Richard K. Rein

Transcription

Richard K. Rein
‘RED
VIOLIN’
Strategies For Success, page 5; Zimmerli Prints, 28;
Ragged Sky Poetry, 41; Rutgers Green Building Pilot, 47.
Elizabeth
Pitcairn
performs
with her
1720 Strad
in Yardley
October 13.
Event
listings
begin,
page 17.
Business Meetings
50
Preview
17
Opportunities
22
Singles
40
Richard K. Rein 54
PH: 609-452-7000 FAX: 609-452-0033
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12
, 20
ER 10
TOB
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2
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
To the Editor:
Penns Neck Tour
direct their path, and so they enter
and explore the pleasant side
streets of Penns Neck in the hopes
of getting to the elusive town
known as Princeton. These side
o I took a walk in my neigh- streets of Penns Neck were not
borhood of Penns Neck on a warm made to handle such wayward
autumnal Saturday from Manor travels. The safety of pedestrians,
Avenue to Route 1 along Washing- bicyclists, and schoolchildren is
ton Road (0.8 miles), along with imperiled by the actions of these
meanders one block down each on drivers following the recalculated
Fairview Avenue and Wilder Av- routes of their GPS devices.
enue.
Over at Alexander Road, there is
Here is what I found: 49 orange a new solution suggested by NJand white barrels, 10 “No U-Turn” DOT this past week for a southsigns; 7 “Local Traffic Only” bound Route 1 motorist attempting
signs; 1 “No U-turns” spray paint- to get to Washington Road east toed upon Wilder Avenue; 8 traffic wards Hightstown. It is to take the
cones in driveways; 2 official NJ- ramp towards Princeton, to go beDOT traffic cones; 2 sawhorse bar- yond the first traffic light to make
ricades at driveways; 6 homemade the cloverleaf turn at Canal Pointe
signs saying “no U-Turns”, “no Boulevard, to make a left turn at
driveway turns” and the like; 7 six- the aforementioned traffic light, to
foot high plastic barricades, 1 go over Route 1 on Alexander
“Road
Closed”
Road, and to make a
sign, 2 right arrow
left turn at another trafBetween
signs; 1 changeable
fic light in order to take
information sign, 1
The
Route north to Washbig orange direcington Road. (DisLines
tional sign, 9 signs
tance: 0.9 miles). The
to join in on the loAlexander Road overcal petition, 1 crushed barrel on the pass and ramps were never deside of the road, 1 “No U-turn” sign signed to accommodate the traffic
on a mailbox, and, lastly, a piece of solution imposed on it by NJDOT.
old plywood against a metal
Meanwhile, directional signage
garbage can blocking a driveway. has sprouted like mushrooms upon
Quantity: 110 items.
the roadside in an attempt to conMy guess is that there is no oth- vince the northbound Route 1 driver neighborhood right now clut- er trying to get to Washington Road
tered with such road and highway to go to Princeton to travel the aditems like Penns Neck.
ditional 1.9 miles into Middlesex
And yet errant and confused County to Scudders Mill Road and
drivers of cars, trucks, and buses back. (No, I didn’t count them.)
continue to ignore the signage, to
These new traffic patterns: Is
ignore the attempts of NJDOT to this really the best way to have better and smoother travel upon Route
1? Is this the best we can do?
U.S. 1 WELCOMES letThis bandage that NJDOT has
ters to the editor, corrections,
applied to the wound has been on
and criticisms of our stories
long enough. Even bandages need
and columns. E-mail our editor: [email protected].
S
Richard K. Rein
Editor
Bill Sanservino
Business Editor
Lynn Miller
Events Editor
Sara Hastings
Special Projects
Craig Terry
Photography
Barbara Figge Fox
Senior Correspondent
Vaughan Burton
Production
Jennifer Schwesinger
Michael Zilembo
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LucyAnn Dunlap, Kevin Carter,
Helen Schwartz, Ilene Dube,
Jonathan Elliott, Linda Arntzenius,
Barbara Westergaard,
David McDonough, Scott Morgan,
Rikki N. Massand
Contributors
Lawrence L. DuPraz 1919-2006
Founding Production Adviser
Stan Kephart – Design 1986-2007
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Or visit www.princetoninfo.com
Copyright 2012 by Community News
Service LLC,
12 Roszel Road, Princeton 08540.
Continued on page 4
INSIDE
Survival Guide
4
Changes In Labor Law Enforcement
Strategies For Success From Wall Street
Be A Better Public Speaker
Business Meetings
4
5
49
50
Commercial Real Estate
Preview
8
17-41
Day by Day, October 10 to 17
Nassau Street Seafood Turns 30
Opportunities
Theater Review: ‘One Slight Hitch’
Wine to Please This Artist’s Palate & Palette
Mother-Child Reunion in Cassatt’s Prints
At the Movies
U.S. 1 Singles Exchange
Ellen Foos: The Sky’s the Limit for Poetry
Fast Lane
Classifieds
Jobs
Richard K. Rein
17
21
22
25
26
28
39
40
41
47
50
52
54
For advertising or editorial inquiries, call 609-452-7000. Fax: 609-452-0033.
Mail: 12 Roszel Road, Princeton 08540. E-Mail: [email protected].
Home page: www.princetoninfo.com © 2012 Community News Service LLC.
For articles previously published in U.S. 1, for listings of scheduled events far
into the future, consult our website: www.princetoninfo.com.
The U.S. 1 Sneak Preview edition is E-mailed weekly.
It contains highlights of the next issue, and links to key websites.
Company Index
Employers’ Association of New
Jersey, 4; Hilton Realty, 8; Infosolve Technologies, 48; Logic Planet, 48; Lucid Technologies, 48.
Mercer Free School, 49; Morgan Stanley, 5; NAI Fennelly, 8;
Nassau Transportation, 48; NJ
101.5, 6; Planet Princeton, 6;
Princeton Chamber, 5.
Princeton Junior School, 47;
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, 48; Princeton Theological
Seminary, 47; Richard J. Lucash
CPA, 48; Rider University, 47.
Rutgers Center for Green
Building, 47; Sturhahn, Dickenson
& Bernard, 48; Toastmasters, 49;
WithumSmith+Brown, 6; Witt Law,
48.
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3
4
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Letters to the Editor
Continued from page 2
to changed in order to promote
proper healing. We need a real traffic solution, not a bandage. The
bandage needs to be changed now.
Curtis Hoberman
Washington Road, Penns Neck
Hoberman, an architect who
likes to count and measure things,
is a 34-year resident of Penns Neck
and a member of Zoning Board of
Adjustment of West Windsor.
Artful 45th
IN CELEBRATION OF OUR 45TH
Anniversary, the Arts Council of
Princeton (ACP) sends heartfelt
thanks to the community for its
continued support and participation. The ACP was founded in September, 1967, and so we aimed to
fill this past month with vibrant anniversary festivities.
Thank you to the hundreds of
artists, families, and friends who
joined us for our early-September
annual members show, which featured 165 artworks by member
artists. We are delighted to share
that our free fall open house on
September 9 garnered both record
attendance and class registrations.
Our mid-month 1960s dance party
was festive and fun. We grooved to
music alongside a giant screen featuring vintage rock-n-roll footage
and videos. Finally, we produced
an Age of Aquarius benefit concert
with renowned singer-songwriter
Francis Dunnery. It was wonderful
to see so many new and familiar
faces during this exciting month.
Thanks to everyone who helped
make our events successful including: McCaffrey’s Markets, Lucy’s
Ravioli Kitchen, Lindt Chocolate
Shop, Halo Pub, Bai Brands, the
bent spoon, small world coffee,
Princeton Record Exchange, Emily’s Cafe & Catering, and CoolVines. We send special thanks to
our performers at the Fall Open
House, who set the tone and created lots of excitement on our terrace
and front steps, Lisa Botalico and
the La Feria dancers, Uma Kapoor
and her Bollywood dancers, and
Zoe Brookes and the Stone Soup
Circus troupe. Our gracious and informative artist-instructors rounded out a superb open house. Finally, we thank our extraordinary volunteers, who on a daily basis work
in so many ways to build community through the arts.
The ACP Staff and Board
SURVIVAL
GUIDE
EDITOR:
BILL SANSERVINO
[email protected]
More Stringent Labor
Law Enforcement
On The Way
M
any employers manage
their workplaces with “rules that
are taken for granted.” But are
these rules in line with Federal
Law? John Sarno of the Employers’Association of New Jersey believes that in many cases they are
not.
“A slew of litigation has been
brewing under the federal labor
law — known as the National La-
Hard Labor: John
Sarno of the Employers’ Association of
N.J. says employers
are overly focused on
discrimination laws
while labor laws are
often ignored.
bor Relations Act,” says Sarno.
“Over the last 20 years, there has
been a national policy, from both
parties, to not enforce many of the
labor laws. Under the Obama administration that is changing,” he
says. It will continue to change, no
matter which candidate is elected
president in November, because
the members of the National Labor
Relations Board are appointed, not
elected.
The board is made up of five
members and primarily acts as a
quasi-judicial body in deciding
cases on the basis of formal records
in administrative proceedings.
Board members are appointed by
the president to five-year terms,
with Senate consent. The term of
one member expires each year.
This means that members elected
during one four-year term will continue to make decisions for the
board throughout most of the next
term, no matter whether a new
president is elected.
No Longer in the Driver’s
Seat. “In the past four years there
have been systematic technical
changes in the way the law is applied,” says Sarno. Because these
changes have been incremental,
they have gone unnoticed by most
employers.
“For the past 20 years employers have been in the drivers’ seat.
When that happens, you can become complacent,” says Sarno. It
is often the case that we prepare for
the problems of the past, rather
than those of the future.
Discrimination Cases Often
Lack Merit. “Most HR managers
are focused on discrimination and
harassment but Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission statistics
show that most of these charges
lack merit.”
So while HR managers and employers are overly focused on making sure that discrimination laws
are followed to the letter, labor
laws are often being ignored, and
adds Sarno, “suits on most labor
charges do succeed.”
Sarno has combined his background in both psychology and the
law in his work with the Employers’ Association. He received a
bachelor’s degree from Ramapo
College of New Jersey in 1977 and
a master’s of counseling from Seton Hall in 1980. He worked for
several years as a counselor for
clients with disabilities, including
work with disabled students at
Ramapo College, before returning
Over the last 20 years,
there has been a national policy, from
both parties, to not
enforce many labor
laws. That is changing under the Obama
administration.
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to law school and receiving his J.D.
degree from Seton Hall in 1988. He
advises employers on labor, employment and health care issues
and teaches health care law and
ethics at Fairleigh Dickinson University, including a class on the Affordable Care Act.
Sarno credits his parents for his
career focus on advocating for others. “We lived in East Paterson. It
was a small 1960s community
where everyone knew everyone.
My mother was always an advocate for people with disabilities
and my father was what I’d call a
social extrovert.
“He was the person who went to
all the town council meetings and
asked questions. They were both
advocates, in their own way, for
others in the community. I think
they influenced me to always be
helping others — and I hope that I
am influencing my own children in
the same way.”
The EANJ is the only nonprofit
association in the state of New Jersey dedicated to helping employers
make sound and responsible em-
OCTOBER 10, 2012
ployment decisions through education, informed discussion and training. The organization’s original 1916 charter commits it to
advancing “the understanding of principles
of individual freedom in labor relations” and
to “secure property rights and advance freedom of contract.”
Two years ago, with Democratic majorities in both houses of Congress, unions
pushed for the Employee Free Choice Act or
“card check.” The bill would have allowed
employees to organize simply by signing
cards agreeing to join a union.
Employers said that the law would increase the possibility of workers being subjected to strong-arm or high pressure tactics
to join unions. The current system of secret
ballots was more fair. The act stalled because of opposition from Republicans, business groups, and some Democrats.
Poster Requirement. Last year, the National Labor Relations Board issued a rule
requiring most employers to post a sign explaining to employees their rights under the
federal labor law. A federal appeals court
struck down the poster requirement in its entirety as unlawful. Since then, the District of
Columbia Court of Appeals postponed its
ruling to allow for additional legal arguments to be held.
But the failure of the poster requirement
does not mean that employers can breathe a
sigh of relief, according to Sarno.
“Just this year, administrative judges
have overruled an employer’s ‘employment
at will’contained in an employee handbook;
an employer’s right to prevent workers from
talking to one another about how much they
are paid; an employer’s attempt to keep the
contents of an internal investigation secret;
and to monitor popular social networking
sites such as Facebook. In each case, the
court found that the employer had violated
workers’ rights to engage in legally protected activity,” Sarno explains.
The long years of lack of enforcement
have created “a generation of employers that
are pretty well clueless about the federal labor law,” says Sarno. Many managers confuse legal rights with union organizing, but
the federal labor law applies to most privatesector employers, regardless of whether
there is a labor union involved. Because
union organizing is not a concern, most employers are lulled,” says Sarno.
Lawyers who represent employers say
they worry the NLRB’s actions will make
employers more vulnerable to unfair labor
practice penalties, particularly small companies that are ill-equipped to understand
the intricacies of the law.
The poster law, if re-instated, will change
the dynamic between employers and employees. “The more informed an employee
is, the more likely he is to bring a suit,” says
Sarno. “If the poster goes up and the board
continues to change the legal landscape,
there’s going to be a lot of catch-up for management. Many policies and practices
would need to be changed.”
— Karen Hodges Miller
U.S. 1
Princeton Weight Loss Center
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Thursday, October 11
Strategies For Success
From Wall Street
W
hen Carla Harris, senior Wall
Street executive and gospel singer, married
Victor Franklin, a childhood bowling buddy
from Jacksonville, Florida, the New York
Times sent a reporter to the ceremony.
Friends noted that Harris is “a quintessential
Type-A Wall Streeter” but also that she is “a
Southern girl from Florida doing this investment banker thing. She still has her accent.
She’s kept her religious values.”
On the phone, Harris comes across as
more Wall Street than Jacksonville — at
least at first. Clipped and rushed, she gives
well-rehearsed lines from her book (she’s an
author, too). But then she answers a question
about her childhood in Jacksonville, and she
relaxes. A smile enters her voice.
Harris — a Morgan Stanley managing director, Carnegie Hall chanteuse, philanthropist, inspirational speaker, author, and
bowler — is the keynote speaker at the
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6
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
importance of forming networks and developing relationships with mentors, advisors,
and sponsors. A subtext, though, is to take
Continued from preceding page
care not to listen to every piece of advice.
As a high school student, she was told to
merce’s Women’s Leadership Conference forget about the Ivy League and to apply to
on Thursday, October 11, from 8:30 a.m. to in-state schools. She looked into Ivy League
1:30 p.m. at the Princeton Marriott Hotel & schools anyway, and four years later graduConference Center at 100 College Road ated magna cum laude from Harvard (Class
East.
of 1984). She was also advised against maAccording to Peter Crowley, chamber joring in economics, a tough subject, espepresident and CEO, the event has sold out cially for a girl.
and there will be no walk-in registrations.
She didn’t listen. After earning that deAnyone interested in being put on the gree, she went on to earn an MBA from Harevent’s waiting list can E-mail their name vard. Originally planning to be an attorney,
and phone number to peter@princeton- an internship in her sophomore year quickly
chamber.org.
convinced her that the world of high finance
Following Harris is a lunch keynote pres- was what she really wanted.
entation, featuring a media panel about what
Her rise at Morgan Stanley was steady,
it takes to get positive media attention. The but she says she wishes she had done a few
panelists are Kelly Waldron, NJ 101.5
things differently. Quinews anchor and reporter;
et in meetings at first,
Natalie Kosteini, reshe came to realize that
porter at the Philadelphia
Everyone — new hire
it’s
important
for
Business Journal; Kryswomen to make themto managing partner
tal Knapp, founder of the
selves heard — and
— needs to be able to
online news blog Planet
make sure they’re inPrinceton; Liz Matt, TV
describe themselves
cluded in every aspect
anchor, journalist, and
of business.
with just three adjecpublic relations specialist;
She has been quoted
tives and then has to
and Lynn Doyle, host and
as saying “Don’t say
executive producer for
broadcast them far
‘they won’t let me do
Comcast’s “It’s Your Call
this or that.’ That
and wide.
with Lynn Doyle.”
should be a red flag.
Following lunch are
You need to start putfour afternoon workting yourself into the circle, saying ‘we, we,
shops: Robyn and Trevor Crane, founders we’ until they get it, because you need to be
of the Shake Your Money System, on “Im- an integral part of the fabric. I can’t tell you
age, Impact, and Becoming Irresistible”; how many women say ‘they go out for
Sarah Cirelli, senior marketing coordinator drinks and don’t invite me.’ Invite yourat WithumSmith+Brown, on “Marketing self!”
Your Business by Using Social Media”;
Harris, one of the most senior women on
Paula Gregorowicz, owner of the Paula G. Wall Street, heads the Emerging Markets
Company, on “Who Do You Think You Are? Platform at Morgan Stanley, where she has
How to Be a Woman of Unshakable Confi- worked for more than 20 years. In this posidence”; and Alice Gabriele, investment ad- tion, she provides investment advice to corvisor, and Wendy Herbert, estate, trust, and porations, public pension plans, foundatax attorney, on “ABCs of Building and Pro- tions, and endowments. She formerly headtecting Wealth for Women.”
ed the firm’s equity capital markets effort
Harris’ book’s title is “Expect to Win: for the consumer and retail industries and
Proven Strategies for Success from a Wall was responsible for equity private placeStreet Vet.” One of her biggest themes is the ments. She was a senior member of the equi-
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Invitation
onn
for Central New Jersey CEOs
Oct 31, 2012
7:30 -11 a.m.
Fiddler’s Elbow
Country Club
811 Rattlesnake Bridge Road
Bedminster Township, NJ 07921
Register at 908-799-0491 or
www.vistage.com/US1
Exclusively for CEOs, presidents
and business owners with at least
$5 million or more in annual
sales revenue.
“
What Every CEO Needs to Know to
Outperform the Competition
”
Speaker Bob Prosen will provide his own business execution framework,
proven to rapidly increase profits and out-execute the competition regardless of
market conditions.
tThe nine steps of the business execution model
tThe importance of a common operating language
tHow to quickly boost sales and increase margins
Register at www.vistage.com/US1
Bob Prosen
Vistage Speaker
Prosen is president and CEO of The Prosen Center for Business Advancement in
Carrollton, Texas. In addition to offering his management training programs, he speaks
internationally to a range of organizations, drawing on his experience of more than 25
years as a senior-level executive at several Fortune 500 companies.
More than 500 business leaders in Central New Jersey have
experienced the power of a Vistage CEO peer advisory group.
Meet other like-minded business leaders
at this interactive presentation.
See what’s possible
for your company
Fiddler’s Elbow Country Club | October 31
“ ”
Reaching Record Revenues, Profits
“My decision to become a Vistage member has been the single
greatest business decision of my career. Having been a business
owner for the past 20 years, I’ve developed as a leader-and as
importantly, grown revenues and profits to record levels-with the
help of Vistage. These advances are a true testament to the quality
of people and members within the Vistage organization.”
— Jay VanOrden
Managing Partner,
Worldwide Supply
New Jersey
The World’s Leading Peer Advisory Membership Organization
221_1909 NJ_US1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
ty syndicate desk and executed initial public offerings for a number
of high-profile companies, including UPS and Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia.
Perception is Reality. A piece
of advice that Harris repeats over
and over has to do with perception,
which she sees as critical to success. “Perception is the co-pilot to
reality,” she says. “You can control
perception.”
And you had better do so —
every single day. A key to creating
a perception is the adoption of a
three-adjective description. Everyone — new hire to managing partner — needs to be able to describe
themselves with just three adjectives and then has to broadcast
them far and wide, to make sure
that everyone in their networks
sees them in terms of those adjectives.
Words For Success. So, what
are Harris’ adjectives? “Tough,
commercial, fair,” she says. It’s important to note, she adds, that
“these may change over the course
of a career.” Her descriptors, now
that she has achieved something of
a superstar status on Wall Street,
are very different from those she
may have used two decades ago.
“A brand new associate would
want ‘analytic and quantitative,’”
she says. “Those are the qualities
associated with success” at that
level. A first step in choosing the
traits for which you want to be
known, she says, is an understanding of what is perceived as most
important in your profession at
your level. “You need to understand the micro and the macro,” is
how she puts it.
To get at the macro for your profession, she says, “you need to drill
down.” In the old days, she says,
the rising star in a firm might have
been described as being “a good
guy.” Okay, but what does that really mean? It’s the job of the ambitious employee or professional to
ferret that out. “It could mean very
assertive, takes a lot of initiative”
in one industry, says Harris, but in
another, say marketing, it could
mean “very creative,” while in
sales it could mean “relationship
oriented.” After figuring out just
what traits are valued, the individual needs to personalize and adopt
them — and then act them out,
again, and again, and again.
“Your behavior has to be consistent around those three words,”
says Harris. As an example, she
says that if an analytical mind is
prized in a particular position, an
individual hoping to be recognized
as over-the-top analytical must
speak in an analytical way at meetings, taking care to insert “what do
the numbers say” or “speaking
quantitatively” at every opportunity.
Be Introspective. Harris also
stresses that the truly successful
person will not be afraid to be true
to himself — or, of course, herself.
Yet it took Harris a little while to
fully come out — as a gospel
singer.
“I wanted to keep Carla the
singer in a box,” Harris is quoted
telling the New York Times last
year in an article on her dual banking and singing careers. And this
despite the fact that she had been
singing soul and R&B since age
nine. Early on in her career at Morgan Stanley, she would sneak out
from the bank to go to Harlem on
Wednesday nights, where she
would watch amateur night performances at the Apollo Theater
before taking the subway back to
work.
Within a decade, however, Harris could keep her voice quiet no
longer. She began to reveal herself
as a singer slowly, first singing at a
group function at work. Then she
began singing at colleagues’ weddings. Before long, she was belting
Winning Notes: Carla Harris, executive
and singer, speaks on
strategies for success
at the Princeton
Chamber’s first
Women’s Leadership
Conference on Thursday, October 11.
out “Amazing Grace” at a client
dinner. Now a staple in firm talent
events, she is often asked to sing at
business meetings and frequently
complies. She takes voice lessons
during her lunch hour and even uses the elevator ride to her office to
practice a few notes.
More than an amateur, Harris
has released three CDs, and becomes animated when she talks
about her upcoming November 19
concert at Carnegie Hall — her
fourth. “Proceeds are going to Better Chance Inc.,” she says, “and to
St. Charles Borremeo,” the Harlem
church where she sings in two
choirs. A third recipient is Bishop
Kenny High School in Jacksonville, where, she says, the money will go toward increasing opportunities for “students of color.”
Harris, who was born in Port
Arthur, Texas, speaks fondly of her
U.S. 1
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childhood in Jacksonville. Her father, the late John Harris, was a
commercial fishing boat captain
based out of New Orleans. “He was
gone six months of the year,” she
says. “When he was home, he
worked with my grandmother, in
her sundries store.” Her mother,
the late Billie Joyce Harris, remains her inspiration on the hotly
contentious work-life balance issue. A teacher turned dean of students who coached whatever sport
was in season, Billie Joyce also put
a hot meal on the table every morning and every evening. “She was an
educator, a mom, a wife,” says
Harris. Watching her mother, she
Let’s get dinner
in NewYork.
Discover the pleasure of our polished, professional service.
609-954-3020
www.CranburyLimo.com
Continued on page 49
ICC MC 169-801
Christine Thompson & Frank Vesci, Owners
19th Annual
Convenient Locations throughout the Greater Trenton Area
Learn new business concepts
Refresh old ones
Meet state-of-the arts vendors
Network with the cream
of the Greater Mercer County
business community
Win prizes
Have fun!
For a full schedule of the week-long
activities, sponsorship
opportunities and to register,
www.smallbizweek.com
or call ABS at 609-392-3800.
(All events are free unless otherwise noted.)
Thank You to the Many Sponsors
Who Make This Week Possible
PLATINUM
The City of Trenton
The College of New Jersey Small Business
Development Center
The County of Mercer
Mercer Regional
Chamber of Commerce
Princeton Regional
Chamber of Commerce
TD Bank
GOLD
New Jersey Economic Development
Authority
The Times
US1 Newspaper
WIMG AM 1300
SILVER
Capital Region Minority Chamber
of Commerce
Mercer County Woman
94.5 PST
The College of New Jersey
The Trentonian
Thomas Edison State College
Vision Latina
BRONZE
Food Bazaar
Hutchinson Worldwide
Roma Bank
The Mega Group
Trenton Social
Trenton Thunder
8
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
On Spec: Waiting For The Market To ‘Pop’
A
fice building being built in Princeton region and the first since the
completion in 2007 of 902
Carnegie Center (140,000 square
feet), also developed by Hilton,
and 1 University Square (302,000
square feet), built by Reckson Associates. Both buildings are almost
fully leased, but took about two
years before they saw significant
leasing activity.
Hilton is confident that despite
the current slow market there will
be a lot of interest in the property.
“Typically, a developer of a
building of this size would prelease 50 percent of the property before starting construction,” says
Matt Malatich, Hilton assistant director of leasing. “That means new
buildings are usually leased by
large users and smaller companies
do not get the opportunity to lease
space in the newest buildings.”
Bird’s Eye View: Matt Malatich, left,Jon Brush,
and Mark Hill of Hilton Realty survey the construction site from the third floor of 300 Carnegie
Center.
Photos by Mark Czajkowski.
range,” according to Malatich. Before Hilton purchased the property
BPG had acquired all land use approvals for the building and in
depth engineering and architectural work had been done, says
Malatich.
Still left though was the lengthy
process of obtaining permits before construction finally started.
Work is expected to be completed
in mid to late 2013.
“We believe that the timing is
right and that when this building
comes online we are going to have
good interest,” says Malatich. “A
As it did with 902 Carnegie Center, Hilton is planning to market the
property to smaller, high-end users
interested in leasing Class A space.
“We believe the economy will continue to improve and there is
enough demand for new, high-end
space that this project will be successful,” Malatich says.
When Hilton purchased 301
Carnegie Center from BPG Properties in 2007, it included the rights
to build the 300 building on the adjacent 8.2-acre parcel fronting on
Route 1 south. The purchase price
was “in the low to mid $20 million
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full-on economic re- didn’t pop until 1996. That was six
covery is coming, and the compa- years. This recession started in
nies who get ready for it now are 2008. We’ve gone through four
the ones that will thrive when it ar- years of choppiness now, so hoperives.
fully in two more years things will
So says Jerry Fennelly, presi- pop.”
dent of NAI Fennelly commercial
The signs that the commercial
brokerage, which just moved to a market is coming back to life are
new office at 500 Alexander Park. out there, he says. “It was a great
Fennelly points to companies like first half. There were a lot of transIdis
Pharmaceuticals,
which actions and a lot of growth. For the
tripled its space at 902 Carnegie first time in the last four years more
Center, and ALK Technologies companies grew than contracted.”
which doubled its space when it
He also points out, though, that
moved it offices from Herrontown one of the inevitable “chops” in the
Road to 457 North Harrison Street. recovery graph came when things
“Why did they double or triple? “flattened out a little bit” in the past
They see the opportunity to grow few months.
and they are preparing themselves
At the beginning of this year, in
for what they see as a positive fu- his annual market report, Fennelly
ture,” Fennelly says. “Recoveries boldly proclaimed that “the recestypically don’t go up in a straight sion is over.” He backed up his
line. They chop,
words with acchop, chop, and
tion. “I took a
then they pop.”
risk and hired a
‘It was a great first
The compabunch of new
half. There were a lot
nies that make
salespeople at
of transactions and a
bold
moves
the beginning
now are the
of the year, and
lot of growth. For the
ones who sucwe just killed
first
time
in
the
last
ceed the most
it,” he says. “If
four years more comwhen the econI hadn’t done
omy
finally
that, we wouldpanies grew than
does
“pop,”
n’t have done
contracted.’
Fennelly says.
nearly as well
“You have to be
as we did. The
ready when the
time to prepare
wave hits the beach, and you have for a full recovery is now.”
to ride at the top of it. You don’t
Hilton Realty is one company
want to be at the middle, or at the taking the kind of risk Fennelly
bottom of the wave.”
talks about, with the construction
Fennelly likens the current eco- of a 88,274-square-foot Class A ofnomic situation to the recession of fice building at 300 Carnegie Centhe early 1990s. “1990 was the ter.
worst year of that recession and we
The building is the only spec of-
G
TRENTON
Sale/Lease - 25,000 +/- SF warehouse; newly improved
with office space, 2 loading docks and 5 loading doors.
Fenced-in lot with high ceilings. Excellent condition.
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BEACH HAVEN LONG BEACH ISLAND
Sale. One of the finest and largest restaurants on LBI.
Illness forces sale. Approx. 8,000 SF. Almost new
w/seating for 190. Located in the heart of Beach Haven.
What an opportunity!
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609-586-4300
www.bonannirealtors.com
HAMILTON
LONG BEACH ISLAND
LONG BEACH ISLAND
EAST WINDSOR
LAMBERTVILLE
Sale - Well known prime corner location on Rt.33
available. Located next door to CVS and Acme. Owner
relocating out of area. Priced right.
Sale. Well established restaurant w/(2) 1,500 SF apartments. Turn key operation includes 6 years old bldg,
business, all equipment and furnishings. Call for details!
Sale. A long established ice cream business located in a
prime location w/living quarters in Beach Haven. Won't
last long. Owner retiring. Offered for $789,900.
Sale - 12,450 +/- SF auto retail/service bldg on 3 AC.
parking for 175 cars. Zoned Highway Commercialmany permitted uses available.
Sale. Currently antique retail bldg situated on 3.83 acres.
Next door residential property also available for sale on
7.78 acres. All zoned highway commercial - many permitted uses. Located next to Golden Nugget Flea
Market.
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ALLENTOWN
HAMILTON
ROBBINSVILLE
Sale - 23,450 +/- SF light industrial bldg situated on 2 AC. Premium
location close to I-95 & NJ Turnpike.
Sale - 8800 SF +/- office/flex bldg w/large overhead door. Located on
Yardville-Allentown Rd w/48 parking spaces.
Sale - Center of Robbinsville, Rt.526/Main St. 2.5 story colonial
approved for professional offices. Detached garage with parking.
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HAMILTON
Sale - Restaurant w/Ice cream. Pull up drive-in. Established for over
50 years and now for sale! Located on Rt. 33-great opportunity!
LAHASKA
TRENTON/LAWRENCEVILLE BORDER
TRENTON
PENNINGTON
Lease - Bucks County prime retail space. Located next to Peddler's
Village. Extensive exterior renovations, various spaces and unique setting!
Sale/Lease: 14,650 +/- SF light industrial/warehouse bldg, shop, production, etc.(2) loading doors, new roof, alarm. Great condition and
close to all major roads!
Sale. 4000 SF warehouse w/14' ceilings & 1 acre of fenced yard.
Ideal for construction, transport company, or auto. Easy access to
Rt.1 and Rt.129/29. $399,500.
Lease: 2270 +/- SF premier office space available immediately!
Gorgeous executive suite, number of private office, abundant parking
and more! Great visibility and conveniently located close to Rt. 31,
I-95, downtown shops and restaurants .
OCTOBER 10, 2012
lot of the product in this market is nice, but
the buildings are 15 to 20 years old.”
“We feel very good about the building,”
says Mark Hill, Hilton director of leasing.
“It’s being built with the highest quality materials, and the design is really very different.
We’re going to have a fountain in the center
that’s quite remarkable, and a two-story
vaulted lobby.”
The building, which is the first in the area
to receive LEED-CS Silver certification,
will also offer a fitness room and showers.
The rent is expected to be around $36.50 per
square foot. In-house listing agents for the
building are Hill, Malatich, and Jon Brush,
assistant director of leasing.
According to Hill, there are three active
prospects that Hilton is talking to about leasing space in the building. “The building is
going to be even more beautiful when it’s
filled with people,” he says.
Meanwhile, the fact that the building sits
in the center of the Princeton office market
gives it a good chance for success.
“There’s a barometer here for our economy that differs from others,” says Fennelly.
“We have five colleges, four or five hospitals, and a diverse population that has wealth
and supports labor. We’re at the center of the
universe. You can drive an hour in either direction and target 20 million people.”
“You watch CNN or the other news networks and they use words like ‘fiscal cliff,’
Cranbury
Matrix Corporate Center, 259
Prospect Plains Road. Available
square feet: 100,000, divisible to
5,000. Net rent, $21. Conditions:
plus all utilities; warehouse $7/SF
plus operating expenses. Approximate per-month cost: $8,750, net.
Also for sale: $105/SF.
NAI Fennelly, Matt Meade, 609520-0061. 82.53 acres, 14 buildings
and additional land parcels zoned
light industrial for office, warehouse,
lab, or entertainment use; free onsite parking.
Ewing
146 Scotch Road. Available
square feet: 17,600. Gross rent,
$4.25. Approximate per-month cost:
$6,233.33, gross. Also for sale:
$1,175,000.
Weidel Realtors, 609-737-2077.
Size of building: 17,600 square
feet. Industrial warehouse divisible to 2-3 units.
1660 North Olden Avenue Extension. Available square feet:
3,352. Net rent, $19.50. Conditions:
plus CAM, tenant electric, and heat;
ground lease $65,000/year NNN.
Approximate per-month cost:
$5,447, net. Also for sale: $795,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 3,352 square feet.
One-story brick bank branch building
zoned business highway with three
drive-through windows, seven teller
stations, bank vault, private offices,
kitchenette, central AC, gas-fired hot
air heating system, and parking for
51 cars.
9
Taking Shape: Above is an
artist’s rendering of the rear
of the building as it will appear from Route 1. At right,
Hill, Malatich, and Brush at
the building as it currently
stands.
or ‘world disaster’ — the kind of things people use on television to get headlines. But
overall I think our economy here looks
good.”
