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JUNE 13-19, 2012
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Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Auditions approach
Test acting chops with
Pippin in June. PAGE 3
P r e - s o r t e d
S t a n d a r d
U S P o s t a g e
P A I D
B e l l m a w r N J
P e r m i t 1 5 0 1
P o s t a l C u s t o m e r
Solar
project
draws
ire
By JULIE STIPE
The West Windsor Sun
West Windsor residents and
representatives of SunLight
General Capital and the Mer-
cer County Improvement Au-
thority met recently to discuss
the solar farm project to be
built on farmland owned by
the college along South Post
Road.
Tempers flared as residents
expressed frustrations about
what they say is the colleges
refusal to be honest about the
projects financial viability
and its possible effects on
nearby homes.
A groundbreaking ceremo-
ny that was to have been held
in early May was postponed
due to growing alarm over the
project by residents.
At the meeting, residents re-
iterated concerns over the fi-
nancial aspects of the project,
particularly the low price of
solar renewable energy credits
(SRECs), which are important
to bringing in revenue for the
project.
SunLight General Capital
CFO Stacey Hughes told resi-
dents at the meeting that
SRECs are around $165-$175,
Students display
various talents
By JULIE STIPE
The West Windsor Sun
Americas got talent, and a lot
of it can be found right in the
West Windsor-Plainsboro school
district. On Saturday, June 2, stu-
dents from the district showed off
their abilities to sing, dance, play
instruments, do karate and more
at West Windsor-Plainsboros
very first WW-Ps Got Talent
event.
The student talent show was
largely planned and put together
by students, and the funds raised
from the show will go back to stu-
dents, in the form of grants to the
district through the West Wind-
sor-Plainsboro Education Foun-
dation.
Its all about the kids, said
Ashima Saksena, a member of
the WW-P Education Foundation
board of trustees.
Saksena believes this so strong-
ly that she put together a youth
committee for the education foun-
dation. The committee brings to-
gether students from the districts
high schools and middle schools
to help with every aspect of the
foundations work.
Students from the committee
were in charge of every part of
the event, from holding tryouts
for kids who wanted to partici-
pate in the show, to finding busi-
nesses to donate food for the pre-
show dinner, to designing flyers
JULIE STIPE/The Sun
Kids in traditional Japanese dress dance to Doraemon Ondo music at WW-Ps got talent at Grover Middle School on June 2. The event was
held to benefit West Windsor-Plainsboros education foundation. BELOW: Eighth-grader Yash Kansara sings Can You Feel the Love Tonight.
please see FUNDRAISER, page 6
please see DRAINAGE, page 5
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2 THE WEST WINDSOR SUN JUNE 13-19, 2012
Two teams of eighth-graders
from Stuart Country Day School
of the Sacred Heart accepted top
honors in the 2012 National
STEM Video Game Challenge as
their games won in the middle
school category for the PBS KIDS
stream of the competition, which
challenged participants to devel-
op educational games for chil-
dren ages 4 to 8 that focus on spe-
cific math skills.
Julia Weingaertner, 13, of West
Windsor, and Sarah Lippman, 13,
of Pennington, designed and
programmed Animal Inequali-
ties to demonstrate the
concepts of greater than or less
than.
Chloe Mario, 14, of Princeton,
Madeleine Lapuerta, 14, of Mont-
gomery, and Emma Froehlich, 14,
of Montgomery, built Math Rac-
ing Mania which allows users to
drive home if they can compute
simple math problems.
The National STEM Video
Game Challenge, which is organ-
ized by the Joan Ganz Cooney
Center at Sesame Workshop and
E-Line Media in partnership with
sponsors the Entertainment Soft-
ware Association, AMD Founda-
tion, Microsofts Xbox 360 and the
Corporation for Public Broadcast-
ing/PBS KIDS Ready To Learn
Initiative, received thousands of
entries this year.
Twenty-eight middle school
and high school students, two col-
lege students and three educators
were chosen as winners.
