEN cleaning options! Outstanding refer ences, reliable, licensed & trustwor thy. If you are looking for a phenom enal, thorough & consistent cleaning, don’t hesitate to call (609) 751-2188.04-06-23 HANDYMAN–CARPENTER: Painting, hang cabinets & paintings, kitchen & bath rehab. Tile work, ma sonry. Porch & deck, replace rot, from floors to doors to ceilings. Shelving & hook-ups. ELEGANT REMODEL ING. You name it, indoor, outdoor tasks. Repair holes left by plumbers & electricians for sheetrock repair. RE agents welcome. Sale of home ‘checklist’ specialist. Mercer, Hunt erdon, Bucks counties. 1/2 day to 1 month assignments. CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED, Covid 19 compliant. Active business since 1998. Videos of past jobs available. Call Roeland, (609) 933-9240. tf I BUY ALL KINDS of Old or Pretty Things: China, glass, silver, pottery, costume jewelry, evening bags, fan cy linens, paintings, small furniture, etc. Local woman buyer. (609) 9217469. 10-06 BUYING: Antiques, paintings, Oriental rugs, coins, clocks, furniture, old toys, military, books, cameras, silver, costume & fine jewelry. Guitars & musical instruments. I buy single items to entire estates. Free apprais als. (609) 306-0613. 06-28-23
202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN•37A Town Topics Directory AT YOUR SERVICE 30 Years Experience!of 609-306-0613 Antiques – Jewelry – Watches – Guitars – CamerasBooks - Coins – Artwork – Diamonds – Furniture Unique Items I Will Buy Single Items to the Entire Estate! Are You Moving? House Cleanout Service Available! Daniel Downs (Owner) Serving all of Mercer County Area American Furn ture iExchange HD HOUSEPAINTING&MORE References Available Satisfaction Guaranteed! 20 Years LicensedExperience&InsuredFreeEstimatesExcellentPrices Hector Davila 609-227-8928 Email: HDHousePainting@gmail.com LIC# www.HDHousePainting.com13VH09028000 House Painting Interior/Exterior - Stain & Varnish (Benjamin Moore Green promise products) Wall Paper Installations and Removal Plaster and Drywall Repairs • Carpentry • Power Wash Attics, Basements, Garage and House Cleaning Donald R. Twomey, Diversified Craftsman Specializing in the Unique & Unusual CARPENTRY DETAILS ALTERATIONS • ADDITIONS CUSTOM ALTERATIONS HISTORIC RESTORATIONS KITCHENS •BATHS • DECKS Professional Kitchen and Bath Design Available 609-466-2693 CREATIVE WOODCRAFT, INC. Carpentry & General Home Maintenance James E. Geisenhoner Home Repair Specialist 609-586-2130 FRESH IDEAS Innovative Planting, Bird-friendly Designs Stone Walls and Terraces FREE CONSULTATION PRINCETON, NJ 609-683-4013 BLACKMAN LANDSCAPING Erick Perez Fully insured 15+ Years Experience Call for free estimate Best Prices Serving the Princeton Area since 1963 Find us on Facebook and (609)737-2466Instagram AofTraditionQuality Scott M. Moore of MOORE’S CONSTUCTION HOME IMPROVEMENTS LLC carpenter • builder • cabinet maker complete home renovations • additions 609-924-6777 Family Serving Princeton 100 Years. Free Estimates CALL 609-924-2200 TO PLACE YOUR AD HERE 609 683-7522 Autumn is a great time for exterior painting! Interior & Exterior Painting & PowerwashingStaining Call Us Today SERVING THE GREATER PRINCETON AREA SINCE 1989. Fully Registered and Insured • Family Owned and Operated Local References Available www.olympicpaintingco.com CLEANINGROSA’SSERVICE LLC Offering professional cleaning ser vices in the Princeton community for more than 28 years! Weekly, biweekly, monthly, move-in/move-out services for houses, apartments, of fices & condos. As well as, GREEN cleaning options! Outstanding refer ences, reliable, licensed & trustwor thy. If you are looking for a phenom enal, thorough & consistent cleaning, don’t hesitate to call (609) 751-2188.04-06-23 HANDYMAN–CARPENTER: Painting, hang cabinets & paintings, kitchen & bath rehab. Tile work, ma sonry. Porch & deck, replace rot, from floors to doors to ceilings. Shelving & hook-ups. ELEGANT REMODEL ING. You name it, indoor, outdoor tasks. Repair holes left by plumbers & electricians for sheetrock repair. RE agents welcome. Sale of home ‘checklist’ specialist. Mercer, Hunt erdon, Bucks counties. 