He says that more companies expanded
than contracted and home values are increasing. “Residential values moving up is a
bonus for us. Consumers feels like they’re
wealthy again. Therefore, their confidence
level goes up, it rips through the economy,
and people want to do things. They start
spending.”
And there’s never been a better time to
buy or rent commercial space. Prices are low
and interest rates are low. “Owners are motivated to make deals,” says Fennelly. “If you
want to buy something, do it now. If you wait
two years then it could be too late. Buildings
are starting to sell again and financing is inexpensive. If you can get money for four or
five percent on 25-year loans that’s great.
You can do a lot of damage with that kind of
money.”
— Bill Sanservino
COMMERCIAL SPACE FOR
RENT & FOR SALE
Flex Space
U.S. 1
Hamilton
4 Crossroads Drive. Available
square feet: 17,700, divisible to
4,000. Net rent, $12. Conditions:
NNN; $7/SF NNN for warehouse.
Approximate per-month cost:
$4,000, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Size of building:
34,000 square feet. Single-story
building, office and warehouse.
1440 South Olden Avenue.
Available square feet: 3,200. Net
rent, $10.50. Conditions: plus operating expenses. Approximate permonth cost: $2,800, net. Also for
sale: $470,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Size of building:
3,200 square feet. One-story freestanding building zoned HC with
parking for 15 cars.
3 Nami Lane C-10. Available
square feet: 2,500. Gross rent,
$16.85. Approximate per-month
cost: $3,510.42, gross.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 40,000 square feet.
1,000 SF office and 1,500 SF warehouse. Central AC, 22’-24’ ceilings
dropped to 8’.
2145 Nottingham Way. Conditions: $2,995/month absolute gross.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300. Office space
and additional storage space; leased
as package or individually.
Briarwood Shopping Center.
Available square feet: 3,400, divisible to 1,100. Net rent, $16.95. Approximate per-month cost:
$1,553.75, net.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300. Office/retail
space in multi-tenant shopping center.
Continued on page 11
A U.S. 1 ADVERTISING FEATURE
Commercial Market Shows Signs of Recovery
Bonanni Realtors
Current market is
an opportunity!
A
half-century in commercial
real estate has made Bonanni Realtors the area’s
expert since 1956.
Dave Bonanni is the present
owner and operator of Bonanni
Realtors. With more than 50
years in the business, his experience precedes him. He prides
himself on strong communication
skills, which have contributed to
the success and longevity of Bonanni Realtors.
Bonanni has been aggressively serving central and southern
New Jersey, including Mercer,
Ocean, Burlington, Hunterdon,
Monmouth, Atlantic, Middlesex,
and Cape May counties, and a
few years ago expanded into
Pennsylvania’s Bucks, Montgomery, and Philadelphia counties. This has given the firm’s associates a deep knowledge of
the local marketplace.
“We are now seeing increasing sales and leasing activity in
our market area,” Bonanni said.
“Recent projects include finalizing a location for Briarwood
Pharmacy on Kuser Road, Pollo
Campero Restaurant on Hamilton Avenue, a diner on Arena Drive, and a full-service Quick
Check in Hamilton. One of our
larger projects completed was
the sale of Patterson Chevrolet
on Route 33.”
The Bonanni commercial real
estate philosophy is about
making connections —
bringing together individuals and
businesses to
find the right
opportunities
in real estate.
Bonanni associates become trusted
advisors, assisting clients
in all aspects
of a commercial real estate transaction. “We pride ourselves in always returning phone calls to our
clients and other interested parties.
“Our clients truly see us as experts who can help them with a
variety of issues and needs,” he
added. “We strive to bring a solution to the table every time. Often, we call on other trusted experts to assist, such as banking
relations and building designers.
“Some clients come to us for a
fair market value opinion,” Bonanni noted. “Some buy with the
intent to sell in a few years, some
for a long-term investment. We
listen to their future plans and
needs to achieve their goals and
exceed their expectations.”
Bonanni Realtors sees the
current market as an opportunity.
Purchase prices have adjusted
to favor the buyer and finance
David Bonanni,
Bonanni Realtors
rates are the lowest we have
ever seen. Attractive pricing on
investment properties is still
available. Bonanni says they are
successfully structuring transactions on favorable terms, and
even creating positive cash flow
from day one for most clients.
“There’s a lot of talk and predictions about commercial real
estate out there,” he said. “The
bottom line: we have been here
before. The market is cyclical
and it will cycle up again. Our job
is to assist in both good times
and difficult times - we excel at
that.”
Bonanni Realtors, 609-5864300. www.bonannirealtors.com.
Continued on following page
10
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Commercial
Property
Network
Leasing space:
Starting earlier than
you think can help
M
oving is one of the
biggest decisions your
business will ever make.
From beginning to end, the
process of moving your business
can take a year or more, depending on the size, type of space
needed, and prior planning. A
simple office move with few requirements can be addressed in
four to eight weeks, but that assumes the space is in complete
move-in condition. Requirements for larger offices, medical,
lab, and others can take much
longer.
And putting together a move is
more than just looking at a few
sites in a short period of time.
From the perspective of a broker
or facility advisor, it’s about building relationships with companies
early on, developing a trust of
market knowledge, asking the
right questions, and forward
planning for the problems that
are likely to arise. It’s about getting to know their needs now and
what their needs will be in the future.
And that takes time. But it’s
worth it. At Commercial Property
Network, building relationships is
how we assure our current and
future clients of a planned, well
thought out move, that provides
for enough time to address all
the lead-time options and considerations. Our shared goals of
moving your business to its new
Bill Barish,
Commercial Property Network
location might be short-term, but
our vision looks far into the future.
That’s why we take the time to
get to know your business. We
strive to educate businesses on
the process of moving, from that
first moment of recognizing that
your company’s success will one
day require more space to the
moment the space has received
all inspections and approvals, allowing for your smooth transition
to the new environment.
How long does it take to shore
up a new location? Often, nine
months to a year. Say, for example, you want to renovate a new
space. Construction could take
three months. Getting approvals
and permits from the township?
That’s another two months. Designs and schematics? That’s at
least a month right there. And on
top of all that, there are lease ne-
V I L L A G E
F O R R E S T A L
Jingoli
Properties
Prime 110,000 SF
Princeton property
up for lease
J
ingoli Properties today announced that its prime office
property on Thanet Circle in
Princeton is on the leasing market for the first time in nearly 20
years.
“Our Thanet Circle office complex, near the Princeton Shopping Center, is a jewel in the Jingoli Properties crown,” says Jingoli CEO Stacey Markowitz.
“Boasting 110,000 rental square
feet in two contemporary buildings, this secluded property is
only minutes from downtown
Princeton, the new University
Medical Center, and the U.S.
Route 1 Corridor. And it’s back
on the market after almost two
decades under one tenant.”
Located just off Harrison
Street and very near the Princeton Shopping Center, Thanet Circle provides ample parking to
Considering a move? It can take up to a year to shore up a new lease, says Bill Barish.
Jingoli Properties recently announced that prime office space is available on Thanet Drive.
PFV US1 Oct2012 Half Page Color Page 1
P R I N C E T O N
gotiations, which start once we
have gone through the short list
of viable options that can work
for your firm. Given schedules,
focus, holidays, and more, it can
often take several months to get
from a general goal of the tenant
objectives, to a market report,
site inspections and a short list of
options to consider for serious
consideration
Now do you see why getting to
know you early is so important?
It’s not about sealing a deal, it’s
about getting you through the
process as quickly as needed
but efficiently without your having to worry about what it means
to move (because let’s face it, no
one enjoys moving). We want
you to know we’ve got your back.
The members of Commercial
Property Network have been negotiating transactions and advising prospective tenants for over
31 years. We have been collectively involved in more than $300
million in closed transactions,
from 1000/SF to nearly
200,000/SF. Regardless of size,
each client gets the right amount
of focus and attention to stay
ahead of the curve and to secure
a well thought out agreement
that works.
Give us a call and let’s get to
know each other. Because you
might not be ready to move today, but one day you will be.
Commercial Property Network, 29 Emmons Drive, Suite
A-10, Princeton. 609-921-8844.
www.cpnrealestate.com
10/3/2012
Thanet Circle, Princeton
110,000 SF available for lease
tenant employees, with sweeping 360 degree views of the surrounding mature landscaping in
a tranquil setting. Property highlights include energy-saving
electrical and HVAC, and 24/7
key card security, along with existing high fencing for added security. The amenity-rich Princeton Shopping Center is a quick
two minute drive from the location.
“This highly desirable location
is a single-tenant dream,” adds
Markowitz. “We have already
had many inquiries from people
familiar with the property.”
For information about leasing
opportunities at Thanet Circle, or
any of the other three Jingoli office parks, contact Stacey
Markowitz at 609-883-7070 or
[email protected]
m. Interested parties can also
view the property and other
available spaces at Jingoliproperties.com.
With four large and modern
properties in its portfolio and over
forty years of successful property
ownership and management,
Jingoli Properties is one of central New Jersey’s premier
providers of office and medical
leasing opportunities. Founded
2:05:15 PM
MEDICAL • OFFICE • RETAIL
Cental New Jersey’s Most Attractive Mixed-Use Location...
Now Leasing!
W
hether you’re a medical practice looking for
proximity to the new University Medical Center of
Princeton, a retail establishment ready to serve a
wide demographic of shoppers and diners, or a
business seeking amenity-rich contemporary offices
far from the hassles of downtown traffic, costly
parking, or distant and inconvenient services,
Princeton Forrestal Village
offers you a one-of-a-kind campus ready to meet
all your business and professional demands at highly competitive leasing rates.
•
•
•
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•
•
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•
•
•
A Variety of Available Floor Plans
Medical Spaces with Convenient First Floor Access
Open, Multi-Vendor Food Court
Can Do Fitness and Koi Spa Salon Services
A World-Class Westin Hotel & Conference Center
Ruth’s Chris Steak House, Salt Creek Grille,
Tre Piani Restaurant and Bon Appetit Cafe
Ample, Open and Covered Parking Throughout
New Jersey Transit Bus and Rail Connections
Airport Shuttle Services
Day Care, Document Services, and Dry Cleaning
For more information contact:
Daniel S. Ackerman, Sr. Director of Leasing
[email protected]
201.531.2363 (P)
908.451.4422 (C)
Lincoln Equities Group, LLC.
301 Route 17 North
Rutherford, NJ 07070
www.lincolnequities.com
TAKE A TOUR ON OUR LEASING PAGES at WWW.PFVILLAGE.COM
US ROUTE ONE & COLLEGE ROAD WEST, PRINCETON, NJ 08540
OCTOBER 10, 2012
in 1970 by Joseph R. Jingoli, Jingoli today remains one of the
very few family owned and operated commercial real estate development organizations, with
over 700,000 square feet of
space spread throughout Princeton, Lawrenceville and Ewing
Township. As a longtime “resident” of the Princeton region,
Jingoli Properties prides itself on
maintaining close and effective
relationships with all its tenants.
Joseph R. Ridolfi
& Associates
Is the commercial real
estate market
improving?
by Joseph Ridolfi
T
he development of retail
space and expansion of
the healthcare services industry are showing signs of rebounding as we enter the fourth
quarter of 2012. Retail and
healthcare development appear
to lead the way in the recovery of
the economy in this region. The
stock market is showing promise, although interest rates are at
record level lows with money
markets, savings accounts, CDs
and the like with low yields.
Conversely, mortgage and
home equity loan rates are at low
levels. Unemployment rates are
still relatively high at 8+ percent
average nationally, 10 percent
statewide. Some areas of the
country are doing better than
others, while others are experiencing unemployment rates consistently higher than the national
average. Foreclosures, commercial, and residential properties
continue to be impacting the real
estate market in general, but
there are signs that the worst
could be over.
With all the negative talk
about the state of the economy
there may be somewhat of a silver lining. As we enter the fourth
quarter of 2012 and reflect on
the last nine months of the year,
our office has experienced a
sizeable increase in property listings for sale and lease, resulting
in a good inventory base of realistically priced properties we are
presently marketing. This has resulted in greater activity for our
office completing sales and leasing transactions so far in 2012,
and it appears this trend will continue for at least the near future.
There are some bright spots in
certain business sectors such as
the retail and healthcare industry
in general with the graying of the
population nationwide. Healthcare seems to do well in both
good and bad economic cycles
as people of all ages require
healthcare services. For example, in the greater Mercer County
region, a new $600 million Capital Health Medical Center in
Hopewell Township and another
new $600 million Princeton Medical Center in Plainsboro, and a
new $900 million Virtua Medical
Center in South Jersey.
Other local hospitals such as
Robert Wood Johnson Hospital at
Hamilton, St. Francis Medical
Center and others are expanding
into suburban locations that are
convenient to service their patients. Also assisted care living facilities, hospice care facilities,
adult medical day care centers,
children’s day care centers, and
wellness and fitness centers are
experiencing a demand for their
services in today’s soft economy.
As the population ages this has
created a need also for elder care
Commercial Listings
Continued from page 9
Joseph R. Ridolfi,
Joseph Ridolfi & Associates
legal services, and attorneys are
now specializing in providing elder care legal services related to
living wills, estate planning, business cessation plans, etc.
In concert with the expansion
of hospital medical centers now
taking place, this has spawned
the need for additional doctors’
medical office space near or in
close proximity to these new
medical centers. Many of these
physicians are also looking to
own their professional medical
office condo units, as opposed to
leasing office space. With the
doctors located in or next to a
major medical center offers them
the convenience and efficient
use of their time and also convenience for their patients making office visits or in need of hospital services.
In the long run, a downward
re-adjustment of property values
could be beneficial to stabilize
the real estate marketplace and
economy in general. This would
encourage development and expansion for business operations
large and small and hopefully in
the not too far future.
All these indicators of the nation’s economic health are showing us that the rebound of the
economy is taking longer to recover than past business recovery cycles.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates is a 40-year-old commercial
real estate company specializing
in the sales, leasing, tenant representation, investment properties, development land sites of
commercial, office and industrial
properties in the central New
Jersey commercial real estate
marketplace. Joseph R. Ridolfi,
broker/owner, can be reached at
609-581-4848 or [email protected].
Forest Glen Shopping Center,
1800 Route 33. Available square
feet: 4,756, divisible to 2,375 and
2,398. Net rent, $13. Conditions:
NNN. Approximate per-month cost:
$5,152.33, net. Also for sale:
$699,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 21,200 square feet.
Zoned HC with parking for 106 cars.
Mill One, 1 North Johnston Avenue. Available square feet: 50,000,
divisible to 5,000. Gross rent, $2.70.
Conditions: up to $8/SF; 12,000 SF
of warehouse/storage at $2,995 per
moth. Approximate per-month cost:
$1,125, gross.
Brian Rushing, 609-731-0378.
Size of building: 350,000 square
feet. Warehouse and flex space.
Sports & Entertainment, 200
Whitehead Road. Available square
feet: 15,000, divisible to 600. Net
rent, $4.75. Conditions: plus all operating expenses; offices $10.50/SF
plus operating expenses. Approximate per-month cost: $237.50, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Size of building:
95,500 square feet. Warehouse
space 1,000 to 15,000 SF; loft-style
offices 600 to 1,500 SF. Ceiling
heights 18’ to 32’; zoned for industrial, office, warehouse, or sports/entertainment.
Studio Park, 1800 East State
Street. Available square feet:
50,000, divisible to 500. Net rent, $5.
Conditions: rates up to $15 NNN. Approximate per-month cost: $208.33,
net.
Brian Rushing, 609-731-0378.
Size of building: 220,000 square
feet. Unique spaces.
Whitehorse Commercial Park,
127 Route 206. Available square
feet: 31,990, divisible to 1,200. Net
rent, $5.75. Conditions: up to $10/SF
plus CAM and utilities depending on
ratio of office to warehouse. Approximate per-month cost: $575, net.
Thompson Management, 609921-7655. Size of building: 72,658
square feet. Mix of office and
warehouse space zoned HC.
50,000 square feet. Recycled mill
building, or office use with 3,100 SF
on first floor and 1,400 SF on second.
Lawrence
1880 Princeton Avenue. Available square feet: 13,000, divisible to
3,500. Net rent, $5.50. Conditions:
plus all operating expenses; also
4,000 SF office/showroom divisible
to 2,500 SF. Approximate per-month
cost: $1,604.17, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Size of building:
42,400 square feet. heated and air
conditioned warehouse; 25 parking
spaces; zoned HC.
North Brunswick
832 Ridgewood Avenue. Available square feet: 22,471, divisible to
2,400. Net rent, $5. Conditions: plus
operating expenses; $10.50/SF office plus operating expenses. Approximate per-month cost: $1,000,
net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. 22’ ceilings, fully air
conditioned, loading docks and
drive-in doors. Building 1: 4,206 and
2,400 SF; building 2: 12,000 SF divisible, half office, half warehouse;
building 3: 3,865 SF.
827 Ridgewood Avenue Building 5. Available square feet: 6,000,
Canal Center, 239 North Union
Street. Available square feet: 4,500,
divisible to 500. Net rent, $12. Approximate per-month cost: $500, net.
Brian Rushing, 609-731-0378.
Size of building: 4,500 square feet.
Retail, food, creative, or office use
with 3,100 SF on first floor and 1,400
SF on second.
Canal Studios, 243 & 278 North
Union Street. Available square feet:
6,000, divisible to 150. Gross rent,
$18. Conditions: plus utilities. Approximate per-month cost: $225,
gross.
Brian Rushing, 609-731-0378.
Other tenants: Mill Ballet, Rujo’s Coffee, RiverSigns. Size of building:
11
divisible to 1,050. Net rent, $5. Conditions: plus operating expenses;
$10.50/SF office plus operating expenses. Approximate per-month
cost: $437.50, net. Also for sale:
$2,550,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Size of building:
6,000 square feet. 22’ ceilings, fully
air conditioned, loading docks and
drive-in doors.
North Brunswick Commerce
Center, 100 & 200 North Center
Drive. Available square feet: 13,117,
divisible to 3,620. Net rent, $14. Approximate per-month cost:
$4,223.33, net.
Hilton Realty, Matt Malatich, Jon
Brush, Mark Hill, 609-921-6060. Size
of building: 173,000 square feet.
Class B single-story building.
Pennington
1589 Reed Road. Available
square feet: 18,000, divisible to
2,400. Net rent, $13. Conditions:
plus utilities, janitorial, and trash removal. Approximate per-month cost:
$2,600, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly
& Matt Meade, 609-520-0061. 9,000
SF of air conditioned
warehouse/production space, divisible, and 6,000 to 9,000 SF of office
space on second floor, divisible.
Continued on following page
[email protected] • (609) 642-4488
LITIGATION
•
•
•
•
•
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Estate Litigation
Family Law/Divorce
Breach of Contract
Federal Litigation
Appeals
Arbitrations
Experienced Attorneys
Offering Quality
Representation
GENERAL PRACTICE
•
Lambertville
U.S. 1
•
•
•
•
•
•
Immigration
(Business and Family)
Deportation Defense
Business/Contracts
Real Estate/Lease
Land Use/Zoning
Wills & Estates
Ch.7/Ch. 13 Bankruptcy
OFFERING:
•
•
Competitive Flat Fee/
Contingency Fee
Fluent Korean
and Chinese
Jae H. Cho, Esq.
NY/NJ Bars
ATTORNEYS:
Thomas J. Whitney, Esq.
Raymond Lo, Esq. (Of Counsel)
3490 US Rt. 1, Ste 7b
Princeton, NJ 08540
139 Centre St., Ste. 810
New York, NY 10013
www.JChoLaw.com
EVENING AND WEEKEND APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE
12
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Continued from preceding page
Pennington
1580 Reed Road. Available
square feet: 985. Net rent, $16.50.
Conditions: plus utilities. Approximate per-month cost: $1,354.38.
Commercial Property Network,
Al Toto, 609-921-8844. Size of building: 20,000 square feet. Office/warehouse.
Tree Farm Village, 5 Tree Farm
Road. Available square feet: 5,100.
Net rent, $23. Approximate permonth cost: $9,775, net.
Commercial Property Network,
Al Toto, 609-921-8844. Size of building: 5,100 square feet. New medical/office/retail construction.
Robbinsville
1226 Route 130. Available
square feet: 10,000. Net rent, $7.50.
Conditions: plus all operating expenses. Approximate per-month
cost: $6,250, net. Also for sale:
$895,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Size of building:
10,000 square feet. 3,200 SF office
and 6,800 SF production space on
2.34 acres zoned OC-1 office.
Mercer Corporate Park, 300
Corporate Boulevard. Available
square feet: 10,438, divisible to
1,700. Gross rent, $13.95. Conditions: plus utilities and increases in
CAM. Approximate per-month cost:
$1,976.25, gross.
South Brunswick
Stouts Lane Industrial Park, 4951 Stouts Lane. Available square
feet: 17,500, divisible to 2,500. Net
rent, $7.50. Conditions: up to $12/SF
net. Approximate per-month cost:
$1,562.50, net.
Commercial Property Network,
William Barish, 609-921-8844. Size
of building: 100,000 square feet.
2,500, 5,000, and 10,000 SF spaces.
Expansion potential, design to suit.
Trenton
292 Third Street. Available
square feet: 54,500. Net rent, $4.50.
Conditions: plus operating expenses. Approximate per-month cost:
$20,437.50, net. Also for sale:
$2,995,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Size of building:
75,000 square feet. 44,500 SF warehouse and 10,000 SF office in UEZ
with outside storage/parking.
West Windsor
51 A&B Everett Drive. Available
square feet: 31,500, divisible to 800.
Net rent, $6. Conditions: up to
$12/SF net. Approximate per-month
cost: $400, net.
Commercial Property Network,
William Barish, 609-921-8844. Size
of building: 33,600 square feet.
Spaces for office, lab, daycare, educational of 800, 1,150, 1,350, 2,750,
3,150, 4,500, 6,800, and 11,000 SF.
A Rare & Prime Princeton Leasing Opportunity
Thanet Circle Office Park
Office Space
Allentown
1278 Yardville-Allentown Road.
Divisible to 1,800 SF. Net rent, $18.
Conditions: NNN plus $5/SF CAM;
units up to 2,983 SF available and
combinable for larger spaces; minimum three-year term. Approximate
per-month cost: $2,700, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 12,000 square feet.
65 parking spaces, concrete floors,
sheetrock walls, drop ceiling, powder
room, and individual gas HVAC unit.
Bordentown
3 Third Street. Available square
feet: 4,481, divisible to 1,040. Gross
rent, $10. Conditions: plus utilities.
Approximate per-month cost:
$866.67, gross.
Thompson Management, 609921-7655. Size of building: 12,839
square feet. Zoned C.
102 Farnsworth Avenue. Available square feet: 2,295, divisible to
897. Gross rent, $10. Conditions:
plus utilities. Approximate per-month
cost: $747.50, gross.
Thompson Management, 609921-7655. Size of building: 9,161
square feet. Zoned C.
101 Farnsworth Avenue. Available square feet: 1,837, divisible to
597. Gross rent, $10. Conditions:
plus utilities. Approximate per-month
cost: $497.50, gross.
Thompson Management, 609921-7655. Size of building: 5,701
square feet. Zoned C.
163 Route 130. Divisible to
1,100. Net rent, $10. Conditions:
plus operating expenses, utilities,
and janitorial. Approximate permonth cost: $916.67, net. Also for
sale: $3,950,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly
& Matt Meade, 609-520-0061. Size
of building: 38,000 square feet.
Building 1: 5,470 SF on first floor and
2,900 SF on second; building 2:
1,100 SF on first floor and 2,035 on
second. Also 3,600 SF medical unit
on first floor.
Cranbury
Distinctive architecture set on 15 secluded and secure acres
surrounded by mature landscaping - and minutes from
major transporation hubs of the Northeast Corridor.
110,000 SF readily tailored to your business needs.
Sweeping 360 views of the surrounding countryside.
Energy-conserving electrical and HVAC.
Many nearby services and amenities, including Princeton
Shopping Center and downtown Princeton.
Ample and convenient parking throughout.
24/7 Secure Card Key Access.
Two elegant, modern buildings are joined by a gently sloping
and shaded courtyard, perfect for informal meetings.
3 Miles to The New
University Medical Center of Princeton
at Plainsboro
And The US Route One Corridor
ɷ
ɷ
ɷ
ɷ
ɷ
2 Miles to Downtown Princeton,
Princeton University,
The Institute for Advanced Study and
Princeton Theological Seminary
Ewing
Situated in Central New Jersey along the US Northeast Corridor.
One hour from New York City and Philadelphia and major international airports.
Readily available mix of public transportation including Amtrak and NJ Transit.
Fortune 100 Corporate neighbors, with excellence-rated school systems.
A highly educated available workforce.
609.883.7070
•
JINGOLIPROPERTIES.COM
102 Interchange Plaza. Available
square feet: 54,570. Gross rent,
$28.50. Approximate per-month
cost: $129,603.75, gross.
Hilton Realty, Matt Malatich, Jon
Brush, Mark Hill, 609-921-6060. Size
of building: 54,570 square feet. Proposed new three-story class A building with fitness room.
101 Interchange Plaza. Available
square feet: 8,582, divisible to 934.
Gross rent, $24. Approximate permonth cost: $1,868, gross.
Hilton Realty, Matt Malatich, Jon
Brush, Mark Hill, 609-921-6060. Size
of building: 44,184 square feet.
Class A.
104 Interchange Plaza. Available
square feet: 7,948, divisible to 1,343.
Gross rent, $24.50. Approximate
per-month cost: $2,741.96, gross.
Hilton Realty, Matt Malatich, Jon
Brush, Mark Hill, 609-921-6060. Size
of building: 47,644 square feet.
Class A.
239 Prospect Plains Road.
Available square feet: 2,377, divisible to 977. Net rent, $15.50. Conditions: plus all operating expenses.
Approximate per-month cost:
$1,261.96, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Parking for four
cars/1,000 SF, common kitchen and
conference room.
Constitution Center, 2650
Route 130. Available square feet:
4,100, divisible to 1850. Net rent,
$15. Conditions: plus all operating
expenses. Approximate per-month
cost: $2,312.50, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Size of building:
31,070 square feet. Office or medical
spaces on first and second floors.
2000 Spruce Street. Available
square feet: 4,000, divisible to 900.
Net rent, $7.80. Approximate permonth cost: $585, net. Also for sale:
$395,000.
BUILDING CONFIDENCE
Continued on page 14
OCTOBER 10, 2012
U.S. 1
Mercer County’s Premier Commercial Realtor
Professional • Knowledgeable • Experienced
Office • Retail • Restaurants • Industrial • Land
Development Sites • Investment Properties
609-581-4848
NEW
SPACE
LAWRENCE
(Alt US 1) Brunswick Pike/
Corner Mayflower Ave.
3,900 SF Building
2,000 SF Medical Office &
4 Bed. Apt., 34 Car Parking Lot
SALE $525,000
LAWRENCE TWP
US Route 1 Plaza
2,500 & 2,140 SF Units.
Competitive Lease Rates.
EWING TWP.
3,352 SF Bank Branch Bldg.
No. Olden Ave. Ext., Corner 6th St.
SALE/LEASE
NEW
HAMILTON
Rt 33/Nottingham Way Intersection
HAMILTON TWP.
Nami Lane
At traffic light. Retail/Office Site.
Commercial Zoning.
Outstanding Site Prominence.
Office/Warehouse/Garage Buildings
total 9,050 SF With room for additional
development on 6.74 AC +/-
SALE
SALE
LAWRENCE Quakerbridge Road
4,694 SF Prof. Office Suite
Outstanding Condition
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY
LEASE
HAMILTON
Quakerbridge Road
2,820 SF Office Bldg, with tenants.
Full basement, 14 car parking.
Sale $465,000
NEW
BORDENTOWN CITY
Approved (4) lot townhouse
subdivision. Ready to Build.
SALE $329,900
REDUCED
TRENTON - HOWELL ST.
5,017 SF Storefront Retail/
Warehouse Storage Space
10 Car Parking
Front of Building
SALE $199,000
HAMILTON - Warehouse/Office
3,825 SF w/ 15' Ceilings
2 LG Overhead Doors
SALE $265,000
REDUCED
TRENTON
5,300 SF Brick Retail Store
Downtown Shopping District
4 floors, Full Basement
SALE $259,000
LAWRENCE
5,244 SF Retail Building
150’ x 200’ lot, 2 drive-in doors
Suitable for many retail uses
Zoned Highway Commercial
SALE $510,000
NEW
HAMILTON
Whitehorse-Hamilton Square Rd.
2,250 SF 2 yr old new office Condo.
Move-in condition.
Lease
REDUCED
TRENTON: Prince Street
105,000 SF Warehse/Manuf.
Drive-in & Dock Doors.
Excellent Condition.
SALE $995,000 ($9.47/SF)/LEASE
WHITEHORSE EXEC. CNTR
HAMILTON
1750 SF Med. Ofc. Suite/Apt.
Move-In Condition
Available Nov. 1
SUBLEASE $12 SF / NNN
NEW
HAMILTON - SHADY LANE
2 Story Office/Apt.
Basement
LEASE $13 SF / NNN
HAMILTON
Nami Lane
2,500 SF Condo flex space.
Office/Warehouse, Dock Door.
LEASE
REDUCED
TRENTON - Warehouse
5,000 & 10,000 SF Units
w/ Dock Doors
Available Immediately
LEASE
HAMILTON
HAMILTON TWP.
Whitehead Road
100,000 SF multi-story indust. bldg.,
1.85 AC. All NJDEP enviro.
clearances completed. Will divide.
Reeves Avenue
12,000 SF (3) Building Office Complex
65 Car Parking on 1.15 AC lot
SALE/LEASE
SALE/LEASE
NEW
HAMILTON
Warehouse/Office/Apt.
4,439 SF Block/Brick Bldg.
SALE $449,000
HIGHTSTOWN - RT. 33
4300 SF Chiropractic Office/
2nd Fl. Apt.
2 Car Detached Garage
Large Parking Lot
SALE $465,000
NEW
REDUCED
NEW
NEW
HAMILTON - Near Rt. 33
Whitehorse-M
Mercerville Road
The Tower Bldg. Office Suites
Avail from 550 to 1,160 SF
LEASE
HAMILTON AREA
4,430 SF Magnificent Retail Bldg.
Large Parking Lot, Main Thoroughfare
SALE/LEASE
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
REDUCED
JUST
LISTED
NEW
PRICE
BANK
COMMERCIAL
Real Estate
REDUCED
EVESHAM TWP. - RT. 70 W
1.71 AC +/Former G Boys Garden Center
Multiple Bldgs.
SALE $879,000
EWING
Hillman Ave.
UPPER FREEHOLD TWP
2 Warehouse Bldgs/Office.
8,700 SF
21,600 SF Warehouse/Office
Drive-in and Dock Doors,
24' High Ceilings.
SALE $420,000
SALE/LEASE
NEW
PRICE
JUST
LISTED
HAMILTON - Genesee Street
Corner of Chambers
4,000 SF Store Front Retail
Units Available for
Immediate Occupancy
SALE
TRENTON
BORDENTOWN
Near Hamilton Twp. line
6,840 SF contractors bldg.
Warehouse/Office
Former Jones Bedding
2,460 SF Retail Building
Route 130 Location
SALE $350,000
SALE $299,000
LAND
REDUCED
TRENTON - 77,636 SF Indus. Bldg.
1.84 AC; multiple tenants
Located in Trenton UEZ
Bank Owned
SALE $409,000
REDUCED
TRENTON - CALHOUN ST.
Contractors Yard
1 AC +/- (2) Truck
Maintenance/Office Bldgs.
Good Condition
SALE $279,000
200' x 106' - Residential Bldg Lot. Lawrenceville (across from Lawrenceville Prep School)
SALE/Will Build to Suit
6.18 AC +/- Rt 33, East Windsor, HC Zoning - SALE $295,000
5.9 AC +/- Hamilton Twp., Rt. 33, HC Zoning, wide range of retail used on main corridor - SALE
2.5 AC +/- Rt. 206, Mansfield Tp., HC Zoning - GROUND LEASE
3,000 SF Proposed Pad Site. Route 130/206, High Site Visibility - Bordentown
1.41 AC +/- Rt 537, Monmouth Co., Retail Center Site, SALE $175,000
125' x 175' Lot. Route 130, Robbinsville Highway Comm. Dev. Site - SALE/Will Build to Suit
6.74 AC +/- Hamilton Twp.; office/warehouse/garage buildings total 9,050 SF with room for additional
development. SALE $1,500,000
1.3 AC +/- Hamilton Twp.; Retail development site, corner location at traffic light, suitable for bank
or restaurant; across from regional power center; high traffic. SALE
609-581-4848
Visit Our Website at www.ridolfi-associates.com
(4) Lot Townhouse Development Site,
Bordentown City; Fully approved. Ready to
build. SALE $329,900
RESTAURANTS
HAMILTON - Operating fully equipped
Restaurant/Pizza - SALE $95,000
NORTHERN BURLINGTON COUNTY - Deli/Bagels,
1,550 SF Deli in Shopping Center, FF&E
included. Business Only. SALE
13
14
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Commercial Listings
Continued from page 12
Prime Commercial Property
8.94 Acres, 1,194 Feet of Frontage at a Traffic Light
http://www.auctionpoint.com/EastWindsor/auctionroom.aspx
Auction Dates
October 23-25
Location:
Address:
Land Area:
Last Asking Price:
Comments:
East Windsor, New Jersey
110-138 Route 130 South
3.32 acres: Block 8 Lot 11
5.62 acres: Block 8 Lot 12.01
$3,895,000
AUCTION MINIMUM BID: $1,500,000
Excellent Location at a four way intersection with
traffic light. Nearby retailers include: Target, Shop Rite,
Walgreens, CVS, Commerce Bank, Staples.