Eighth graders
receive top honors
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JUNE 13-19, 2012 THE WEST WINDSOR SUN 3
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BEAUTY, STYLE, ELEGANCE
The Pennington Players, the
production company, which an-
nually performs shows at Mercer
County Community Colleges
Kelsey Theatre, has announced
audition dates and details for its
fall production of Pippin.
Auditions for children only
will be held on Thursday, June 21,
6:30 to 7 p.m., and Sunday, June 24,
from 11 a.m. to noon. Auditions
for adult roles will be Thursday,
June 21, 7 to 10 p.m., and Sunday,
June 24, from noon to 5 p.m. Call-
backs will be held Tuesday, June
26, from 7 to 10 p.m.
Auditions and callbacks will be
held in the Communications
(CM) building adjacent to Kelsey
Theatre on MCCCs West
Windsor campus, 1200 Old Tren-
ton Road.
Pennington Players is seeking
seven men, eight women and one
child.
Auditioners are asked to pre-
pare one complete song from mu-
sical theater, and to bring sheet
music in the correct key.
Actors wishing to be consid-
ered only for the featured dancer
roles need not prepare a song for
the audition.
Audition appointments are
suggested and can be made by
calling (609) 737-PLAY, or email-
ing auditions@penningtonplay-
ers.org.
Walk-ins will be seen on a time-
available basis.
The show comes to Kelsey The-
atre for six performances: Sept. 7,
9, 10, 16, 17 and 18.
For maps and directions, call
(609) 570-3333, or visit
www.kelseytheatre.net.
Pippin auditions
on June 21 and 24
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The following items were taken
from reports on file with the West
Windsor Police Department:
On June 1 at 8:22 p.m. on U.S.
Route 1 South at Carnegie Center
Boulevard, Patrolman William
Jones says he stopped a 2004 Ford
convertible for speeding and im-
proper passing. Upon meeting
with the driver, identified as a 38-
year old Hamilton resident, Jones
detected a strong odor of marijua-
na emanating from inside the ve-
hicle.
A subsequent search of the ve-
hicle determined the man was in
possession of under 50 grams of
marijuana as well as a pipe used
to ingest marijuana. The man
was placed under arrest and
charged with possession of under
50 grams of marijuana, posses-
sion of drug paraphernalia,
speeding and improper passing.
He was later released, pending a
future court date.
Between May 27 and May 29,
unknown suspects keyed the lift
gate of a 2010 red Toyota SUV be-
longing to a West Windsor resi-
dent on Cranbury Road. The
damage was estimated to be ap-
proximately $650.
On May 25 at 3:41 a.m., Sgt.
Evans says he stopped a 2006
Volkswagen Jetta for failure to
maintain a lane while traveling
on Route1 north at Harrison
Street. Upon stopping the vehicle,
Evans says he met with the driv-
er, identified as a 42-year-old Clay-
ton, N.C., resident. While speak-
ing with the man, Evans says he
detected a strong odor of alcohol
emanating from the mans breath.
Evans says he then had the man
perform several field-sobriety
tests, which he failed. The man
was placed under arrest and
charged with drunken driving,
failure to maintain a lane, reck-
less driving and driving while
suspended.
He was later released, pending
a future court date.
police report
Send us your West Windsor news
Have a news tip? Want to send us a press release or photos? Shoot
an interesting video? Drop us an email at news@westwindsorsun.com.
Fax us at (856) 427-0934. Call the editor at (609) 751-0245.
JUNE 13-19, 2012 THE WEST WINDSOR SUN 5
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right now, not around $100, as res-
idents have stated.
We get that from a variety of
sources that are extremely consis-
tent, Hughes said. Were in the
business of knowing where
SRECs are.
Hughes admitted SREC prices
have dropped significantly since
the project was being put together
when they were worth around
$600 but said no one at SunLight
assumed prices would stay in that
range.
We're anticipating fluctua-
tions, Hughes said.
