Sunteți pe pagina 1din 20

www.theprincetonsun.

com
APRIL 17-23, 2013
FREE
Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . 18-19
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Obituaries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
New names
New municipal building
names are chosen. PAGE 3
The Princeton Folk Music
Society will present David
Massengill on Friday, April 19,
at 8:15 p.m. at Christ
Congregation Church, 50
Walnut Lane.
Massengill, a virtuoso on
the Edsel Martin dulcimer, is
a transplanted Tennessean
who has been an important
figure of the folk scene in
Greenwich Village for more
30 years. His richly
observed songs about socie-
ty and the life around him,
combine the soft-spoken
charms of a Southern gen-
tleman with the street-wise
common sense of a New
Yorker, the society would
have us know.
Massengill has performed
at The Newport Folk Festival,
Carnegie Hall, The Kennedy
Center, and on PBS and BBC.
His songs have been record-
ed by Joan Baez, Nancy
Griffith, Chad Mitchell, Dave
Van Ronk, Lucy Kaplansky
and many others.
Admission is $20 at the
door. For more info, call 609-
799-0944.
SPOTLIGHT
Just plain folk
Battle of Princeton re-enactment
Officials,
police chief
continue
negotiations
By KATIE MORGAN
The Princeton Sun
Municipal officials have met
with Princeton Police Chief
David Dudeck several times in the
past month to negotiate a separa-
tion agreement.
Town attorney Ed Schmierer
said he has met with Administra-
tor Bob Bruschi and Dudeck at
least three times.
Dudeck has not been in the of-
fice since Feb.
26, when he
left amid alle-
gations of
administra-
tive miscon-
duct. In the
weeks follow-
ing Dudecks
departure,
the matter was referred to the of-
fice of the Mercer County Prose-
cutor. A spokeswoman from the
prosecutors office said the allega-
tions were being reviewed. The
substance of the allegations has
not been disclosed.
Dudeck is on medical leave.
Schmierer said the parties are not
in a rush to negotiate a separation
because Dudecks absence has not
EDITORIAL
Its time to end the
dysfunctional
culture of the
police department.
PAGE 6.
please see DUDECK, page 9
JASON S. COLFLESH/Special to The Sun
Seen are actors in Revolutionary War-era dress at the re-enactment of the 1777 Battle of Princeton
at Princeton Battlefield State Park on April 6.
2 THE PRINCETON SUN APRIL 17-23, 2013
police report
The following public informa-
tion was provided by the Prince-
ton Police Department.
April 1, first block of Wither-
spoon: A victim at a business re-
ported the theft of cash and a
bank card from his coat pocket,
with additional money subse-
quently withdrawn from his bank
account.
April 2, 400 block of Mount
Lucas Road: During the course of
a stop, a 21-year-old Willingboro
man was found to have a
$922 warrant outstanding. He was
arrested and transported to the
Mercer County Corrections
Center in Hopewell in default of
bail.
April 4, Lytle Street near With-
erspoon: During a motor vehicle
stop, a 23-year-old Morrisville,
Pa., man was found to be in pos-
session of what appeared to be
marijuana. He was arrested,
processed and released. He was
also charged with possession of
drug paraphernalia and several
motor vehicle violations.
April 4, Valley Road near Wal-
nut Lane: During a motor vehicle
stop, a 50-year-old Ewing man was
found to have an active traffic
warrant for $190 outstanding
from Pennington Borough. He
was arrested and released on bail.
April 4, 100 block of Wither-
spoon: Patrols were dispatched in
response to a report of a man
peering into windows. A 50-year-
old Bridgeton man matching the
description was found in Prince-
ton Cemetery. He was found to
have multiple traffic and criminal
warrants outstanding, totaling
$1,350. He was arrested and
charged with criminal trespass
and possession of burglary tools.
He was held in default of bail.
April 5, Hulfish Street: Patrol
officers responded to a report of
an unresponsive woman, col-
lapsed on the floor of a restau-
rant, blue in the face, with no
pulse. Officers began CPR.
PFA&RS took over her care. She
was transported to UMCP at
Plainsboro for further treatment.
The woman survived.
April 6, North Harrison Street
near Clearview: During a motor
vehicle stop, a 26-year-old Trenton
man was arrested for possession
of a controlled dangerous sub-
stance. He was also charged with
having a broken windshield and
for driving an unregistered vehi-
cle. He was later released.
April 7, Snowden Lane near
Route 27: During a motor vehicle
stop, a 40-year-old Princeton man
was arrested on a charge of
drunken driving. He was released
with a pending court date.
April 9, University Place,
Dinky Station: A Trek mens bicy-
cle was reported stolen between
March 8 and 10.
April 10, Stockton Street (Route
206), south of Lovers Lane: Multi-
ple 911 calls reported that a trac-
tor trailer hauling scrap metal
was on fire. The driver had been
forced to abandon the vehicle. Re-
sponding were Princeton Police,
Princeton Fire, PFA&RS and
Trenton HAZMAT. The fire was
extinguished.
Send us your Princeton news
Have a news tip? Want to send us a press release or photos? Shoot
an interesting video? Drop us an email at
news@theprincetonsun.com. Fax us at 856-427-0934. Call the edi-
tor at 609-751-0245.
Pet Friends Grief
support for pet owners
(800) 404-7387
PSA
By KATIE MORGAN
The Princeton Sun
The former Township Building
and former Borough Hall will
now be known as Witherspoon
Hall and Monument Hall, respec-
tively.
The winners of a town-wide
contest to rename Princetons two
municipal buildings were an-
nounced April 5.
One of the winners of the con-
test, which was co-sponsored by
the town and the Princeton Pub-
lic library, is Carol Calamoneri,
who submitted Witherspoon Hall.
She was also one of five people to
submit Monument Hall. The
other four submissions came
from Diana Crane, Stephanie
Chorney, Mimi Omiecinski and
Roger Shatzkin.
The five winners were recog-
nized at the April 8 Princeton
Council meeting. Calamoneri re-
ceived a prize package that in-
cluded a $250 gift certificate to
McCaffreys Supermarket, season
tickets to the next season of
Princeton University basketball,
a free family membership to the
Community Park Pool, and free
DVD rentals at the library.
One of the other four winners
was chosen at random to receive a
similar prize package. Shatzkin,
whose name was drawn from a
hat, received a season ticket pack-
age, free pool membership and
DVD rentals. Shatzkin, Calam-
oneri, Omiecinski, Crane and
Chorney all received $50 gift cer-
tificates to McCaffreys Super-
market.
Calamoneri, who has been a
Princeton resident for seven
years, said her ideas for the two
building names were just com-
mon sense.
I read about the contest in the
local paper, she said. The
names just came to me. Theyd
been rattling around in my head.
The new names will let people
know exactly where the buildings
are, so residents and non-resi-
dents will be able to find them.
Calamoneri coordinates food
drives for Yes We Can, a grass-
roots charity in Princeton that
benefits the Crisis Ministry food
pantry. She said her $300 in Mc-
Caffreys gift certificates would
go to buy food for needy families.
I thought, you know, I could
buy several filet mignons, but it
would just go so much further for
people who really need it, she
said. I will take the season tick-
ets, though, and well definitely
use the pool.
More information about Yes
We Can is available at yeswecan-
fooddrives.org.
Calamoneri said she was
pleased the municipality reached
out to the public for ideas when
renaming the buildings.
Our town officials give people
a chance to express themselves,
she said. There are incredibly in-
telligent people who live here and
have worthwhile things to say. Its
just that kind of town. I credit the
council and the mayor for listen-
ing to the people.
APRIL 17-23, 2013 THE PRINCETON SUN 3
New municipal building names are chosen
By KATIE MORGAN
The Princeton Sun
The Dinky, the small NJ TRAN-
SIT train that runs from Prince-
ton University to the Princeton
Junction Transit Station, will be
re-routed to a temporary station
in mid-October.
The trains Princeton terminus
will be moved during construc-
tion of the universitys new Arts
and Transit neighborhood. The
project will ultimately include the
construction of a new, permanent
Dinky station 460 feet south of
the current station.