Strong Demographics
For further information or inspection, contact:
Exclusive Broker
Ian M. Grusd, CCIM SIOR
Managing Director
[email protected]
732-763-6330
OFFICE SUBLET - PRINCETON
CLASS “A” Space, $18.95/SF-Offer!
Howco Management, Howard Cohen,
609-896-0505. Building owner: Spruce Investments. Size of building: 6,300 square feet. Sixsuite office building. Can be delivered vacant.
1330 Parkway Avenue. Available square
feet: 3,508, divisible to 620. Gross rent, $12.
Conditions: plus utilities. Approximate permonth cost: $620, gross.
Weidel Realtors, , 609-737-2077. 620,
690, 830, and 1,368 SF office spaces available. Five parking spaces per 1,000 SF; elevator service.
1450 Parkside Avenue. Available square
feet: 3,463, divisible to 1,098. Gross rent, $12.
Conditions: plus utilities. Approximate permonth cost: $1,098, gross.
Thompson Management, 609-921-7655.
Size of building: 7,932 square feet. Zoned
C.
860 Lower Ferry Road. Available square
feet: 3,458, divisible to 1,558. Gross rent, $16.
Conditions: includes all utilities; six months
free rent depending on lease terms. Approximate per-month cost: $2,077.33, gross.
Commercial Property Network, Al Toto,
609-921-8844. First floor offices with ample
on-site parking.
1590 5th Street. Available square feet:
2,400. Gross rent, $9. Conditions: modified
gross. Approximate per-month cost: $1,800,
gross.
Weidel Realtors, 609-737-2077. Entire
second floor with three private offices,
half-bath, and mini-kitchen.
201 Scotch Road. Available square feet:
1,000. Gross rent, $12. Approximate permonth cost: $1,000, gross.
Weidel Realtors, 609-737-2077. Chiropractic office.
1440 Pennington Road. Gross rent, $12.
Also for sale: $750,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates, Joseph
R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848. Size of building:
12,068 square feet. 1.42 acres zoned PRO
with approved additional 4,500 SF retail building. Large basement for storage, elevator
service, 50-car parking lot.
Crossroads Corporate Center, 250
Phillips Boulevard. Available square feet:
21,069, divisible to 2,221. Gross rent, $17.
Conditions: plus tenant electric. Approximate
per-month cost: $3,146.42, gross.
Trillium Realty Agency, Mark Bennison,
609-466-0400. Building owner: 250 Phillips
Associates LLC. Size of building: 40,952
Thompson Management
square feet. Mix of private offices and open
space in quiet setting.
Ewing Professional Park, 1901 North
Olden Avenue. Available square feet: 2,115,
divisible to 775. Net rent, $10.50. Approximate
per-month cost: $678.13, net.
Howco Management, Howard Cohen,
609-896-0505. Building owner: Ewing Professional Park. Other tenants: physicians, attorneys, nonprofits. Size of building: 30,000
square feet. Two-story elevator-served building with 25 tenants.
Hamilton
100 Youngs Road. Available square feet:
10,585, divisible to 5,035, 2,275, 2,025, and
1,550. Net rent, $12. Approximate per-month
cost: $1,500.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates, Joseph
R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Howco Management, Howard Cohen,
609-896-0505. Building owner: Youngs Road
Investments. Size of building: 20,200 square
feet. Various configurations available; abundant parking.
1675 Whitehorse-Mercerville Road.
Available square feet: 4,714, divisible to 1,785,
2,040, and 889 SF. Gross rent, $18. Conditions: full service includes electric, taxes, water, sewer, and snow plowing; tenant pays janitorial; 2-5 year minimum lease term. Approximate per-month cost: $1,333, gross.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates, Joseph
R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848. Size of building:
16,000 square feet. Two-story brick handicapaccessible office building with 24-hour keyless
entry and security alarm.
77 Shady Lane. Available square feet:
2,418. Net rent, $13. Conditions: NNN plus
tenant operating expenses. Approximate permonth cost: $2,619.50, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates, Joseph
R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848. Size of building:
2,418 square feet. 1,456 SF on first floor and
962 SF on second plus on-site parking.
2382 Whitehorse-Mercerville Road.
Available square feet: 2,340, divisible to 550,
630, and 1,160. Net rent, $16. Conditions:
NNN plus tenant heat and electric. Approximate per-month cost: $733, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates, Joseph
R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848. Size of building:
10,000 square feet. Three-story brick building.
1540 Kuser Road A-3. Available square
feet: 1,375. Net rent, $9. Conditions: plus
$5.20/SF CAM and all tenant operating expenses. Approximate per-month cost:
$1,031.25, net. Also for sale: $185,000.
www.thompsonmanagementllc.com Q 609-921-7655
Immediate Occupancy
812 State Road (Route 206), Princeton, NJ
2500 Brunswick Pike (Rte. 1), Lawrence Twp.
100 - 1200 SF for Lease
Approx. 3½ mi. North of Downtown Princeton
Frontage on Rt. 206 & Cherry Valley Rd.
400 - 1,200 SF Office/Medical • For Lease
Immediately Available • Conv. Access to Rt 1 & I-295
Flex/Warehouse
4500-24,000/SF….best deal in the market?
Princeton Corporate Center
- Convenient
Independence Way
location
- Immediate occupancy
- Phones and furniture
available
- On site café, hotel
and restaurant
- Flexible lease term,
up to 8 years
- Can acquire total floor
White Horse Commercial Park
Pennington Business Park
127 Route 206, Hamilton Township, NJ
1,200 - 4,000 SF • For Lease • Office/Flex
Ample Parking • Conv. Access to I-195/295
16,000 SF Gym Space • Equipment Available
55 Route 31, Pennington, NJ • 6,000 - 12,000 SF • $5.75/SF
FLEX/WAREHOUSE/OFFICE FOR LEASE
Multiple Loading Docks & Drive-ln Overhead Doors
1/2 mi. N. of Pennington Circle • Easy access to I-95
Buildings/Condos For Sale
+
A
1970 Route 33, Hamilton Township, NJ
Building For Sale Or Lease • Office/Retail - Adjacent Parking
2-Story Free Standing Bldg. on 1.25 ac.
Unit 1: 2,433 SF; Unit 2: 2,079 SF • Convenient to Route 130 and I-295
Office/Medical/Professional
CONTACT: William Barish, Broker
609-731-6076 [email protected]
www.cpnrealestate.com
Commercial Property Network, Inc.
We Have a Place For Your Company
1450 Parkside Avenue, Ewing, NJ
1,075 - 2,900 SF Office/Medical/Professional
Condos Available for Sale/Lease • Close Proximity to new
Capital Health Hospital • Convenient to Rts. 31, 1 and 206
Princeton
• 195 Nassau
Street
• Sizes from 252 SF
to 1,200 SF available
• Parking
Available
50 Princeton-Hightstown Rd., Princeton Jct.
800 - 950 SF Office Space For Lease • Ample Parking Spaces
5 Min. walk to Princeton Train Station • Convenient to US Route 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Medical office condo with seven exam rooms, waiting room, reception
desk, handicap-accessible bathrooms, tile and carpet flooring, hardwired alarm system, hot air gas-fired
heating, and central air.
Gateway 195 Center, 5 Commerce Way. Available square feet:
12,000, divisible to 150. Gross rent,
$17.75. Conditions: plus utilities. Approximate per-month cost: $221.88,
gross.
Brian Rushing, 609-731-0378.
Size of building: 100,000 square
feet. Class A space.
Hamilton Professional Office,
1345 Kuser Road. Available square
feet: 1,600. Net rent, $9. Conditions:
plus $8/SF CAM charge. Approximate per-month cost: $1,200, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 8,500 square feet.
Medical/office suite, central AC, utilities; abundant parking.
Hamilton Transit Corporate
Park, 572 Whitehead Road. Available square feet: 16,000. Net rent,
$10.95. Conditions: NNN plus
$2.25/SF CAM and tenant heat and
electric. Approximate per-month
cost: $14,600, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 16,000 square feet.
Industrial/office complex with rail
available to site.
Longford Corporate Center,
3379 Quakerbridge Road. Available
square feet: 2,000. Net rent, $20.
Conditions: plus all utilities. Approximate per-month cost: $3,333.33,
net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. On second floor.
Neuman Building, 3575
Quakerbridge Road. Available
square feet: 13,000, divisible to
3,000. Net rent, $20.50. Conditions:
plus tenant electric and janitorial. Approximate per-month cost: $5,125,
net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Size of building:
58,000 square feet. Free-standing
two-story building with high percentage of windows and 239 parking
spaces.
Tower Building, 2382 Whitehorse-Mercerville Road. Available
square feet: 2,500, divisible to 550.
Net rent, $14. Approximate permonth cost: $641.67, net.
Howco Management, Howard
Cohen, 609-896-0505. Building owner: Tower Building. Size of building:
5,200 square feet. For office or research.
Van Nest Office Park, 3836
Quakerbridge Road. Available
square feet: 25,000, divisible to
2,000. Net rent, $16.50. Conditions:
plus all operating expenses, utilities,
and janitorial. Approximate permonth cost: $2,750, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Size of building:
33,000 square feet. Office/medical
space; new brick construction overlooking forest reserve.
Whitehorse Executive Center,
1235 Whitehorse-Mercerville
Road. Available square feet: 1,750.
Net rent, $12. Conditions: plus tenant operating expenses. Approximate per-month cost: $1,750, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 1,750 square feet.
One-story medical office suite for
sublease with four exam rooms, two
handicap bathrooms, doctor’s office,
break room, waiting room, foyer, reception desk, wall-to-wall carpet,
vinyl tile flooring.
Hopewell
Hopewell 57, 57 Hamilton Avenue. Available square feet: 35,000,
divisible to 750. Gross rent, $17.50.
Approximate per-month cost:
$1,093.75, gross.
Commercial Property Network,
William Barish, 609-921-8844. Size
of building: 55,000 square feet.
Hopewell South Corporate
Center, 370 Scotch Road. Available
square feet: 175,000. Net rent, $33.
Conditions: for medical office;
$36/SF office space. Approximate
per-month cost: $481,250, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly
& Matt Meade, 609-520-0061. Size
of building: 175,000 square feet. Two
new buildings; build to suit.
Lawrence
680-690 Whitehead Road. Available square feet: 6,000. Net rent,
$13.50. Conditions: NNN plus
$3.50/SF CAM plus tenant heat and
electric for 680 building. Approximate per-month cost: $6,750, net.
Also for sale: $995,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 11,000 square feet.
6,000 and 5,000 SF buildings zoned
office with full basements and parking for 40 cars.
Howco Management, Howard
Cohen, 609-896-0505.
3100 Princeton Pike, Building
1. Available square feet: 5,964, divisible to Suite A: 2,350; Suites J, K:
3,164, 1,908, or 1,256. Net rent, $24.
Conditions: $7.70/SF CAM including
taxes. Approximate per-month cost:
$2,512, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Medical/diagnostic space.
3100 Princeton Pike, Building
3. Available square feet: 5,662, divisible to Suite D: 1,840; Suite E-F:
3,082; Suite H: 740. Net rent, $24.
Conditions: $7.70/SF CAM including
taxes. Approximate per-month cost:
$1,480, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Medical and business space.
505 Lawrence Square Boulevard South. Available square feet:
U.S. 1
4,694. Net rent, $14. Conditions:
NNN plus $7/SF CAM and tenant
heat and electric; 3-5 year lease
term. Approximate per-month cost:
$5,476.33, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 18,000 square feet.
Suite in one-story brick building with
11 private offices, one interior office,
cubicles area, hot air heating, central
AC, wall-to-wall carpet, break room,
two bathrooms, handicap accessible, 91 parking spaces.
3131 Princeton Pike. Available
square feet: 3,000, divisible to 850.
Net rent, $14.50. Approximate permonth cost: $1,027.08, net.
Commercial Property Network,
William Barish, 609-921-8844. Size
of building: 64,000 square feet. Onsite management, ample parking.
3100 Princeton Pike, Building
4. Available square feet: 2,916. Net
rent, $24. Conditions: $7.70/SF CAM
including taxes. Approximate permonth cost: $5,832, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 2,916 square feet.
Medical/diagnostic space.
6 Colonial Lake Drive. Available
square feet: 903. Net rent, $10. Conditions: plus CAM. Approximate permonth cost: $752.50, net.
Building owner: Lake Park Center. Size of building: 10,716 square
feet.
Continued on following page
For Lease:
:DUHKRXVH)OH[6KRZURRP2IÀFH6SDFH
Directly off Route #130.
Close proximity to exit
#8 New Jersey Turnpike,
Route #33 and 295
Windsor
Industrial
Park
1RUWK0DLQ6WUHHW:LQGVRU5REELQVYLOOH0HUFHU&RXQW\1GREAT RENTS & LOW CAM / TAXES
Available Spaces:
Building #20
Unit C 13,500 sq. ft. (3,500 sq. ft. office
ED
space/10,000 warehouse
5 drive thru doors
LEASspace)
truck wash bay, 1/4 acre of outdoor storage/parking.
Building #18
Unit G/H 12,500 sq. ft. ( +/- 4,000 sq. ft. office
space, 8,500 sq. ft. warehouse)
2 tailgate loading
ASED
E
L
doors, 1 drive in door, racking in place, commercial
dishwasher and counters, 20’ ceilings in warehouse.
Units A/B/C 7,500 sq. ft., 1,000 sq ft. of office,
3 tailgate loading, 22’ ceilings
Building #15
16,000 sq. ft. (1,500 sq. ft. office, 14,500 sq. ft.
warehouse distribution space), 9 loading docks,
tractor trailer parking.
Building #8
12,000 sq. ft., 16 ft.Lceilings,
EASEDdivisible, dead storage
- $3.00 psf.
Building #7
6,000 sq. ft. 1/2 acre of private paved area, private
ASED will build interior to
LEheight,
parking, 24’ ft. ceiling
suit, 2 drive in doors.
Building #6
Unit A: 4,000 sq. ft., 2000 sq. ft. of office space,
one overhead door, column free
Unit B: 4,000 sq. ft., one overhead door, column
free storage space.
Unit C 3,200 sq. ft. of office/showroom/sales space.
&DOO7RGD\ZZZHYHUHVWUHDOW\QMFRP
No warranty or representation, express or implied, is made
to the accuracy of the information contained herein and
same is submitted subject to errors, omissions, change of
price, rental or other conditions, This listing may be withdrawn without notice.
BROKERS PROTECTED
15
16
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Laboratories
& Research Center
Princeton Corporate Plaza
Over 80 Scientific Companies
Route 1 Frontage
Between
Princeton & Rutgers
Universities
Big Pharma Has Moved, Downsized
It’s the SCIENTISTS Who Are the FUTURE of Pharma!
Princeton Corporate
Plaza Has an
Affordable Solution!
New Laboratory
Incubator #4
•
•
•
•
•
Small, Equipped Labs 300 SF & Up
Full Services, Small Offices
Short-term Leases – Ask for Help
Immediate Occupancy Available
Innovative, Flexible Designs
Pam Kent, Email: [email protected]
www.princetoncorporateplaza.com • 732-329-3655
Continued from preceding page
Brunswick Professional, 2500
Brunswick Pike. Available square
feet: 1,476, divisible to 422. Gross
rent, $13.16. Conditions: plus utilities. Approximate per-month cost:
$462.79, gross.
Thompson Management, , 609921-7655. Size of building: 14,696
square feet. Zoned C.
Heritage Village, 1950
Brunswick Pike. Available square
feet: 7,031, divisible to 1,211 to
1,482. Net rent, $14. Conditions:
NNN plus $4.50/SF CAM charge; six
months free rent; 3-5 year minimum
lease. Approximate per-month cost:
$8,202.83, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 7,031 square feet.
Storefront/retail/medical/office space
with units ready for fit-out. On-site
parking.
Lawrence Executive Center,
3120 Princeton Pike. Available
square feet: 12,120, divisible to
1,350. Gross rent, $27.50. Approximate per-month cost: $3,093.75,
gross.
Hilton Realty, Matt Malatich, Jon
Brush, Mark Hill, 609-921-6060. Size
of building: 36,995 square feet.
Class A and medical office with prebuilt spaces including 1,350, 2,235,
2,217, and 6,320 SF.
Lawrence Office Park, 168
Franklin Corner Road. Available
square feet: 9,658, divisible to 1,500.
Gross rent, $13.16. Conditions: plus
utilities. Approximate per-month
cost: $1,645, gross. Also for sale:
$225,000.
Thompson Management, 609921-7655. Size of building: 36,146
square feet. Condos zoned RD/C.
Montgomery
Princeton Office Solutions, 475
Wall Street. Available square feet:
105. Gross rent, $7. Conditions: flexible agreements with shorter-term
contracts. Approximate per-month
cost: $61.25, gross.
609-924-0905. Building owner:
Hilton Realty. Other tenants: attorneys, CPA, marketing, IT. Size of
building: 19,119 square feet. Fully
furnished windowed office, complimentary use of conference rooms,
office mail delivery, choice of phone
and internet service providers, business center, and support service on
site.
Straube Center, 1 Straube Center Boulevard. Available square
feet: 6,467. Conditions: rent negotiable.
609-737-3322. Building owner:
Win Straube. Size of building: 68,788
square feet.
Pennington
Plainsboro
2425 Pennington Road. Avail501 Plainsboro Road. Available
able square feet: 3,300. Net rent,
square feet: 2,200, divisible to 1,000.
$23. Conditions: can be subdivided;
Net rent, $15. Conditions: up to
plus utilities. Approximate per-month
$17/SF plus utilities. Approximate
cost: $6,325, net.
per-month cost: $1,250, net.
Commercial Property Network,
Commercial Property Network,
Al Toto, 609-921-8844. Ample parkAl Toto, 609-921-8844. Size of building.
ing: 5,800 square feet.
10 Route 31 North. Available
Plainsboro Village Center.
square feet: 1,440. Gross rent, $20.
Available square feet: 2,500, divisiApproximate per-month cost:
ble to 597. Net rent, $17.50. Condi$2,400, gross.
tions: plus operating expenses. ApWeidel Realtors, 609-737-2077.
proximate per-month cost: $870.63,
Class A with abundant natural
net.
light.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Mixed-use town cen238 West Delaware Avenue.
ter development; newly constructed
Available square feet: 2,275. Condioffice buildings.
tions: sublease; rent negotiable.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300. Executive suite,
conference room, private offices,
ample parking.
801 Route 206. Available square
Circle West, 1 Washington
feet: 18,000. Net rent, $22. ApproxiCrossing Road. Available square
mate per-month cost: $33,000, net.
feet: 2,000, divisible to 400. Net rent,
Commercial Property Network,
$15. Approximate per-month cost:
Al Toto, 609-921-8844. Size of build$500, net.
ing: 18,000 square feet. New shopHowco Management, Howard
ping center to be constructed.
Cohen, 609-896-0505. Other ten17 & 47 Hulfish Street. Available
ants: attorneys, financial planner.
square feet: 9,505, divisible to 1,646.
Size of building: 11,000 square feet.
Net rent, $42. Conditions: plus tenHowe Commons, 65 South
ant electric and parking. ApproxiMain Street. Available square feet:
mate per-month cost: $5,761, net.
4,215. Gross rent, $15. Conditions:
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
up to $25/SF gross; spaces: 1,315,
609-520-0061. Spaces of 1,646,
1,131, 513, 465, 449, and 342 SF.
1,796, 1,818, 1,845, and 2,400 SF in
Approximate per-month cost:
buildings with passenger elevator
$427.50, gross.
and rear parking deck.
Commercial Property Network,
812 State Road. Available square
Al Toto, 609-921-8844. Size of buildfeet: 1,327. Gross rent, $15.75. Coning: 35,000 square feet.
ditions: plus utilities. Approximate
Pennington Office Park, 114 Tiper-month cost: $1,741.69, gross.
tus Mill Road. Available square feet:
Thompson Management, 6099,000, divisible to 1,500. Net rent,
921-7655. Size of building: 9,030
$17. Conditions: plus utilities. Apsquare feet. Zoned C.
proximate per-month cost: $2,125,
234 Nassau Street. Available
net. Also for sale: call for price.
square
feet:
1,181.
Net rent, $30.48.
Commercial Property Network,
Between Robert
Wood
John
Conditions: plus utilities. ApproxiAl Toto, 609-921-8844. Size of buildand University
Medical
mate per-month
cost: $2,999.74,
ing: 12,000 square feet. Condo units.
net.
Pennington Point East, 23
Commercial Property Network,
Route 31 North. Available square
Al Toto, 609-921-8844. Two offices,
feet: 3,688. Net rent, $14. Condireception, and conference floor on
tions: up to $17/SF net plus utilities;
second floor plus on-site parking for
spaces: 450, 688, 1,121, and 1,429
three cars.
SF. Approximate per-month cost:
195 Nassau Street. Available
$525, net.
square feet: 503, divisible to 252.
Commercial Property Network,
Conditions: plus utilities. ApproxiAl Toto, 609-921-8844. Size of buildmate per-month cost: $575, gross.
ing: 15,000 square feet.
Thompson Management, 609Pennington Point West, 2 Tree
921-7655. Size of building: 14,028
Farm Road. Available square feet:
square feet. Zoned C/RO-1.
5,030. Net rent, $14. Conditions: up
Nassau East, 247C Nassau
to $17/SF net plus utilities; spaces
Street. Available square feet: 1,300.
are 565, 1,225, 1435, and 2,370 SF.
Gross rent, $22.15. Conditions: plus
Approximate per-month cost: $660,
utilities. Approximate per-month
net.
cost: $2,399.58, gross.
Commercial Property Network,
Al Toto, 609-921-8844. Size of building: 15,000 square feet.
Princeton
Continued on page 42
• Turnkey suites immediately available:
2,040 SF, 1,785 SF and 884 SF
• 1.9 miles from RWJ University Hospital
• Close to I-295, I-95, Route 1 and NJ Turnpike
• Gross lease structure insulates tenants from increasing utilities/
operating expenses
• Newly renovated common areas and ADA bathrooms
• 24/7 card key access provides secure work environment
OCTOBER 10, 2012
ART
FILM
LITERATURE
DANCE
DRAMA
U.S. 1
17
MUSIC
PREVIEW
DAY-BY-DAY EVENTS, OCTOBER 10 TO 17
For more event listings visit
www.princetoninfo.com. For timely updates, follow princetoninfo on
Twitter and Facebook. Before attending an event, call or check the
website. Want to list an event?
Submit details and photos to
[email protected].
For listings of meetings, networking groups, trade associations, and training organizations,
see Business Meetings in the Survival Guide section.
Wednesday
October 10
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
Good-Natured Fun
Benefit, D&R Greenway Land
Trust, Princeton University
Chapel, 609-924-4646. www.drgreenway.org. “Music and Poetry
of the Earth” features Paul Winter
Consort interweaving music with
the poetry of Jane Hirshfield.
Meet the artists reception in Firestone Library at 8:30 p.m. Register. Concert, $15; reserved seating, $35; concert and reception,
$75. 7 p.m.
ALL UKULELES, ALL FORMS
OF MUSIC
The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain takes on all genres of music in
what’s billed as a rousing & raucous show at McCarter on October 16.
Classical Music
On Stage
Dancing
Downtown Lunchtime Recital
Series, First Reformed Church,
9 Bayard Street, New Brunswick,
732-545-1005. Trillium with Jill
Crawford on flute, Marjorie
Selden on viola, and Ena Bronstein on piano. Lunch follows
recital. Free. 12:15 p.m.
The Serious Concertina, Mason
Gross School of the Arts,
Schare Recital Hall, New Brunswick, 732-932-7511. Lecture
about the instruments and the
music composed for them in the
19th century presented by Allan
Atlas. Free. 12:35 p.m.
Adriana Lecouvreur, State Theater, 15 Livingston Avenue, New
Brunswick, 732-246-7469. From the
Royal Opera House. $12. 7 p.m.
Oleanna, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol,
215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org.
Drama by David Mamet focuses
on a professor, a student, and
sexual politics. $35 to $42. 2 and
7:30 p.m.
Vanya and Sonia and Masha and
Spike, McCarter Theater, 91
University Place, Princeton, 609258-2787. Comedy about life in
Bucks County in a new play by
Christopher Durang. $20 to $72.
7:30 p.m.
A Chorus Line, Paper Mill Playhouse, 22 Brookside Drive, Millburn, 973-376-4343. Musical set
during an audition for a Broadway
show focuses on the hopes,
fears, and dreams of performers.
$26 to $97. 7:30 p.m.
Nine, Westminster Choir College, Yvonne Theater, Rider University, Lawrenceville, 609-9212663. www.rider.edu. Musical
based on Fellini’s semi-autobiographic film “8 1/2.” $9. 7:30 p.m.
One Slight Hitch, George Street
Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue,
New Brunswick, 732-246-7717.
New Jersey premiere of a modern
farce by Lewis Black stars Mark
Linn-Baker. $25 to $62. 8 p.m.
Newcomer’s Dance, American
Ballroom, 1523 Parkway Avenue, Ewing, 609-931-0149. $10.
7 to 9 p.m.
Contra Dance, Princeton Country Dancers, Suzanne Patterson
Center, Monument Drive, 609924-6763. Instruction followed by
dance. $8. 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Live Music
Arturo Romay, Jester’s, 233
Farnsworth Avenue, Bordentown,
609-298-9963. 6 to 9 p.m.
The Invitational, John & Peter’s,
96 South Main Street, New Hope,
215-862-5981.9:30 p.m.
Open Mic, Alchemist &
Barrister, 28 Witherspoon Street,
Princeton, 609-924-5555. 21
plus. 10 p.m.
Literati
Writers Workshop, Princeton
Public Library, 65 Witherspoon
Street, 609-924-8822. Beth
Plankey leads the group. 5 p.m.
Good Causes
Bingo, Saint Raphael School,
151 Gropp Avenue, Hamilton,
609-585-7733. Vera Bradley and
Coach prizes. Must be 21. 6 p.m.
Benefit, D&R Greenway Land
Trust, Princeton University
Chapel, 609-924-4646. “Music
and Poetry of the Earth” features
Paul Winter Consort interweaving
music with the poetry of Jane Hirshfield. Meet the artists reception
in Firestone Library at 8:30 p.m.
Register. Concert, $15; reserved
seating, $35; concert and reception, $75. 7 p.m.
EVENTS EDITOR:
LYNN MILLER
[email protected]
Beef, Beer, and a Silent Auction,
Pet Rescue of Mercer, Cedar
Gardens, Route 33, Hamilton. Proceeds benefit homeless animals.
Register to [email protected] or online. $25. 7 to 11 p.m.
Music Faculty Gala, College of
New Jersey, Mayo Concert Hall,
2000 Pennington Road, Ewing,
609-771-2585. $15. 9 p.m.
Food & Dining
Cornerstone Community
Kitchen, Princeton United Methodist Church, Nassau at Vandeventer Street, Princeton, 609-9242613. Free. 5 to 6:30 p.m.
Health
Tied to the Cause Breast Cancer
Awareness, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital, New
Brunwick, 888-MD-RWJUH. “Find
Your Power: Joy, Hope, Laughter”
with keynote speaker Saranne
Rotherg founder of the Comedy
Cures Foundation. Physician
keynote by Laurie Kirstein, and
breast surgical oncologist at the
Cancer Institute of New Jersey.
$20 includes a gift bag, buffet dinner, and parking. Register. 4:45
p.m.
Continued on following page
18
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
October 10
Continued from preceding page
Saturday & Sunday,
October 20th -21st, 12-5pm
$10/online • $15/person at door
KIDS
FREE!
We are welcoming the harvest with
a weekend of family fun. Wine tastings,
tours, music, arts craft vendors, hayrides,
kids activities, and more.
For more information or to purchase
tickets visit: oldyorkcellars.com
Meeting, Allergy and Asthma
Support Group of Central NJ,
United Methodist Church, 7 Vandeventer Avenue, Princeton.
“Communicating with Your Child’s
Doctor” presented by Dr. Neha
Saralya. E-mail [email protected] for information. 7
p.m.
Mental Health
Mental Illness Awareness Week,
NAMI Mercer, Lawrence Library,
2751 Route 1 South, Lawrenceville, 609-799-8994. “In Our Own
Voice,” a public education program in which two trained volunteers share compelling stories
about living with mental illness
and achieving recovery. Register.
Free. 5 to 6:30 p.m.
Wellness
80 Old York Road • Ringoes, NJ 08551
908.284.WINE (9463)
Introduces Its New Fall Menu!
Chef Perez and the entire kitchen staff are eager for you to sample
their new fall offerings with your choice of either the 4 course prix
fixe offered at $65 per person or the 6 course tasting menu offered
at $85 per person. Wine pairings are offered on both menus. If you
prefer à la carte, please join us at the bar/lounge.
Visit The Peacock Inn for a fine dining gastronomic experience.
Sound Healing, Hickory Corner
Library, 138 Hickory Corner
Road, East Windsor, 609-4481330. Cynthia Yoder, a spiritual
coach and sound healer, demonstrates the benefits of healing
through sound using instruments
such as a drum. 10 a.m.
Dance for People with Parkinson’s Disease, DanceVision,
Forrestal Village, 116 Rockingham Row, Plainsboro, 609-5141600. Dancers who trained with
the Mark Morris Dance Group
and Brooklyn Parkinson Group
collaborate with DanceVision and
Parkinson Alliance to present a
movement class for people with
Parkinson’s disease and their
caregivers. Register. Free. 1 to
2:15 p.m.
Community Yoga, Four Winds
Yoga, 114 West Franklin Avenue,
Pennington, 609-818-9888. Jill
Gutowski leads an all level class.
$5 benefits Global Seva India initiative to stop human trafficking. 7
to 9 p.m.
Create New Habits For Healthy
Eating, Nassau Inn, 10 Palmer
Square, Princeton, 609-3560558. “Creating New Habits of
Eating” presented by Judith
Robinson. Register. $25. 7 to
8:30 p.m.
Life Lessons, Robert Wood
Johnson Hamilton Center for
Health and Wellness, 3100
Quakerbridge Road, Mercerville,
609-584-5900. “Relationships” focuses on changing our reactions
and breaking the cycles causing
unhealthy relationships. Register.
Free. 7 to 8:30 p.m.
Self-Talk Workshop, Center for
Relaxation and Healing, 666
Plainsboro Road, Suite 635,
Plainsboro, 609-750-7432. www.relaxationandhealing.com. “Love
Your Body” presented by Dr. Susan Burger. Register. $25. 7:15 to
9:15 p.m.
All Events, All the Time
For more event listings,
cancellations, and late listings, visit www.princetoninfo.com. For timely updates, follow princetoninfo
at Twitter and on Facebook.
Before attending an event,
we suggest calling.
Send listings for upcoming events to U.S. 1 Preview
ASAP (it is never too early).
Deadline for events to appear
in any Wednesday edition is
the previous Thursday.
Listings must include
date, time, place, phone, and
price. Listings submitted via
Facebook and E-vites are
usually not acceptable.
Submit press releases to
us by E-mail at [email protected]; fax at
609-452-0033; or mail to
U.S. 1, 12 Roszel Road,
Princeton 08540. E-mail
photos (300 ppi and four
inches wide or larger) to
[email protected].
History
Guided Tour,
Drumthwacket Foundation, 354 Stockton
Street, Princeton, 609683-0057. New Jersey
governor’s official residence. Group tours are
available. Register. $5
donation. 1 p.m.
A Fonthill Feast,
Fonthill Museum, East
Court Street and
Swamp Road,
Doylestown, 215-3489461. A tour with Henry
Mercer followed by an
elegant dinner. Register. $100. 5:30 and 7
p.m.
For Families
Read to a Therapy Dog,
South Brunswick Library, 110 Kingston
Lane, Monmouth Junction, 732-329-4000. www.sbpl.info. For children with special
needs and their families. Register. 6 p.m.
Lectures
College Bound Lecture, PEAC
Fitness, 1440 Lower Ferry Road,
Ewing, 609-883-2000. www.peachealthfitness.com. “Inside
the Admissions Office: What
Every Family Needs to Know in
an Increasingly Competitive College Environment” presented by
Don Betterton, a financial aid and
admissions expert. He was on
Princeton University’s admission
committee for three decades and
has written three books on how to
finance your college education.
Register. Free. 6:30 p.m.
Meeting, Linux Users Group,
Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane,
609-937-7442. www.lugip.org. 7
p.m.
Meeting, Princeton Photography Club, Johnson Education
Center, D&R Greenway Land
Trust, 1 Preservation Place,
Princeton, 732-422-3676. www.princetonphotoclub.org. “Photo
Simulacra: Art of Hipsta Shooting”
presented by Rick Wright, a
Philadelphia area photographer,
artists, and instructor. Refreshments. 7 p.m.
Outdoor Action
Guided Wildflower Walk, Bowman’s Hill Wildflower Preserve,
River Road, New Hope, 215-8622924. www.bhwp.org. Daily walks
except Mondays. Register. $5. 2
to 3 p.m.
Politics
Talking Politics, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon
Street, 609-924-8822. www.princetonlibrary.org. Discuss “The
Real Romney,” a book by Michael
Kranish and Scot Helman, with
Joan Goldstein of Mercer Community College. 7:30 p.m.
Singles
Divorced and Separated Support Group, Hopewell Presbyterian Church, 80 West Broad
Street, Hopewell, 609-452-8576.
www.hopewellpres.org. Register.
Free. 7:30 to 9 p.m.