As a cushion against these fluc-
tuations, said SunLight General
Capitals Director of Municipal
Finance Bill Zachary, a $3 million
enhanced securities amount
would be held in cash against
temporary declines in SREC val-
ues, and if the amount is drawn
on during times when SREC val-
ues are low, the fund would be re-
plenished when prices rebound.
Because Mercer County has
guaranteed the project, it is re-
sponsible for paying the debt and
any other costs associated with
the project if SunLight were to
default, which West Windsor resi-
dent Nicole Miller called gam-
bling with taxpayers money.
Representatives of SunLight
were skeptical such a situation
would arise, and insisted taxpay-
ers are a last resort for paying
back debt.
Under state law, the Mercer
County Improvement Authority
(MCIA) would be the title owner
of the solar project. MCIA and
the college have formed a lease
agreement with SunLight,
through which the company
would sell electricity back to the
college at a much lower rate than
it currently pays to its utility,
PSE&G.
Residents also noted concerns
the farm could cause a change in
water runoff patterns, creating
flooding and drainage problems.
West Windsor resident Janet
Mariano told the panel about
problems shes aware of at the
McGraw Hill solar farm in East
Windsor. After storms, Mariano
said, water pools under the pan-
els and the large amount of
runoff from the farm has created
a gully.
The vegetation under the pan-
els, which residents were told
would help prevent these prob-
lems, is growing poorly.
Mariano showed the panel pho-
tos of the farm, and noted a fire
hose, which she said is being used
to drain large quantities of water
from the area to avoid flooding.
Residents nearby who used to
have dry basements, she said,
now have wet ones, and must put
up with a noisy pump that works
at all hours to remove excess
water from the solar farm.
These residents were told the
same things were being told
that there were studies done,
Mariano said. People promised
them that none of this was going
to happen. Who do we call when
we are under water?
SunLight General Director of
Projects and Engineering
Stephen Goodbody said the Mc-
Graw Hill projects (not built by
SunLight General Capital) had is-
sues, but insisted the college proj-
ect was put together with these
potential problems in mind.
There have been projects with
pooling, but because of those, the
construction plan were using is
designed to avoid this, Goodbody
said. Those projects were poorly
constructed. I cant talk to why
those projects were approved the
way they were.
Goodbody said SunLights plan
involves being very careful to
avoid compacting the soil around
the panels during the building
process, in order to allow as much
water to drain through as possi-
ble.
The project has also been thor-
oughly discussed and vetted with
the Mercer County Soil Conserva-
tion District, the Mercer County
Planning Board and the New Jer-
sey Department of Environmen-
tal Protection, Goodbody said.
Residents were unconvinced by
these reassurances, which they
said were also given to residents
near the McGraw Hill project.
There is nothing I can say that
will make the majority of resi-
dents happy, Goodbody said.
DRAINAGE
Continued from page 1
Drainage problems a top concern
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6 THE WEST WINDSOR SUN JUNE 13-19, 2012
20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A
Princeton, NJ 08542
609-751-0245
The Sun is published weekly by Elauwit
Media LLC, 20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A,
Princeton, NJ 08542. It is mailed weekly to
select addresses in the 08550 ZIP code. 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@westwindsorsun.com. For advertis-
ing information, call 609-751-0245 or
email advertising@westwindsorsun.com.
The Sun welcomes suggestions and com-
ments from readers including any infor-
mation about errors that may call for a cor-
rection 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@westwindsorsun.com, via fax at
609-751-0245, or via the mail. Of course,
you can drop them off at our office, too. The
West Windsor Sun reserves the right to
reprint your letter in any medium includ-
ing electronically.
PUBLISHER Steve Miller
GENERAL MANAGER & EDITOR Alan Bauer
VICE PRESIDENT OF SALES Joe Eisele
NEWS
MANAGING EDITOR, NEWS Kevin Canessa Jr.
MANAGING EDITOR, PRODUCTION Mary L. Serkalow
WEST WINDSOR EDITOR Julie Stipe
OPERATIONS
DIGITAL MEDIA DIRECTOR Tim Ronaldson
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.
VICE CHAIRMAN Alan Bauer
to inform parents of the show.