Kristin Appelget, director of
community and regional affairs
at Princeton University, said the
temporary re-routing would be
necessary while the new station
and tracks were constructed.
The train will operate to the
current station until October
2013, Appelget said. Beginning
in October, there will be a tempo-
rary station adjacent to the new
commuter parking lot. The Dinky
will run to that temporary station
until the new, permanent station
is complete in July 2014.
Appelget said the temporary
station, which will be approxi-
mately 750 feet from the planned
location of the new, permanent
station, would have an indoor
waiting room, heating and air
conditioning, bathrooms, ticket
vending machines and a covered
platform.
Community members have ex-
pressed concern that the tempo-
rary station would be approxi-
mately 1,200 feet from the current
location of the Dinky station.
Bruce Afran, the attorney rep-
resenting the Save the Dinky
group, which is currently fighting
the Arts and Transit project in
court, said he doesnt believe the
university has the authority to
move the station to the planned
location.
Its rather shocking that the
university would even attempt to
alter the train location or service
before the courts have looked at
these cases, Afran said. The
community deserves to have the
courts resolve these issues before
the university starts construc-
tion.
Appelget said the university
would take steps to avoid inconve-
niencing the Dinkys riders while
the temporary station is in use.
There will be several buses in
use, and commuters will have op-
tions, Appelget said. There will
be a free express bus provided
that will stop at the original
Dinky location, the temporary
station, and continue on to
Princeton Junction. The Tiger
Transit bus will also stop at both
the original station and the tem-
porary station.
Appelget said that motorists
who park at the Dinky station
would not be forced to walk far-
ther.
Construction has already
begun, she said. One of the first
things being built is the new com-
muter lot, which is adjacent to the
temporary station. By the time
the Dinky is re-routed to the tem-
porary station, the adjacent lot
will be complete.
Afran said he believes the uni-
versity should not begin con-
struction while a lawsuit against
the project is ongoing.
In all the planning board and
developing cases Ive handled,
Ive never seen a developer start
to build before the courts ruled,
Afran said. If they were to begin
construction, it would be a shock-
ing disregard for the legal sys-
tem. If we need to, well file an in-
junction to stop any work.
4 THE PRINCETON SUN APRIL 17-23, 2013
Lic #10199 Cont Lic #13VH01382900
Out w|th the O|d. In w|th the NewI
For over 100 years conventional salt-based water softeners have
stripped out healthy minerals like calcium and magnesium from
water to prevent scale. While effective, salt-based water softeners
have many undesirable side effects including: hauling heavy salt
bags, briny taste, slimy-feeling showers,
health concerns, and flushing thousands
of gallons of salty waste water into our
sewers and our environment.
Heating, Plumbing,
Cooling and Fuel
SINCE 1925
Licensed On-Staff
PIumbers FuIIy Insured
16 Gordon Ave. Box 6097 Lawrence, NJ 08648
609-896-0141 IawrenceviIIefueI.net
S50 OFF
Separate Hot Water Heaters
Must present this coupon at the time of purchase.
May not be combined w/ any other offer. Expires 5/1/13.
10% OFF
Any Service
Up to $100. Must present this coupon at the time of purchase.
May not be combined w/ any other offer. Expires 5/1/13.
S100 OFF
Heating/Air Conditioning InstaIIation
Must present this coupon at the time of purchase.
May not be combined w/ any other offer. Expires 5/1/13.
Lic. #13VH00927200
Dinky to be rerouted to temporary station in fall
When the news |s sweet,
We Tweet!
When the news |s b|tter,
We Still Twitter!
Fo||ow us at
tw|tter.com/pr|ncetonsun
Send us your Princeton news
Have a news tip? Want to send us a press release or photos? Shoot
an interesting video? Drop us an email at
news@theprincetonsun.com. Fax us at 856-427-0934. Call the edi-
tor at 609-751-0245.
letter to the editor
in our opinion
Here we go again ...
It is time to address the dysfunctional culture of the police department
6 THE PRINCETON SUN APRIL 17-23, 2013
I
t seems clear that the Princeton
Council missed at least one oppor-
tunity that consolidation afford-
ed: A chance to address the apparent-
ly dysfunctional culture of the
Princeton Police Department.
Enough is enough. The time has
come.
The issue appears to go deeper
than allegations of administrative
misconduct or mismanagement on
the part of Top Brass even, in one
case, a criminal offense. It goes deep-
er than the sorry spectacle of a veter-
an officers effectively winning a suit
against the department over allega-
tions of wrongful firing, for whistle-
blowing. The question has been
raised whether the rank-and-file can
force out their superiors. That such a
question can be raised and sound
halfway plausible is a call to action.
Its undeniable that Princetons
governing officials had their hands
full bringing the towns historic con-
solidation to fruition. But now, when
one learns, in reference to the contin-
uing turmoil, that a council member
has expressed unwillingness to sit
through a new round of interviews to
select a new chief, one can only react
with astonishment. The public inter-
est clearly calls for more review, more
consideration, more oversight, not
business-as-usual. It may even call for
a fundamental restructuring. Lets hit
the brakes, now, and think this
through.
Nothing should be off the table. For
instance, another council member
has suggested that the council take a
look at the advisability of appointing
a civilian administrator to run the de-
partment in other words, a police di-
rector, to whom the chief of police
would report. Other municipalities
have this structure, which provides
the level of day-by-day oversight that
the councils Public Safety Committee
cannot. Is this level of management
necessary? Would it solve the depart-
ments problems?
Lets find out.
Princetons citizenry deserve a sta-
ble, well-organized and internally
harmonious police force. The depart-
ment itself deserves better. A turbu-
lent work environment is no help to
officers out there on the front line,
doing their best to ensure the mainte-
nance of public safety and civic order.
One expects, too, that a turbulent
work environment is no help to the
department in attracting the best and
the brightest to its service.
Were grateful for everything our
police officers do for this community,
day in and day out. We fully support
them. But sometimes and this is
such a case responsible support
means asking hard questions and de-
manding hard answers.
1330 Route 206, Suite 211
Skillman, NJ 08558
609-751-0245
The Sun is published weekly by Elauwit
Media LLC, 1330 Route 206, Suite 211,
Skillman, NJ 08558. It is mailed weekly to
select addresses in the 08042 and 08540 ZIP
codes.
If you are not on the mailing list, six-month
subscriptions are available for $39.99. PDFs
of the publication are online, free of charge.
For information, please call 609-751-0245.
To submit a news release, please email
news@theprincetonsun.com. For advertis-
ing information, call (609) 751-0245 or
email advertising@theprincetonsun.com.
The Sun welcomes comments from readers
including any information about errors that
may call for a correction to be printed.
SPEAK UP
The Sun welcomes letters from readers.
Brief and to the point is best, so we look for
letters that are 300 words or fewer. Include
your name, address and phone number. We
do not print anonymous letters. Send letters
to news@theprincetonsun.com, via fax at
609-751-0245, or via the mail. Of course,
you can drop them off at our office, too.
The Princeton Sun reserves the right to
reprint your letter in any medium includ-
ing electronically.
PUBLISHER Steve Miller
EXECUTIVE EDITOR Tim Ronaldson
VICE PRESIDENT OF SALES Joe Eisele
MANAGING EDITOR Mary L. Serkalow
COMMUNITY EDITOR Michael Redmond
PRINCETON EDITOR Katie Morgan
ART DIRECTOR Tom Engle
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Russell Cann
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Barry Rubens
VICE CHAIRMAN Michael LaCount, Ph.D.
ELAUWIT MEDIA GROUP
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Dan McDonough, Jr.
EDITOR EMERITUS Alan Bauer
Reader disagrees that sports
gambling is harmless practice
I strongly disagree that sports gambling is a
harmless practice. Gambling addiction is a
well-known risk, even to those who take a bus,
fly or drive to get to a casino. The number of
people who watch sports is huge including the
under age fan and those on Social Security (like
myself).
The draw to try to make a buck (just once)
will be too great. This potentially could ruin
lives, families and marriages.