1/2 day to 1 month assignments. CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED, Covid 19 compliant. Active business since 1998. Videos of past jobs available. Call Roeland, (609) 933-9240. tf I BUY ALL KINDS of Old or Pretty Things: China, glass, silver, pottery, costume jewelry, evening bags, fan cy linens, paintings, small furniture, etc. Local woman buyer. (609) 9217469. 10-06 BUYING: Antiques, paintings, Oriental rugs, coins, clocks, furniture, old toys, military, books, cameras, silver, costume & fine jewelry. Guitars & musical instruments. I buy single items to entire estates. Free apprais als. (609) 306-0613. 06-28-23 TOWN TOPICS CLASSIFIEDS GET TOP RESULTS! Whether it’s selling furniture, finding a lost pet, or having a garage sale, TOWN TOPICS is the way to go! We deliver to ALL of Princeton as well as surrounding areas, so your ad is sure to be read. (609) 924-2200 ext. classifieds@towntopics.com10;ESTATELIQUIDATIONSERVICE: I will clean out attics, basements, garages & houses. Single items to entire estates. No job too big or small. In business over 35 years, serving all of Mercer County. Call (609) 306-0613. 06-28-23 WE BUY CARS Belle Mead Garage (908) 359-8131 Ask for Chris WHAT’S A GREAT GIFT FOR A FORMER PRINCETONIAN? A Gift Subscription! Call (609) 924-2200, ext circulation@towntopics.com10YARDSALE+TOWNTOPICSCLASSIFIED=GREATWEEKEND! Put an ad in the TOWN TOPICS to let everyone know! Call (609) 924-2200 ext. classifieds@towntopics.com10; DEADLINE: Tues before 12 noon tf HOME HEALTH AIDE: 25 years of experience. Available mornings to take care of your loved one, transport to appointments, run errands. I am well known in Princeton. Top care, excellent references. The best! Call (609) 356-2951 or (609) 751-1396. tf LOLIO’S WINDOW WASHING & POWER WASHING: Free estimate. Next day service. Fully insured. Gut ter cleaning available. References available upon request. 30 years ex perience. (609) 271-8860. tf HOUSECLEANING: Experienced, English speaking, great references, reliable with own transportation. Weekly & bi-weekly cleaning. Green cleaning available. Susan, (732) 8733168. I have my own PPE for your protection. 11-30 CLEANING, IRONING, LAUN DRY by women with a lot of expe rience. Excellent references, own transportation. Please call Inga at (609) 530-1169 and leave a message.09-14
38•202231,AUGUSTWEDNESDAY,N.J.,PRINCETON,TOPICS,TOWN Sales Representative/Princeton Residential Specialist, MBA, ECO Broker Princeton Office 609 921 1900 | 609 577 2989(cell) | info@BeatriceBloom.com | BeatriceBloom.com ADVERTISING SALES Witherspoon Media Group is looking for a part-time advertising Account Manager, based out of our Kingston, NJ office, to generate sales for Town Topics Newspaper and Princeton Magazine The ideal candidate will: • Establish new sales leads and manage existing sales accounts for both publications • Develop industry-based knowledge and understanding, including circulation, audience, readership, and more. • Collaborate with the advertising director and sales team to develop growth opportunities for both publications Track record of developing successful sales strategies and knowledge of print and digital media is a plus. Fantastic benefits and a great work environment. Please submit cover letter and resume to: charles.plohn@witherspoonmediagroup.com Witherspoon Media Group For additional info Publishingwitherspoonmediagroup.commelissa.bilyeu@contact:CustomDesign,Printing,andDistribution · BrochuresNewsletters · BooksPostcards · Catalogues · Annual609-924-5400Reports4438 Route 27 North, Kingston, NJ 08528-0125 Employment Opportunities in the Princeton Area DEMOLITION NOTICE: Please be advised that it is our intention to demolish the detached garage structure on the 197 Witherspoon Street property (Block 20.01, Lot 12). The Office of Historic Preservation requires that the owner provide notice in a local publication prior to the date of the Monthly Meeting. This project will be presented at the HPC Monthly Meeting set to take place on Monday Sep tember 19th, 2022, at 4:00pm. Below you can find the Zoom webinar link for the Historic Preservation Com mission Meeting: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85916319616DialIn:1-646-558-8656MeetingID:85916319616 The demolition activities will be conducted solely on the property and will be completed in accordance with all applicable laws and regulations. While further writ ten notice will not be provided, please do not hesitate