I really appreciate what theyve done,
said Saksena. These kids have worked re-
ally hard. They have had SATs, AP tests,
and finals despite all of that stuff, they
were able to bring together a show of this
magnitude.
The youth committee, which was
formed early this year, collaborated with
the foundation to come up with an idea for
a single large event to raise money for the
district.
The group wanted a fundraiser that
would involve all the schools in the district,
and thats what WW-Ps Got Talent prom-
ised to do.
To bring together all 10 schools in the
district that has been huge, Saksena
said.
Since money raised by the show will go
back to students in the district, a talent
show made sense, Saksena said, as a way to
show off the districts students who will ul-
timately benefit from the event.
Our district is so talented, Saksena
said, (so) it seemed like the best thing to
do.
The local community has been very sup-
portive of the talent show, and members of
the student committee said they were sur-
prised and excited by the communitys re-
sponse.
Youth committee member Jessica Oer-
tels job as part of the food committee in-
volved asking for donations of food from
businesses for the buffet-style dinner pre-
ceding the event.
I was really surprised by how generous
everyone was, Oertel said. They all came
together.
What shocked me most was how much
people were willing to give, youth commit-
tee member and fundraising chair Arnav
Sood said. It was more successful than I
could have imagined.
The foundation received monetary dona-
tions as well as donations of food from
local restaurants. Mothers of students in
the district, Saksena said, also donated
their time to mentor youth committee
members in their roles and lend support.
They have been invaluable to us, Sak-
sena said.
The foundation found enthusiasm not
only in the business community and in
parent volunteers, but also in students
willing to take a risk onstage.
About 100 kids tried out for the show,
said youth committee member Abhinav
Bheemidi. The foundation tried not to say
no to any students wishing to participate,
said Bheemidi, which meant doing some
consolidation.
Its difficult to go from 100 kids to about
30 acts, Bheemidi said.
The final program, Bheemidi said, had
about 135 kids from the district, from
kindergarteners to high school students
and beyond (one performer was a graduate
of WW-P High School South).
The talents on display at WW-Ps Got
Talent were as diverse as the district it-
self, and included Japanese and Indian
classical dances along with tap dancing,
break dancing, singing groups, guitarists
and pianists.
A crowded, enthusiastic audience was
noisily supportive of each act, whether it
was a rendition of George Michaels pop-
rock song, Faith, or a Bollywood meets
Hollywood dance performance.
The event raised around $12,500, Sakse-
na reported, with an attendance of more
than 500 people.
It was a huge success and surpassed
our expectations, Education Foundation
executive director Marcia Smith Fleres
said. We are already starting to plan for
next year and would like it to become an
annual event.
FUNDRAISER
Continued from page 1
Fundraiser brought ten schools of district together
in our opinion
I
ts been about two months since
Atlantic Citys new slogan was un-
veiled. So, we have to ask: Will you
Do AC? Have you Done AC? Does
the new slogan Do Anything for
You?
We like it. We think it fits with what
has to be the citys future if theres
any hope of survival: transforming it-
self into something other than a gam-
bling destination.
You may have seen some of the com-
mercials. We like those, too. They de-
emphasize the gambling aspect. We
cant remember if theres even one
shot of a slot machine in the ads.
Instead, they highlight the beach,
nightlife, food, entertainment and
more.
If you want to gamble, you have
plenty of alternatives the closest
being the lottery at the convenience
store down the street.
Want to go to a casino? Theyre all
over the place these days.
Want to vacation in a place where
there are not only all kinds of gam-
bling options, but also world-class en-
tertainment, food and accommoda-
tions, not to mention a ton of other
non-gambling things to do? Well, those
options are more limited.
And thats what AC has to become. It
has a lot of the essentials in place,
such as numerous casinos/resorts
grouped together with others only a
short drive away. All that has been
lacking is a coordinated vision and ef-
fort to have everyone pull together in a
drive to make visiting and staying in
AC a true event similar to what a
trip to Vegas is.