I propose the federal law of 1992 be appealed,
not enhanced.
Joanne Dix
Special to The Sun
Enjoying The Princeton Festival's 'Voyage 2013' gala at Greenacres Coun-
try Club, Lawrenceville, are, from left: Richard Tang Yuk, the festival's gen-
eral and artistic director, U.S. Rep. Rush Holt (D-12), and festival chairman
Costa Papastephanou. The gala provides support for the ninth season of
The Princeton Festival, running June 8-30 at various Princeton-area ven-
ues, and featuring Wagner's opera 'The Flying Dutchman' at McCarter The-
atre. For more information, visit princetonfestival.org.
Voyage 2013 gala
www.windowaccentsandfIooring.com
4 $l8l0 8080, Ffl00l0. I09l 9Z400Z9
8 0$ 8l0N8 Z0, 8lll800f000. I908l Z81180Z(Mountainview Plaza)
l8ll 00 0l 00f 0090l0l $00Nf00M8 1008I
ONGOING
The Winter's Tale: McCarter The-
atre. Rebecca Taichman directs
Shakespeare's genre-bending
play. $20-$67. 609-258-2787,
www.mccarter.org.
Sondheim! 8 p.m., Berlind Stage at
McCarter Theater. Princeton Uni-
versitys Lewis Center of the Arts
presents Stephen Sondheims
musical Sunday in the Park with
George, based on Georges Seu-
rat's painting, A Sunday After-
noon on the Island of La Grande
Jatte. Directed by Julia Bumke.
$15, 609-258-1500, www.prince-
ton.edu/arts. Repeated April 18,
19, 20.
Art Museum: Princeton University
Art Museum. 1. Revealing the
African Presence in Renaissance
Europe. 2. Picturing Power:
Capitalism, Democracy, and
American Portraiture, portrait
collection of the New York Cham-
ber of Commerce, assembled
over a 200-year period beginning
in 1772. 3. The Year of Mod-
ernism, 100th anniversary of
modern art and literature. On
view through June 23. Free. 609-
258-3788, artmuseum.prince-
ton.edu.
D&R Greenway: D&R Greenway
Land Trust, Johnson Education
Center, 1 Preservation Place (off
Rosedale), 609-924-4646. Sky
Gazing, group art exhibition fea-
turing works by Deb Brockway,
Merrillee Drakulich, Lora Durr,
Donna Gratkowski, Ann Guidera-
Matey, Donna Levinstone,
Charles McVicker, Lucy McVicker,
Paul Mordetsky, Stefanie Silver-
man, Neil Thompson, and Mary
Waltham. On view through May 2.
Chapin Show: Chapin School, 4101
Princeton Pike. All I Have
Learned, Until Now, paintings by
Thomas Kelly. On view through
April 30. 609-924-7206,
www.chapinschool.org
WEDNESDAY April 17
Theater talk: 11 a.m., Princeton Uni-
versity, 185 Nassau. Lewis Center
for the Arts presents Gregory
Doran, artistic director of the
Royal Shakespeare Company, in
Conversation with actor Sir
Antony Sher: On Looking For-
ward to Working Together Again,
and Looking Back on Their Previ-
ous Shakespeare Collaborations.
Free. 609-258-1500, www.prince-
ton.edu/arts.
Lunch and Learn: Noon. Jewish
Center, 435 Nassau. Women in
Islam, with Buntzie Ellis
Churchill, former president,
World Affairs Council of Philadel-
phia, member, Council on Foreign
Relations. Bring dairy or parve
lunch. Dessert provided. Free.
609-921-2782.
Reading: 4:30 p.m., McCarter The-
atre, Berlind Stage: Princeton
Universitys Althea Ward Clark
Reading Series presents poet
Matthew Dickman, writer Joseph
O'Neill. Free.
AIDS pioneer: 4:30 p.m., Woodrow
Wilson School, Dodds Auditori-
um, Robertson Hall. Ending the
HIV/AIDS Pandemic: From Scien-
tific Advances to Public Health
Implementation, with Anthony
S. Fauci, M.D., HIV and AIDS
researcher, director of the
National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases. Free. Recep-
tion follows.
Cornerstone Community Kitchen:
5 to 6:30 p.m., Princeton United
Methodist Church, Nassau at
Vandeventer, 609-924-2613. Hot
meals served, prepared by TASK.
Free.
Princeton Country Dancers: 7:30
p.m., Suzanne Patterson Center,
45 Stockton. Contra dance. Class
followed by dance. $8, 609-924-
6763, www.princetoncountry-
dancers.org.
THURSDAY April 18
Trenton Farmers' Market: 9 a.m. to
6 p.m. Open air, 960 Spruce
Street, Lawrence. 609-695-2998.
Through Saturday. thetrenton-
farmersmarket.com.
55-Plus: 10 a.m., Jewish Center, 435
Nassau. The Political Conse-
quences of Economic Insecurity,
with Adam Seth Levine, professor
of government, Cornell Universi-
ty. $3, 609-896-2923,
www.princetonol.com.
Westminster Conservatory: 12:15
p.m. Niles Chapel, Nassau Presby-
terian Church, 61 Nassau. Faculty
concert: Darryl Yokley, saxo-
phone, with Ruisha Zhang,
pianist. Free.
Afternoon Concert: 12:30 pm,
Princeton University Chapel. Iris
Lan, organist. Free. 609-258-
3654.
Poetry: 7 p.m., Princeton Public
Library. Lynn Levin reads from
Miss Plastique. Free. 609-924-
9529, www.princetonlibrary.org.
Author, author: 7 p.m., Princeton
Public Library. 7 p.m. Shannon K.
O'Neil, author of Two Nations
Indivisible: Mexico, the United
States, and the Road Ahead.
Free. 609-924-9529, www.prince-
tonlibrary.org.
Public Meeting: 7:30 p.m., Planning
Board.
Women dancing: 7:30 p.m., YWCA
Princeton, Black Box Theater, 59
Paul Robeson Place. I'll Have
What She's Having Dance Proj-
ect, professional dancers-chore-
ographers, including Lisa Botali-
co, Christine Colosimo, Joy Sayen
of Princeton. 10th anniversary
celebration, including poets and
musicians. $25. Parental adviso-
ry. 609-497-2100,
www.ywcaprinceton.org. Repeat-
ed April 19 and 20, 7:30 p. m.
Princeton Shakespeare Company:
8 p.m., Whitman College. The
Taming of the Shrew. $10 at
door. 609-258-3000,
www.princeton.edu/~psc.
Repeated April 19, 20, 25, 26, 27.
FRIDAY April 19
Preventing Lyme Disease: Noon,
Princeton Senior Resource Cen-
ter, 45 Stockton. Lyme Disease
Prevention, Detection, and Treat-
ment, with Suzanne Rose, public
health educator, Princeton Health
Department. Bring lunch. Bever-
ages and desserts provided. Free.
Register, 609-924-7108,
www.princetonsenior.org.
America 2013: 4:30 p.m.,
Woodrow Wilson School, Prince-
ton University, Dodds Auditorium,
Robertson Hall. America 2013:
Challenges and Opportunities,
with Jon Huntsman, former gov-
ernor of Utah, former U.S.
ambassador to China, former
contender for GOP presidential
nomination. Free. 609-258-0157.
Lincoln Highway Centennial Cele-
bration: 5 to 7 p.m., Historical
Society of Princeton, Bainbridge
House, 158 Nassau. American
Songline, with Cecelia Otto, in
program of folk songs, show
tunes, operetta, classical songs
relating to the Lincoln Highway,
originating in Times Square, New
York City, and ending in Lincoln
CALENDAR PAGE 8 APRIL 17-23, 2013
Lic #10199 Cont Lic #13VH01382900
Let us show you how to save money on this years
utility bill by upgrading your equipment!
We still do FREE ESTIMATES!
Monday through Friday 8:30 AM - 4:00 PM
please see CALENDAR, page 16
Special to The Sun
Princeton University's Woodrow
Wilson School will present Jon
Huntsman, former governor of
Utah and former U.S. ambassa-
dor to China, for a public talk on
'America 2013: Challenges and
Opportunities,' Friday, April 19,
at 4:30 p.m. in Dodds Auditori-
um, Robertson Hall. Admission
is free.
negatively affected the depart-
ment.