to reach out to our office, Joshua Zinder Architecture & Design, with any questions or contact the Township Construction Code Enforcement Division to obtain a copy of the application submission. TOWN TOPICS CLASSIFIEDS GET TOP RESULTS! Whether it’s selling furniture, finding a lost pet, or having a garage sale, TOWN TOPICS is the way to go! We deliver to ALL of Princeton as well as surrounding areas, so your ad is sure to be read. (609) 924-2200 ext. classifieds@towntopics.com10;ESTATELIQUIDATIONSERVICE: I will clean out attics, basements, garages & houses. Single items to entire estates. No job too big or small. In business over 35 years, serving all of Mercer County. Call (609) 306-0613. 06-28-23 WE BUY CARS Belle Mead Garage (908) 359-8131 Ask for Chris WHAT’S A GREAT GIFT FOR A FORMER PRINCETONIAN? A Gift Subscription! Call (609) 924-2200, ext circulation@towntopics.com10YARDSALE+TOWNTOPICSCLASSIFIED=GREATWEEKEND! Put an ad in the TOWN TOPICS to let everyone know! Call (609) 924-2200 ext. classifieds@towntopics.com10; DEADLINE: Tues before 12 noon tf HOME HEALTH AIDE: 25 years of experience. Available mornings to take care of your loved one, transport to appointments, run errands. I am well known in Princeton. Top care, excellent references. The best! Call (609) 356-2951 or (609) 751-1396. tf LOLIO’S WINDOW WASHING & POWER WASHING: Free estimate. Next day service. Fully insured. Gut ter cleaning available. References available upon request. 30 years ex perience. (609) 271-8860. tf HOUSECLEANING: Experienced, English speaking, great references, reliable with own transportation. Weekly & bi-weekly cleaning. Green cleaning available. Susan, (732) 8733168. I have my own PPE for your protection. 11-30 CLEANING, IRONING, LAUN DRY by women with a lot of expe rience. Excellent references, own transportation. Please call Inga at (609) 530-1169 and leave a message.09-14
SEEKING AFFORDABLE APT/ HOUSE SHARE Female, semi-retired music teach er seeks affordable room in apt. or house shared with good compa ny, school year or longer, beginning October 1 or sooner. Princeton and surrounding locations preferred. Residing locally 25 years. 609-706-
209, jerseylea.tu3@gmail.com.09-07 DO YOU NEED AN INTELLI GENT, EXPERIENCED, AND TRULY CARING CARETAKER? I know someone who has just be come available. For more details call Hazel Stix: 609-924-4485.08-31 HOUSE-SITTER, HOME HEALTH AVAILABLE:AIDE/COMPANION NJ certified and experienced. Live-in or live-out. Driv er’s license. References available. Please call Inez, (609) 227-9873.09-14 PERSONAL ASSISTANT/CARE GIVER FOR YOUR LOVED ELDER Years of experience. Trustworthy, reliable & highly competent. Female. Excellent references. 609-477-4671.09-21 JOES LANDSCAPING INC. OF PRINCETON Property Maintenance and Specialty OverCommercial/ResidentialJobs45YearsofExperience • Fully Insured • Free Consultations Email:Textjoeslandscapingprinceton@gmail.com(only)(609)356-9201Office(609)216-7936PrincetonReferences • Green Company HIC #13VH07549500 tf “Where quality still matters.” 4621 Route 27 Kingston, NJ riderfurniture.com609-924-0147 Mon-Fri 10-6; Sat 10-5; Sun 12-5 FurnitureRider 30 Years Experience!of 609-306-0613 Antiques – Jewelry – Watches – Guitars – CamerasBooks - Coins – Artwork – Diamonds – Furniture Unique Items I Will Buy Single Items to the Entire Estate! Are You Moving? House Cleanout Service Available! Daniel Downs (Owner) Serving all of Mercer County Area American Furn ture iExchange www.princetonmagazinestore.com Featuring gifts that are distinctly Princeton NEW ADDEDPRODUCTSWEEKLY! Witherspoon Media Group For additional info Publishingwitherspoonmediagroup.commelissa.bilyeu@contact:CustomDesign,Printing,andDistribution · Newsletters · Brochures · Postcards · Books · Catalogues · Annual WitherspoonReportsMediaGroupForadditionalinfocontact:melissa.bilyeu@witherspoonmediagroup.comCustomDesign,Printing,PublishingandDistribution · Newsletters · Brochures · Postcards · Books · Catalogues · Annual WitherspoonReportsMedia Group For additional info Publishingwitherspoonmediagroup.commelissa.bilyeu@contact:CustomDesign,Printing,andDistribution · Newsletters · Brochures · Postcards · Books · Catalogues · Annual609-924-5400Reports4438 Route 27 North, Kingston, NJ 08528-0125
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