Think about it, those of you who
have visited Las Vegas. Theres a feel-
ing about that city. Theres an attitude.
Theres an anticipation as your vaca-
tion is about to begin.
And admit it: You do things in Vegas
you wouldnt do elsewhere. Or at least
you should.
Now the challenge is for AC to cre-
ate that same vibe so that people really
want to Do AC.
Will you Do AC?
The citys new slogan is a step in the right direction
Just do it
Atlantic Citys new slogan is a winner.
Now it will be up to the city, the casi-
nos and the tourism efforts to make
sure that Doing AC is a desirable
thing to do.
JUNE 13-19, 2012 THE WEST WINDSOR SUN 7
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Work
As part of its 10th annual
fundraising event, the James
Tolin Memorial Fund will reprise
its first-ever production, Paul
Rudnicks comedy, Jeffrey, at
the Kelsey Theatre on the campus
of Mercer County Community
College, 1200 Old Trenton Road,
West Windsor, on June 22, 23 and
24.
The Friday and Saturday per-
formances include a silent auc-
tion and catered reception. Pro-
ceeds from the event benefit the
Open Arms Foundation; the
James Tolin Memorial Scholar-
ship at MCCC and the Tyler
Clementi Foundation.
Over the past nine years, JTMF
has presented events which fea-
tured productions of Harvey
Fiersteins Torch Song Trilogy;
Neil Simons The Odd Couple;
Paul Rudnicks Mr. Charles, Cur-
rently of Palm Beach; Nicky Sil-
vers The Altruists; Charles
Buschs Psycho Beach Party;
Joe Ortons What the Butler
Saw; Rudnicks The Most Fabu-
lous Story Ever Told; Del Shores
Sordid Lives and Buschs Die
Special to The Sun
Seen are some of the castmembers of the upcoming Jeffrey at the
Kelsey Theatre. The production is a fundraising event for the James
Tolin Memorial Fund.
Jeffrey hits the Kelsey
Theatre stage for fundraiser
please see SHOW, page 9
WEDNESDAY JUNE 13
Using e-books: 1 to 2 p.m. at West
Windsor Branch Library. This
class teaches how to search for
and check out e-books on the eLi-
braryNJ website with a Mercer
County Library System card.
Demonstration on downloading
an e-book to a computer and
transferring it to the Nook e-book
reader will be shown.
Word: 2 to 3 p.m. at West Windsor
Branch Library. A tour through
the Microsoft Word 2007 tool-
bars. Learn how to change font
styles, bullet and number para-
graphs, set margins, inset graph-
ics and more. Sign up at the refer-
ence desk or call (609) 275-8901.
Word II: 3 to 4 p.m. at West Windsor
Branch Library. This class covers
formatting and tables, as well as
Word templates. These skills will
help to produce professional-
looking resumes, term papers
and flyers. Sign up at the refer-
ence desk or call (609) 275-8901.
Bollywood Babies: Age 18 to 36
months. 11:30 to noon at West
Windsor Branch Library. Experi-
ence the fun of Bollywood dance.
Instructor Sunita Raj has over 12
years professional dance experi-
ence and a degree in early child-
hood education. Children learn
simple Bollywood dance moves.
No registration required.
West Windsor Township Parking
Authority meeting: 8 p.m. Visit
www.westwindsornj.org for more
information.
THURSDAY JUNE 14
West Windsor Township Environ-
mental Commission meeting: 8
p.m. Visit www.westwindsornj.org
for more information.
SATURDAY JUNE 16
Yoga & Meditation: 10:30 to 11:30
a.m. at West Windsor Branch
Library. Led by Sita. Bring a mat.
Scouting Out a Good Book: Pre-
school to third grade. 1:45 to 4:15
p.m. at West Windsor Branch
Library. Girl Scouts present
crafts, books and activities based
on a theme. Theme for June 16 is
Fairytales and Folktales. Walk-in
activity. Children are allowed to
come and go any time during the
program. Parents need to stay in
the library. No registration
required.