The police department is func-
tioning just fine with Capt. Nick
Sutter in every day, Schmierer
said. The chief is currently on
medical leave, which has been
documented. Were satisfied with
the documentation of that.
Schmierer said there was no in-
dication of when an agreement
would be reached, but that several
drafts had been shared among
himself, Bruschi and Dudeck.
If an agreement is reached,
Schmierer said it would be public,
and would be acted upon by the
Princeton Council.
It would be available to anyone
who wants to read it, Schmierer
said. It would be on the Council
agenda, and they would hear it
and vote on it.
While the separation agree-
ment is being negotiated, Dudeck
has maintained his position as the
head football coach at the Hun
School of Princeton. In a state-
ment issued last week, the school
said it was aware of the issues
currently surrounding Dudeck.
"We are aware of the allega-
tions of misconduct against Dave
Dudeck in his role as Princeton
police chief, the statement read.
Our expectation is that every
member of our staff conducts
himself with honor on and off
campus. Because we have no first-
hand knowledge of the allega-
tions, we await the outcome of the
current process.
Dudeck has served on the
Princeton Borough police force
since 1983. He became chief of the
borough department in 2009. He
became chief of the consolidated
police department immediately
following consolidation. Schmier-
er said discussions regarding the
separation agreement are ongo-
ing.
It is unclear whether Dudeck
will return at any time to active
duty.
Celebrate spring with The Winters Tale
William Shakespeares The
Winters Tale, thought to be a
late work, invites theater-goers of
the romantic persuasion to make
a wild dedication of
(them)selves/ To undiscovered
waters, undreamed shores. And
thats where director Rebecca
Taichman takes us in McCarter
Theatres stunning production of
this play. Run, do not walk, to see
this show, running through April
21.
A co-production with The
Shakespeare Theatre Company of
Washington, D.C., this strikingly
inventive
Winters
Tale is an
fine example
of how a post-
modernist
sensibility can
breathe new
life into a
sprawling,
bustling,
everything-
plus-the-kitchen-
sink Elizabethan
entertainment
by tightening, paring, focusing,
and streamlining. Five acts are
compressed into two, with noth-
ing essential lost; the tragic as-
pects deepen, the comic aspects
explode, the romantic aspects
soar.
Of the nine featured players
(all superb, by the way), six play
multiple roles, with no loss of
clarity, and with the addition, in
some cases, of hitherto unsus-
pected psychological depth. One
actor plays a king and a rogue.
Another plays a lost son and a
found daughter. Mark Harelik
turns in a virtuoso performance
in three roles the grim king,
Leontes, the Tom Waits-like street
rascal, Autolycus, a singing role,
to boot, then Autolycus imperson-
ating an effete courtier. The art of
acting doesnt get any better than
this.
Also stand-outs: Nancy Robi-
nette (Paulina/Drunken Shep-
herdess), Heather Wood (Mamil-
lius/Perdita), and Brent Carver
(Camillo), Ted van Griethuysen
(Antigonus/Old Shepherd) . Han-
nah Yelland made the best work
she could of the ungrateful role of
Hermione. First shes charming,
then shes outraged, then shes
dead (or is she?), then shes a stat-
ue, then the statues alive. In this
production, Hemiones coup-de-
theatre is wordless: Taichman has
her appear, trailing immortality,
in the midst of the play, in one of
this shows simply breath-taking
moments.
This play, like Shakespeares
other romances (Cymbeline
and The Tempest) is about
everything, more or less, life,
death, winter, spring, love, hate,
youth, age, love, lust, betrayal, for-
giveness, and so on, but all that
theater-goers need to hit the
ground running is a 10-minute pe-
rusal of McCarters program, it-
self a marvel.
No heavy essays just an illu-
minating character graphic,
seven short paragraphs by Taich-
man, and youre good to go. The
players diction is excellent,
Taichmans direction is crystal-
clear, and the productions visual
aspects are consistently revelato-
ry.
The action flows like water, and
so do the scene changes, all done
in full view. When actors arent
on, they sit upstage, constituting a
second audience.
As Shakespeare was celebrat-
ing our capacity for contradiction,
transformation, multiplicity, so
too does this production, Taich-
man writes, but Christine Jones
brings it all together in a set de-
sign that celebrates formal sym-
metry.
Theres much thats Robert Wil-
son-ish about the look of this
show, including that directors sig-
nature chairs and Christopher
Akerlinds wonderful lighting de-
sign, which occasionally employs
Wilsons high-beam spotlights to
memorable effect. Sicily is black-
and-white, tailored clothing, Clas-
sical Revival architecture, chairs
in a line; Bohemia is green and
blue and outdoorsy, with the sly
use of a large, framed painting of
a meadow offering a touch of
Magritte, the cast offering a daffy
choreography-on-parade waving
big placard images of butterflies
and sheep, and chairs spilled all
over the place.
The show hits pure magic late
on, with the statue scene. Swaying
rows of lamps and bells are all
thats needed to make viewers
heed Paulinas exhortation, It is
required/ You do awake your
faith. Hermione is back, some-
how, and all is forgiven.
Nice music by Nico Muhly, nice
sound design by Matt Tierney.
Winning performances by a
strolling trio of fiddle, clarinet, ac-
cordion.
Act I runs 1 hour, 20 minutes;
Act II runs 1 hour, five minutes.
Celebrate spring with some
Shakespeare. As Autolycus sings,
When daffodils begin to peer,/
With heigh! the doxy over the
dale,/ Why, then comes in the
sweet o' the year;/ For the red
blood reigns in the winter's pale.
Get em while theyre gettable:
www.mcarter.org.
DUDECK
Continued from page 1
Dudeck has served on borough force since 1983
Special to The Sun
Todd Bartels and Heather Wood as the young lovers Florizel and Perdita in McCarter Theatre's 'The
Winter's Tale.'
APRIL 17-23, 2013 THE PRINCETON SUN 9
REVIEW
MICHAEL REDMAN
10 THE PRINCETON SUN APRIL 17-23, 2013
THE RIGHT HOUSE
THE RIGHT RATE!
Whether youre buying a home or refinancing
1st Constitution Bank has a great rate and the
right loan type for your needs!
Call Today! 888-519-7677
Or visit us online at
www.1stconstitution.com
Convenient branches located throughout New Jersey
Lawsuit suspension sought; negotiations possible
By KATIE MORGAN
The Princeton Sun
Attorneys representing the
Princeton Council and the Prince-
ton Regional Planning Board
against developer AvalonBay are
seeking to suspend lawsuits in an-
ticipation of a new negotiation
process among the three parties.
In December, the Planning
Board rejected AvalonBays pro-
posal to build a 280-unit apart-
ment complex on the former
Witherspoon Street site of the
University Medical Center at
Princeton after finding that the
proposals design elements were
not in compliance with the sites
zoning ordinances.
In February, AvalonBay filed a
lawsuit appealing the Planning
Board decision. Judge Mary Ja-
cobson agreed in March to expe-
dite the process. A decision was
expected by May 1.
Mayor Liz Lempert said Aval-
onBay contacted her a few weeks
ago to discuss moving the process
out of the courtroom and about
submitting a new proposal.
The agreement being worked
on is about the process, not the
substance, of the new plan, Lem-
pert said. What they want to do is
suspend the litigation and re-sub-
mit a new plan. We would then go
back through the normal process.
The plan would go through the
Environmental Committee, the
Shade Tree Commission and the
Planning Board.
Lempert said she expects the
new plan to be in front of the
Planning Board by mid-August.
Lempert said AvalonBay repre-
sentatives have shown the council
and the planning board initial
concepts that make her optimistic
about the success of a re-submit-
ted plan.
The new plan could possibly in-
clude five separate buildings of
staggered heights, with the tallest
buildings in the center of the
complex. It could also include a
smaller pool, several townhouses
and green design standards.