Public Speaking
Mid-Day Toastmasters, Robbinsville Library, 42 AllentownRobbinsville Road, Robbinsville,
609-585-0822.
4139.toastmastersclubs.org.
Members meet for prepared and
impromptu speeches to improve
as speakers and as leaders.
11:30 a.m.
For Seniors
Kosher Cafe East, Jewish Family and Children’s Service, Beth
El Synagogue, 50 Maple Stream
Road, East Windsor, 609-9878100. www.jfcsonline.org. “How
to Communicate with Your Doctor” presented by Marsha Maloney, senior support specialist at
Trenton Behavioral Health Center. For ages 60 and up. Register.
$5 includes lunch. 12:30 p.m.
‘Four Corners of Europe’: Bridget Kibbey
performs on harp with
the Riverside Symphonia at the First Presbyterian Church of
Lambertville on Friday,
October 10, at 8 p.m.
Thursday
October 11
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
Biden vs. Ryan
Vice Presidential Debate Watching Party, Princeton Democratic Campaign, 217 Nassau Street,
Princeton, 609-301-0842. The
debate will be shown on a wide
screen TV. Bring snacks and
drinks. Ice and paper products
provided. 8:30 p.m.
Classical Music
After Noon Concert, Princeton
University Chapel, Princeton
campus, 609-258-3654. www.princeton.edu. Christopher Titko
from Packanack Community
Church on organ. Free. 12:30 to
1 p.m.
TCNJ Choirs, College of New
Jersey, Mayo Concert Hall, 2000
Pennington Road, Ewing, 609771-2585. www.tcnj.edu. $5 to
$15. 8 p.m.
Live Music
Arturo Romay, Luchento’s, 520
Route 33, Millstone, 732-4464800. 6 to 9 p.m.
Open Mic Night, Grover’s Mill
Coffee House, 335 Princeton
Hightstown Road, West Windsor,
609-716-8771. www.groversmillcoffee.com. 7 p.m.
Paula Ryan, Alchemist & Barrister, 28 Witherspoon Street,
Princeton, 609-924-5555. www.theaandb.com. 9 p.m.
Skip’s Museum, John & Peter’s,
96 South Main Street, New Hope,
215-862-5981. www.johnandpeters.com. 9:30 p.m.
Pop Music
The Midtown Men, State
Theater, 15 Livingston Avenue,
New Brunswick, 732-246-7469.
www.StateTheatreNJ.org. Reunion of four stars from Broadway’s “Jersey Boys.” $42 to $67.
3 p.m.
Art
Fall Photowalk, Grounds For
Sculpture, 126 Sculptors Way,
Hamilton, 609-586-0616. www.groundsforsculpture.org. Michael
S. Miller of Visions Photographic
Workshops guides the photographic journey. Digital point and
shoot or digital SLR camera required. Rain or shine. Register.
$60. 2 to 5 p.m.
OCTOBER 10, 2012
On Stage
Literati
A Chorus Line, Paper Mill Playhouse, 22 Brookside Drive, Millburn, 973-376-4343. Musical set
during an audition for a Broadway
show focuses on the hopes,
fears, and dreams of performers.
Directed by Mitzi Hamilton, one of
the dancers in the original workshop that inspired the musical.
$26 to $97. 1:30 and 7:30 p.m.
One Slight Hitch, George Street
Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue,
New Brunswick, 732-246-7717.
www.gsponline.org. New Jersey
premiere of a modern farce by
Lewis Black stars Mark Linn-Baker. $25 to $62. 2 p.m.
Oleanna, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol,
215-785-0100. Drama by David
Mamet focuses on a professor, a
student, and sexual politics. $35
to $42. 7:30 p.m.
Vanya and Sonia and Masha and
Spike, McCarter Theater, 91
University Place, Princeton, 609258-2787. www.mccarter.org.
Comedy about life in Bucks
County in a new play by Christopher Durang. Nicholas Martin directs. Actors include David Hyde
Pierce and Sigourney Weaver.
Co-production with Lincoln Center Theater, where it will play following its Princeton run. $20 to
$72. 7:30 p.m.
Nine, Westminster Choir College, Yvonne Theater, Rider University, Lawrenceville, 609-9212663. www.rider.edu. Musical
based on Fellini’s semi-autobiographic film “8 1/2.” $20. 7:30
p.m.
Othello, Princeton Shakespeare
Company, Whitman College,
Princeton University, 609-2581500. www.princeton.edu/~psc.
Shakespeare drama. $10. 8 p.m.
Author Event, Labyrinth Books,
122 Nassau Street Princeton, NJ
08542, 609-497-1600. Sheila
Kohler, author of “Bay of Foxes”
and Joyce Carol Oates, author of
“Mudwoman” in conversation with
Jennifer Altman. 6 p.m.
Author Event, Lawrence Library,
Darrah Lane and Route 1,
Lawrence Township, 609-9896920. Cathy Knepper, author of
“Jersey Justice: The Story of the
Trenton Six.” Known as the
“northern Scottsboro Boys case,”
it attracted international attention
from 1946 to 1952. Refreshments. Register. 7 p.m.
Author Event, Princeton Public
Library, 65 Witherspoon Street,
609-924-8822.Ishmael Von Heidrick-Barnes, author of “Intimate
Geography,” celebrates the release of the book of verse. 7 p.m.
Dancing
Argentine Tango, Viva Tango,
Suzanne Patterson Center, 45
Stockton Street, Princeton, 732789-5272. vivatango.org. Class
and practice session. $12. 8 p.m.
Good Causes
Windsor, 609-443-4454. Discussion with Rabbi Eric M. Lankin
and Abba Eban. Register. $10.
7:30 p.m.
Moroccan Dinner, Rat’s Restaurant, 126 Sculptor’s Way, Hamilton, 609-584-7800. Wine reception followed by a four-course dinner with wine pairing. Register.
$89. 5:30 p.m.
Cooking Class, Whole Foods
Market, Windsor Green Shopping Center, West Windsor, 609799-2919. www.wholefoods.com.
“The Italian Table” with Christina
Pirello, cookbook author and TV
host. Register. $35. 6:30 p.m.
Farm Markets
Princeton Farmers’ Market,
Hinds Plaza, Witherspoon Street,
Princeton, 609-655-8095. www.princetonfarmersmarket.com.
Rain or shine. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Mental Health
Benefit Galas
Fall Harvest: Root and Bean
Cuisine, Princeton Fitness and
Wellness Center, 1225 State
Road, Princeton, 609-683-7888.
Presented by Jane Schwartz.
Register. $10. 6 p.m.
Orthopedics Open House,
Robert Wood Johnson Hamilton Center for Health and Wellness, 3100 Quakerbridge Road,
Mercerville, 609-584-5900. Information about total joint replacement. Dinner will be served. Register. Free. 6 to 8 p.m.
Faith
Celebrate Israel: The Creation of
the State, Beth El Synagogue,
50 Maple Stream Road, East
19
thai shrimp salad
Food & Dining
A Taste of America, Allies, Nottingham Ballroom, 200 Mercer
Street, Hamilton, 609-689-0136.
Wine, beer, and food sampling.
Silent auction. $50 to $55. 5:30
p.m.
Annual Gift Auction, Daughters
of Penelope, St. George Church,
1200 Klockner Road, Hamilton,
609-587-7119. Register. $10 includes 25 tickets, coffee, tea, and
homemade Greek pastries. Other
food available for purchase. 7
p.m.
Cocktails for a Cause, Dress for
Success Mercer County,
Greenacres Country Club, 2170
Lawrenceville Road, Lawrenceville, 609-895-7241. www.dressforsuccess.org/mercercounty.
Benefit evening. Register. $125. 6
to 8:30 p.m.
U.S. 1
Mental Illness Awareness Week,
NAMI Mercer, 3371 Brunswick
Pike, Suite 124, Lawrenceville,
609-799-8994. Luncheon meeting
with leaders in the Hispanic community to collaborate on improving
education and support resources
for Spanish speaking individuals
and families affected by mental illness. Register. 11:30 a.m.
TAKE A HOLIDAY FROM PLANNING
your corporate or personal holiday party
Turn up the style quotient of your holiday party and dial down the
stress factor. Have your holiday party at elements. Esquire Magazine
recognized our chef as being “in the vanguard of modern globalAmerican cuisine.” So you can expect a fresh party that guests
recall with pleasure months later.
Clients, colleagues, family, friends. Brunch, lunch, cocktails, dinner.
6-24 people. Plan early for the best date choices.
Call Beth at 609-924-0078.
elements
BAYARDLANERTEsPRINCETON
WWWELEMENTSPRINCETONCOMs
Wellness
Continued on page 21
A U.S. 1 ADVERTISING FEATURE | REPRINTED FROM THE OCTOBER 26, 2011, ISSUE OF U.S. 1
A Taste of Mexico In Downtown Princeton
by Pat Tanner
know my way around American
cooking, because while I was
there Perkins expanded the
menu well beyond pancakes.”
That Cruz, now 42, settled in
Princeton was, by his own account, accidental. He was living
in California when he got a distress call from his mother in Mexico. The family had lost contact
with his brother in Manhattan,
and she asked Felipe to try to
find him. “My mom thought that
California was next door to Manhattan, so it would be no big
deal,” he says. It took almost 10
months, but this dutiful son
tracked down his brother in
Princeton, living among the sizeable Oaxaqueno population
here. Felipe decided to stay on.
In 2001 he was quoted in a
New York Times story about why
so many Oaxaquenos had immigrated to suburban Princeton as
saying, “People follow the crowd.
You don’t want to go somewhere
by yourself. People come here directly from Mexico because they
have people they know here, and
they have relatives. Half of my
hometown now lives here.”
The original Taste of Mexico’s
extensive menu and BYOB status are replicated at the new
space, with some additional features. “We have the kitchen
space, so we’re adding one or
two new items, like hard-shell
tacos,” Cruz says. Dinner entrees range from $6.99 to
$10.99. Plus, it will also feature
photo by Craig Terry
F
elipe Cruz’s tiny Taste of
Mexico in the Princeton
Shopping Center on Harrison Street has been serving
user-friendly guacamole, tacos,
burritos, quesadillas, enchiladas,
and the like since 1995, so this
eatery is by no means a newcomer. But what is new is that
Cruz has opened a second Taste
of Mexico in the Nassau Street
space that had been Calico Grill.
The cheerfully repainted room,
which opened in October, 2011,
and seats 30, is tucked down the
alley behind Cox’s Market.
Cruz bought both businesses
from Alan and Marguerite Heap
and Carlos Espichan, who had
taken over the market in 2004
and then opened Calico Grill in
2007. While Cruz’s popular original restaurant will continue to operate as always, he confesses,
“To be honest, I always wanted
to be on Nassau Street. I was not
crazy about the shopping center
at the time, especially when seven businesses went bankrupt,
and I was assistant manager
there.”
But owning a restaurant had
always been a dream, says
Cruz, who is also the proprietor
of El Oaxaqueno 2 in New
Brunswick. He has been cooking
since he was 15, shortly after he
moved to the U.S. from Mesones
Hidalgo, a small town in Oaxaca.
“I have worked two or three jobs
at a time ever since,” he says
proudly. By the time he was 19,
he was running a Perkins Pancake House on Staten Island. “I
Felipe Cruz and Leslie Paredes
breakfast on Saturday and Sunday, which the Harrison Street
restaurant does not. He promises, “a full breakfast menu, including hand-squeezed orange juice
and Spanish and Mexican dishes
like huevos rancheros.”
In addition, some Taste of
Mexico offerings will be added to
Cox’s Market’s existing catering
options. Cruz isn’t worried about
spreading himself too thin. “In
each of the stores we have key
people managing, and we are trying to keep the same kitchen and
wait staff that the Heaps had at
both the market and the restaurant. It was a package deal.”
A Taste of Mexico, 180 Nassau Street, down the alley behind
Cox’s Market. 609-924-0500.
Princeton Shopping Center,
301 North Harrison Street. 609252-1575.
Accepts all major credit
cards.
20
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
NO-TURKEY TURKEY
VEGETARIAN ENTREÉ
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ZUDSSHGLQSXIISDVWU\,QFOXGHVYHJHWDULDQJUDY\
SMALL
MEDIUM
2-3 Lbs. Pre-cooked Weight
4-5 Lbs. Pre-cooked Weight
with 16 Oz. Gravy
with 32 Oz. Gravy
$24.99 each
$39.99 each
Serves 4-6
Serves 8-10
OCTOBER 10, 2012
U.S. 1
For Voice: Bass baritone Mark Moliterno sings
works of Schubert, Schumann, and Brahms, in a
3 p.m. concert on Sunday, October 14, at Westminster Choir College’s Bristol Chapel.
October 11
Continued from page 19
Lectures
Consumer Affairs, Mercer County
Connection, 957 Route 33, Hamilton, 609-890-9800.Discuss how to
avoid credit, home improvement,
difficulty with a local business, Internet fraud, or unreliable repairmen. Free. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Holocaust Genocide Resource
Center, Mercer College Student
Center, Second floor of the library building, 1200 Old Trenton
Road, West Windsor, 609-5703355. “Ouch! Your Silence Hurts”
workshop. Register. 4:30 p.m.
Woodrow Wilson School,
Princeton University, Robertson
Hall, Dodds, 609-258-0157. “The
Eighteen Day Running Mate” presented by Joshua M. Glasser.
4:30 p.m.
The Callaloo Conference,
Princeton University, Richardson Auditorium, 609-258-3116.
“Love in the Poetics of Movement” presented by Wallace Best,
professor of religion and acting
chair for the Center for African
American Studies at Princeton
University. Continues October 12
and 13. 5:30 p.m.
Politics
Forum, League of Women Voters
of the Princeton Area, Jewish
Center, 435 Nassau Street,
Princeton, 609-658-6107. Forum
for candidates for mayor of Princeton. Questions will be taken from
the audience. Free. 7:30 p.m.
Vice Presidential Debate Watching Party, Princeton Democratic Campaign, 217 Nassau Street,
Princeton, 609-301-0842. Bring
snacks and drinks. Ice and paper
products provided. 8:30 p.m.
For Seniors
Time at Last: Navigating Retirement, Robert Wood Johnson
Hamilton Center for Health and
Wellness, 3100 Quakerbridge
Road, Mercerville, 609-584-5900.
New conversation group facilitated by Marilyn Gilroy. 2 p.m.
Friday
October 12
50th Anniversary Concert
Series, St. Peter Lutheran
Church, 1608 Harbourton-Rocktown Road, Lambertville, 609466-0939. Dale Travis, a bassbaritone, in concert. Refreshments. Free. 4 to 5:30 p.m.
Vienna: From Mozart to Strauss,
New Jersey Symphony Orchestra, War Memorial, Trenton, 800ALLEGRO. Music of Mozart,
Strauss Jr. Suppe, and Lehar. $20
to $60. 7:30 p.m.
Magnificant Journeys, Riverside
Symphonia, First Presbyterian
Church of Lambertville, 31 North
Union Street, Lambertville, 609397-7300. “The Four Corners of
Europe” features Bridget Kibbey
on the harp and the orchestra.
Mariusz Smolij conducts. 8 p.m.
Phantom of the Opera, Princeton
University Chapel, Princeton
campus, 609-258-3654. Silent
movie with organ accompaniment
by Michael Britt. $10. 9 p.m.
Folk Music
Open Stage, Folk Project, Morristown Unitarian Fellowship, 21
Normandy Heights Road, Morristown, 973-335-9489. $7. 8 p.m.
Jazz & Blues
Jazz Cafe, South Brunswick
Arts Commission, South
Brunswick Municipal Complex,
540 Route 522, Monmouth Junction, 732-329-4000. Shikantaza
with Doug Miller on piano, Bernhard Geiger on bass, Brandon
Lewin on percussion, and Lori
Pantaleo on vocals. $6 includes
refreshments. 8 to 10 p.m.
Live Music
Dick Gratton, Chambers Walk
Cafe, 2667 Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609-896-5995. Solo
jazz guitar. 6 to 9 p.m.
Music, Pizza, and Wine,
Hopewell Valley Vineyards, 46
Yard Road, Pennington, 609-7374465. Acoustic Road with classic
rock. 6 to 9 p.m.
Arturo Romay, Villa Romanza,
429 Route 156, Hamilton, 609585-1717. 6 to 9 p.m.
Bob Egan, Bowman’s Tavern,
1600 River Road, New Hope, PA,
215-862-2972. Open mic and
sing-a-long night. 8 p.m.
The Billy Hector Band, John & Peter’s, 96 South Main Street, New
Hope, 215-862-5981. 9:30 p.m.
Pop Music
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
Art Photography
Art Exhibit, Gallery 14, 14 Mercer
Street, Hopewell, 609-333-8511.
www.photogallery14.com. Opening reception for “Cityscapes” by
Charles Miller and Richard Tanner; “Nantucket” by India Blake;
and “Recent Work” by Kenneth
Kaplowitz.” On view to November
11. Meet the photographers on
Sunday, October 14, noon to 5
p.m. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Classical Music
Gallery Concert, Westminster
Choir College, Luedeke Theater,
Rider University, Lawrenceville,
609-921-2663. “Music for the
Flute and Piano,” a chamber music concert. Free. 12:15 p.m.
Gallery Concert, Westminster
Conservatory, Art Gallery,
Luedeke Center, Rider University,
609-921-2663. Kevin Willois on
flute and Kyu Jung Rhee on piano
present a program featuring music of France in observation of
Claude Debussy’s 150th birthday.
Free. 12:15 p.m.
Concert, Curtis Symphony Orchestra, Richardson Auditorium,
Princeton University, 609-2589220. Program of works by Strauss
and Tchaikovsky conducted by
Carlos Miguel Prieto. $30. 3 p.m.
John Hiatt and the Combo, McCarter Theater, 91 University
Place, Princeton, 609-258-2787.
Singer songwriter, his latest album is “Dirty Jeans and Mudslide
Hymns.” $20 to $48. 8 p.m.
Art
Art Exhibit, Garden State Watercolor Society, Prallsville Mill,
Stockton, 609-394-4000. Annual
juried exhibition. On view to October 28. Award to Marge Charooshian. Noon to 4 p.m.
Art Exhibit, Gallery 14, 14 Mercer
Street, Hopewell, 609-333-8511.
www.photogallery14.com. Opening reception for “Cityscapes” by
Charles Miller and Richard Tanner; “Nantucket” by India Blake;
and “Recent Work” by Kenneth
Kaplowitz.” On view to November
11. Meet the photographers on
Sunday, October 14, noon to 5
p.m. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Gallery Exhibit, Peddie School,
Mariboe Gallery, Hightstown, 609490-7550. Opening reception and
artist talk in conjunction with “Nuits Blanches,” an exhibition of recent paintings by Frank Rivera.
The serial format of his new and
smaller works shows the influence
of storyboard graphics, computer
art, underground comics from the
1980s, and predella (small serial
panels affixed to the bottom of an
altar piece). On view to November
2. 6:30 to 8 p.m.
Dance
Ailey II, State Theater, 15 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick,
732-246-7469. www.StateTheatreNJ.org. The program includes works by Donald Byrd,
Thang Dao, and signature Ailey
work. $35 to $50. 8 p.m.
On Stage
The Wildest: Hip, Cool, and
Swinging, Off-Broadstreet Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-2766.
www.off-broadstreet.com. Musical inspired by Louis Prima and
Keeley Smith. $29.50 to $31.50
includes dessert. Through Saturday, November 10. 7 p.m.
Nine, Westminster Choir College, Yvonne Theater, Rider University, Lawrenceville, 609-9212663. www.rider.edu. Musical
based on Fellini’s semi-autobiographic film “8 1/2.” $20. 7:30
p.m.
Oleanna, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol,
215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org.
Drama by David Mamet focuses
on a professor, a student, and
sexual politics. $35 to $42. 8 p.m.
One Slight Hitch, George Street
Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue,
New Brunswick, 732-246-7717.
www.gsponline.org. New Jersey
premiere of a modern farce by
Lewis Black stars Mark Linn-Baker. $25 to $62. 8 p.m.
Next to Normal, Kelsey Theater,
Mercer County Community
College, 1200 Old Trenton Road,
West Windsor, 609-570-3333.
www.kelseytheatre.net. Musical
with a contemporary score about
a woman diagnosed with a mental illness and her family’s struggles. Presented by Pierrot Productions. $18. 8 p.m.
Vanya and Sonia and Masha and
Spike, McCarter Theater, 91
University Place, Princeton, 609258-2787. Comedy about life in
Bucks County in a new play by
Christopher Durang. $20 to $72.
8 p.m.
A Chorus Line, Paper Mill Playhouse, 22 Brookside Drive, Millburn, 973-376-4343. Musical set
during an audition for a Broadway
show focuses on the hopes,
fears, and dreams of performers.
Directed by Mitzi Hamilton, one of
the dancers in the original workshop that inspired the musical.
$26 to $97. 8 p.m.
Othello, Princeton Shakespeare
Company, Whitman College,
Princeton University, 609-2581500. www.princeton.edu/psc.
Shakespeare drama. $10. 8 p.m.
The Side Order, Ramada Hotel,
6426 Lower York Road, New
Hope, PA, 215-862-5221. Romantic comedy. $5. E-mail
[email protected]. 8 p.m.
And the Winner Is, Villagers
Theater, 475 DeMott Lane, Somerset, 732-873-2710. Drama by
Mitch Albom. $12. 8 p.m.
Film
Acme Screening Room, Lambertville Public Library, 25
South Union Street, Lambertville,
609-397-0275. Screening of
“Sourlands” by Jared Flesher. $8.
7 and 8:30 p.m.
Dancing
Friday Night Social, American
Ballroom, 1523 Parkway Avenue, Ewing, 609-931-0149. $15.
8 to 11 p.m.
Continued on following page
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Get your message into every home in Montgomery
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22
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
CASH
Highest Price Paid
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Tea Sets • Silver Coins • Gold Coins
Dental Gold • Diamonds ¼ Carat & Up
Rolex Watches
With the Precious Metal Market
at an All-Time High, Now Is the Time to Turn
Broken Jewelry and Unwanted Items to CASH!
Trent Jewelers
16 Edinburg Rd. at 5 Points • Mercerville, N.J.
609-5
584-8
8800
Opportunities
Call for Art
Town of Princeton and the
Arts Council of Princeton invite
designers and artists to enter a logo
design competition for the consolidated Princeton.
Mayors Yina Moore and Chad
Goerner request your help in designing a logo that is symbolic in
its representation of the new municipality. They are seeking an
original logo that is a clear and simple graphic solution representing
the consolidated Princeton. The
new logo design will be incorporated into letterhead, decals, website, and informational materials.
Open to people of all ages who
work or live in Princeton or are a
current member of the Arts Council. Contact Vashtie Coefer at
[email protected] or 609-924-8777. Intent to submit must be received by Friday,
October 19. Final submissions are
due on Friday, October 26. Visit
www.artscouncilofprinceton.org.
Grounds For Sculpture seeks
entries for “Focus on Sculpture
2013” from amateur photographers. The primary requirement is
that the images depict sculpture or
present an image in a sculptural
manner. The prospectus is available online. On display in the education gallery, the annual exhibit
promotes sculpture as seen by
members of the community
through their photographs. Must
be 18 or older. E-mail [email protected] for entry
requirements and details.
West Windsor Arts Council
seeks artwork in various media to
be offered at prices not exceeding
$300 that may literally be taken off
the wall at time of purchase. Submissions for “Off the Wall” art
609-924-4800 . www.onsenforall.com
[email protected]
Onsen For All . 4451 Route 27 at Raymond Road
Princeton, NJ 08540
For Young Musicians
Greater Princeton Youth Orchestra holds auditions on Monday, November 19 for all instruments. There are various performing groups to accommodate players of various ability levels in middle school and high school. Applications may be submitted at www.gpyo.org or contact Mark Morris
by E-mail at [email protected].
Volunteers Needed
Fresh Air Fund seeks host families for children from New York
City child. The not-for-profit
agency has provided free summer
vacations to more than 1.7 million
New York City children from lowincome communities since 1877.
For information contact Laurie
Bershad at 609-371-2817 or Fresh
Air Fund at 800-367-0003 or visit
www.freshair.org.
Folk Dance, Princeton Folk
Dance, Suzanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street, Princeton,
609-912-1272. Beginners welcome. Lesson followed by dance.
No partner needed. $5. 8 to 11
p.m.
Cocktails at the Castle, Mercer
Museum, Pine and Ashland
streets, Doylestown, 215-3450210. “A Savory Exploration” is a
champagne reception featuring
the collection and cuisine. Music
by Acoustic Madness, Jazz It Upright, and Where’s Pete? Register. $150; $75 extra for champagne reception. 6 to 10:30 p.m.
Literati
Comedy
Poetry Sampler, Geraldine R.
Dodge Poetry Festival, Prudential Hall, NJPAC, Newark. www.dodgepoetry.org. E-mail [email protected] for information.
7 p.m.
Ryan Maher, Catch a Rising
Star, Hyatt Regency, 102
Carnegie Center, West Windsor,
609-987-8018. www.catcharisingstar.com. Register. $19.50. 8
p.m.
Halloween Comedy, Rock Salt
Comedy Theater, Black Box
Theater, Mercer County Park Ice
Skating Rink, West Windsor, 732690-8694. Ages 13 and up. Flexible seating in a cabaret-like setting. $10. 8 p.m.
Comedy Night, HA Comedy Productions, Rat’s Restaurant, 126
Sculptor’s Way, Hamilton, 609584-7800. Helene Angley of West
Windsor hosts her line-up of seasoned comics including Doug
Adler, Regina DeCicco, and
Veronica Mosey. 21 plus. $25 to
$30. 8:30 p.m.
Ladies’ Night Out, Robert Wood
Johnson Hamilton Center for
Health and Wellness, 3100
Quakerbridge Road, Mercerville,
609-584-5900. www.rwjhamilton.org. Information from healthcare
professionals, therapeutic drumming, and dance. Register. Free.
6 to 9 p.m.
Mystical Musical, Princeton
Center for Yoga & Health, Orchard Hill Center, 88 Orchard
Road, Skillman, 609-924-7294.
www.princetonyoga.com. Open
practice time with original compositions and improvisations on
mystical instruments, keyboard,
and drums by Karttikeya. Sit,
meditate, watch, listen, do yoga,
read, study, sleep, or dance. $10.
7:30 to 9 p.m.
Good Causes
Now enrolling for Winter 2013
Email [email protected]
for information
Somerset Valley Players has
auditions for “A Murder is Announced” on Sunday and Monday,
November 4 and 5, at 689 Amwell
Road, Hillsborough, from 7 to 10
p.m. Needed are five adult males,
ages 20 to 60; and seven adult females, ages 20 to 70. British accent
a plus but not required. Mitzi character should have a European accent. Readings will be from the
script. Visit www.svptheatre.org or
call 908-369-7469.
Villagers Theater has auditions
for “A Night of Up and Coming
Talent,” a cabaret to showcase local youth performers, on Monday,
October 15, from 7 to 9 p.m., in
Somerset. The January performance will feature contemporary
musical theater songs, with some
classics mixed in, by performers
ages 8 to 25. Prepare 32 bars of a
contemporary musical theater
song. An accompanist will be provided. Rehearsals are Mondays,
October 22, November 5, November 19, December 3, December 10
and 17. E-mail [email protected].
Mercer County Veteran Services is conducting its annual donation drive to help veterans and
their families enjoy the comforts of
a hot meal on each holiday. Last
year the County raised $6,500.
Rather than collecting donations of food monetary donations
go toward the purchase of ShopRite gift cards veterans can use to
purchase holiday meals. The organization uses every dollar collected to purchase and distribute
the gift cards. Send checks payable
to Mercer County Trust Fund to
Mercer County Division of Veteran Services, 2280 Hamilton Avenue, Hamilton 08619. Call 609989-6120.
Wellness
Continued from preceding page
Deepen your yoga practice
Become a Yoga Teacher
Auditions
Donate Please
Benefit Galas
October 12
Purchase a Series of Three
60 or 90 Minute Massages from 10/10-10/12
and receive 33% OFF the 3rd Service!
http://onsenforall.com/Classes/Events.aspx
must be brought to the West Windsor Arts Center Monday, November 12, from 5 to 7 p.m., or Tuesday, November 13, 10 a.m. to
noon. Submission deadline is Friday, November 2 for the market.
“Off the Wall” will be on view Saturday, December 1, through Saturday, January 5; and one-day artisan
market is Saturday, December 1.
All submissions will be juried by
the West Windsor Art Council exhibition committee. Visit www.westwindsorartscenter.org/offthe-wall-prospectus, call 609-7161931 or E-mail [email protected].
Art Exhibit, HomeFront, 67
Palmer Square West, Princeton,
609-989-9417. Opening reception for “ArtJam,” an exhibit and
sale featuring national and local
artists. The exhibit features the
work of 50 artists, including
clients of HomeFront. AOn view
to October 22. 6 to 10 p.m.
In the Pink Fashion Show, YWCA Princeton, Westin Hotel, Forrestal Village, Plainsboro, 609497-2100. Benefit for the Breast
Cancer Resource Center features
a fashion show of fall and winter
collections modeled by breast
cancer survivors, their husbands,
children, doctors, and nurses.
Cocktail reception, silent auction,
and floral centerpiece competition. Register. $100. 6 to 9 p.m.
Autumn Nights Reception, Corner House Foundation, Princeton Day School, 650 Great Road,
Princeton, 609-924-8018. Benefit
for the organization. The all City
Just Dessert competition features
desserts provided by Princeton
area chefs. Leadership awards to
Gisela A. Moore and Richard Grenis, both raised in Princeton and
graduates of Princeton High
School. Business attire. Register.
$40. 7 to 10 p.m.
Food & Dining
Restaurant Supported Agriculture Dinner Series, Tre Piani,
120 Rockingham Row, Forrestal
Village, Plainsboro, 609-4521515. Three course farm to table
dinner. Register. $29. 5 p.m.
Mental Health
Mental Illness Awareness Week,
NAMI Mercer, Trenton Psychiatric Hospital, 301 Sullivan Way,
Trenton, 609-799-8994. Public forum with three family members
speaking about their own experiences with stigma. Tour of the facility follows. Register. Free. 1 to
3 p.m.
For Families
House of Horrors, Middlesex
County 4-H, 645 Cranbury Road,
East Brunswick, 732-398-5261.
Haunted house with ghosts and
goblins. Benefit for Project Gift, a
project to help 200 limited resource families buy gifts for their
children at no cost to themselves.
$4. 7 to 11 p.m.
Lectures
How Climate Works: Symposium, Princeton University,
Dodds Auditorium, Robertson
Hall, 609-258-3000. “Fundamentals of Climate Science” for scholars, students, and the general
public. Panelists include David
Archer, University of Chicago;
Michael Bender and Geoff Vallis,
Princeton University; Andrew Ingersoll, Caltech; Shawn Marshall,
University of Calgary; David Randall, Colorado State University;
Andrew Revkin, New York Times;
and David Schimel, California Institute of Technology. Keynote
speaker is Andrew Revkin, New
York Times and Pace University’s
Academy for Applied Environmental Studies. Free. 10:30 a.m.
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Outdoor Action
Corn Maze Harvest, Howell Living History Farm, 70 Wooden’s
Lane, Lambertville, 609-7373299. The maze, whose two plus
miles of pathways in the shape of
a barn owl, offers challenges with
puzzle pieces. $8. 5 to 8 p.m.
Corner of Chaos Haunt, Corner
Copia Farm Market, 299 Princeton-Hightstown Road, East Windsor, 609-426-8884. www.cornercopia.com. A Tour of Terror, Fright
Tour, Haunt World, and more. $13
to $40. 7 p.m.
Schools
Open House, Grey Nun Academy, 1750 Quarry Road, Yardley,
PA, 215-968-4151. www.gnaedu.org. For prospective students and
their parents to visit the only private, Catholic, co-educational elementary school in Bucks County.
Noon to 2 p.m.
English Conversation Class for
ESL Students, West Windsor
Library, 333 North Post Road,
609-799-0462. Focus on language speaking skills, pronunciation, vocabulary, and general fluency with Richard Peterson, the
reference librarian. 1:15 p.m.
Shopping News
Rummage Sale, Slackwood
Presbyterian Church, 2020
Brunswick Avenue, Lawrenceville, 609-392-3258. 9 a.m. to 5
p.m.
Rummage Sale, St. Matthews,
300 South Main Street, Pennington. www.stmatthewspennington.org. Gently used
clothing, shoes, and accessories;
sports equipment, small electronics, housewares, and more. 9
a.m. to 5 p.m.
Book Sale, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street,
609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Annual sale of paperback, softcover, and hardcover
books; DVDs; and CDs. Preview
sale from 10 a.m. to noon, $10
admission. Free admission from
U.S. 1
23
noon to 8:30 p.m. Books from the
collection of Peter and Wendy
Benchley, including books on
sharks and other aquatic life; a
collection from Anne-Marie
Slaughter; scholarly books on
Asian history and politics; rare
books; limited editors; and more.
10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Singles
Happy Hour, Yardley Singles,
Cafe Mulino, 938 Bear Tavern
Road, Ewing, 215-736-1288.
www.yardleysingles.org. Three
different menus available. 5 p.m.
Divorce Recovery Seminar,
Princeton Church of Christ, 33
River Road, Princeton, 609-5813889. www.princetonchurchofchrist.com. “Dealing with Anger.”
Non-denominational support
group for men and women. Free.
7:30 p.m.
Public Speaking
Successfully Speak Up Toastmasters, Pellettieri, Rabstein, &
Altman, 100 Nassau Park Boulevard, Suite 111, West Windsor,
732-631-0114. ssu.freetoasthost.ws. Members deliver
and evaluate prepared and impromptu speeches. 7:30 to 9
p.m.