MONDAY JUNE 18
Adult Summer Reading Program:
9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. at West Wind-
sor Branch Library. Register for
the summer-long program at the
reference desk and pick up a
reading log. Turn in the log by Fri-
day, Aug. 10, and by entered into
a drawing to win a Kindle or $30
Target gift certificates. Call (609)
275-8901 for more information.
Kelleys Kids: Ages birth to 2. 10:30
to 11 a.m. at West Windsor Library.
Fun-filled program with music
and movement. No registration
required.
Ping Pong & Pizza Mummies: Ages
12 to 18. 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. at West
Windsor Branch Library. Trans-
form a ping pong ball into a glow-
ing mummys head, then make a
snack of pizza mummies! Regis-
tration required.
TUESDAY JUNE 19
Annual Petting Zoo and Family
Fair for All Ages: 10 a.m. to noon
at West Windsor Branch Library.
Kick off the summer reading pro-
gram with the annual fair. Games
and prizes. Sprinklers to help cool
off. Wear sunscreen and have a
morning of fun. All ages welcome.
No registration required.
Scouting Out a Good Book: Pre-
school to third grade. 2:45 to
4:45 p.m. at West Windsor
Branch Library. Girl Scouts pres-
ent crafts, books and activities
based on a theme. Theme for
June 19 is Oh the Places Youll
Go. Walk-in activity. Children are
allowed to come and go any time
during the program. Parents
need to stay in the library. No reg-
istration required.
CALENDAR PAGE 8 JUNE 13-19, 2012
WANT TO BE LISTED?
To have your West Windsor meeting or affair listed in the Calendar
or Meetings, information must be received, in writing, two weeks
prior to the date of the event.
Send information by mail to: Calendar, The West Windsor Sun, 20
Nassau Street, Suite 26A, Princeton, N.J. 08542. Or by email:
news@westwindsorsun.com. Or you can submit a calendar listing
through our website (www.westwindsorsun.com).
We will run photos if space is available and the quality of the photo
is sufficient. Every attempt is made to provide coverage to all
organizations.
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Sign up now for summer programs
School is out and its time to
go bananas and swing into sum-
mer. Kids can sign up now for
Jungle Jam, Princeton Communi-
ty Churchs free annual kids
camp, that promises a jungle ad-
venture like no other, with songs,
crafts, games and goodies.
This awesome adventure runs
from Monday, June 25 to Thurs-
day, June 28, from 6:30 p.m. to 8:45
p.m., for children who are age 4 to
those who have completed grade
five. Jungle Jam will be at Prince-
ton Community Church, 2300
Pennington Road, West Windsor.
Parents, enroll online at
www.princetonchurch.com/#/ch
ildren/upcoming-events. For in-
formation, call Diana Herbert at
(609) 730-1114.
NJ AIDS/STD Hotline
(800) 624-2377
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become so afraid of AIDS he vows
to give up sex. He then he imme-
diately meets the man of his
dreams in Steven (played by
David Hamm of Wrightstown) a
bartender who is HIV-positive.
Jeffreys best friend Sterling
(played by Brian A. Bara of Levit-
town, Pa, reprising his first JTMF
role) is an interior designer who
is in a relationship with Darius
(played by Chino Aczayus of
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As Jeffrey sorts through his
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Directed by company founder
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tures Christian Anthony of
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Bauch of Bordentown in multi-
ple roles.
Friday and Saturday night
shows start with a catered recep-
tion and opening bids on silent
auction items at 7 p.m., with cur-
tain at 8 p.m.
Curtain for the Sunday mati-
nee is at 2 p.m. All proceeds from
ticket sales go to the beneficiar-
ies.
Please note: this production
features adult subjects, adult lan-
guage and sexual situations. It is
not recommended for children
younger than 18.
For reservations and informa-
tion, call the Kelsey Box Office at
(609) 570-3333 or visit
www.jtmf.org.
SHOW
Continued from page 7
Show set for
June 22 to 24
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T HE WE S T WI N DS O R S U N
JUNE 13-19, 2012 PAGE 11
BOX A DS
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.
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