Many of the issues with the
initial proposal involved the
monolithic appearance of the
apartment complex and the aes-
thetic impact upon residents of
adjacent neighborhoods, plan-
ning board members said.
Myself and other members of
the administration have had
meetings with AvalonBay where
theyve shown initial concepts
that do address many issues and
concerns that were raised, Lem-
pert said. Im optimistic that we
can restart the process, and find a
solution that will be good for
AvalonBay and for Princeton.
Princeton municipal attorney
Ed Schmierer said that, to sus-
pend the lawsuit, all parties in-
volved would have to agree to the
submission of a consent order the
court would then evaluate. Three
of the four parties involved in the
litigation are currently in agree-
ment.
If it looks like theres a new
process, the court will be in-
formed, Schmierer said. If they
are satisfied that the new process
has merit, they could adjourn, or
suspend, or push back litigation.
The planning board, council and
AvalonBay are all in agreement
about submitting that consent
order, but the fourth party, a
group of citizens, hasnt agreed to
that. Discussions are still ongo-
ing.
The fourth party includes Citi-
zens for Sustainable Neighbor-
hoods and other residents.
Lempert said she is pleased the
issues between the developer and
municipality may be resolved
without litigation.
Im very hopeful about the
new process, she said. Whenev-
er possible, we always want to
find solutions through public
process and out of the court-
room.
Lic #10199 Cont Lic #13VH01382900
Combining print advertising with an online advertising campaign is the most comprehensive
way to reach all your local customers. But it was an expensive proposition until now.
Sun Newspaper print customers can now take advantage of special online packages and
pricing. Our online advertising packages combine local exposure on well-known national
websites such as Discovery, Comedy Central, Time, Rachael Ray, Facebook, USA Today and
The Weather Channel with advertising on Elauwits hyperlocal websites in South Jersey,
Central Jersey and Philadelphia.
So whether your customers are catching up on local happenings on our websites or
checking in on their friends on Facebook, theyll be seeing your business.
Elauwit offers 3 digital advertising packages:
Special online advertising packages available
to Sun Newspaper print customers only
3-month contract required
Pre-payment required
B0Y AN AD
If you want in on this, just pick up the
phone or drop an email:
p: 856-528-4703
e: sales@elauwit.com
w: www.sunne.ws
Your Customers Are OmIIme.
Are You?
Its a fact of todays society more and more people spend time online.
Are you there when they are?
Local exposure on national sites.
BRON2E PACKAOE($100/month):
300 x 250 ad that clicks through to your website
30,000 impressions per month
Target your ads on the national website directory to 3 Zip Codes
Pick either South Jersey, Central Jersey or Philadelphia for your Elauwit web presence
8ILVER PACKAOE($200/month):
300 x 250 ad that clicks through to your website
60,000 impressions per month
Target your ads to 5 Zip Codes
Pick 2 of either South Jersey, Central Jersey or Philadelphia for your Elauwit web presence
OOLD PACKAOE($300/month):
300 x 250 ad that clicks through to your website
100,000 impressions per month
Target your ads to 7 Zip Codes
Get all 3 Elauwit websites: South Jersey, Central Jersey and Philadelphia
300
x
250
APRIL 17-23, 2013 THE PRINCETON SUN 13
Ffl00l0 80fl0 $00l 00l0f
1225 State Rd. 206, Princeton, NJ
(Located across the street from the Princeton Airport, near the Bagel Barn and Princeton Fitness & Wellness Center)
NNN.0l0l8l0f0l8.00M I09l 8J100
Friday April 19th through Sunday April 21st
00ll0 088I
Every Saturday from Noon to 2pm, we have adoption days
sponsored by SAVE, A Friend to Homeless Animals.
They bring both dogs and cats that are looking for a great home.
obituaries
Marie Louise Stokes
April 2, 2013
Marie Louise (Weedie) Stokes,
98, died peacefully at her home in
Lawrence on April 2, 2013. Born
on April 29, 1914, and raised in
Easton, Pa., she was the daughter
of the late Sara and Frank Reeder
Jr. She moved to Princeton in 1936
upon her marriage to W. J. B.
Stokes II, who predeceased her in
1991.
Mrs. Stokes was very active in
the Princeton area community.
She was a member of the Histori-
cal Society of Princeton, the
Lawrence Historical Society, and
Historic Fallsington. She volun-
teered at a wide range of organi-
zations, including Mercer Street
Friends, Planned Parenthood and
Friends of the Lawrence Library.
She was a former member of the
Countryside Gardeners of
Doylestown, Pa., the Womens
Club of Lawrenceville and a cur-
rent member of The Present Day
Club of Princeton.
Mrs. Stokes is survived by her
three daughters: Carol Stokes of
Lawrence, Elizabeth (Jill) Halbert
and her husband, Peter, of Great
Falls, Va., and Robin Snyder and
her husband, Donald, of Valley
Center, Calif.; six grandchildren,
Andrew Tibbetts, Margaret Tib-
betts, Douglas Halbert, Amanda
Halbert Jackson, Jonathan Sny-
der, and William Snyder; eight
great-grandchildren, and her sis-
ter, Frances Burnett of San
Diego, Calif.
A celebration of her life will be
held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, April
27, at Princeton Friends-Quaker
Meeting, Quaker Road and Mer-
cer Street, Princeton. Interment
will be in the Stokes family mau-
soleum in Ewing Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, memorial
contributions may be made to
Planned Parenthood of Mercer,
437 E. State St., Trenton 08608, or
Princeton Homecare Hospice, 208
Bunn Drive, Princeton, NJ 08540.
Arrangements are under the
direction of Kimble Funeral
Home, 1 Hamilton Avenue,
Princeton.
Barbara Piasecka
Johnson
April 1, 2013
Barbara (Basia) Piasecka John-
son, 76, widow of J. Seward John-
son Sr. (1895-1983), died on April 1
near Wroclaw, Poland, her native
land, following a long illness. She
had been a longtime resident of
Princeton, where the Johnsons
created their 140-acre estate,
Jasna Polana, now a golf club,
and Monaco. A cause of death
was not disclosed.
Born on Feb. 25, 1937, Mrs.
Johnson studied art history and
philosophy at Wroclaw Universi-
ty and enrolled in a doctoral pro-
gram at Jagiellonian University
in Krakow before traveling to
Rome and the United States,
where she initially worked in do-
mestic service. She married Mr.
Johnson in 1971. Following her
husbands death and the settle-
ment of his estate, which in-
volved a three-year-long legal bat-
tle, Mrs. Johnson became one of
the worlds wealthiest women.
During the marriage, the John-
sons became avid art collectors, a
passion Mrs. Johnson pursued
until the end of her life. Much of
her charitable work, in Poland
and elsewhere, was carried on
through the Barbara Piasecka
Johnson Foundation, established
in 1974.
According to the foundation,
Mrs. Johnson sought to assist
students and professionals from
Poland in continuing their stud-
ies in the United States Over
the years, Mrs. Johnson also ex-
tended significant support to the
Solidarity movement, the victims
of martial law in Poland, various
nursing homes for single moth-
ers, selected health-care facilities
and a number of other important
humanitarian projects, includ-
ing the creation of a foundation
in Gdansk for autistic children.
A funeral Mass took place
April 15 in Wroclaw Cathedral.
Mrs. Johnson, who never remar-
ried, is survived by a brother,
Peter Piasecki.
Author Marci Alboher will talk
about her new book The Encore
Handbook: How to Make a Living
and a Difference in the Second
Half of Life on Wednesday, April
23, 7 p.m., at the Princeton Senior
Resource Center, 45 Stockton
Street. This is a free event and
open to the public.
Alboher will discuss figuring
out what jobs pay, the encore
landscape, when to update your
skills and return to school and
how to get comfortable with un-
certainty, among other subjects.
After the presentation she will
sign books, available at the event
or available in advance from
Labyrinth Books, or books can be
purchased through www.engage-
dretirement.org, under the Re-
sources tab.
Refreshments served, free
parking, but please RSVP to 609-
924-7108.