Sports
Trenton Titans, Sun National
Bank Center, 81 Hamilton Avenue, Trenton, 609-341-1100.
www.trentontitanshockey.com.
Hockey vs. Greenville. $11 and
up. 7:05 p.m.
Sports for Causes
Golf Classic, Gerald R. Covello
Jr. Memorial Scholarship Fund,
Cranbury Golf Course, 49 Southfield Road, West Windsor, 609240-9580. covelloclassic.org.
Benefit for a scholarship fund to
develop youth baseball. Breakfast, barbecue lunch, cocktail
hour, silent auction, and awards
banquet. $135 includes golf and
dinner. $50 includes dinner. 8 a.m.
Broadway Audition:
‘A Chorus Line’ plays
at Paper Mill Playhouse in Millburn
through Sunday, October 28.
forms on a 1720 Stradivarius,
said to have inspired the Academy Award-winning film “The Red
Violin.” $18. 7:30 p.m.
Saturday
October 13
Jazz & Blues
Joe Zook and Blues Deluxe,
Bring Back Trenton Jazz and
Blues Festival, Candlelight
Lounge and Ellarslie Mansion.
Blues, swing, funk. 7:30 p.m.
Jazz Ensemble, Princeton University Department of Music,
Richardson Auditorium, 609-2582800. “Jazz Pot Luck.” Ralph
Bowen conducts. $15. 8 p.m.
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
Let’s Go Tigers
Princeton Football, Princeton
Stadium, 609-258-3538. Brown.
Noon.
Classical Music
Magnificant Journeys, Riverside
Symphonia, First Presbyterian
Church of Lambertville, 31 North
Union Street, Lambertville, 609397-7300. “The Four Corners of
Europe” features Bridget Kibbey
on the harp and the orchestra.
$20 to $55. 8 p.m.
35th Anniversary Concert,
Bucks County Performing Arts
Center, Yardley Community Center, 64 South Main Street, Yardley,
PA. 215-493-3010.
www.bcpac.org. Elizabeth Pitcairn on violin and Louise
Thomas on piano. Pitcairn per-
Live Music
Ninth Birthday Party, Crossing
Vineyards and Winery, 1853
Wrightstown Road, Washington
Crossing, PA, 215-493-6500. Eric
Mintel Quartet with jazz from 1 to
5 p.m. Noon to 6 p.m.
Dick Gratton, Chambers Walk
Cafe, 2667 Main Street, Lawrenceville, 609-896-5995.Solo
jazz guitar. 6 to 9 p.m.
NY Ska-Jazz Ensemble, The
Record Collector Store, 358
Farnsworth Avenue, Bordentown,
609-324-0880.$18. 7:30 p.m.
Jeffrey Gaines and Erin Hill &
her Psychedelic Harp, Randy
Now’s Man Cave, Crosswicks
Street and Farnsworth Avenue,
Bordentown, 609-424-3766.
www.mancavenj.com. BYOB. 8
p.m.
Chris Harford & the Band of
Changes, John & Peter’s, 96
South Main Street, New Hope,
215-862-5981. 9:30 p.m.
Pop Music
Laser Mania, Raritan Valley College, Planetarium, College Center, North Branch, 908-526-1200.
Songs by One Direction, Black
Eyed Peas, and Lady Gaga while
lasers draw pictures on the dome
overhead. “Dark Side of the
Moon” at 8 p.m. $7. 4 and 8 p.m.
Continued on following page
Please Join Dr. Roderick Kaufmann &
Princeton Dermatology Associates
in Welcoming
Dr. J. Scott Henning
&
Dr. Darshan Vaidya
Dr. Henning will be at our Hillsborough office.
Dr. Vaidya will be at our Monroe and Pennington offices.
Please Call Today to Make Your Appointment
with Dr. Henning or Dr. Vaidya.
307 Omni Drive
Hillsborough
908-281-6633
5 Centre Drive, Suite 1A
Monroe Twp.
609-655-4544
Pennington Point West
2 Tree Farm Road
Ste. A-110, Pennington
609-737-4491
24
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
October 13
Continued from preceding page
Bebe Neuwirth and Malcolm
Gets, Bucks County Playhouse,
70 South Main Street, New Hope,
215-862-2121. Benefit evening for
Broadway Cares/ Equity Fights
AIdS. Neuwirth, a two time Emmy
and Tony award winner, is a former Princeton resident. Gets, a
two time Obie award winner, received a Tony nomination. Cocktails, performance, and live auction. A VIP reception with the
artists will be held at Barley Sheaf
in Holicong, PA. Register. 7 p.m.
Luke Elliot and his Band, Arts
Council of Princeton, 102 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-8777.
Stephanie White and the Philth
Harmonic opens the show. $10.
7:30 p.m.
Golden Oldies Spectacular,
State Theater, 15 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, 732-2467469. Lou Christie, Sonny Turner’s Platters, Jay & the Americans, Freddy Boom Boom Cannon, and Barbara Harris with the
Toys. $40 to $75. 7:30 p.m.
Art
Art Show and Sale, Watercolorists Unlimited, Parsonage
Barn, Cranbury Neck Road and
South Main Street, Cranbury, 609577-6789. Inaugural art exhibit
featuring works by close to 20
painters who have been showing
their work for more than 25 years.
The show includes some paintings
of the barn park, local scenes, and
landscapes. Refreshments. Sales
must be check or cash. No raindate. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Art Exhibit, Zimmerli Art Museum, George and Hamilton streets,
New Brunswick, 732-932-7237.
First day of “Le Mur at the Cabaret
des Quat’z’Arts,” an exhibition of
drawings, poems, and newspaper
clippings that were mounted on a
wall of a cabaret. The collections
features 1,500 sheets from the
journal. On view to February 24.
10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Bucks County Artist Studio
Tours, Michener Art Museum,
138 South Pine Street,
Doylestown, 215-340-9800.
www.michenerartmuseum.org.
Nakashima Studio. Transportation on your own. Register. $50 includes tour and boxed lunch.
10:30 a.m.
Tots on Tour, Grounds For
Sculpture, 126 Sculptors Way,
Hamilton, 609-586-0616. www.groundsforsculpture.org. For
ages 3 to 5. Listen to a story, become park explorers, make original works of art. One adult must
accompany each child. Register.
Free with park admission. Rain or
shine. 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Highlight Tour, Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton
campus, 609-258-3788. artmuseum.princeton.edu. Free. 2 p.m.
Art Exhibit, Garden State Watercolor Society, Prallsville Mill,
Stockton, 609-394-4000. www.gardenstatewatercolorsociety.org. Opening reception for the annual juried exhibition. On view to
October 28. Award to Marge Charooshian. Gallery talk by Charles
McVicker on Sunday, October 14,
at 3 p.m. Gallery walk, discussion,
and wine follow. 4 to 6 p.m.
Artists Network, Lawrenceville
Main Street, 2683 Main Street,
Lawrenceville, 609-512-1359.
www.lmsartistsnetwork.com. Art
gallery reception for an exhibit focusing on food. Refreshments. 4
to 7 p.m.
Art Exhibit, Studio Space, 20
Bridge Street, Lambertville.
Opening reception for the fall
show featuring works by Aly
Lyons, Suzanne Aubuchon,
Joyce Parksinson, Jill Pozadas,
and Gladys Mitchel. On view
weekends from noon to 5 p.m.
through October 28. E-mail [email protected] for information. 5
to 8 p.m.
Block Printing Class, Sterling
Creativity, 19 Main Street, Building C, Robbinsville, 215-7672845. First of three sessions to
create a print for the holidays.
Register by E-mail to [email protected]. $75. 5:30 p.m.
S.O.S.: Deborah Jean Templin presents
her one-woman show, ‘Unsinkable Women:
Stories and Songs from the Titanic,’ on
Tuesday, October 16, at noon and 7 p.m. at
Raritan Valley Community College.
Art Exhibit, JB Kline Gallery, 25
Bridge Street, Lambertville, 609397-7026. Opening reception for
“At the Same Place at the Same
Time,” an exhibit of paintings by
SL Baker. On view to October 31.
6 to 9 p.m.
Dance
Contemporary Ballet, Lustig
Dance Theater, Crossroads Theater, Livingston Avenue, New
Brunswick, 732-246-7300. www.lustigdancetheatre.org. Three
new works and a revival of Graham Lustig’s “Infinitum.” The
highlight of the evening is a preview of Lustig’s “Shake Down the
Stars” danced to a selection of
iconic jazz ballads. $25. 8 p.m.
On Stage
A Chorus Line, Paper Mill Playhouse, 22 Brookside Drive, Millburn, 973-376-4343. www.papermill.org. Musical set during an audition for a Broadway show focuses on the hopes, fears, and
dreams of performers. Directed
by Mitzi Hamilton, one of the
dancers in the original workshop
that inspired the musical. $26 to
$97. 1:30 and 8 p.m.
Oleanna, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol,
215-785-0100. www.brtstage.org.
Drama by David Mamet focuses
on a professor, a student, and
sexual politics. $35 to $42. 2 and
8 p.m.
One Slight Hitch, George Street
Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue,
New Brunswick, 732-246-7717.
www.gsponline.org. New Jersey
premiere of a modern farce by
Lewis Black stars Mark Linn-Baker. $25 to $62. 2 and 8 p.m.
Othello, Princeton
Shakespeare
Company, Whitman
College, Princeton University, 609-258-1500.
Shakespeare drama.
$10. 2 and 8 p.m.
Nine, Westminster
Choir College, Yvonne
Theater, Rider University, Lawrenceville, 609921-2663. www.rider.edu. Musical based on
Fellini’s semi-autobiographic film “8 1/2.” $20.
2 and 7:30 p.m.
Vanya and Sonia and Masha and
Spike, McCarter Theater
(Berlind), 91 University Place,
Princeton, 609-258-2787. www.mccarter.org. Comedy about life
in Bucks County in a new play by
Christopher Durang. Nicholas
Martin directs. Actors include
David Hyde Pierce and Sigourney
Weaver. Co-production with Lincoln Center Theater, where it will
play following its Princeton run.
$20 to $72. 3 and 8 p.m.
The Wildest: Hip, Cool, and
Swinging, Off-Broadstreet Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-2766.
Musical inspired by Louis Prima
and Keeley Smith. $29.50 to
$31.50 includes dessert. 7 p.m.
Next to Normal, Kelsey Theater,
Mercer County Community College, 1200 Old Trenton Road,
West Windsor, 609-570-3333.
Musical with a contemporary
score about a woman diagnosed
with a mental illness and her family’s struggles. Presented by Pierrot Productions. $18. 8 p.m.
And the Winner Is, Villagers
Theater, 475 DeMott Lane, Somerset, 732-873-2710. www.villagerstheatre.com. Drama by
Mitch Albom. $12. 8 p.m.
Family Theater
Theater of Illusion, Raritan Valley Community College, Route
28, North Branch, 908-725-3420.
The Spencers perform. For age
eight and older. $25. 7 p.m.
Film
Acme Screening Room, Lambertville Public Library, 25
South Union Street, Lambertville,
609-397-0275. Screening of
“Sourlands” by Jared Flesher. $8.
7 and 9 p.m.
Film Series, West Windsor Arts
Council, 952 Alexander Road,
West Windsor, 609-716-1931.
Screening of “Who the #$&% is
Jackson Pollock?,” 2006, a documentary that follows the life of a
73 year-old woman who bought a
painting for $5 at a thrift store as a
gift. She learns that it is possibly a
Jackson Pollock original. Speaker
is Julia Myers, a professor of art
history, curator of postwar American art, and resident of West
Windsor. In conjunction with “Outloud: A Collective of Washington,
D.C. Abstract Artists,” an exhibit
on display to November 21. Register. $7. 7:30 p.m.
Continued on page 30
OCTOBER 10, 2012
U.S. 1
25
Review: ‘One Slight Hitch’
I
n a conspicuous display of
serendipity, the socio-political
commentator, stand-up comedian,
and marginal playwright Lewis
Black is currently appearing in his
own one-man show, “Running on
Empty,” on Broadway while one of
his “trunk” plays, “One Slight
Hitch,” receives its New Jersey
premiere at the George Street Playhouse.
At George Street the aftermath
of a dissolved love affair is farcically, if also nonsensically, constructed by Black, who has presumably
drawn broadly from his own experience. Here the aimless writer
Ryan (Christopher Tocco) — who
thinks of himself as the next Jack
Kerouac — takes to the road after
he’s jilted by his steady girlfriend,
Courtney (Rosie Benton), after
two-and-a-half years. A recently
published novelist and successful
short-story writer, Courtney has evidently made it clear to Ryan that a
marriage to him is not for her. She
has, in fact, announced — only a
few months after bailing — her
forthcoming nuptials to Harper
(Scott Drummond), a wealthy and
upstanding psychology student, to
all — except for Ryan.
Black has taken what reality
there must have been and morphed
it into the kind of foolish farrago
that would not have passed muster
as a rejected pilot for a TV sit-com
in 1981, the year in which this play
takes place. If there is ample evidence Black is a master of barbed
political commentary, this resurrected comedy offers no evidence
that he is even a minor playwright.
In the play, Ryan’s decision to
hitchhike from his apartment in
by Simon Saltzman
New York City to a suburb of (Clea Alsip) and P.B. (Lauren AshCincinnati, to visit Courtney’s par- ley Carter), to keep Ryan from ruents is his illogical next step and ining Courtney’s big day and from
only the first of many. It seems that further upsetting the already adCourtney’s parents were inclined dled mother Delia Coleman (Lizto like him for better and for worse. beth Mackay).
This can only last so long, as
To make it worse, he arrives at their
home on the morning of the wed- Delia’s frenzy grows exponentially
ding day. A series of noisily absurd with her inevitable discovery of the
antics don’t begin to define this uninvited guest. She is also in the
egregiously predictable (except for midst of numerous crises that inone final twist) comedy. But who clude getting bail money for the
are we to say that the conservative tardy and currently jailed florist
Coleman family and their plans for and dealing with a caterer who has
the home wedding shouldn’t disin- arrived too early and has put the
tegrate as fast as do the mostly un- shrimp boats out in the blazing sun.
funny jokes that pass for conversa- Director Joe Grifasi’s efforts seem
to be concention or asides?
trated on the
You may asThe aftermath of a
cast posturing
sume correctly
when not oththat the intenddissolved love affair
erwise punched marriage ceris farcically, if also
ing out one-linemony and renonsensically, coners directly to
ception are not
the audience.
destined
for
structed by Black.
Melanie is a
smooth sailing
sexy nurse in
when Ryan, a
loser of no noticeable traits or char- her form-fitting white uniform and
acteristics, arrives at the door to the impractical shoes. She has no comdismay of Courtney’s father Doc punctions about drinking excesColeman (Mark Linn-Baker). sively in the morning, or in ripping
Ryan is soon enough running back Ryan’s towel off. I rather liked the
and forth from the living room to narrative digressions of P.B., a prethe bathroom — all the time trying cocious, hyperkinetic teenager ofto avoid detection while wrapped ten glued to her blaring Walkman.
in a bath towel. Just as absurd is the She serves as the play’s intermitliving room setting designed by tent point-of-view character who
Bob Dahlstrom in which the bath- has things to say about family valroom appears to be an adjunct of ues, Ronald Reagan, and how she
the living room and the cellar door will grow up to be normal and a Recovered in the same floral paper as publican.
The biggest hitch for the audithe walls and used for quick enence is why they should give a hoot
trances and exits.
The ensuing situation is built on about Courtney and whether marthe efforts of Doc Coleman and rying the starchy Harper is really
Courtney’s two sisters, Melanie what she wants. It is not a spoiler to
reveal that Harper turns out to be a
rather standup guy when the inevitable happens. What the audience is mainly confronted with is a
messy convergence of minimally
defined characters who do not invite our curiosity beyond this excellent cast’s ability to the make the
most of insistently puerile material.
Involved with this production
for many years, director Grifasi has
presumably done everything that
can be done to keep the actors in
motion and mindful of their responsibility to stand their ground,
even if it is a lot like quicksand. As
characters without much depth or
definition, they do dispense
Black’s occasionally funny enough
one-liners, as well as expend a lot
of energy in their behalf.
Tocco works hard as the unattractive and unmotivated Ryan to
insure us that there is no accounting for taste or temperament. Benton succeeds in giving us a few isolated glimpses into the kind of conflicted bride-to-be Courtney is purported to be. Broadway veteran
Linn-Baker brings his expert comic timing and endearing personality to his role as the mostly nonplussed Doc Coleman, and Mackay has settled nicely into her role as
the flummoxed always on the
verge of hysteria Delia.
Drummond is called upon to
project the opposite of verve as
Farcical: Mark LinnBaker and Lizbeth
Mackay in ‘One Slight
Hitch.’
Photo by Frank Wojciechowski
Harper, but he gains our empathy
with his humorously rigid performance. I like the cutting neurotic edge in Alsip’s performance as
the sex-obsessed Melanie and also
the free-spirited performance by
Carter as the commendably tolerant P.B. So much for these superficially contrived family types.
If Black has presumably been
fiddling with his script for about 30
years, perhaps we can concede and
be grateful that the recent revisions
made under Grifasi’s supervision
are improvements. Whatever it is
about love and marriage that Black
is trying to sell is best shared by the
parents who provide the play’s one
and only charmingly original idea.
For those in the market to buy,
know that this hitch is definitely
slight but probably also silly
enough to satisfy the minimally demanding.
One Slight Hitch, George
Street Playhouse, 9 Livingston
Avenue, New Brunswick. Through
Sunday, October 28. $44. 732-2467717 or www.GSPonline.org.
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26
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Wine to Please This Artist’s Palate & Palette
‘P
lease sample this
splendid Cabernet Sauvignon. I
think you’ll find it holds a bold
sunrise crimson, moving onto a
rich vermilion, with finishes of
dark mahogany.”
“Oh, yes. And did you notice the
bordering meniscus of dewy
rose?”
Huh? What are these oenophilic
wannabes blithering about?
Wine lovers typically spend untold amounts of time teasing out a
vintage’s varying tastes - granted.
But colors? Well, one only concentrates on tastes if one is imbibing
the wine. Yet if one opts to paint in
this rich medium, then scrutinizing
the liquid’s color palate becomes
much more appropriate.
And who, might you well ask,
wastes perfectly fine wine by setting it to canvass? Innovative and
expert artist Mark Schreiber, for
one of the very few. And if you are
still a bit dubious, visit Ringoesbased Old York Cellars on Saturday October 13 to watch this savory artist performing his grape
creations. A feature of the winery’s
Mixing Palettes Art and Wine plein
air weekend, visitors can also view
more than 30 Schreiber winepainted pictures - that will remain
in the tasting room (appropriately)
through Thanksgiving weekend.
One of the marvelous benefits of
being self-taught is the total inability to recognize what cannot be
performed. Last spring, Old York
Cellars had invited 25 regional
artists to participate in a showing
on their grounds. In walking the
vineyard, one of his fellow exhibitors turned to Schreiber and
asked, “And what medium will you
by Bart Jackson
be using for these muted colors?”
After giving the matter absolutely no thought whatsoever,
Schreiber replied, “I dunno. I guess
I really should try to paint with
wine.” He then went home, popped
a cork, and proceeded to dabble.
Fortunately, Schreiber’s artistic
meanderings had never been subjected to the regimen of a fine arts
school education. No one ever told
him that you cannot paint with
wine. He kept experimenting;
plugging away at this unplowed
ground. His efforts have brought to
fruition an array of assiduously detailed compositions, with a downright surprising range of coloration. Here is no mean monochrome. (Those seeking a tantalizing
foretaste
may
visit
www.markschreiberartist.com.)
Schreiber’s latest medium is not
unique to this artist. Painting with
fruit juices holds its own diminutive niche in the realm of art history. More than 20,000 years ago,
Neanderthalic artists, such as those
in the Lascaux caves, blended a variety of fruit and vegetable
essences. Roman poet Virgil and
Lord Byron both refer to painting
with Dionysus’own fruit. But wine
is not a common dye, primarily because the red color is achieved by
first pressing the juice, then for a
week or so, soaking the skins in the
resulting clear liquid. (That’s how
all those marvelous rich red wines
gain their deep carmine hues.)
Today, a small handful of California artists paint with wine, yet
by comparison, this writer must admit theirs seem, well, a bit sickly
and washed out beside Schreiber’s
bold, sharp-edged offerings.
Red or White?:
Mark Schreiber, pictured outside Old
York Cellars, uses
various wine varietals
to create paintings.
Jokes aside, wine as paint is a lot
more whimsical than imagined.
Start with a richly aromatic, fullbodied Shiraz. Why not a Cab Sav,
Merlot, or Malbec? Because artist
Schreiber likes Shiraz — visually.
While his imbibing tastes may run
more eclectic, he definitely feels
that Shiraz provides the deepest,
most expressive tones on watercolor paper.
The trouble is, of course, that
wine, more than any typical watercolor paints, absorbs outrageously
into the paper. Further, depth of
color can only be achieved from
this monotone substance by continual layering. To create the
smoky dark profile of a large and
ancient oak, Schreiber had to perform eight washes — layerings of
paint.
“It’s painfully time consuming,
Schreiber notes. “Each layer takes
10 minutes to dry sufficiently, after
it’s laid down. I try to take it outside
and let the wind and sun hasten the
process.” In between every two
layers, the artist additionally layers
the painting with a matte fixative to
control the color absorption.
T
ime is, for the family man,
artist, and professional Schreiber,
something in very short supply.
Trained as an architect at the New
Jersey Institute of Technology,
from which he graduated in 1985,
Schreiber now designs at KSD Architects in Cranbury. He also does
freelance architectural illustrating
on the side.
Long before his architect wife,
Heather, arises to commute to her
Philadelphia firm, Schreiber is up
and running his newspaper delivery route. “It’s a job I got when I
was real poor, and honestly I’d love
to get rid of it now,” the busy man
laughs. However, the artist is ever
considering the four children who
light up the couple’s Fairless Hills,
PA, home. Somewhere in here,
Schreiber manages to escape to his
home studio and schedule in all his
art.
Schreiber does not paint representations. He paints ballads.
Some tale, filled with action and
expectation is always happening in
a Schreiber painting, and the viewer invariably enters in the middle of
it. In “Wine Painting III” a covey of
Canada geese have begun settling
in amidst the stubble of a freshly
harvested cornfield seeking to
OCTOBER 10, 2012
glean prospects beneath a shifting
sky.
In another untitled wine painting, sunlight crests distant trees,
bringing visible hope to newly
emergent grape leaves, still young
and translucent on the well tended
vine. “Beautiful City Walk,” with
its amazingly delicate Shiraz shadings, is brought to life with a single
modern maid striding purposefully
between an interplay of horizontal,
vertical, and diagonal parallels. (I
am still impressed with the artist’s
achievement of the mottled sign
painted on the side of the foreground left hand building in this
one.)
Such anticipation and motion
carries through in Schreiber’s more
traditional media, and it reflects the
man himself. A veteran marathon
runner — he’s competed in 13 of
them — he has become familiar
with the canal towpath, both
around Princeton, his former
home, and across the river. His
“Waiting For Breakfast” shows the
sunlit, forested towpath with two
runners training in the background.
In the foreground, a patient, silhouetted great blue heron stands in the
shallow, reflective water, scanning
for the day’s first meal.
Not the first practicing architect
to transition from workman-like
graphics to more expressive media,
Schreiber first picked up a brush at
age 23. Born in Trenton, Mark’s father died before he was 11, which
led, as he puts it, to shifting homes
either side of the Delaware —
Manalapan, Bucks County, Englishtown. Stability and a penchant
to paint came in the late 1980s with
his first professional design job after graduating from NJIT.
“My first paintings were strictly
experimental and for fun,” he says.
Then his sixth composition hit
home. The National Society of
Painters in Casein and Acrylic, taken by Schreiber’s compelling
bird’s-eye vision of three individuals amidst a sewage spill, awarded
it best of show. Surprised and en-
couraged by this national recognition, Schreiber began to paint, and
study, in earnest.
Obsessed with powerful action,
Schreiber studied the works of
Frank Frazetta, famed fantasy and
science fiction artist. Frazetta’s
powerfully muscular men wielding
lethal blades against monstrously
fierce beasts, and loin clothed lasses reining back snarling, giant
saber-toothed cats embraced the
anticipation and motion Schreiber
sought.
Another influence is popular
wildlife artist Robert Bateman. “It
was Bateman’s naturalistic works
that taught me to achieve the clear
sense of line and depth,” Schreiber
says. “And of course, both of these
men led me to (Salvador) Dali, who
just explodes perspective in all directions.”
Those familiar with Schreiber’s
poignantly expressive style may
recall his massive murals. For High
Bridge Township, the artist depicted the area’s founding and history
U.S. 1
A Different Kind of Wine Connoisseur: A image
of leaves created using red wine, left, and ‘Two
Tigers in the Snow,’ an image of Princeton University’s Nassau Hall in white wine.
on a series of seven, six by eight
foot barn doors. Those visiting
Arm & Hammer’s North Harrison
Street office in Princeton may view
Schreiber’s two murals portraying
that firm’s 150-year history. And
many Plainsboro youngsters still
remember Schreiber’s Plainsboro
interactive murals where children
crouched on the library floor and
painted their own pictures, to
which Schreiber added his own abstract background.
Does the media experimentation
stop with wine? Hardly. At my
home Schreiber unveiled, as somewhat of an afterthought to wine
painting, a more amber-toned composition, created by layering washes of Southern Tier Chocolate
Stout. Yes, a beer painting. He held
it to my nose and I could faintly still
catch the finishes of chocolate arising from the art. I stand awed before such artistic innovation, and to
Mr. Schreiber, may we all raise our
glasses and toast a hearty “Shiraz!”
Painting with Wine workshop
with Mark Schreiber, Old York
Cellars, 80 Old York Road, Ringoes. Saturday, October 13, 1:30 to
3:30 p.m. (Rain date: Sunday, October 14). $20 fee covers materials
and wine tasting.
Mixing Palettes: Art and Wine
Weekend. Saturday and Sunday,
October 13 and 14, 12 to 5 p.m.
Plein air artists invited to participate. Free. 908-284-9463 or oldyorkcellars.com.
Thinking
about
Graduate
School?
Rider has the answers you need.
Graduate Open House
Saturday, October 13
8:30 a.m. – Registration • 9:00 a.m. – Program
Lawrenceville, NJ
Get the answers you need with just one visit:
•
•
•
•
27
Meet and talk with faculty about your goals
Get details on how to apply
Discover the difference financial aid can make
Learn about our graduate programs in education, business,
applied psychology and business communication
For details and to register online:
rider.edu/grad
Phone: 609-896-5036 • Toll-Free: 800-257-9026
rider.edu/grad
28
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
The Zimmerli: Cassatt’s Prints & Artful Text
M
any years ago, when
living on the third floor of a brownstone in Brooklyn’s Park Slope, I
would brace myself as the Swedish
landlady and her husband, one
flight below, would have at it. After
receiving the rent check the beautiful landlady would send a thank
you card with a painting of a mother nurturing her child. In Mary Cassatt’s paintings of idyllic motherhood, the landlady could escape
her domestic abuse.
Although by today’s standards
the paintings of mothers and children in domestic settings seem to
emphasize a traditional role for
women, Cassatt (1844-1926) was
something of a feminist in her day.
She went against her family’s
wishes to study art at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
(PAFA), and later moved to Paris to
pursue her art, putting her career
above marriage. Toward the end of
her life, when she could barely see,
she became a suffragette. For more
than 100 years Cassatt has been a
role model for women artists.
Although primarily known for
her colorful paintings and pastels,
Cassatt was also a printmaker. The
Zimmerli Art Museum in New
Brunswick is showcasing 17 drypoints from its renowned collection, as well as five color prints
from a private collection, in “Mary
Cassatt Prints: In the Company of
Women,” on view through March
3, 2013.
“With this exhibition, we focus
on treasures from our collection
that are rarely displayed due to
their inherent fragility as light-sensitive works on paper,” says
Suzanne Delehanty, director of the
by Ilene Dube
Zimmerli. “We continue our tradition of organizing important exhibitions of prints and focusing on
the achievements of women artists.
The works in this exhibition also
complement
the
Zimmerli’s
renowned collection of Japonisme
by demonstrating the important influence of Japanese art on Cassatt’s
print oeuvre.”
Cassatt embarked upon an ambitious project of color intaglio
printmaking inspired by a major
exhibition of Japanese color woodcut prints she saw in Paris in 1890.
One year later, Cassatt exhibited a
set of 10 color aquatints showing
contemporary Parisian women in
the course of their daily activities.
Among the 23 prints in the exhibition are two works from that set,
“The Fitting” and “In the Omnibus,” as well as three other important color prints.
Cassatt was born in what is now
Pittsburgh. Her father was a stockbroker and land speculator, and her
mother came from a family of
bankers. The family moved to
Philadelphia when Mary was six.
Her upper middle class upbringing included travel as a part of her
education. She took lessons in
drawing and music and learned
German and French. In Paris Cassatt was exposed to Ingres,
Delacroix, Corot, and Courbet as
well as Degas and Pissarro, both of
whom would be future colleagues
and mentors.
Back in Philadelphia, at the age
of 15, she began her studies at
PAFA, where Thomas Eakins was a
classmate. Frustrated with drawing
from casts, rather than a live mod-
In Black & White:
‘The Stocking,’ one of
17 dry-point prints by
Mary Cassatt on view
at the Zimmerli Museum at Rutgers.
el, Cassatt moved to Paris and studied privately with masters from the
Ecole des Beaux-Arts, which did
not yet admit women.
She maintained a studio in her
Parisian apartment. Cassatt’s art
reflects her thinking about this living and working arrangement, especially for the women who visit
and entertain, as well as privately
care for their own and their families’ daily activities. The topic will
be explored by Williams College
Museum of Art curator Nancy
Mowll Matthews, who will speak
on “Visiting Mary Cassatt: The
Paris Apartment in Cassatt’s Art,”
Sunday, October 14, at p.m.
Cassatt arrived during a tumultuous time in the French art world,
as artists were breaking away from
the Academy style and Impressionism was getting underway. The
American artist continued in the
traditional style before eventually
finding her way to Impressionism,
taking a sketchbook with her to
record what she saw outside of her
studio.
In 1877 Edgar Degas invited her
to join the group of Impressionist
painters and assumed a mentoring
role in her career. She worked sideby-side with Degas, learning pastels and copper engraving from
him. Inspired by his experiments in
printmaking, Cassatt began making prints of her own. Cassatt broke
new ground as an artist with her
own experimental printmaking
practice, employing drypoint (image is incised into a plate, usually
copper, with a sharp point),
aquatint (the plate is incised with
rosin), and etching (the plate is incised with acid) in innovative combinations.
“Mary Cassatt’s prints stand out
in the crowded field of avant-garde
printmaking during the 1890s. She
found an ideal vehicle for her lucid
depictions
of
contemporary
women when she took up the drypoint needle,” says Christine
Giviskos, associate curator of European Art at the Zimmerli, who organized “In the Company of
Women” with Marilyn Symmes,
director, Morse Research Center
for Graphic Arts and Curator of
Prints and Drawings.
Ultimately Cassatt moved away
from Impressionism toward a simpler, more straightforward style
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OCTOBER 10, 2012
U.S. 1
29
Paper Views: In
‘Four Ways to Blue,’
Jane Hammond uses
Vladimir Nabokov’s
words and finely cut
paper to create the illusion of a live butterfly. Jill Baroff’s untitled ‘tide drawing,’
below, is based on
mathematical equations.
Cassatt’s work is at
the Zimmerli until
March 3, 2013.
‘Art=Text=Art’ is on
view until January 6.
and found her place in tenderly observed scenes of mothers and their
children. She was attracted to the
simplicity and clarity of Japanese
design.
The Zimmerli’s exhibition
showcases Cassatt’s ability to capture the specific moods, relationships, and spaces of the women of
her day. The two girls intently
studying in “The Map,” the dignified young woman in “Reflection,”
and the focused mother and child in
“The Stocking” are just three examples of Cassatt’s mastery in conveying moments of quiet female
intimacy and absorption in
thought.
A
lso on view at the Zimmerli
is “Art=Text=Art,” a fascinating
exhibit of how artists such as Trisha Brown, Dan Flavin, Jasper
Johns, Sol LeWitt, Ed Ruscha,
Richard Serra, Cy Twombly, and
Lawrence Weiner use text, language, and the written word. The
exhibition continues to January 6,
2013.
“‘Art=Text=Art’ features absolutely seminal pieces that are essential to understanding contemporary art and relationships between art and language,” says
Delehanty.
QR codes have become ubiquitous these days — they are even
used on tombstones! — so it is only fitting that one of the works in
“Art=Text=Art” is a QR code.
Scan your QR code reader over it,
and it takes you to the online catalog for “Art=Text=Art.”
The works here are from the collection of Werner and Sarah-Ann
Kramarsky, the nation’s foremost
drawing collectors who are dedicated to sharing their collection
and promoting the importance of
drawing for learning and stimulating imaginative creativity. A goal
for the Kramarskys is to encourage
viewers to draw.
“Art=Text=Art” shows how
artists since the 1960s have revolutionized drawing while incorporating language.
“I hope viewers will pause in the
exhibition to puzzle out how words
have a visual appearance apart
from their powerful verbal meanings, how illegibility can often be
more eloquent than literal interpretation, or how all data visualization
is never a given, but must be constructed,” says Symmes, the Zimmerli’s curator of prints and drawings and director of the Morse Research Center for Graphic Arts,
who oversaw the museum’s installation of “Art=Text=Art.”
One will need to several visits to
the Zimmerli to appreciate
“Art=Text=Art.” The first is needed to take it all in visually, and at
least another visit is needed to read
all the text, and the meta text, of
“Art=Text=Art.”