For more information, contact
Carol King or Susan Hoskins at
the Princeton Senior Resource
Center, 609-924-7108, or email at
info@princetonsenior.org.
Author Marci Alboher to hold talk
14 THE PRINCETON SUN APRIL 17-23, 2013
Mopar Quality Detail
Includes: car wash, tire shine, deep
windowcleaning, door jams cleaning,
interior dusting, and vacuum.
(certainvehicles higher.)
plus tax
Expires 5/16/13
Adjust drive belts, tightenfittings,
cleancondenser fins and visually
check systems for leaks
Refrigerant extra.
plus tax
Present couponwhenrepair order is written. One coupon
per customer. Cannot be used with other offers.
Offer expires 5/30/13.
Loadtest battery andcheck charging system
Any repair or non-discounted service.
Get anextra 5%off whenyou signup for the Dick
Greenfield DodgeAdvantage Card. Ask for details.
Not valid onalready discounted services. Not valid with
any other coupon. One couponper vehicle. CouponMUST
be presented at time of write-up!
FREE Battery Check
* While you wait!
10% OFF
MOPAR BATTERY
and if you need a
newbattery
Hometown news.
When |t happens.
Or Shortly
Thereafter.
Fo||ow us at
tw|tter.com/pr|ncetonsun
87 Federal City Road Lawrenceville, NJ, 08648
609-818-1140 www.oasisgardencenternj.com
CALL AHEAD TO ORDER YOUR FRESH BAKED PIES
Apple, Apple Crumb, Apple Caramel Walnut, Blueberry Crumb,
Cherry Crumb, Lemon Meringue, Mixed Fruit,
Peachberry, Peach Blackberry Streusel, Pumpkin
Fresh Cut Flowers Trees and Shrubs Perennials
Local Honey Peach Cider Three Monkeys Mustard
First Field Jersey Ketchup Jersey Fresh Products
Open All
Year Round
INSTALLATION
AVAILABLE:
Mulch, Stone,
Trees, Shrubs
PLANT OF THE WEEK
8 inch Pansy Pot ONLY $3.95
Special to The Sun
The Hun Schools eighth grade boasts four sets of twins, comprising nearly 20 percent of the Class of
2017: back row Grant Versfeld 17, Alexander Versfeld Jr. 17, Bowen Dong 17 and Allen Dong; front row
Samuel Leppo 17, Logan Leppo 17, Chelsea Braithwaite 17 and Paige Braithwaite 17.
By KATIE MORGAN
The Princeton Sun
A spokesman for a West Wind-
sor citizens group critical of a
state proposal to relieve conges-
tion on Route 1 said that a new
proposal, developed by local engi-
neers, with a few adjustments
could work.
The new concept plan, devel-
oped in response to a request for
local input on possible solutions
by the Department of Trans-
portation, was discussed at
length at the April 8 meeting of
the Princeton Council.
The new proposal, called The
Princeton Plan, calls for the con-
struction of a connector road on
either side of Route 1. One road
would be in Princeton, the other
in West Windsor. The Princeton
connector road, or bypass, would
connect Harrison Street and
Washington Road. The two roads
would merge at a traffic circle
that would be constructed in the
Penns Neck neighborhood of
West Windsor.
The state requested sugges-
tions from engineers in Prince-
ton, West Windsor and Plains-
boro last month after a DOT pro-
posal sparked public outcry in
the three communities.
The DOT plan proposed elimi-
nating several left-hand turns off
Route 1 and constructing two
jughandles.
West Windsor residents attend-
ed the April 8 meeting to voice
their concerns about The Prince-
ton Plan. Eric Payne, a resident
of the Penns Neck neighborhood
and the leader of a citizens group
called Smart Traffic Solutions,
said he was disappointed that the
community was not aware of the
new proposal until the meeting
agenda was published.
First, the plan calls for a traf-
fic circle in the middle of a neigh-
borhood, Payne said. It also
maintains the right turn from
Route 1 onto Washington Road.
So basically Washington stays
busy, and you add another busy
road on the other side. The plan
doesnt alleviate the misery; it
just spreads it around.
Councilman Patrick Simon
said he believed the new plan
may be too complex, and that en-
gineers should work toward a
simpler solution.
I think this is a case where
simpler might be better, he said.
This is introducing a heck of a
problem.
Payne said that, though The
Princeton Plan is still not a desir-
able solution, it represents a step
in the right direction.
With a few adjustments, it
could work, he said. There
are a lot of factors that still need
to be considered, but I think
were getting much closer.
This is much better than the first
DOT proposal. It looks like every-
one is starting to work on this,
and Im very hopeful. Well just
have to wait and see what hap-
pens.
APRIL 17-23, 2013 THE PRINCETON SUN 15
New Route 1 concept plan could work
Americas first transconti-
nental road, the Lincoln High-
way, originates in Times
Square, New York and termi-
nates in Lincoln Park, San Fran-
cisco, traversing a total of 14
states. The route has become af-
fectionately known as "The
Main Street Across America."
Envisioned by Carl Fisher, an
Indianapolis Automobile entre-
preneur who also developed the
idea of the Indianapolis 500, the
Lincoln Highway is the largest
memorial to President Abra-
ham Lincoln, predating his
monument in Washington, D.C.,
by nine years.
As the first automobile road
across America, the Lincoln
Highway brought great prosper-
ity to the hundreds of cities,
towns and villages along the
way.
In Princeton, Nassau Street
became a part of the Lincoln
Highway when it was estab-
lished in 1913. In conjunction
with its current exhibition, We
Love Princeton: Stories from
the Street, the Historical Society
of Princeton is honoring the
Lincoln Highway Centennial
with a musical performance on
Friday, April 19 entitled, An
American Songline: A Musical
Journey Along The Lincoln
Highway.
The performance will begin
at 5 p.m. at the Bainbridge
House, 158 Nassau St. Prince-
ton.
Cecelia Otto, a classically
trained singer, composer, educa-
tor, writer and self-proclaimed
Professional Artistic Journey-
woman, will perform music
from the 1910s, 20s and 30s. A
mix of folk songs, show tunes,
operetta and classical numbers,
the program consists of songs
either about the Lincoln High-
way, or ones once performed at
concert halls along the highway
in the first decades of its exis-
tence.
I named this project Ameri-
can Songline to celebrate the
roads that our ancestors made
and to allow them to live again
through music, says Otto. I
will travel the entire length of
the route from New York to Cali-
fornia over several months, giv-
ing musical performances in
every state. I will then not only
write about the journey, but also
write new music as well. Ameri-
can Songline will thus be both a
book and a CD about my jour-
ney across the country.
Her project has been en-
dorsed by the National Lincoln
Highway Association. For more
information, visit american-
songline.net.
Annual stream clean-up nears
Historical society to
honor Lincoln Highway
Communities and volunteers
are joining together to score a
win for clean water over the
growing threat of people pollu-
tion during Stony Brook-Mill-
stone Watershed Associations
7th Annual Stream Cleanups. On
the weekend of April 20, volun-
teers from 12 towns will be don-
ning work gloves in honor of
Earth Day to help make rivers
and lakes cleaner and healthier.
Each year thousands of
pounds of trash and pollutants
are washed from streets and
yards into our rivers and streams,
eventually washing to New Jer-
seys bays and the ocean. Our
Annual Stream Clean-ups are just
one way we can all pitch in to
help keep our water clean and
healthy, said Erin Stretz, Stream
Clean-Up coordinator for the Wa-
tershed Association. It is also a
great way to be active in your
community and to set a positive
example for your children.
In 2012, more than 400 volun-
teers hauled 7,528 pounds of trash
from area waterways. Since its in-
ception, the Stream Cleanups
have removed more than 23 tons
of trash from in and around local
streams and rivers.
Municipal and environmental
leaders in 12 towns across Mercer,
Middlesex, Monmouth and
Somerset counties are participat-
ing.