Text and language are all about
code, and William Anastasi explores this in his “Word Drawing
Over Shorthand Practice Page.”
The symbols for short hand loop
and scroll over the long form of the
words themselves, and the practice
pages are what drawing was once
thought of for painting. But are we
to read and understand these
words, and if so, do they hold
meaning? “Plebiscite,” “poise,”
“histrionic,” “snuggle,” “ravenous.” It reminds this viewer of
word games.
Most of us know Trisha Brown
as a contemporary modern dance
choreographer and performer, but
she has had a decades-long practice
as a visual artist. Here we see pencil drawings on graph paper, but
she does not follow the grid, instead finding her own way through
the order and control.
“Drawing, for Brown, is a form
of mental exercise, a way of attaining the intense focus necessary to
create or perform her works,” according to the catalog. “These
works on paper were meant to convey to her dancers a sense of the
rise and fall of the dance.”
Richard Serra’s rusty steel
sculptures wave and wend their
enormous way through museums,
but in “Art=Text=Art,” we see his
8-by-10-inch lists of verbs. “‘Verb
List’ holds the kernels not only of
the artistic revolution brewing in
American art during the 1960s, but
of the monumental body of work
that Richard Serra has been creating ever since,” writes Delehanty
in the catalog. “Serra made ‘Verb
List’shortly after he moved to New
York in 1966, following two years
of travel and study in Europe. Living in New York’s then rough-andready Soho district, he was part of a
circle of artists, musicians,
dancers, and filmmakers who were
breaking down the boundaries between painting, sculpture, drawing, performance, and film to create works of art that directly reflect
the artist’s actions and engage the
viewer.”
Serra was in his late 20s when he
created “Verb List” in 1967-’68. At
the time, he did not consider it a
work of art but thought of it as a
way of figuring out his own direction as a young artist. In a recent interview, Serra said: “The ‘Verb
List’ gave me a subtext for my experiments with materials. The
problem I was trying to resolve in
my early work was: How do you
apply an activity or a process to a
material and arrive at a form that
refers back to its own making?
That reference was mostly established by line. In a sense you can’t
form anything without drawing.”
The exhibition’s online catalog
includes essays about each work by
39 contributors. Artists’ books that
can only be seen partially in the
gallery are shown here in full digital format.
“Since the beginning of civilization, humankind has created systems of words and images to capture an ever-expanding realm of
knowledge and experience,” writes
Delehanty in the forward, citing
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Sumerian cuneiform tablets,
Egyptian hieroglyphics, the manuscripts of the Middle Ages, and the
invention of the first printed page.
“When Picasso and the Cubists attached fragments of actual newspapers to their drawings in the
opening years of the 20th century,
they challenged us to adopt new
ways of seeing and thinking.”
Visiting Mary Cassatt: The
Paris Apartment in Cassatt’s
Art, Zimmerli Art Museum, 71
Hamilton Street, New Brunswick.
Sunday, October 14, 2 p.m. $10
general admission.
Mary Cassatt Prints: In the
Company of Women. Through
March 3, 2013.
Art=Text=Art. Through January 6, 2013. For more information,
visit www.zimmerlimuseum.rutgers.edu/about/visit-us
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30
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
October 13
Continued from page 24
Dancing
Ballroom and Latin Dancing, Joy2Dance
Studio, 178 Route 206, Hillsborough, 908431-5146. Class followed by a social. For
singles and couples. $15. 7 p.m.
English Country Dance, Princeton Country Dancers, Suzanne Patterson Center,
Monument Drive, 609-924-6763. Instruction
followed by dance. $10. 7:30 to 11 p.m.
International Dance Sport Night, G&J
Studios, 5 Jill Court, Suite 15, Hillsborough, 908-892-0344. www.gandjstudios.com. Ballroom and Latin dancing with the
Chinese Association. $12. 8 p.m.
Literati
Author Event, Classics Used and Rare
Books, 4 West Lafayette Street, Trenton,
609-394-8400. Holly Mertz, author of
“Killing the Poormaster: True Story of Depression Era Murder in Hoboken.” Noon.
Good Causes
Clothing Drive, High School North, 90
Grovers Mill Road, Plainsboro, 609-7165100. Bring clothing, shoes, hats, belts,
handbags, stuffed toys, and linens to the
loading docks to benefit the post-prom
event. Place items in a plastic bag. Tax deductible receipts are available. 9 a.m. to 3
p.m.
Silent Auction, Groveville Christian
Women, 449 Church Street, Groveville,
609-931-9185. $10 includes lunch and
door prizes. Benefit for area missions.
Noon.
Tricky Tray, Sammy’s Hope, Edison Senior
Center, 2963 Woodbridge Avenue, Edison,
732-993-8009. Benefit for the animal rescue group. $10 includes tickets and light refreshments. Must be 18 or older. E-mail
[email protected]. 6 to 10 p.m.
Benefit Evening, Trinity Church, 33 Mercer Street, Princeton, 609-924-2277. Hors
d’oeuvres, cocktails, door prizes, music,
and a silent auction benefit the church’s
choir trip to London. $20 to $25. 7 to 10
p.m.
Benefit Galas
2012: The Year of the Water Dragon,
Stony Brook Millstone Watershed, 31 Titus Mill Road, Pennington, 609-737-7592.
www.thewatershed.org. Benefit evening includes a cocktail hour, hors d’oeuvres,
silent and live auctions, and dinner. Black
tie. $200. 6:30 p.m.
Comedy
Ryan Maher, Catch a Rising Star, Hyatt
Regency, 102 Carnegie Center, West
Windsor, 609-987-8018. Register. $22.
7:30 and 9:30 p.m.
Fairs & Festivals
Cultural Festival, Mercer County Cultural
and Heritage, Mercer County Park, West
Windsor, 609-278-2712. www.mercercounty.org. Celebrate diverse cultures
through traditional food, cultural music, and
dance performances. Work by artists exploring the art heritage of culture include
Mexican, Chinese, Indian, Polish, Jamaican, Irish, African American, Greek,
Puerto Rican, and Italian. Rain date is Sunday, October 14. Free admission and parking. 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Himalayan Culture: Dan
Mead and Sally Eagle exhibit
photos at Princeton Day
School in ‘Bhutan: Land of
the Thunder Dragon.’ A reception takes place Monday,
October 15, at 12:30 p.m.
Performers include Philadelphia Mandolin
and Guitar Ensemble, NogBhoys,
Sabrosongo, Odessa Klezmer BAnd, Son
7, Chin Yun Chorus. Spook Handy is emcee for the event. Art representing Egypt,
China, Germany, West Africa, and
Guatemala.
Faith
Women’s Red Tent Service and Hike, Har
Sinai Temple, Baldpate Mountain, Titusville, 609-730-8100. Breakfast, hike up
the mountain, morning service. wear comfortable shoes and a jacket. Bring a chair
or blanket. An easier foot is available by
car. Register. $10. 9:30 a.m.
Speaker Series, Voices of September 11,
84 Albany Street, New Brunswick, 732-5432300. www.voicesofsept11.org. “Coming
Home to Yourself: The Rubenfeld Synergy
Method” with Joe Weldon and Noel Wight.
Register. Free. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Food & Dining
Oktoberfest, Central Jersey Masonic
Center, 345 River Road, Montgomery, 609412-7235. German meal, German music,
and German beers. $10. 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Harvest Celebration, Whole Foods Market, Windsor Green Shopping Center, West
Windsor, 609-799-2919. www.wholefoods.com. Sample curried butternut soup and
pumpkin bread pudding. Decorate a Halloween pumpkin. Free. Noon.
Farm Markets
Farmers’ Market, Metuchen Chamber of
Commerce, Pearl Street, Metuchen, 609619-9365. www.metuchenfarmersMarket.com. Produce, wine, food products, and
more. 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Farmers’ Market, Montgomery Friends of
Open Space, Village Shopping Center,
1340 Route 206 South, Skillman, 609-4300805. www.montgomeryfriends.org. Produce, poultry, eggs, beef, flowers, herbs,
pies, coffee, honey, and more. 9 a.m. to 1
p.m.
West Windsor Community Farmers’ Market, Vaughn Drive Parking Lot, Princeton
Junction Train Station, 609-933-4452.
www.westwindsorfarmersmarket.org. Produce, flowers, baked goods, and music. 9
a.m. to 1 p.m.
Blood Drives
American Red Cross, Central Jersey
Donor Center, 707 Alexander Road, West
Windsor, 800-448-3543. www.redcrossblood.org. 7 a.m. to 2 p.m.
South Brunswick Community Blood
Bank, South Brunswick Community Center, 124 New Road, Monmouth Junction,
732-297-3198. www.redcrossblood.org. 10
a.m. to 4 p.m.
Wellness
Community Yoga, Integral Yoga of
Princeton, 613 Ridge Road, Monmouth
Junction, 732-274-2410. www.integralyogaprinceton.org. Free. 8 and 9:45 a.m.
Communicate with Angels, Center for Relaxation and Healing, 666 Plainsboro
Road, Suite 635, Plainsboro, 609-7507432. Workshop with Judy Toma taps into
your psychic abilties. Practice using oracle
cards. Register. $45. 10 a.m. to 1:15 p.m.
T’ai Chi Ch’uan, Todd Tieger, Plainsboro
Library, 9 Van Doren, Plainsboro, 609-4398656. All levels. Free. 10 a.m.
Prenatal Yoga, Yoga Above, 80 Nassau
Street, Princeton, 609-613-1378. www.yogaabove.com. $25. 10 to 11:30 a.m.
Martial Arts Workshop, Princeton Academy of Martial Arts, 14 Farber Road, West
Windsor, 609-452-2208. www.pamausa.com. Rick Tucci presents Silat, an exotic
martial art from Indonesia. Register. 10:30
a.m. to 4 p.m.
Wine Tasting and Yoga, Crossing Vineyards and Winery, 1853 Wrightstown
Road, Washington Crossing, PA, 215-4936500. www.crossingvineyards.com.
Vinyasa yoga class for all levels followed by
a wine tasting and private tour. Bring a yoga mat. Register. $35. 11:30 a.m.
History
Colonial Trades, William Trent House, 15
Market Street, Trenton, 609-989-0087.
www.williamtrenthouse.org. Blacksmithing,
apple pressing, household skills, colonial
toys and games, pumpkin painting, and
tours of the restored house and kitchen
garden. No rain date. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Guided Tours, Historic Society of Hamilton, Historic John Abbott II House, 2200
Kuser Road, Hamilton, 609-585-1686.
Tours of the historic home. Donations invited. Noon to 5 p.m.
Civil War and Native American Museum,
Camp Olden, 2202 Kuser Road, Hamilton,
609-585-8900. www.campolden.org. Exhibits featuring Civil War soldiers from New
Jersey including their original uniforms,
weapons, and medical equipment. Diorama of the Swamp Angel artillery piece and
Native American artifacts. Free. 1 to 4 p.m.
For Families
Young Eagles Day, Experimental Aircraft
Association, Trenton Mercer Airport,
Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-462-2236. For
ages 8 to 17 to fly with an FAA certified pilot
from the Experimental Aircraft Association.
Parents or guardian must sign a permission
slip. Activities for all ages include an aviation ground school. Adults are welcome.
Free. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Fall Family Fun, Terhune Orchards, 330
Cold Soil Road, Lawrenceville, 609-9242310. Wagon rides, corn stalk maze, adventure barn, and music. Rain or shine.
Food available. Wine tasting. “Picture Perfect at Terhune Orchards,” a photography
exhibit, on view. Mountain View with music
from noon to 4 p.m. Alpacas and their
breeders present toys, fibers, and clothing
for sale. $5 admission. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
House of Horrors, Middlesex County 4-H,
645 Cranbury Road, East Brunswick, 732398-5261. Haunted house with ghosts and
goblins. Benefit for Project Gift, a project to
help 200 limited resource families buy gifts
for their children at no cost to themselves.
$4. 7 to 11 p.m.
For Teens
New Jersey Regional Conference, Junior
State of America, Princeton University,
732-658-5199. midatlantic.jsa.org. “Election 2012: Beyond the Ballot Box” includes
discussions and debates about political issues that surround the presidential election. Thea Ma, a student at West WindsorPlainsboro High School North, is vice mayor and one of the event organizers. $5. 9
a.m. to 3 p.m.
Lectures
Beginning Farmer Program, Northeast
Organic Farming Association, 334 River
Road, Hillsborough, 908-371-1111. www.nofanj.org. Open house for a farm education day. Free. E-mail [email protected]
for information. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Football Lecture Series, Princeton University, 120 Lewis Library, 609-258-8280.
princeton.edu. “Tooth Tattoos and Other
Biointerfaced Nanodevices” with Michael
McAlpine, assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, Princeton
University. Register by E-mail to [email protected]. Princeton vs. Brown
football follows. 10 a.m.
PC Clinic, South Brunswick Library, 110
Kingston Lane, Monmouth Junction, 732329-4000. Bring your computer and power
cord; monitor not needed. Cure is not guaranteed. No Macs. Register. Free. 1:30 p.m.
Outdoor Action
Saturday Morning Birding, Mercer County Park Commission, Mercer Meadows,
Federal City Road, Lawrenceville, 609303-0706. Visit birding hotspots with Tyler
Christensen. Bring binoculars. For ages 12
and up. Free. 8:30 a.m.
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Bird Walk, Mercer County Park
Commission, Baldpate Mountain, Pleasant Valley Road, 609883-6606. www.mercercounty.org. Bring binoculars. Free. 8:30
a.m.
Canal Walk 2012, Friends of the
Delaware Canal, Indian Rock Inn
to Point Pleasant, 215-862-2021.
www.fodc.org. The guided walking tour in five segments of a 56mile walk. Bring a light lunch and
beverage. Transportation back to
the starting point will be arranged
through carpooling. Register.
Free. Week two is a 13.2 mile
walk. 9 a.m.
Corn Harvest, Howell Living History Farm, 70 Wooden’s Lane,
Lambertville, 609-737-3299. Help
farmers harvest corn in the fields,
shell and grind corn, and make
cornbread in the farmhouse
kitchen. The four-acre corn maze
will be open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Princeton Canal Walkers, Turning Basin Park, Alexander Road,
Princeton, 609-896-0546. Threemile walk on the towpath. Bad
weather cancels. Free. 10 a.m.
Fall Farm Festival, Corner Copia
Farm Market, 299 PrincetonHightstown Road, East Windsor,
609-426-8884. www.cornercopia.com. Pumpkin painting contest, hayrides, pumpkin picking,
petting, zoo, bounce castle, and
music by Kim Yarson Band. Refreshments available. 11 a.m.
Corn Maze Harvest, Howell Living History Farm, 70 Wooden’s
Lane, Lambertville, 609-7373299. www.howellfarm.org. The
maze, whose two plus miles of
pathways in the shape of a barn
owl, offers challenges with puzzle
pieces. $8. Noon to 8 p.m.
Corner of Chaos Haunt, Corner
Copia Farm Market, 299 Princeton-Hightstown Road, East Windsor, 609-426-8884. www.cornercopia.com. A Tour of Terror, Fright
Tour, Haunt World, and more. $13
to $40. 7 p.m.
Ghost Tour, Princeton Tour
Company, Witherspoon and
Nassau streets, 609-902-3637.
www.princetontourcompany.com.
$20. 8 p.m.
Colleges
Culinary Center, Mercer County
Community College, Conference Center, West Windsor, 609586-0505. www.mccc.edu. “Knife
Skills” includes techniques and
garnishes. Register. $79 includes
demonstration, hands-on practice, sampling, and an eight-inch
chef’s knife. 2 p.m.
Shopping News
Yard Sale, St. Gregory the Great,
4680 Nottingham Way, Hamilton
Square, 609-587-1131. Bring
your own table or set up on the
ground. $25 per space. 8 a.m. to
12:30 p.m.
Rummage Sale, Slackwood
Presbyterian Church, 2020
Brunswick Avenue, Lawrenceville, 609-392-3258. 8:30 a.m. to
3 p.m.
Flea Market, Bordentown Elks,
11 Amboy Road, Bordentown,
609-298-2085. Rain date is October 20. $15 per space. 9 a.m. to 2
p.m.
Book Sale, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street,
609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Annual sale of paperback, softcover, and hardcover
books; DVDs; and CDs. 9 a.m. to
5:30 p.m.
Flea Market and Bake Sale,
Princeton United Methodist
Church, Nassau and Vandeventer Streets, Princeton, 609-9242613. www.princetonumc.org.
Vendor space available. 9 a.m. to
3 p.m.
Multi Family Yard Sale and Open
House, Somerset Valley Players, 689 Amwell Road, Hillsborough, 908-369-8437. www.svptheatre.org. Shop, sell, buy tickets. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Rummage Sale, St. Matthews,
300 South Main Street, Pennington. www.stmatthewspennington.org. Gently used
clothing, shoes, and accessories;
sports equipment, small electronics, housewares, and more. $10
bag sale from 6 to 8 p.m. 9 a.m.
Singles
Dance and Social, Professional
and Business Singles Network,
Havana, 105 South Main Street,
New Hope, PA, 610-384-5544.
Meet and greet followed by dance
and social featuring Horn Dance
Band and Soul Purpose. For ages
40 to 69. Cocktail mixer, DJ, cash
bar. $15. 7:30 p.m.
Sports
Open House, Princeton Skating
Club, Rink, Princeton Day
School, 650 Great Road, Princeton. www.princetonskatingclub.org. Information about group and
private lessons for adults and children of all ages and abilities. Free
ice time. Skate rentals available.
11:15 a.m. to 1:15 p.m.
Princeton Football, Princeton
Stadium, 609-258-3538. Brown.
Noon.
Sports for Causes
Race to Restore, Preservation
New Jersey, PEAC Health & Fitness, 1440 Lower Ferry Road,
Ewing, 609-392-6409. www.preservationnj.org. 5K run and
walk to benefit the restoration of
the historical 1867 Sanctuary at
Ewing. Business and art expo, activities for families and individuals,
refreshments, and a farmers’ market. Register. 8:15 a.m. to 4:30
p.m.
5K and Kids Fun Run, Jersey’s
Hope for Hearing, 320 Sullivan
Way, Ewing, 609-731-7022.
www.jerseyshopeforhearing.com.
For all ages. Benefit for New Jersey School for the Deaf. Register.
$20 to $30. 9 a.m.
Tennis Party, Eden Autism Services, Princeton Day School,
609-987-0099.Tennis round robin
with professional players and top
ranked juniors from the area. Exhibition. Instruction for adults and
children. $25 donation includes a
t-shirt. The event is organized by
Samantha Asch, a senior at PDS.
E-mail [email protected] for information. 1 to 5 p.m.
Sunday
October 14
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
For Book Worms
Book Sale, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street,
609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Annual sale of paperback, softcover, and hardcover
books; DVDs; and CDs. Fill a bag
for $5. Half price sale from 3 to
5:30 p.m. 1 to 5:30 p.m.
U.S. 1
31
God & Science: Rabbi Jonathan Sacks of
the United Hebrew
Congregation of the
Commonwealth lectures and signs books
on Wednesday, October 17, at 7:30 p.m. at
Princeton University’s
Friend Center.
Classical Music
Jazz Sundays, Princeton University Chapel, Princeton campus,
609-258-3654.Free. 11 a.m.
Guild for Early Music, Grounds
For Sculpture, 126 Sculptors
Way, Hamilton, 609-586-0616.
Music from the medieval, renaissance, baroque, and Early American eras. The program includes a
dozen ensembles, instrumental
and vocal. There will also be
strolling musicians in the park and
exhibition buildings. WWFM Classical Network introduces performers. $12 includes admission to the
park. Noon to 5:30 p.m.
Reception and Tea, Princeton
Friends of Opera, Smith House,
400 Sayre Drive, Plainsboro, 609734-0141. “American Opera and
Operetta.” Refreshments. Register. $10. 3 p.m.
Mark Moliterno, Westminster
Choir College, Bristol Chapel,
101 Walnut Lane, Princeton, 609921-2663. www.rider.edu/arts.
Bass baritone performs a program of works by Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, and more. Free. 3
p.m.
Westminster Community Orchestra, Westminster Conservatory, Princeton Presbyterian
Church, 545 Meadow Road, West
Windsor, 609-258-9220. www.rider.edu/arts. “Music Moves and
Takes Us Places,” a family concert with works by Bach,
Beethoven, Elgar, and RimskyKorsakov. Also performance by
students in the Conservatory
Suzuki violin program. Conducted
by Ruth Ochs. $15. 3 p.m.
Continued on following page
32
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
All Classical: The
Curtis Symphony Orchestra plays Strauss
and Tchaikovsky on
Friday, October 12, at
3 p.m. in Richardson
Auditorium.
October 14
Continued from preceding page
Piano Recital, College of New
Jersey, Mayo Concert Hall, 2000
Pennington Road, Ewing, 609771-2585. www.tcnj.edu. Marvin
Blickenstaff performs. Free. 5
p.m.
Live Music
Joseph A. Ricciardi, DDS, PC
Family, Cosmetic and Implant Dentistry
HEALTHY LIVING
Gentle, Comprehensive Dental Care
• Composite (White) Fillings
• Root Canal Therapy
• Crowns, Bridges
• Extractions
• Non-surgical
Gum Treatments
• Whitening
• Veneers
• Implant Dentistry
• Digital X-Rays
• Nitrous Oxide
609-586-6688
Evening and Saturday Appointments Available
University Office Plaza II
3705 Quakerbridge Rd.
Suite 203 • Hamilton, NJ
HEALTHY TEETH
DISTINCTIVE FLORAL DESIGNS
Events ~ Weddings ~ Mitzvahs
Custom Holiday Décor Services
Richard J. Kisco
- designer dD
Lawrenceville, NJ 08648
609.512.1521 | c. 609.504.1941
[email protected]
www.richardsdfd.com
Dick Gratton, Allentown Fall
Harvest Festival, Main Street, Allentown. Solo jazz guitar. 11 a.m.
to 3 p.m.
Ninth Birthday Party, Crossing
Vineyards and Winery, 1853
Wrightstown Road, Washington
Crossing, PA, 215-493-6500. Eric
Mintel Quartet with jazz from 1 to
5 p.m. Noon to 6 p.m.
Jazzy Sundays, Hopewell Valley
Vineyards, 46 Yard Road, Pennington, 609-737-4465. Wine by
the glass or bottle, brick oven pizza, and cheese platters are available. The Jazz Group Four. 2 to 5
p.m.
Blue Jersey Band, Community
Concert Association of Bordentown, Bordentown Middle
School, 50 Dunns Mill Road, Bordentown, 609-954-8130. “Django,
Djazz, and Bluegrazz.” $15. 3
p.m.
Cotton, Alchemist & Barrister,
28 Witherspoon Street, Princeton,
609-924-5555. 9 p.m.
Kid is Qual, John & Peter’s, 96
South Main Street, New Hope,
215-862-5981. 9:30 p.m.
Art
Art Exhibit, Gallery 14, 14 Mercer
Street, Hopewell, 609-333-8511.
www.photogallery14.com. Meet
the photographers in conjunction
with “Cityscapes” by Charles
Miller and Richard Tanner; “Nantucket” by India Blake; and “Recent Work” by Kenneth
Kaplowitz.” On view to November
11. Noon to 5 p.m.
Gallery Talk and Highlight Tour,
Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton campus, 609-2583788. Free. 2 p.m.
Art Lecture, Zimmerli Art Museum, George and Hamilton
streets, New Brunswick, 732-9327237. “Visiting Mary Cassatt: The
Paris Apartment in Cassatt’s Art”
presented by Nancy Mowll
Matthews, senior curator of 19th
and 20th century art emerita at
Williams College Museum of Art.
She will provide the personal and
professional context for the two
major print portfolios that Cassatt
produced in 1890 and 1891, including the rare set of 12 drypoints that is the centerpiece of
the exhibition, “Mary Cassatt
Prints: In the Company of
Women.” Register by E-mail to
[email protected].
$10. 2 p.m.
Art Exhibit, Garden State Watercolor Society, Prallsville Mill,
Stockton, 609-394-4000. www.gardenstatewatercolorsociety.org. Gallery talk, walk, and discussion by Charles McVicker. 3
p.m.
Art Exhibit, Michener Art Museum, 138 South Pine Street,
Doylestown, 215-340-9800.
www.michenerartmuseum.org.
“Drawing the Line: A Symposium
on the State of Editorial Cartoons”
presented by Auth, Jules Feiffer,
and Joel Pett. 3 p.m.
Art Symposium, Michener Art
Museum, 138 South Pine Street,
Doylestown, 215-340-9800.
www.michenerartmuseum.org.
“Drawing the Line: A Symposium
on the State of Editorial Cartoons”
presented by Auth, Jules Feiffer,
and Joel Pett in conjunction with
“To Stir, Inform, and Inflame: The
Art of Tony Auth,” an exhibit featuring more than 100 original cartoons. Register. $25. 3 p.m.
Art Exhibit, West Windsor Arts
Council, 952 Alexander Road,
West Windsor, 609-716-1931.
www.westwindsorarts.org. Opening reception for “Outloud: A Collective of Washington, D.C., Abstract Artists.” On view to November 21. “My Kid Can Do That —
Or So You Think: The Aesthetics
of Abstractions,” a gallery talk by
Julia Myers, a professor of art and
West Windsor resident. 3 to 5
p.m.
Dance
An Evening of Dance and Film,
Mason Gross School of the
Arts, Loree Dance Theater, 70
Lipman Drive, New Brunswick,
732-932-7511. “Box Solo” and
“Rushes Plus.” featuring Jessica
Coldber in conjunction with “The
Fertile Crescent: Gender, Art, and
Society.” Free. 6 p.m.
On Stage
The Wildest: Hip, Cool, and
Swinging, Off-Broadstreet Theater, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell, 609-466-2766.
www.off-broadstreet.com. Musical inspired by Louis Prima and
Keeley Smith. $29.50 to $31.50
includes dessert. 1:30 p.m.
A Chorus Line, Paper Mill Playhouse, 22 Brookside Drive, Millburn, 973-376-4343.Musical set
during an audition for a Broadway
show focuses on the hopes,
fears, and dreams of performers.
Directed by Mitzi Hamilton, one of
the dancers in the original workshop that inspired the musical.
$26 to $97. 1:30 and 7 p.m.
One Slight Hitch, George Street
Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue,
New Brunswick, 732-246-7717.
www.gsponline.org. New Jersey
premiere of a modern farce by
Lewis Black stars Mark Linn-Baker. $25 to $62. 2 and 7 p.m.
Next to Normal, Kelsey Theater,
Mercer County Community
College, 1200 Old Trenton Road,
West Windsor, 609-570-3333.
Musical with a contemporary
score about a woman diagnosed
with a mental illness and her family’s struggles. Presented by Pierrot Productions. $18. 2 p.m.
Vanya and Sonia and Masha and
Spike, McCarter Theater
(Berlind), 91 University Place,
Princeton, 609-258-2787. Comedy about life in Bucks County in a
new play by Christopher Durang.
Nicholas Martin directs. Actors include David Hyde Pierce and
Sigourney Weaver. Co-production with Lincoln Center Theater,
where it will play following its
Princeton run. $20 to $72. Final
performance. 2 p.m.
And the Winner Is, Villagers
Theater, 475 DeMott Lane, Somerset, 732-873-2710. Drama by
Mitch Albom. $12. 2 p.m.
Nine, Westminster Choir College, Yvonne Theater, Rider University, Lawrenceville, 609-9212663. www.rider.edu. Musical
based on Fellini’s semi-autobiographic film “8 1/2.” $20. 2 p.m.
Oleanna, Bristol Riverside Theater, 120 Radcliffe Street, Bristol,
215-785-0100. Drama by David
Mamet focuses on a professor, a
student, and sexual politics. $35
to $42. Final performance. 3 p.m.
Film
Matinees, Ewing Library, 61
Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-8823130. Screening of “Mirror Mirror.” 2 p.m.
Acme Screening Room, Lambertville Public Library, 25
South Union Street, Lambertville,
609-397-0275. www.acmescreeningroom.ticketleap.com.
Screening of “Sourlands” by
Jared Flesher. $8. 5 p.m.
Dancing
Dinner Dance, German American Club, 215 Uncle Pete’s
Road, Hamilton, 856-764-3106.
Monday Blues Jazz Orchestra, a
23-member ensemble, performs.
Full menu available. Reservation
suggested. $15. 3 to 7 p.m.
Ballroom Blitz, Central Jersey
Dance Society, Suzanne Patterson Center, 45 Stockton Street,
Princeton, 609-945-1883. www.centraljerseydance.org. Waltz
with Candace Woodward-Clough
followed by social dance. No partner needed. Refreshments. $12.
4 p.m.
Tango and Salsa, Joy2Dance
Studio, 178 Route 206, Hillsborough, 908-431-5146. www.joy2dance.com. Argentine tango
class at 5 p.m. Salsa and bachata
at 6 p.m. No partner needed. $15.
5 p.m.
Literati
Poetry Basics Workshop, Center for Relaxation and Healing,
666 Plainsboro Road, Suite 635,
Plainsboro, 609-750-7432. www.relaxationandhealing.com. Tap
into your inner poet with Conny
Jasper. Bring a journal or notebook. Register. $25. 11 a.m. to
1:30 p.m.
Poetry Sampler, Geraldine R.
Dodge Poetry Festival, Prudential Hall, NJPAC, Newark. www.dodgepoetry.org. E-mail [email protected] for information.
1 p.m.
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Author Series: Fall Into Inspiration, Franklin Township Cultural Arts, Van Liew-Suydam
House, 280 South Middlebush
Road, Somerset, 609-577-3847.
www.franklincac.org. Paul Muldoon, Pulitzer Prize winning poet.
His next book, “The Word on the
Street: Rock Lyrics,” will be released in February. He is a professor at Princeton University.
Register. $7. 2 to 4 p.m.
Author Event, Princeton Jewish
Center, 435 Nassau Street,
Princeton, 609-921-1944. www.thejewishcenter.org. Rabbi Dov
Peretz Elkins, author of “Simple
Actions for Jews to Help Green
the Planet: Jews, Judaism, and
the Environment,” will launch his
newest book. Elkins is rabbi
emeritus of the Jewish Center
and author of more than 35
books. 4 to 5:30 p.m.
Good Causes
Mazie Mae Memorial Benefit,
Mid Atlantic Bulldog Rescue,
Veteran’s Park, Kuser Road,
Hamilton, 609-475-5284. Dog fun
walk, silent auction, temporary
tattoos, dog costume contest, K-9
demonstration by Mercer County
sheriff, exhibitors, and a DJ. Food
available. Benefit for bulldog rescue. Well behaved and healthy
dogs are welcome. $15. 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m.
A Night in the Village, Lawrenceville Main Street, 17 Phillips Avenue, Lawrenceville, 609-2199300. Walking restaurant and art
tour with live music from
Stringzville, goodie bags, and
specialties from area restaurants.
Two tours. BYOB. Rain or shine.
Wear comfortable shoes. Register. $50. 4 and 6 p.m.
Faith
Renaissance Group, Har Sinai
Temple, 2421 Pennington Road,
Pennington, 609-730-8100.
www.harsinai.org. Brunch and
theater for senior group. “I’ve Got
a Crush on You,” a musical revue
performed by Philly Senior Stage.
Register. $10. 11:30 a.m.
U.S. 1
33
Friendship Circle, Mercer
Friends, Brunswick Zone Carolier, 790 Route 1, North Brunswick,
609-683-7240. www.mercerfriends.com. Bowling for Jewish
adults with special needs. Register. $5. 6 p.m.
Original Mind Zen Sangha, Fellowship in Prayer, 291 Witherspoon Street, Princeton. www.originalmindzen.com. Zen meditation and Buddhist services.
Free. 6:45 to 9 p.m.
Wellness
Classes, Onsen For All, 4451
Route 27, Princeton, 609-9244800. www.onsenforall.com. Introduction to yoga at 9:15 a.m.
Gentle yoga at 10:25 a.m. Multilevel yoga at 11:30 a.m. Register.
$15 each. 9:15 a.m.
Wah!, Integral Yoga Institute
Princeton, 613 Ridge Road,
Monmouth Junction, 732-2742410. www.iyiprinceton.com. Yoga with savasana music and informal chanting from 11 a.m. to 2
p.m. Healing workshop from 5 to
7:30 p.m. Class, $30; workshop,
$35; both, $60. 11 a.m.
Women’s Self Discovery Circle,
Music Together, 225 Hopewell
Pennington Road, Hopewell, 908208-4453. Reflection and introspection expressed through personal writing that is not shared
with others. Register. 1 to 4 p.m.
Yoga in the Museum, Ellarslie,
Trenton City Museum, Cadwalader Park, 609-989-1191.
www.ellarslie.org. “Recharge
Body and Spirit” presented by
Christine Donahue. Bring your
own mat. Register. $15. 5 to 7
p.m.
History
Candle Making, Princeton Battlefield Society, 500 Mercer
Street, Princeton, 609-921-0074.
www.theprincetonbattlefieldsociety.com. Demonstrations using both casting and dipping
methods. Historians talk about
materials used and demonstra-
tion other lighting devices. Clarke
House and exhibits are open for
tours. Free. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Guided Tours, Historic Society
of Hamilton, Historic John Abbott
II House, 2200 Kuser Road,
Hamilton, 609-585-1686. Tours of
the historic home. Donations invited. Noon to 5 p.m.
Civil War and Native American
Museum, Camp Olden, 2202
Kuser Road, Hamilton, 609-5858900. www.campolden.org. Exhibits featuring Civil War soldiers
from New Jersey including their
original uniforms, weapons, and
medical equipment. Diorama of
the Swamp Angel artillery piece
and Native American artifacts.
Free. 1 to 4 p.m.
Open House, Historical Society
of West Windsor, Schenck
House, 50 Southfield Road, West
Windsor, 609-799-1278. Selfguided tour of 1790-1830 farmhouse with rooms decorated in
various periods, an exhibit of
‘Jersey Boys’ Reunion: The Midtown Men perform at the State Theater in New Brunswick on
Thursday, October 11, at 3 p.m.
West Windsor history, and more.
The English-Dutch barn, outhouse, one room schoolhouse,
corn crib, and other farm buildings
on view. Donations welcome. 1 to
4 p.m.
Art Exhibit, Ellarslie, Trenton
City Museum, Cadwalader Park,
609-989-3632. www.ellarslie.org.
Gallery walk with Francois
Guillemin in conjunction with
“Naturally Man-Made, in Full
View: The Art of Le Corbeau,” a
retrospective featuring 53 sculptural items from a lifetime of art
making by the artist known as le
Corbeau. A West Coast native,
Guillemin made jewelry while
studying forestry in culture, and
then moved on to sculpture, and
later furniture and decorative objects. He adopted the name le
Corbeau while spending time with
Native Americans in Sante Fe.
Each person adopted a persona
and his name stuck. He moved to
the East coast to work at the
Johnson Atelier, established his
own studio in 1985, and created a
larger studio and metal production facility in Hopewell in 2007.
On view to November 4. 2 p.m.
Walking Tour, Historical Society
of Princeton, Bainbridge House,
158 Nassau Street, Princeton,
609-921-6748. www.princetonhistory.org. Two-hour walking tour
of downtown Princeton and
Princeton University includes stories about the early history of
Princeton, the founding of the
University, and the American Revolution. $7; $4 for ages 6 to 12. 2
to 4 p.m.
Continued on page 35
34
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OCTOBER 10, 2012
OCTOBER 10, 2012
October 14
Continued from page 33
For Families
Fall Family Fun, Terhune Orchards, 330 Cold Soil Road,
Lawrenceville, 609-924-2310.
www.terhuneorchards.com. Wagon rides, corn stalk maze, adventure barn, and music. Rain or
shine. Food available. Wine tasting. “Picture Perfect at Terhune
Orchards,” a photography exhibit,
on view. Heavy Traffic Blue Grass
Band with music from noon to 4
p.m. $5 admission. Alpacas and
their breeders present toys,
fibers, and clothing for sale. 10
a.m. to 5 p.m.
For Parents
Parenting Workshop, West
Windsor Library, 333 North Post
Road, 609-799-0462. “Parenting
with Joy and Wisdom” presented
by Shaheen Hamid, certified parenting and relationships coach. 2
p.m.
For Teens
Teen Meeting for Summer Volunteers, Princeton United
Methodist Church, Nassau at
Vandeventer Street, Princeton,
609-924-2613. Information night
for annual service trip for youth in
grades 9 to 12 with the Appalachia Service Project. Preparation is an eight month process
with classes, skills, and fundraising. 7 p.m.
Lectures
Hip Hop as a Tool, Hip Hop
Cares for Kids Networks Studios, 18 East Paul Avenue, Trenton. “Hip Hop as a Tool for Improving Inner-City Youth Educational Achievement” presented by
Umar Johnson, author of “The
Death and Rebirth of Hip Hop as
a Tool for Improving Inner-City
Youths’ Educational Achievement
and Social Development, Volume
I.” Register to [email protected]. $25. 2 to 5 p.m.
Outdoor Action
Flower to Tower 5K, Bowman’s
Hill Wildflower Preserve, River
Road, New Hope, 215-862-2924.
www.bhwp.org. Run or one mile
walk to benefit conservation, environmental education, and stewardship programs. 7:30 a.m.
Corn Maze Harvest, Howell Living History Farm, 70 Wooden’s
Lane, Lambertville, 609-7373299. www.howellfarm.org. The
maze, whose two plus miles of
pathways in the shape of a barn
owl, offers challenges with puzzle
pieces. $8. Noon to 4 p.m.
Primitive Technologies Day,
Washington Crossing State
Park, Visitor Center, Titusville,
609-737-0609. Archaeologists
and primitive technologists
demonstrate and discuss a variety of primitive skills that local Native Americans and indigenous
people practiced in prehistoric
times. Free. Noon to 4:30 p.m.
Corner of Chaos Haunt, Corner
Copia Farm Market, 299 Princeton-Hightstown Road, East Windsor, 609-426-8884. Tour of Terror,
Fright Tour, Haunt World, and
more. $13 to $40. 7 p.m.
Schools
Open House, Hun School, 176
Edgerstoune Road, Princeton,
609-921-7600. www.hunschool.org. Information about the upper
school. Register by E-mail to [email protected]. 1 p.m.
Open House, Princeton Junior
School, 90 Fackler Road, Lawrenceville, 609-924-8126. www.pjs.org. Admissions information
for age two through grade five. 2
to 3:30 p.m.
Shopping News
Book Sale, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street,
609-924-9529. www.princetonlibrary.org. Annual sale of paperback, softcover, and hardcover
books; DVDs; and CDs. Fill a bag
for $5. Half price sale from 3 to
5:30 p.m. 1 to 5:30 p.m.
Designer Handbag Bingo and
Gift Auction, Robbinsville Irish
Heritage Association, Robbinsville High School, 609-2593776. Benefit for the fourth annual Robbinsville St. Patrick’s Day
Parade. Must be 18 or older. $25
includes dessert, one card per
game, and raffle ticket. 6 p.m.
Socials
Coffee and Conversation,
Grover’s Mill Coffee House, 335
Princeton Hightstown Road, West
Windsor, 609-716-8771. “The Art
of Being Human,” an open public
discussion focusing on the rat
race between technology, social
media, and more. Moderated by
Franc Gambatese. 2 to 4 p.m.
Sports
Roller Derby, New Jersey Hellrazors, Kendall Park Roller Rink,
3550 Route 27, Kendall Park,
908-240-2412. The team takes on
the Boardwalk Brawlers (their only loss this year). Music by the Orphan Sporks, Rutger’s University
a capella group. DJ, team merchandise, and baked goods. $12.
6:30 p.m.
Sports for Causes
Memory Walk, Alzheimer’s Association, Educational Testing
Service, Lawrenceville, 609-2751180. Three-mile walk, entertainment, information, a tribute ceremony, refreshments, and prizes.
Rain or shine. Register. 9 a.m.
U.S. 1
35
Crop Hunger Walk, WindsorHightstown Area Ministerium,
Mercer County Park East Picnic
Area, West Windsor, 609-6554731. www.cropwalkonline.org.
Benefit to alleviate hunger and
support lifesaving programs
around the world. Register online.
1 p.m.
Monday
October 15
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
Chamber Music
Pinchas Zukerman and the
Zuckerman Chamber Players,
McCarter Theater, 91 University
Place, Princeton, 609-258-2787.
www.mccarter.org. Ensemble
presents a program of Brahms
and Shostakovich led by Israeli violinist Pinchas Zukerman. $38 to
$54. 7:30 p.m.
Classical Music
Princeton Symphony Orchestra,
Monroe Public Library, 4 Municipal Plaza, Monroe, 732-5215000. www.monroetwplibrary.org.
The Lark String Quartet with
guest percussionist perform
works by Haydn, Bartok, and
more. Free. 12:30 p.m.
Food for Thought: Lisa Lillien, author of ‘Hungry
Girl to the Max: the Ultimate Guilt-Free Cookbook,’ has a booksigning at Wegmans in West
Windsor at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, October 16.
Singing Fun, Arts Council of
Princeton, Witherspoon Street,
Princeton, 609-924-8777. American Boychoir School and the
Princeton Girlchoir demonstrate
the basics of choral singing
through vocal exercises, singing
games, songs, and rounds. Audition for American Boychoir School
for boys in grades 3 to 6. Free.
1:45 p.m.
Pinchas Zukerman and the
Zuckerman Chamber Players,
McCarter Theater, 91 University
Place, Princeton, 609-258-2787.
Ensemble presents a program of
Brahms and Shostakovich led by
Israeli violinist Pinchas Zukerman. $38 to $54. 7:30 p.m.
Rehearsal, Voices Chorale, Music Together, 225 PenningtonHopewell Road, Hopewell, 609924-7801. www.musictogetherprinceton.com. Register. 7:30
p.m.
Continued on following page
36
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
October 15
Continued from preceding page
Pop Music
PUBLIC LECTURE
The Great Partnership:
God, Science and the Search for Meaning
Fall Harmony Workshop, Jersey Harmony Chorus, Buckingham Place, 155 Raymond Road, Monmouth Junction, 732-4693983. www.harmonize.com/jerseyharmony.
Women with or without prior experience in
choral groups or solo singing are welcome.
E-mail [email protected] for information. 7:30 p.m.
Rehearsal, New Jersey Gay Men’s Chorus, Nassau Presbyterian Church, 61 Nassau Street, Princeton. www.njgmc.org. New
members are welcome to join the all inclusive, non-discriminatory chorus. E-mail
[email protected]. 7:30 to 10 p.m.
Art
Chief Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks
United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth
‘One of the most engaging thinkers of our time’
-The London Times
Lord Sacks will be signing copies of his book, which will be on sale
at the close of his lecture, courtesy of Labyrinth Books.
7:30 pm Wednesday October 17th, 2012
Friend Center Auditorium, Room 101
Princeton University
Corner of William Street & Olden Street
For more information visit: www.princeton.edu/csr/events/
Art Exhibit, Princeton Day School, The
Great Road, Princeton, 609-924-6700.
www.pds.org. Reception for “Bhutan: Land
of the Thunder Dragon,” a photography exhibit by Dan Mead and Sally Eagle featuring images of the Himalayan country and
culture. They will display masks, textiles,
and religious paintings at the reception.
The exhibit is on view to November 11.
12:30 p.m.
Annual Juried Exhibition, Phillips Mill,
2619 River Road, New Hope, 215-8620582. www.phillipsmill.org. Annual fall juried exhibition featuring artists of the
Delaware Valley. Oils, watercolors, prints,
mixed media, drawings, and sculpture.
Through October 27. Free admission on
Mondays. 1 to 5 p.m.
Film
Movie Matinee, Lawrence Library, Darrah
Lane and Route 1, Lawrence Township,
609-989-6922. www.mcl.org. Screening of
“Bridges of Madison County,” 1995, with
Clint Eastwood and Meryl Streep. Refreshments. Register. Free. 2 p.m.
Film Movement Collection, Pennington
Library, 30 North Main Street, Pennington,
609-737-0404. www.penningtonlibrary.org.
Screening of “King of Devil’s Island.” Post
film discussion. 7 p.m.
Dancing
Latin Dance Technique, Joy2Dance Studio, 178 Route 206, Hillsborough, 908431-5146. No partner needed. $15. 7 p.m.
Literati
Tutor Training, Literacy Volunteers in
Mercer County, Pelletieri and Rabstein,
100 Nassau Park Boulevard, West Windsor, 609-587-6027. Five week training sessions begin. Register. 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Author Event, Barnes & Noble, 869 Route
1 South, North Brunswick, 732-545-7860.
www.bn.com. Mark Di Ionno, author of “The
Last Newspaperman.” 6 p.m.
Author Event, Princeton Public Library,
65 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-8822.
Leora Skolkin, author of “Edges,” “The
Fragile Mistress,” and “Hystera,” talks
about Israel in Fiction. 7 p.m.
Faith
American Jewish Experience Lecture Series, Jewish Historical Society of Central Jersey, Monroe Jewish Center, 11 Cornell Drive, Monroe, 732-249-4894. “Jewish
Good Humor: Better Than Ice Cram” presented by Bertram Busch, a lawyer in New
Brunswick. Free. 10 a.m.
Food & Dining
Wine 101, Crossing Vineyards and Winery, 1853 Wrightstown Road, Washington
Crossing, PA, 215-493-6500. www.crossingvineyards.com. “Food and Wine
Pairing” presented by Eric Cavatore, sommelier. Register. $30. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Gardens
Program, Garden Gate Club, Lawrence
Senior Center, 30 Darrah Lane, Lawrenceville, 609-883-6648. “Ways to Reduce Your
Natural Waste and Produce a Tea for Your
Plants” presented by Tahirih Smith and
Teresita Bastides-Heron. Refreshments.
Free. 7 p.m.
Mental Health
The Push Group, Saint Mark United
Methodist Church, 465 Paxton Avenue,
Hamilton Square, 609-291-0095. For men
and women with anxiety disorders. Free. 7
p.m.
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Singer/Guitarist: Keb’ Mo’ and Band perform Friday, October 19, at 8 p.m. at McCarter Theater.
Wellness
For Seniors
Gentle Yoga, Heart to Heart
Women’s Health Center, 20 Armour Avenue, Hamilton, 609-6893131. Gentle alignment-focused
class includes elements of
breathing, basic yoga postures,
and meditation techniques. Register. $15. 7 to 8 p.m.
Retirement Talk, Princeton
Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-924-8822.
“Finding the Right Volunteer
Opportunity for You” presented by Carol King. 7 p.m.
History
Stamp Collecting, Coryell’s Ferry Stamp Club, Washington
Crossing United Methodist
Church, 1896 Wrightstown Road,
Washington Crossing, PA, 908806-7883. “precancel stamps”
presented by allen Schwartz.
Auction follows. 7:30 p.m.
Lectures
Woodrow Wilson School,
Princeton University, Robertson
Hall, Dodds, 609-258-0157. futureofchildren.org. “Digital Pathways to Peace? Online Dialogues
in the Middle East” presented by
a panel moderated by Christopher L. Eisgruber, provost,
Princeton University. 4:30 p.m.
Making College Affordable, Ewing Library, 61 Scotch Road,
Ewing, 609-882-3130. Presented
by Alex Jenkins of Premier College Funding. 7 p.m.
PC Clinic, South Brunswick Library, 110 Kingston Lane, Monmouth Junction, 732-329-4000.
www.sbpl.info. Bring your computer and power cord; monitor not
needed. Cure is not guaranteed.
No Macs. Register. Free. 7 p.m.
Program and Meeting, Washington Crossing Audubon Society,
Pennington School, 112 West
Delaware Avenue, Pennington,
609-443-3981. Refreshments followed by “A Winter in the Neotropics: Migratory Songbirds on
the Wintering Grounds” presented by Tyler Christensen. Free.
7:30 p.m.
Politics
80th Anniversary Party, League
of Women Voters, Unitarian Universalist Church, 50 Cherry Hill
Road, Princeton, 609-658-6107.
Portrayal of Alice Paul by Taylor
Williams of the American Historical Theater. Refreshments. Free.
6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Public Talk, Eagleton Institute of
Politics, 100 George Street, New
Brunswick, 732-932-9384.
Chuck Todd, NBC News political
director and chief White House
correspondent, and co-host of
MSNBC’s “The Daily Rundown.”
He is also co-author of “How
Barack Obama Won: A State by
State Guide to the Historic 2008
Presidential Election.” Register.
Free. 7 p.m.
Shopping News
Book Sale, Hamilton Public Library, 1 Justice Samuel A. Alito
Jr. Way, Hamilton, 609-581-4060.
Benefit for new computers, children’s programs, and equipment.
9 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Singles
Singles Night, Grover’s Mill Coffee House, 335 Princeton Hightstown Road, West Windsor, 609716-8771. Drop in for soups,
sandwiches, desserts, tea, coffee, and conversation. Register at
http://ht.ly/3gd9w 6:30 to 8 p.m.
Socials
Meeting, Women’s College Club
of Princeton, All Saints Church,
16 All Saints Road, Princeton,
609-732-0912. “Presidential Inaugurations” presented by Reverend David Mulford, a retired
Presbyterian minister. Refreshments. Free. 1 p.m.
Off the Page, Lawrence Library,
Darrah Lane and Route 1,
Lawrence Township, 609-9896920. Try out your acting chops
as a character from dramatic literature or contemporary comedy.
Casting followed by a table reading. Register. 6:30 p.m.
Scrabble Challenge, Boys &
Girls Club, Jasna Polana, 4519
Province Line Road, Princeton,
609-392-3191. www.bgctrenton.org. Buffet dinner and wine. Register. $85 benefits the extended
day learning programs. 6 p.m.
Live Music
Blueballs, John & Peter’s, 96
South Main Street, New Hope,
215-862-5981. www.johnandpeters.com. 9:30 p.m.
Pop Music
The Ukulele Orchestra of Great
Britain, McCarter Theater
(Matthews), 91 University Place,
Princeton, 609-258-2787. www.mccarter.org. The octet of musicians balance comedy with musicianship, all on ukulele, in their
only New Jersey appearance.
$20 to $48. 7:30 p.m.
Rehearsal, Princeton Garden
Statesmen, Plainsboro Library, 9
Van Doren Street, Plainsboro,
888-636-4449. Men of all ages
and experience levels are invited
to sing in four-part harmony. The
non-profit organization presents
at numerous charities. Free. 7:30
to 10 p.m.
On Stage
Tuesdays with Stories Series,
Raritan Valley Community College, Route 28, North Branch,
908-725-3420.“Unsinkable
Women: Stories and Songs from
the Titanic” presented by Deborah Jean Templin in a solo show.
Discussion and refreshments. For
ages 14 and up. Two performances. $10 and $25. Noon and 7
p.m.
One Slight Hitch, George Street
Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue,
New Brunswick, 732-246-7717.
New Jersey premiere of a modern
farce by Lewis Black stars Mark
Linn-Baker. $25 to $62. 8 p.m.
Fine Quality Home Furnishings at Substantial Savings
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Scrabble Challenge, Boys &
Girls Club, Jasna Polana, 4519
Province Line Road, Princeton,
609-392-3191. www.bgctrenton.org. Buffet dinner and wine. Register. $85 benefits the extended
day learning programs. 6 p.m.
Taize Evening Prayer, Princeton
Lutheran Church, Princeton University Chapel. Christian service
of prayer, scripture, and song.
7:30 p.m.
Food & Dining
Fall Extravaganza! It’s ALL On Sale in October!
Rider Furniture
4621 Route 27, Kingston, NJ
609-924-0147
Monday-Friday 10-6; Saturday 10-5; Sunday 12-5
Design Services Available.
riderfurniture.com
Gardens
Garden Horror Stories, Mercer
County Connection, 957 Route
33, Hamilton, 609-890-9800.
“Troubleshooting and Bulb Planting” presented by Barbara Bromley. Register. 10:30 a.m. to 12:30
p.m.
Wellness
Soul Evening, Center for Relaxation and Healing, 666 Plainsboro Road, Suite 635, Plainsboro,
609-750-7432. Channeled teachings with Dzar, a group of compassionate energies presented
by Gary O’Brien. Register. $25. 7
p.m.
Lectures
Good Causes
Outdoor Action
Meeting, Allies, 1262 Whitehorse-Hamilton Square Road,
Hamilton, 609-689-0136. For
adult volunteers with hobbies or
interests to share with adults who
have developmental disabilities.
Register with Linda Barton. 5:30
to 7:30 p.m.
Meeting, Princeton Ski Club,
Rocky Hill Inn, 137 Washington
Street, Rocky HIll, 609-588-4737.
Presentation by Sierra Club
speaker. Register. 7 p.m.
Literati
Prints and Accessories
Leather Furniture
Antique Furniture
Repair & Refinishing
Author Event, Wegmans, 240
Nassau Park Boulevard, West
Windsor, 609-919-9300. www.wegmans.com. Lisa Lillien, author of “Hungry Girl to the Max:
the Ultimate Guilt-Free Cookbook,” has a booksigning. Creator
of Hungry-Girl.com and Food
Network host also shares dormfriendly snacks and samples. 6
p.m.
Author Event, Labyrinth Books,
122 Nassau Street Princeton, NJ
08542, 609-497-1600. A reading
of new poems” by Susan Wheeler, author of “Meme,” and John
Koethe, author of “ROTC Kills.” 6
p.m.
Ballroom and Latin Dancing,
Joy2Dance Studio, 178 Route
206, Hillsborough, 908-431-5146.
www.joy2dance.com. Learn to
dance. No partner needed. $22. 7
p.m.
International Folk Dancing,
Princeton Folk Dance, Riverside
School, 58 Riverside Drive,
Princeton, 609-921-9340. Ethnic
dances of many cultures and
countries using their original music. Beginners welcome. For all
ages. Lesson followed by dance.
No partner needed. $3. 7 to 9
p.m.
Dining Room
Bedroom
Occasional
Custom Made Upholstery
Where quality still matters.
Faith
Effective Resume Writing,
South Brunswick Library, 110
Kingston Lane, Monmouth Junction, 732-329-4000. 10:30 a.m.
The Problem of the Archive:
Memory, History, and the
African Diaspora Lecture Series, Princeton University,
Lewis Library, Room 138, 609258-3116. “Sites of Slavery: Citizenship and Racial Democracy in
the Age of Obama” presented by
Salamishah Tillet, assistant professor of English and Africana
Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. Free. 4:30 p.m.
Planning for a Comfortable Financial Future, West WindsorPlainsboro Community Education, High School South, 346
Clarksville Road, West Windsor,
609-716-5030. A three session
course focuses on practical instruction for people planning for
retirement. Continues October 23
and 30. Presented by Joseph P.
Silvestri, Creative Financial
Group of NJ. Register. $45 includes the workbook. 6:30 to
9:30 p.m.
Public Lecture Series, Princeton
University, McCosh 50, 609258-3000. “Future Imperfect: The
Clock Strikes Midnight” presented
by Margaret Atwood, author of
“The Year of the Flood.” 8 p.m.
Dancing
37
Rider Furniture
Tuesday
October 16
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
Word Games
U.S. 1
Continued on following page
Princeton • Shrewsbury • Morristown • Sparta
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
October 16
Wednesday
October 17
Continued from preceding page
Politics
Presidential Debate Watching Party,
Princeton Democratic Campaign, 217
Nassau Street, Princeton, 609-301-0842.
The debate will be shown on a wide screen
TV. Bring snacks and drinks. Ice and paper
products provided. 8:30 p.m.
Schools
Open House, The Bridge Academy,
1958B Lawrenceville Road, Lawrenceville,
609-844-0770. www.banj.org. For parents
and professionals to obtain information on
the program, curriculum, and admission
policies for the private school for ages 8 to
18 with language-based learning differences including dyslexia. It is accredited by
the Orton-Gillingham Academy. Register.
9:30 a.m.
College Financial Planning, West Windsor Library, 333 North Post Road, 609799-0462. “The Key to Paying for College.”
7 p.m.
Singles
Pizza Night, Yardley Singles, Vince’s, 25
South Main Street, Yardley, PA, 215-7361288. Register. 6 p.m.
Public Speaking
Mercer Free School, Ewing Library, 609403-2383. Program to enhance communication effectiveness. Register. 7 to 8:30
p.m.
Socials
Meeting, Rotary Club of Plainsboro, Guru
Palace, 2215 Route 1 South, North
Brunswick, 732-213-0095. 7:30 p.m.
For Seniors
Memoir Writing Workshop, Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane and Route 1, Lawrence
Township, 609-989-6920. Introductory
course for seniors to reflect on a significant
life experience and put it on paper. Facilitated by Maria Okros. E-mail [email protected]. Register. 2:30 to 4:30 p.m.
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
Lots of Laughs
Paul Spratt, The Stress Factory, 90
Church Street, New Brunswick, 732-5454242. www.stressfactory.com. $10. 8 p.m.
Classical Music
Russian Songs, Arts Council of Princeton, Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609924-8777. “Russian Songs of Soviet Film
and Animation Composers” with Ivan Farmakovsky on piano, Ralph Bowen on saxophone, Kenny Dais on bass, and Donald
Edwards on drums. Commentary by Cyril
Moshkow. Free. 8 p.m.
Live Music
Arturo Romay, Jester’s, 233 Farnsworth
Avenue, Bordentown, 609-298-9963.
www.jesterscafe.net. 6 to 9 p.m.
The Invitational, John & Peter’s, 96 South
Main Street, New Hope, 215-862-5981.
9:30 p.m.
Open Mic, Alchemist & Barrister, 28 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, 609-924-5555.
www.theaandb.com. 21 plus. 10 p.m.
Art
Alice Aycock, Grounds For Sculpture, 126
Sculptors Way, Hamilton, 609-586-0616.
Whirls and Twirls” includes lunch with Alice
Aycock, an artist specializing in large-scale,
architecturally inspired work. Register. $60.
11 a.m.
One Slight Hitch, George Street Playhouse, 9 Livingston Avenue, New
Brunswick, 732-246-7717. Modern farce by
Lewis Black. $25 to $62. 8 p.m.
Film
Documentary Film Series: Power of Art,
South Brunswick Library, 110 Kingston
Lane, Monmouth Junction, 732-329-4000.
“Bernini’s Ecstasy of St. Teresa.” Bring a
brown bag lunch. Free. 12:30 p.m.
Sculpted: ‘Lapis and Silver
Dagger,’ by the artist known
as Le Corbeau, who gives a
gallery walk on Sunday, October 14, at 2 p.m. at Ellarslie in conjunction with his
current exhibit there.
Dancing
Newcomer’s Dance, American Ballroom,
1523 Parkway Avenue, Ewing, 609-9310149. $10. 7 to 9 p.m.
Open House, MR Square Dance Club,
Grace St. Paul’s Church Parish Hall, 3715
East State Street Extension, Hamilton, 609844-1140. A series of progressive dances
follows the open house. No experience
needed. Register. Free. 7:30 p.m.
Contra Dance, Princeton Country
Dancers, Suzanne Patterson Center, Monument Drive, 609-924-6763. Instruction followed by dance. $8. 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Literati
Writers Workshop, Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street, 609-9248822. 5 p.m.
Author Event, Labyrinth Books, 122 Nassau Street Princeton, NJ 08542, 609-4971600. Chris Hedges, author of “Days of Destruction, Days of Revolt,” a look at exploitation in the name of profit, progress,
and technological advancement. 6 p.m.
Good Causes
Couture for a Cure, Young Survival Coalition, Bucks County Playhouse, 70 South
Main Street, New Hope, PA. Food, wines,
games, and fashion. $55 to $65. 7 p.m.
On Stage
Faith
The Fertile Crescent: Gender, Art, and
Society, Princeton University, Lewis
Center, 185 Nassau Street, 609-258-1500.
“Scheherazade Goes West” by Fawzia
Afzal-Kahn explores contradictions in gender and culture. Discussion follows moderated by Jill Dolan, director of Princeton Program in Gender and Sexuality Studies. 7 to
10 p.m.
Jonathan Sacks, Center of Theological
Inquiry, Friend Center, William and Olden
streets, Princeton, 609-683-4797. Rabbi
Jonathan Sacks, author of “The Great Partnership: God, Science, and the Search for
Meaning.” Lecture and booksigning. 7:30
p.m.
Food & Dining
Cornerstone Community Kitchen,
Princeton United Methodist Church,
Nassau at Vandeventer Street, Princeton,
609-924-2613. Hot meals served, prepared
by TASK. Free. 5 to 6:30 p.m.
Health
Blood Drive, New Jersey Blood Services,
Mercer College, Old Trenton Road, West
Windsor, 800-933-2566. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Caregiver Support Group, Alzheimer’s
Association, RWJ Center for Health and
Wellness, 3100 Quakerbridge Road, Mercerville, 609-396-6788. Free. 6 p.m.
Attention Deficit Disorder Lecture and
Discussion, Children and Adults with Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder,
Riverside School, 58 Riverside Drive,
Princeton, 609-683-8787. “Assistive Technology for ADHD” presented by Brian
Friedlander, professor and assistive technology expert. 7 to 9 p.m.
Wellness
Dance for People with Parkinson’s Disease, DanceVision, 116 Rockingham
Row, Plainsboro, 609-514-1600. Movement class for people with Parkinson’s disease and their caregivers. Register. Free. 1
to 2:15 p.m.
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U.S. 1
39
At the Movies
Confirm titles, dates, and times
with theaters.
Arbitrage. Drama about business stars Richard Gere. Garden,
Montgomery.
Argo. Action with Ben Affleck.
AMC, Regal.
Atlas Shrugged: Part 2 Either
Or. Drama directed by John Putch.
AMC, Regal
Barfi. Hindi drama. Multiplex,
Regal.
Beloved (Les bien-aimes). Romantic drama with Catherine
Deneuve. Montgomery.
The Bourne Legacy. Thriller
with Jeremy Renner as Aaron
Cross. AMC, MarketFair, Multiplex.
The Dark Knight Rises. Christian Bale portrays Bruce Wayne
and Batman. AMC.
Dredd. Bloody thriller. AMC.
End of Watch. Jake Gyllenal in
police drama. AMC, Destiny, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal.
Finding Nemo 3D. Animated
film is now in 3D. AMC, MarketFair, Regal.
Frankenweenie.
Animated
comedy. AMC, Destiny, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal.
Here Comes the Boom. Action
comedy with Kevin James. AMC,
Regal.
Heroine. Hindi film looks at
Bollywood behind the scenes. Regal.
Hope Springs. Comedy with
Meryl Streep and Steve Carell.
Multiplex.
Hotel Transylvania. Animated
comedy with Adam Sandler as the
voice of Dracula. AMC, Destiny,
MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal.
House at the End of the Street.
Thriller with Jennifer Lawrence.
AMC, Destiny, Multiplex, Regal.
The Intouchables. Biopic
about a wealthy man from France
and his caretaker. Montgomery.
Lawless. Western drama with
Tom Hardy and Guy Pearce. AMC.
Little White Lies (Les petits
mouchoirs). Drama directed by
Guillaume Canet. Montgomery.
Looper. Time travel with Bruce
Willis. AMC, Destiny, MarketFair,
Create New Habits For Healthy
Eating, Nassau Inn, 10 Palmer
Square, Princeton, 609-3560558. “Sources of Protein Besides Meat” presented by Judith
Robinson. Register. $25. 7 to
8:30 p.m.
Life Lessons, Robert Wood
Johnson Hamilton Center for
Health and Wellness, 3100
Quakerbridge Road, Mercerville,
609-584-5900. “Relationships” focuses on changing our reactions
and breaking the cycles causing
unhealthy relationships. Register.
Free. 7 to 8:30 p.m.
History
Guided Tour, Drumthwacket
Foundation, 354 Stockton Street,
Princeton, 609-683-0057. New
Jersey governor’s official residence. Group tours are available.
Register. $5 donation. 1 p.m.
Holocaust Genocide Resource
Center, Mercer College Student
Center, Second floor of the library building, 1200 Old Trenton
Road, West Windsor, 609-5703355. Opening of the exhibit,
“Besa: Muslims Who Saved Jews
in World War II,” an international
exhibit featuring works by photographer Norman Gershman. 4:30
p.m.
Lectures
Lunch and Learn, Princeton Jewish Center, 435 Nassau Street,
Multiplex, Regal.
The Master. Drama with Philip
Seymour Hoffman and Joaquin
Phoenix. AMC, Garden, Montgomery, Multiplex.
Metropolitan Opera: L’Elisir
d’Amore. Saturday, October 13.
AMC, Multiplex, Regal.
Metropolitan Opera: Otella.
Saturday, October 27. AMC, Multiplex, Regal.
Pitch Perfect. Musical with
Elizabeth Banks. AMC, Destiny,
MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal.
The Possession. Thriller with
Jeffrey Dean Morgan and Kyra
Sedgwick. Destiny.
Resident Evil: Retribution.
The horror continues. AMC, Destiny.
Seven Psychopaths. Comedy
with Sam Rockewell and Christopher Walken. AMC, Regal.
Shakespeare’s Globe Theater:
All’s Well That Ends Well. Multiplex.
Sinister. Horror with Ethan
Hawke, a former West Windsor
resident. AMC, Regal.
The Story of Levi Leipheimer.
Opens Tuesday, October 23. Regal.
Taken 2. Liam Neeson in action. AMC, Destiny, MarketFair,
Multiplex, Regal.
Trouble with the Curve. Clint
Eastwood portrays an aging baseball scout. AMC, Destiny, MarketFair, Multiplex, Regal.
Princeton, 609-921-2782. “Designing the Spiritual” focuses on synagogue design historically and into
the future presented by Michael
Landau and Joshua Zinder. Bring a
dairy or parve lunch. Noon.
Caregiving, Ewing Library, 61
Scotch Road, Ewing, 609-8823130. “Caring for a Loved One
with Dementia” presented by Dr.
Shelly Chinkes. 1 p.m.
Woodrow Wilson School,
Princeton University, Robertson
Hall, Dodds, 609-258-0157. “Policy Implications for Post Secondary Education” in conjunction
with “Technology and Public Policy” lectures series. Presented by
Daphne Koller, professor of computer science at Stanford University. 4:30 p.m.
College Bound Lecture, PEAC
Fitness, 1440 Lower Ferry Road,
Ewing, 609-883-2000. “Getting
into a College of Choice is Half
the Battle...Figuring Out How to
Pay for it is Another” presented by
Stephen Molinelli, founder of
Wealth Management Partners.
Register. Free. 6:30 p.m.
Public Seminar, New Jersey
Law Center, Ryders Lane, New
Brunswick, 800-Free-Law. “Harassment and Other Employment
Issues in the Workplace” features
presentations by John Shahdanian II, Esq; and Tedd J. Kochman,
Esq. Register. Free. 7 p.m.
Comedy: Colin Farrell, left, Christopher
Walken, and Sam
Rockwell star in ‘Seven Psychopaths,’ now
playing.
Won’t Back Down. Drama
about mothers and education with
Viola Davis and Maggie Gyllenhaal. AMC, Destiny, MarketFair,
Multiplex, Regal,
The Words. Drama about a
“writer” stars Bradley Cooper.
AMC, Multiplex.