Princetons clean-up will take
place Sunday April 21, from 9 to
11 a.m. The Stony Brook-Mill-
stone Watershed Association, the
Princeton Environmental Com-
mission, Department of Public
Works, and volunteers will clean
up along the D&R Canal. Partici-
pants will meet at Port Mercer
Canal House at Quaker Road and
Province Line Road. In 2012, 44
volunteers picked up 393 pounds
of trash and debris from the area.
To volunteer, contact Water-
shed Association Stream Clean-
Up Coordinator Erin Stretz at 609-
737-3735, ext. 17, orestretz@thewa-
tershed.org. Volunteers should
wear boots and long sleeves, and
bring a water bottle and work
gloves if they have them. T-shirts
are provided as well as water and
snacks. To learn more visit:
www.thewatershed.org.
For more info, visit www.the-
watershed.org.
Lewis Center to host photography exhibit
The Lewis Center for the Arts
Program in Visual Arts presents,
Utopian for Beginners, an exhibi-
tion of photography and graphic
design by Lily Healey, a senior in
the program, April 23 through 27
in the Lucas Gallery at 185 Nas-
sau Street on the Princeton cam-
pus. An opening reception will be
held on Thursday, April 25 from 6
to 8 p.m. in the gallery. The
Gallery is open Monday through
Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
The exhibition and reception are
free and open to the public.
Utopian for Beginners is
Healeys senior thesis project and
her first solo show. She is com-
pleting her AB at Princeton in
studio art and art history.
Healey notes that her artistic
interests focus on the concepts
and ideas behind the creation of
art and, in particular, images.
Two series of works in the ex-
hibition rely on a process de-
signed by the artist for transform-
ing text. Other photographs docu-
ment Healeys studio and desktop
space as it changed and evolved
throughout the year, revealing
glimpses into the artists working
process. Additionally, she de-
signed an accompanying book for
the exhibition that functions on
some level as a catalogue for the
show.
To learn more about this event,
the Program in Visual Arts, and
the more than 100 other events
presented each year by the Lewis
Center visit princeton.edu/arts.
Park, San Francisco. Donation,
609-921-6748, www.princeton-
history.org.
Choral concert: 8 p.m., Princeton
Presbyterian Church, 545 Mead-
ow Road, West Windsor. Westmin-
ster Kantorei. Music by Renais-
sance and Baroque composers.
$20, 609-921-2663,
www.rider.edu.
Out of doors: 8 to 11 p.m., weather
dependent. Star gazing with the
Amateur Astronomers Associa-
tion of Princeton at Simpson
Observatory, Washington Cross-
ing State Park, Titusville. Free.
609-737-2575, www.princetonas-
tronomy.org.
Princeton Folk Music Society: 8:15
p.m., Christ Congregation
Church, 50 Walnut Lane. David
Massengill, Greenwich Village
troubadour from Tennessee. $20,
609-799-0944, www.princeton-
folk.org.
SATURDAY April 20
Gently Used Sale: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
Princeton Friends School, 470
Quaker Road. Clothing for chil-
dren and adults, furniture, toys,
books, household items. 609-
683-1194, www.princetonfriendss-
chool.org.
Out of doors: 10 a.m., Princeton
Canal Walkers, Turning Basin
Park, Alexander Road. Three-mile
walk on the Towpath. Bad weath-
er cancels. Free. 609-638-6552.
Healthy Kids Day: 1 to 3:30 p.m.,
Princeton YMCA, Paul Robeson
Place, 1 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Play and
educational activities. Free. 609-
497-9622, www.princetonymca.
org.
Going for Baroque: 7:30 p.m., Uni-
tarian Church of Princeton, 50
Cherry Hill Road. Music of the
Baroque on period instruments
by Le Triomphe de l'Amour.
Music from Burghley House:
18th Century Music Collected by
the Early of Exeter, including
works by Bach, Handel, Arne,
Boyce. Pre-concert talk by John
Burkhalter. $20, 609-252-0522,
www.triomphebaroque.org.
Shorty Long and the Jersey
Horns: 7:30 p.m., Princeton Elks,
354 Route 518, Montgomery.
Benefit concert. Snacks and cash
bar. $20. Register: donald-
schafer@hotmail.com. 609-466-
4945.
Heavenly: 8 p.m., Princeton Univer-
sity Chapel. Of Earth and Heav-
en by the Chapel Choir and
Orchestra, Penna Rose conduct-
ing, featuring Alice Parkers
Melodious Accord and Maurice
Durufles Requiem. Free. 609-
258-3654.
Choral premiere: 8 p.m., Princeton
Presbyterian Church, 545 Mead-
ow Road, West Windsor. West-
minster Williamson Voices of
Westminster Choir College,
James Jordan conducting. U.S.
premiere of Paul Mealor's
choral Crucifixus; music by
Ginastera and Victoria. $20, 609-
921-2663.
SUNDAY April 21
A Special Day for Brides: Noon to
5 p.m., The Papery, 15 Hulfish.
Goody bags, prizes, personalized
gifts for every bride-to-be. Meet
with stationers to create wedding
invitation. Register by phone or
Email:
princeton@thepapery.com., 609-
279-0101, www.thepapery.com.
Reforming immigration: 1 p.m., Uni-
tarian Universalist Congregation,
50 Cherry Hill Road. Social Jus-
tice Committee presents Achiev-
ing Comprehensive Immigration
Reform, moderated by Ted Fet-
ter, chair of the Immigration Task
Force of the UU Legislative Min-
istry of New Jersey. Free, 609-
924-1604, www.uuprinceton.org.
'Versailles Revisited: 3 p.m.,
Princeton Theological Seminary,
Miler Chapel. The Dryden Ensem-
ble in concert. $35, 609-466-
8541, www.drydenensemble.org.
Family Pasta Night: 6 to 8 p.m.,
Princeton Elks, 354 Route 518,
Montgomery. Pasta dinner and
ice cream bar. Benefit for the
Michael Damato Scholarship
Fund. $10.
MONDAY April 22
Art Exhibit: D&R Greenway Land
Trust, Johnson Education Center,
off Rosedale Road.From White
16 THE PRINCETON SUN APRIL 17-23, 2013
calendar
CALENDAR
Continued from page 8
Special to The Sun
MOMIX returns to McCarter Theatre in 'Botanica,' a Cirque-du-Soleil style show featuring dancer-illu-
sionists 'conjuring a world of surreal images using light, shadow, props, humor and the human body,'
Thursday, April 25, at 7:30 p.m. Suitable for a family audience. Tickets $25-$56, 609-258-2787,
www.mccarter.org.
please see CALENDAR, page 17
APRIL 17-23, 2013 THE PRINCETON SUN 17
9B East Broad Street | Hopewell, NJ 08525
(609) 466-7800
www.bell-whistle.com
INNOVATIVE AMERICAN CUISINE
Lunch: Tues.-Fri. 11:30-2:30
Dinner: Wed.-Thurs. 4:30-8
Fri.-Sat. 4:30-9:30
Swans to Black Ducks, decoy
exhibition. Free. 609-924-4646,
www.drgreenway.org.
'Cooking for Change:' Woodrow
Wilson School, Bernstein Gallery.
Opening day for exhibit of photo-
graphs by Steve Riskind, text by
Doris Friedensohn, spotlighting
the frustrations and challenges
facing students at the Food
Service Training Academy of
the Community Food Bank in Hill-
side (Union County). Images and
narratives are based on the book,
Cooking for Change: Tales from
a Food Service Training Acade-
my. Artist reception on Wednes-
day, March 1, 6 p.m. 609-258-
0157. On view through June 7.
Women's College Club of Prince-
ton: 11:30 a.m., Present Day Club,
72 Stockton. Annual scholarship
benefit luncheon, bridge, white
elephant sale, silent auction. $45.
Register: 609-737-0912.
Nuclear disarmament: 4:30 p.m.,
Woodrow Wilson School, Dodds
Auditorium, Robertson Hall.
Global Zero's Fight for Heart
and Minds: Is Nuclear Disarma-
ment Possible in Your Lifetime?,
with Bruce Blair, co-founder of
Global Zero. Free.
Going Green with Spring Vegeta-
bles: 6 p.m., Princeton Fitness &
Wellness Center, 1225 State Road.
Hands-on program features salad
and saute recipes. Register: 888-
897-8979. $10,www.princeton-
hcs.org.
Public Meeting: 7 p.m., Princeton
Council at the Municipal Complex,
400 Witherspoon St.
Second Chance Cinema: 7:30 p.m.,
Princeton University, Friend Cen-
ter Auditorium, Computer Sci-
ence Building. Presented by
Princeton Adult School,
hosted by Bill Lockwood.
Screening of Margin Call
(USA, 2011). $8. Register: 609-
683-1101, www.princet-
onadultschool.org.
Princeton Photography Club: 7:30
p.m., D&R Greenway Land Trust,
Johnson Education Center, off
Rosedale Road. Workshop:
Cycling and Photography: Cap-
turing memories of races, rides,
and scenes, with Carl Geisler
and Maia Reim. Free, 732-422-
3676www.princetonphotoclub.or
g.
Jazz bass: 8 p.m., Princeton Univer-
sity Department of Music, Fine
Hall, Taplin Auditorium. Eric Weis-
er, bassist. Free. 609-258-2800,
princeton.edu/music.
TUESDAY April 23
The crisis in Sudan: 4:30 p.m.,
Woodrow Wilson School,Dodds
Auditorium, Robertson Hall.
'Overcoming the Legacies of
War and Bitterness: Bringing
Peace to Sudan and South
Sudan, with Ambassador Prince-
ton N. Lyman, former U.S. Special
Envoy to Sudan and South Sudan.
Free. 609-258-0157.
McCarter Live at the Library: 7
p.m., Princeton Public Library.
Members of the Fiasco Theater
Company discuss Sondheims
Into the Woods, musical pro-
duction at McCarter May 2 to
June 2. Sneak peak into the
company's storytelling style, plus
a few musical numbers. Free.
609-924-8822, www.princetonli-
brary.org.
Shanti Meditation: 6 p.m., Fellow-
ship in Prayer, 291 Witherspoon.
Friends of Conscious Evolution
present Acharya Girish Jha, a
spiritual counselor from the
Himalayas. First class free; then
$30. Register by email guru-
ji220@gmail.com 732-642-
8895, www.authenticyogatra-
tion.com.
Princeton Folk Dance: 7 p.m., River-
side School, 58 Riverside Drive.
Ethnic dances using authentic
music. Beginners welcome. $3,
609-921-9340, www.princeton-
folkdance.org.
Encore careers: 7 p.m., Suzanne
Patterson Building, 45 Stockton.
Princeton Senior Resource Cen-
ter presents Marci Alboher,
author of The Encore Career
Handbook: How to Make a Living
and a Difference in the Second
Half of Life. Booksigning follows.
Free. 609-924-7108, www.prince-
tonsenior.org.
calendar
CALENDAR
Continued from page 16
ELIOT GORDON
Special to The Sun
The 'Ill Have
What Shes Hav-
ing ' dance proj-
ect celebrates its
10th year April
18, 19 and 20 at
7:30 p.m. with
performances in
the YWCA Prince-
ton's Black Box
Theater. Featured,
from left, are
dancers Fara
Lindsay, Linda
Mannheim, Marie
Alonzo and Chris-
tine Colosimo,
performing during
the showcase for
women dancers
and choreogra-
phers. Tickets are
$25 at the door,
www.ywcaprince-
ton.org.
classified
T HE P R I N C E T O N S U N
APRIL 17-23, 2013 PAGE 18
W H A T Y O U N E E D T O K N O W
All ads are based on a 5 line ad, 15-18 characters per line. Additional lines: $9, Bold/Reverse Type: $9 Add color to any box ad for $20. Deadline: Wednesday - 5pm for the following week.
All classified ads must be prepaid. Your Classified ad will run in all 5 of The Sun newspapers each week! Be sure to check your ad the first day it appears.
We will not be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion, so call us immediately with any errors in your ad. No refunds are given, only advertising credit.
L I NE
ADS
Only
$
20per week
H O W T O C O N T A C T U S
Call us: 609-751-0245 or email us: classifieds@elauwitmedia.com
Hopewell Sun Lawrence Sun
Montgomery Sun Princeton Sun
West Windsor Sun
BOX
ADS Only
$
25per week List a text-only ad for your yard
sale, job posting or merchandise.
CIeaning
MiIa's CIeaning Service
Reliable, Affordable
Free estimates
Call Mila
609-620-0849
Email:
mila.iaskevich@gmail.com
Roofing
856-356-2775
Board Your
Dog In A
Loving Home
Not A KenneI
www.OurHome-DogBoarding.com
Dog Boarding
Garage SaIe
Landscaping
30 Years Experience Family Owned and Operated High Quality Products Senior Citizen Discount
No High Pressure Sales Tactics Professional Installation
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 5/1/13.
$1,000 BFF
UP TO
Any new
complete roofing
or siding job
10 BFF
UP TO
Any
roofing
or siding job
FREE
ROOF AND
GUTTER
INSPECTION
FREE
GUTTERS
With any new roof
and siding job
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 5/1/13.
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 5/1/13.
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 5/1/13.
EducationaI Services
Guzman Landscaping
Fully Licensed & Insured
References Available
guzmanlandscapingservices@gmail.com
Call Today! 609-439-5600
Guzman Landscaping
Spring Cleanup Mulch Cutting
Patios Drainage Walkways
Fix Driveways Powerwash Patios
Mulch Delivery
WATER IN THE BASEMENT?
We will drain the water away from your home! No wreckage!
Academic Success:
Tutoring
Certified K-12 Honors
Graduate
Over 25 years exp.
Caring,ndividualized
nstruction
SAT Reading, Writing,
Math, Subject Tests
H.S. Eng. Lit. and Writing;
Math to Pre-Calc., History
Elem. Phonics, Reading,
Math; Study Skills; E.S.L.
Excellent Ref.
609-924-2610
RUMMAGE SALE -
MONTGOMERY UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Friday, April 19, 9am-7pm;
Saturday, April 20,
9am-noon.
Clothing, baby items, toys,
sports equipment,
household and more.
Sat only fill bag for $4,
$6, $10.
117 Sunset Road,
Belle Mead
609-466-1163
Ocean City New Jerseys #1 Real Estate Team!
The Team You Can Trust!
Matt Bader
Cell 609-992-4380
Dale Collins
Cell 609-548-1539
Let the Bader-Collins Associates make all of your Ocean City
dreams come true! If you are thinking about BUYING, SELLING or
RENTING, contact us for exceptional service and professionalism.
3160 Asbury Avenue Ocean City, NJ 08226
Office: 609-399-0076 email: bca@bergerrealty.com
Beautiful newer 2nd floor
condo. This 3 bedroom
2 bath condo has it all!
Bay views, 1.5 car garage,
huge wrap around deck,
s/s appliances, granite
countertops, cherry
cabinets, marble fireplace,
storage, and much much
more! Furniture is
negotiable. $439,000
8 LINCOLN PLACE
CHECK OUT THE SUN CLASSIFIEDS!
CLASSIFIED APRIL 17-23, 2013 - THE PRINCETON SUN 19
1oo pooped 1o scoop?
We provide weekly scooper service s1or1ing o1
$
I3/week
saving our planet, one pile at a time
856-665-6769
www.alldogspoop.com
GET $10.00 OFF YOUR FIRST SERVICE!
Locally owned and operated.
Pet Care
Identity
Print
Web
Tom Engle
www.spectdesigns.com
If youre reading your
competitors ad?
Whos making money
YOU OR THEM?
Advertise with us!
Special Classified offers available.
Dont delay! Call today!
(856) 427-0933
INTO ACTION!
(609) 751-0245
THINK
ABOUT
IT
This
space
could be
yours!
Hmmmm
To
advertise
call us at
856
427-0933.
Concrete Masonry
Spring Clean Up
Mulch

Lawn Service
Full Line of Landscape Services
Fully Licensed & Insured
609-516-0259
Blue Garden Landscaping
10% OFF ANY COMPETITORS PRICE
Landscaping

S-ar putea să vă placă și