Venues
AMC Hamilton 24 Theaters, 325
Sloan Avenue, I-295 Exit 65-A, 888262-4386.
Destiny 12, 2465 South Broad
Street, Hamilton, 609-888-1110.
Garden Theater, 160 Nassau
Street, Princeton, 609-683-7595.
MarketFair-UA, Route 1 South,
West Windsor, 609-520-8960.
Montgomery Center Theater,
Routes 206 and 518, Rocky Hill,
609-924-7444.
Multiplex Cinemas Town Center
Plaza, 319 Route 130 North, East
Windsor, 800-315-4000.
Regal Theaters, Route 1 South,
New Brunswick, 732-940-8343.
Politics
Election Polling for the 21st
Century, Lawrence Library,
Darrah Lane and Route 1,
Lawrence Township, 609-9896920. Edward Freeland, director
of Princeton University’s Survey
Research Center and a lecturer at
the Woodrow Wilson School, discusses the history of political
polling. Q&A follows. Free. 7 p.m.
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Colleges
Information Session, Mercer
County Community College,
Student Center, 1200 Old Trenton
Road, West Windsor, 609-5703795. Free. 6 p.m.
Singles
Divorced and Separated Support Group, Hopewell Presbyterian Church, 80 West Broad
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Socials
Social Night, Princeton Corridor
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Sports
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U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
SINGLES
MEN SEEKING WOMEN
MEN SEEKING WOMEN
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
Autumn Fire- SWM - young - 60. I am
a well-educated, financially secure person with a good sense of humor. I enjoy
the small things in life like a beautiful
sunset. I enjoy movies, plays, and museums. I also enjoy sports including
softball, running, skiing, and tennis.
Seeking a positive SWF 40-55, slim or
medium build, non-smoker, with a college degree for a possible long-term relationship. Box 236142
and phone number. Let’s have fun. You
wont be disappointed. Box 237167
Single J/W/F/W ready to start the
next half of my life, perhaps with you
(lucky man). I am in my late 60s, prefer
men from 60-72. I am playful, pretty, funny, creative. Many passions: watercolor,
comedy, home decor, fashion, and
hockey. Hopefully you are humorous,
well groomed, hard worker, kind, and
with a heart of gold. Looking forward to
your company. Lived in Monroe Township one year. My five grandchildren are
also one of my passions. What’s yours?
Box 238331
Confirmed bachelor 6’4”, blonde,
young 50s, retired, is hoping to be pleasantly surprised by a zaftig woman who
loves animals as I do, who can draw me
out of my shell, who can expect to be
treated well, and who enjoys dry humor
(so my sister says.) I may just be the
prize at the bottom of the CrackerJacks
box. I’ll be your Sir Lancelot and you’ll be
my Lady Guinevere. Box 238323
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Outstanding, nice guy, SWM. If you
are seeking a down-to-earth yet refined
man who appreciates a lady for all that
she is, this guy is most likely what you
are looking for. He is a believer of true
romance and eternal love, always having faith in those who are real and confident in a secure future with the right lady. If your passions are likewise, and
you, like I, are positive in thought and
action, ready to meet that someone to
create and build a future, well this cleancut, fit, 48-year-old would like to know
you. Please be Asian or white, between
35 and 50. Remember: do nothing —
nothing happens. Box 236193
Retired Business Executive mid
60’s tall, 6’ white, fit, non smoker, comes
complete with all working parts. Not
marriage minded seeking the companionship of a woman for day trips, vacations and whatever “adventures” might
present themselves. You should be
bright, attractive, articulate and relatively fit, and enjoy being treated like a lady.
Enclose a current photo with your note
Still looking for “Miss Right.” If
you’re 60-70, Jewish, shapely, and enjoy concerts, theater, films, art exhibits,
dining out, etc., you may want to meet
this well-known professional artist. Box
236262
SWM 6’1” 45 Handsome man with no
kids, clean cut, looking for a woman, 4050 years old, friendly, nice, understanding. No drugs, no alcohol, good companion. Send picture with ideal first
date. Box 238312
WOMEN SEEKING MEN
A mature, attractive JPF, young
senior, active, sexy, bright, great dresser and humorous, laid back looking for a
date, a friend, male company, fun-loving, generous gentleman who is 5’9” or
more, kind, intelligent, good dresser,
clean body and clean mind, active, enjoys dancing, music, travel, life. Be a millionaire! Kidding - smile. Well, that was
wishful thinking. Tall, dark, and handsome - smile. Non-smokers only. Box
237587
Beauty Seeks Mate. DWF, voluptuous figure, told pretty, in search of
clean-cut, 5’10”-6’1”, attractive, white
male, 40-58, who is interested in meeting a great woman for dating or a possible relationship. Prefer central/north
Jersey. Photo please. Box 236082
Mature African American Woman
seeking gentlman over 60 for companionship, day trips, vacations and walking
the beach. If you would enjoy the friendship of a lady that is active and fun loving
please drop me a line with contact information and a photo if available. Box
235462
Told I’m beautiful by everyone, not
marriage-minded, young, 50s, passionate about animals, highly educated,
own home and am retired. If you are
beautiful too, in heart, mind, and
physique, I’m interested in knowing you.
Let’s share further details in future days
of fun. By the way, I’m Caucasian, Anglo-Saxon of English descent. If you are
the same, similar, or of Spanish descent, I welcome your response. Box
238322
HOW TO RESPOND
How to Respond: Place your note in
an envelope, write the box number on
the envelope, and mail it with $1 cash to
U.S. 1 at the address below.
HOW TO ORDER
Singles By Mail: To place your free
ad in this section mail it to U.S. 1, 12
Roszel Road, Princeton 08540, fax it to
609-452-0033, or E-mail it to [email protected]. Be sure to include
a physical address to which we can
send responses.
SINGLES BY EMAIL
[email protected]
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ART
FILM
LITERATURE
DANCE
DRAMA
U.S. 1
41
MUSIC
PREVIEW
Ellen Foos: The Sky’s The Limit for Poetry
T
his year marks the 20th
anniversary of Ragged Sky Press,
the independent publishing venture founded by Princeton-based
poet and editor Ellen Foos.
To celebrate, the press is dedicating three days to launch its
newest poetry collection — “Intimate Geography” by California
writer and visual artist Ishmael von
Heidrick-Barnes. The first event is
Thursday, October 11, at 7 p.m. at
the Princeton Public Library,
where von Heidrick-Barnes will be
joined by award-winning ArabAmerican poet Sam Hamod and
opera singer Andrea Horken. That
event will be followed by readings
on Friday, October. 12, at the Cornelia Street Cafe in New York City,
and on Saturday, October 13, at the
Hunterdon County Library in
Flemington.
Ragged Sky Press had its beginnings when Foos — whose book
editing career has included stints in
the Midwest and East Coast — was
asked to help publish a memoir by
a parish priest in St. Paul, Minnesota, where Foos was then working.
“That book came out in 1992. Then
I helped a friend get the novel he’d
written about life in the East End of
London into print, but it was done
more as a service than as a business
venture,” says Foos.
If Ragged Sky Press evolved out
of these early toe-in-the-water efforts, it found its niche with the
publication of a five-book set of
poetry chapbooks -- small paperback books or pamphlets -- more
than a decade later. By that time
Foos, who is originally from upstate New York, had moved to New
Jersey and was working for Princeton University Press.
That first collection grew out of
her involvement with U.S.1 Poets’
Cooperative, the Princeton-based
critique group. In 2005 Foos and
several other poets in the group —
Elizabeth (Mimi) Danson, Carlos
Hernandez Pena, Elizabeth Anne
Socolow, and Arlene Weiner —
formed their own offshoot, meeting once a month to focus on each
others’ body of work, with a view
to publication. “I realized that the
group had some great poets but
none, save Liz Socolow, had
books, including me,” says Foos.
Approaching her 50th birthday,
Foos figured it was time to have her
own works in print. “Each of us
served as an editor for another
member of the group, and each
paid for the printing, which is pretty affordable these days.” Foos did
all the production. Her sister Jean
Foos, a graphics designer in New
York City, provided the artwork for
the covers.
The Ragged Sky Poetry Series
was launched in 2006 and included
the titles “Little Knitted Sister” by
Foos, “The Luxury of Obstacles”
by Danson, “Moonmilk and Other
Poems” by Hernandez Pena, “Between Silence and Praise” by Socolow, and “Escape Velocity” by
Weiner.
“The books were fun to work on
and provided an opportunity to do
by Linda Arnteznius
readings and network,” says Foos,
who believes they were instrumental in her winning a 2007 MacDowell Colony Fellowship which allowed her to attend what is considered of the nation’s oldest leading
artist residency programs, located
in New Hampshire.
The 2006 publications were followed by the poetry anthology
“Eating Her Wedding Dress: A
Collection of Clothing Poems” and
titles by award-winning poets Valerie Lawson (“Dog Watch”); Romanian-born poet and novelist Anca Vlasopolos (“Penguins in a
Warming World”); and Michael R.
Brown (“Susquehanna” and “The
Confidence Man”), among others.
Foos says publishing Brown
garnered quite a bit of media attention for Ragged Sky Press, which is
now attracting quality writers such
as Eileen Malone (a recipient of a
score of awards and author of the
title poem from “Eating Her Wedding Dress”) and von HeidrickBarnes.
The latest publication, “Intimate
Geography: Poems,” was co-edited by Foos and Weiner. The writer,
von Heidrick-Barnes, is known for
his poems, lyrics, and non-fiction
found in numerous literary publications and his co-editing of the
Magee Park Poets. His Ragged Sky
book — promoted by the press as
“one man’s journey through many
of this century’s cathartic events”
— had an initial release in August
when the writer read to a standing
room crowd in his hometown of
San Diego.
F
oos has been part of the
Princeton poetry scene for well
over a decade. She has been an active member of US1 Poets, founded the monthly US1 Poets Invite
series at the Princeton Public Library, and organizedS poetry slams
for the Arts Council of Princeton.
More recently she has been involved in events that brought C.K.
Williams, Gerald Stern, and Hayden Saunier to the Trenton City
Museum and actively supports the
Trenton-based Classics Used and
Rare Books, where owner Eric
Maywar provides poetry readings
and literary activities.
Foos’ sure-handedness comes
from experience. As senior production editor at Princeton University
Press since 1998, she prepares
manuscripts for production and supervises freelance copyeditors,
proofreaders, and indexers. She
handles about 20 titles a year including field guides, natural history titles, and poetry. “I try to snatch
up any books of poetry because it’s
so much fun for me,” she says.
She’s worked on the fourth edition of “The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics” and on
“The Princeton Series of Contem-
porary Poets,” which in the past included the likes of Robert Pinsky,
Ann Lauterbach, and Jorie Graham. Recently under series editor
Paul Muldoon, PUP has produced
titles by Kathleen Graber and Gary
Whitehead.
“It’s great working with the contemporary poetry series, and the
creative writing department at
Princeton University is unparalleled, both in the faculty and the
visiting fellows. There’s no place
better,” says Foos. “Over the years
I’ve worked with Louise Gluck,
Jorie Graham, Czeslaw Milosz,
and Charles Simic.”
Foos likes to tell people she’s
from Greece. And indeed she is,
born and bred in the small town of
that name, near Rochester, NY. She
was born on September 11, 1955,
and attributes her love of literature
and poetry to her homemaker
mom. As a child, Foos listened as
her mother, an amateur painter,
read aloud from a favorite collection of American poetry. Her father
was a tool and die tradesman for
General Motors, a union man of
German ancestry (Foos means
Foot in German).
The future publisher studied
English at SUNY Purchase but
dropped out just shy of finishing
her BA degree in English literature,
lured to life in the Big Apple, where
her older sister was already living.
“I lived in the East Village around
the corner from CBGB’s during the
late 1970s and early ’80s. I just
read Patti Smith’s memoir of that
period and it brought back memories of seeing the likes of Smith and
Blondie and Talking Heads. It was
a fantastic time.”
In New York City, Foos worked
in independent publishing, where it
was a badge of honor “not” to have
an academic degree. She never
quite lost that anti-academic stance
and is tickled by the irony of a career that has been primarily in academic publishing. Eventually she
returned to SUNY to finish her degree.
From New York City, Foos
moved with her husband to Minnesota, where she worked for
Graywolf Press. Her son Karl, who
was born in NYC in 1986, was just
three. When she and her husband
parted, she moved with Karl to
Hopewell for a new job at Ecco
Press, then settled in Princeton.
She got into poetry when she
took a class at the College of New
Jersey. “I enjoyed it so much that I
contacted Princeton professor Jim
Richardson, who put me in touch
with U.S.1 Poets. I’m indebted to
him for that and to U.S.1 Poets for
making me welcome.”
“Cooperative publishing” is
how she describes Ragged Sky
Press. Poets are involved in the
process from start to finish. “It
takes a village to produce a book of
poems,” Foos says. The press is
funded by readers’ purchases.
Printing costs are borne by the individual authors, and Foos donates
her time and expertise. If that
sounds like vanity publishing,
that’s a stigma that has largely dissolved with recent advances in
publishing. “It’s a friends and family affair. No one gets paid. We do it
for the love of poetry and the glamour,” says Foos (emphasizing the
ironic use of the final word).
Several of the poets published
by the press now lend their hand to
the production side of things: Arlene Weiner, Vasiliki Katsarou (author of the recent “Memento
Tsunami”), and Ruth Zamoyta,
who worked on “Eating Her Wedding Dress.”
When asked about her ambitions for the press, Foos dissolves
into laughter. While working fulltime and with a soon-to-be-teenage
adopted son at home, her ambitions
are modest, of necessity. When her
son Karl left home to work for the
Washington Nationals baseball
team in Washington, DC, Foos
made some major personal
changes. In 2011, she and her longtime boyfriend, Mark Enterline,
married and adopted their son,
Kayjaun. “We aren’t the conventional nuclear family,” she says. “I
live in Princeton, Mark lives in the
Poconos, but it works very well.”
As for time to write? “That will
have to wait until I retire and can
devote my full attention to the
press and to my own work.”
Besides her book, “Little Knitted Sister,” Foos’ work has appeared in U.S. 1 Worksheets, the
Kelsey Review, Edison Literary
Review, and Sensations Magazine.
She describes her style as minimalist, literary, free verse (rather
than formal), and based on quotidian experience, domestic scenes,
family dynamics, and nature. Although she enjoyed her years living
in New York City, she’s a natureloving country girl at heart and
quite the athlete. She regularly
‘Cooperative publishing is a friends & family affair. No one gets paid.
We do it for the love of poetry and the glamour,’ says Foos ironically.
Poetry Scene: Poet
and editor Ellen Foos,
left, and poet Ruth
Zamoyta put poetry in
motion.
bikes to her job in Princeton from
her home on Route 206 and takes
part in a sprint triathlon every summer.
“As the press has become better
known, the quality of submissions
has gone up and we are getting
more recognized poets,” says
Foos. She happily adds that since
Ragged Sky produces only a limited number of books per year and is
set for 2013, those hoping to submit should wait for a while.
But there is no waiting for encouragement. Foos says, “If someone is really green and just starting
out I’ll advise them to send their
work to small journals and to join a
local writers group like U.S.1 Poets’ Cooperative. If they are accomplished but I don’t like their
work, I’ll usually send them elsewhere. I encourage anyone with aspirations to write poetry to get their
work out. That’s my goal at Ragged
Sky Press. Seeing their work in a
book is validating for poets. To
those starting out, the established
poetry scene can be intimidating, it
can seem clique-ish.” Foos’ advice? “Jump right in.”
Ragged Sky Press book
launch, Princeton Public Library. Presentations by poet Ishmael von Heidrick-Barnes, poet
Sam Hamod, and opera singer Andrea Horken, Thursday, October
11, 7 p.m. Free. www.princetonlibrary.org.
More Ragged Sky Press readings with von Heidrick-Barnes:
Cornelia Street Cafe, 29 Cornelia Street, New York. Friday, October 12, 6 p.m. $8 includes beverage. corneliastreetcafe.com.
Hunterdon County Library,
314 State Route 12, Flemington.
Saturday, October 13, 2 p.m. Free.
www.hclibrary.us.
For more on Ragged Sky Press,
visit: www.raggedskypress.com.
42
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
COMMERCIAL SPACE FOR RENT & FOR SALE
COMMERCIAL SPACES FOR LEASE
LAWRENCE - 5,000 sq. ft. office can be subdivided.
Will renovate to your specs.
EWING - 800-2,000 sq. ft. in professional park, near Rt. 31 and TCNJ.
- 1,000 sq. ft. office space near Lawrence border. First month free.
HAMILTON - 650 sq. ft. office/retail at signaled intersection.
- 1,250 - 5,000 sq. ft. office ideally suited for many uses.
- 550, 650, or 1,100 sq. ft. medical/office space
in high profile building near Applebees.
FAIRLESS HILLS, PA - 500 - 4,000 sq. ft. suites near Oxford Valley Mall
ideal for medical or office.
FLORENCE - 2,000 to 12,000 sq. ft on Rt. 130 at NJ Turnpike entrance.
PENNINGTON - 400 sq. ft. office space at Pennington Circle.
DOYLESTOWN, (CHALFONT) PA - 2,000 sq. ft.
Ideal for office or medical. Near PA Turnpike
BUILDINGS FOR SALE
EWING - 6,300 Sq. ft. multi-tenant
office building. Great upside
potential. Reduced for quick
sale - $395,000.
LAWRENCE - 11,000 sq. ft.
multi-tenant office building
(2 bldgs). Ideal for
user/investor. $995,000
www.HowcoManagement.com
Commercial Listings
South Brunswick
Continued from page 16
Cranbury Plaza, 2525 Route
130. Available square feet: 4,427, divisible to 1,230. Gross rent, $14.97.
Conditions: plus utilities. Approximate per-month cost: $1,534.43,
gross.
Thompson Management, 609921-7655. Size of building: 31,182
square feet. Zoned HC.
Princeton Corporate Center, 5
Independence Way. Available
square feet: 23,400, divisible to
12,000. Gross rent, $18.95. Conditions: sublease with flexible terms
and expansion provisions. Approximate per-month cost: $18,950,
gross.
Commercial Property Network,
William Barish, 609-921-8844. Onsite cafe, gym, hotel, and restaurant.
Stockton Real Estate, Martha
Stockton, 609-924-1416. Other tenants: three lawyers, two residences,
travel agency, marketing company,
community housing office, architect.
Size of building: 1,300 square feet.
One conference room, four small office, four parking spaces; sign on
door is allowed.
Nassau East, 245 Nassau
Street. Available square feet: 1,000.
Gross rent, $19.20. Conditions: plus
utilities. Approximate per-month
cost: $1,600, gross.
Stockton Real Estate, Martha
Stockton, 609-924-1416. Other tenants: two apartments, Princeton
Community Housing, marketing, architect. Two large rooms with reception area in between and signage in
vestibule.
Research Park, 40 Wall Street.
Available square feet: 12,600, divisible to 870. Gross rent, $19. Approximate per-month cost: $1,377.50,
gross.
Hilton Realty, Matt Malatich, Jon
Brush, Mark Hill, 609-921-6060. Size
of building: 400,000 square feet. 18building office park.
Robbinsville
Washington Town Center, 1
Union Street. Available square feet:
11,450, divisible to 1,250. Net rent,
$16.50. Conditions: plus all operating expenses. Approximate permonth cost: $1,718.75, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly
& Matt Meade, 609-520-0061. Size
of building: 72,000 square feet.
Mixed-use town center with 7,000
SF divisible to 1,500 SF on first floor
and 1,250 and 3,200 SF spaces on
second floor, partially constructed.
Trenton
700 South Clinton Avenue.
Available square feet: 3,678, divisible to 1800. Net rent, $16. Conditions: plus operating expenses. Approximate per-month cost: $2,400,
net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Unique, modern
space in art district.
40 Riverview Plaza. Available
square feet: 3,409. Net rent, $22.50.
Conditions: plus tenant electric and
janitorial. Approximate per-month
cost: $6,391.88, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Size of building:
30,394 square feet. Two-story class
A building with on-site management
and deli.
West Windsor
500 Alexander Park. Available
square feet: 48,000, divisible to
1850. Net rent, $29. Conditions: plus
utilities and janitorial. Approximate
per-month cost: $4,470.83, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly
& Matt Meade, 609-520-0061. Size
of building: square feet. Property
manager on-site and building signage available.
821 Alexander Road. Available
square feet: 13,652, divisible to
3,600. Gross rent, $28.50. Approximate per-month cost: $8,550, gross.
Hilton Realty, Matt Malatich, Jon
Brush, Mark Hill, 609-921-6060. Size
of building: 44,488 square feet.
Class A.
191 Clarksville Road. Available
square feet: 13,000. Gross rent, $23.
Approximate per-month cost:
$24,916.67, gross. Also for sale:
$2,340,000.
Commercial Property Network,
William Barish, 609-921-8844. Size
of building: 13,000 square feet. Freestanding contemporary building with
huge windows.
50 Princeton-Hightstown Road.
Available square feet: 1,764, divisible to 825. Gross rent, $12.95. Conditions: plus utilities. Approximate
per-month cost: $890.31, gross.
Thompson Management, 609921-7655. Size of building: 17,288
square feet. Zoned AR.
Princeton Service Center, 3490
Route 1. Available square feet:
15,000, divisible to various sizes.
Gross rent, $15. Approximate permonth cost: $18,750, gross.
609-452-8008. Building owner:
Rujim Inc. Other tenants: Goodrich
Corporation/SUI, SnapMyLife. Size
of building: 100,000 square feet.
Class B research/office/light manufacturing space zoned ROM-1.
Windsor Business Park, 186
Princeton-Hightstown Road,
Building 3. Available square feet:
17,140, divisible to 895. Net rent,
$14. Approximate per-month cost:
$1,044.17, net.
Hilton Realty, Matt Malatich, Jon
Brush, Mark Hill, 609-921-6060. Size
of building: 25,190 square feet. Renovated office building with new
suites: 895, 1,058, 1,399, 1,579,
1,644, 1,726, and 8,839 SF.
Retail Space
Ewing
1660 North Olden Avenue Extension. Available square feet:
3,352. Net rent, $19.50. Conditions:
plus tenant heat and electric; ground
lease $65,000/year NNN. Approximate per-month cost: $5,447, net.
Also for sale: $795,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 3,352 square feet.
One-story brick bank branch building
zoned Business Highway.
1640 North Olden Avenue Extension. Available square feet:
2,500. Net rent, $12. Conditions:
NNN plus tenant operating expenses; 3-5 year minimum. Approximate
per-month cost: $2,500, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Chuck Russo, 609-581-4848. Size of
building: 2,500 square feet. Single
story masonry building with 10’ ceilings, full basement storage, 12 onsite parking spots.
926 North Olden Avenue. Available square feet: 2,250. Conditions:
sale includes all furniture, fixtures,
and equipment; lease does not include tenant heat or electric. Approximate per-month cost: $3,800, net.
Also for sale: $399,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Bob Sherer, 609-581-4848. Size of
building: 4,412 square feet. Firstfloor storefront for rent; three apartments on second and third floors
with tenants.
185-189 Scotch Road. Available
square feet: 2,000. Gross rent, $12.
Approximate per-month cost:
$2,000, gross.
Weidel Realtors, 609-737-2077.
In shopping center.
Parkside Plaza, Parkside Avenue and North Olden Lane. Available square feet: 4,471. Net rent,
$17. Approximate per-month cost:
$6,333.92, net.
Hilton Realty, Matt Malatich, Jon
Brush, Mark Hill, 609-921-6060. Other tenants: liquor store, ShopRite,
restaurant, nail salon, Advance Auto.
Size of building: 98,035 square feet.
Center anchored by ShopRite.
Hamilton
1629 Route 33. Available square
feet: 3,000. Net rent, $16. Conditions: NNN. Approximate per-month
cost: $4,000, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 6,000 square feet.
Two contiguous 1,000-2,000 SF
storefronts with 34-vehicle parking
lot.
541 Route 33. Available square
feet: 2,000. Net rent, $16.95. Approximate per-month cost: $2,825,
net.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300. Large front window exposure and ample parking.
339 Route 33. Available square
feet: 1,350. Gross rent, $22.22. Conditions: plus tenant heat and electric.
Approximate per-month cost:
$2,499.75, gross.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 6,000 square feet.
End-cap unit in shopping center.
3690 Nottingham Way. Available
square feet: 650. Net rent, $10. Approximate per-month cost: $541.67,
net.
Howco Management, Howard
Cohen, 609-896-0505. Size of building: 5,000 square feet. Two storefronts at signaled intersection.
Concord Square, 1905 Route
33. Available square feet: 2,200. Net
rent, $15.50. Approximate per-month
cost: $2,841.67, net.
Howco Management, Howard
Cohen, 609-896-0505. Building owner: Concord Square. Other tenants:
nail salon, dance studio, Grand
Bank. Size of building: 19,100
square feet. Strip shopping center
with high visibility.
Kingston
Kingston Shopping Center,
4437 Route 27. Available square
feet: 18,950, divisible to 5,000. Net
rent, $10. Conditions: plus CAM. Approximate per-month cost:
$4,166.67, net.
Building owner: High Co. LLC.
Size of building: 68,860 square feet.
Lawrence
2901 Brunswick Avenue. Available square feet: 7,500, divisible to
2500. Net rent, $12. Conditions:
OCTOBER 10, 2012
NNN plus $3.50/SF CAM; 3-5 year
term. Approximate per-month cost:
$2,500, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 25,000 square feet.
Montgomery
Montgomery Shopping Center,
Route 206 at Route 518. Available
square feet: 10,048, divisible to
2,138. Net rent, $17. Approximate
per-month cost: $3,028.83, net.
Hilton Realty, Matt Malatich, Jon
Brush, Mark Hill, 609-921-6060. Other tenants: Rite Aid, restaurants,
Massage Envy, framing, liquor store,
movie theater, Thomas Sweet. Size
of building: 155,000 square feet. Retail strip center.
Pennington
7 Tree Farm Village. Available
square feet: 1,265. Net rent, $27.
Conditions: rent negotiable. Approximate per-month cost: $2,846.25, net.
Commercial Property Network,
Al Toto, 609-921-8844. Other tenants: Chez Alice, Osteria Proccaccini
Restaurant, Wooly Lamb, Pennington Quilt Works, Artful Beads.
Princeton
801 Route 206. Available square
feet: 18,000. Net rent, $28. Approximate per-month cost: $42,000, net.
Commercial Property Network,
Al Toto, 609-921-8844. Size of building: 18,000 square feet. New shopping center to be constructed.
Robbinsville
2340 Route 33. Available square
feet: 10,000. Gross rent, $7.50. Approximate per-month cost: $6,250,
gross.
Howco Management, Howard
Cohen, 609-896-0505. Size of building: 10,000 square feet. 5,000 SF
main floor and 5,000 SF lower level
currently used as furniture store in
town center.
1240 Route 130/33 South. Divisible to 1,050 to 2,400 SF. Net rent,
$19. Conditions: NNN plus $5/SF
CAM and tenant heat and electric.
Approximate per-month cost:
$1662.50, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 12,000 square feet.
72 parking spaces.
Trenton
145 Morris Avenue. Available
square feet: 18,000. Conditions: rent
negotiable.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300. Three-story
catering/banquet facility can be
leased per individual floor with commercial kitchen available.
224 East State Street. Available
square feet: 3,000. Net rent, $15.
Conditions: NNN plus $3.75/SF CAM
and tenant heat and electric. Approximate per-month cost: $3,750, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 3,000 square feet.
Ready for tenant fit-out.
West Windsor
Princeton Arms, Old Trenton
Road and Dorchester Drive. Available square feet: 6,024, divisible to
1,975. Net rent, $14. Approximate
per-month cost: $2,304.17, net.
Hilton Realty, Matt Malatich, Jon
Brush, Mark Hill, 609-921-6060. Other tenants: Little Szechuan, Kumon
Learning Center, Mexico Lindo,
Snap Fitness, CMB Karate. Size of
building: 32,810 square feet. Retail
strip center.
Warehouse Space
Ewing
94 Stokes Avenue. Available
square feet: 48,000. Net rent, $2.25.
Conditions: plus $1/SF CAM and
tenant heat and electric; also 600 SF
garage $350/month plus electric. Ap-
proximate per-month cost: $9,000,
net. Also for sale: $950,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 48,000 square feet.
Four-story warehouse/office building
with 400 AMP electric, alarm system,
40-car parking.
802 Prospect Street. Available
square feet: 25,000. Net rent, $3.25.
Approximate per-month cost:
$6,770.83, net. Also for sale:
$695,000.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300. Size of building:
25,000 square feet. Two loading
docks and five loading doors;
fenced-in lot.
Enterprise Park, 800 Silvia
Street. Available square feet:
39,072, divisible to 5,072. Net rent,
$7.50. Conditions: up to $9/SF. Approximate per-month cost: $3,170,
net.
Hilton Realty, Matt Malatich, Jon
Brush, Mark Hill, 609-921-6060. Size
of building: 54,000 square feet. Office/warehouse.
Enterprise Park, 370 Sullivan
Way. Conditions: 9,663 SF office at
$15.50/SF modified gross; 9,358 SF
storage at $5/SF net; 18,641 SF
warehouse at $12/SF net; 32,202 SF
office at $12/ SF net.
Hilton Realty, Matt Malatich, Jon
Brush, Mark Hill, 609-921-6060. Size
of building: 156,192 square feet. Drive-in door and loading dock.
Princess Diana Lane Center, 25
Princess Diana Lane. Available
square feet: 63,000. Net rent, $3.
Conditions: plus operating expenses; $9/SF office. Approximate permonth cost: $15,750, net. Also for
sale: $1,995,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Size of building:
84,602 square feet. Unit 1: 37,000
SF warehouse; unit 2: 1,260 SF office; unit 3: 20,000 SF office; unit 4:
5,000 SF warehouse. Investment
property.
NNN plus all tenant operating expenses. Approximate per-month
cost: $2,458.33, net. Also for sale:
$2,750,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 100,000 square
feet. Part of condo complex; will subdivide; security camera system.
28 Industrial Drive. Available
square feet: 17,000, divisible to
5,000. Gross rent, $4. Approximate
per-month cost: $1,666.67, gross.
Howco Management, Howard
Cohen, 609-896-0505. Building owner: BCC Realty. Size of building:
45,000 square feet. Includes use of
loading dock.
2470 Lamberton Road. Available
square feet: 3,000. Gross rent,
$4.80. Conditions: plus tenant electric and water; 12,155 SF yard space
available at $1,000/month gross. Approximate per-month cost: $1,200,
gross.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 5,850 square feet.
Metal building with no heat/bathrooms; security alarm system.
Kuser Plaza, Kuser Road at
Whitehorse Mercerville. Available
square feet: 6,333. Gross rent, $10.
Approximate per-month cost:
$5,277.50, gross.
Hilton Realty, Matt Malatich, Jon
Brush, Mark Hill, 609-921-6060. Size
of building: 58,458 square feet.
Warehouse/storage.
Pennington
Pennington Business Park, 55
Route 31. Available square feet:
4,471. Net rent, $5.75. Conditions:
plus CAM and utilities. Approximate
per-month cost: $2,142.35, net.
Thompson Management, 609921-7655. Size of building: 58,202
square feet. Zoned SC.
Trenton
Hamilton
533 Whitehead Road. Available
square feet: 100,000, divisible to
10,000. Net rent, $2.95. Conditions:
66-72 Prince Street. Available
square feet: 105,000. Net rent,
$3.50. Conditions: NNN; $2/SF for
first floor rear only. Approximate per-
Trenton
610 Plum Street. Available
square feet: 44,225. Net rent, $3.50.
Conditions: plus all operating expenses. Approximate per-month
cost: $12,898.96, net. Also for sale:
$800,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Size of building:
44,225 square feet. Zoned industrial
A; 3,000 SF office on second floor.
39 Meade Street. Available
square feet: 15,000, divisible to
5,000. Gross rent, $4.95. Conditions:
plus tenant heat and electric. Approximate per-month cost:
$2,062.50, gross.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 250,000 square
feet. Multi-story manufacturing/warehouse.
West Windsor
University Plaza, 741-3-5
Alexander Road. Available square
feet: 33,000, divisible to 3,300. Net
rent, $8.50. Conditions: up to
$14.50/SF net. Approximate permonth cost: $2,337.50, net.
Commercial Property Network,
William Barish, 609-921-8844. Size
of building: 90,000 square feet.
40,000 sf, 2 Story Medical Arts Building
The vision is soon
to be a reality...
Ground Breaking
on or about
November of 2012!
Outstanding Location
1/4 mile from the new
University Medical
Center of Princeton
New University
Medical Center
of Princeton
at Plainsboro
‡ Occupancy 4th Quarter 2013
‡ Leases executed for over 23,000 SF
‡ Medical suites from 1,500 SF
‡ $55/SF net workletter allowance
For Rates & Information Call:
Paul Goldman
Mercer Oak Realty, LLC
609-452-0200
Subject to errors & omissions
43
month cost: $30,625, net. Also for
sale: $995,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Size of building: 105,000 square
feet. 90,000 SF warehouse space;
12,425 SF office space; 2,575 SF
basement storage; two-bay truck
well and three drive-in doors.
70 Culbertson Avenue. Available
square feet: 70,000. Net rent, $2.
Conditions: plus utilities and janitorial. Approximate per-month cost:
$11,666.67, net. Also for sale:
$1,250,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061. Size of building:
70,000 square feet. Heavy power,
TG loading docks, 14’ ceilings.
Forrestal Professional Center
Forrestal
Professional
Center
U.S. 1
44
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Flex Space
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY FOR SALE
Cranbury
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Matrix Corporate Center, 259
Prospect Plains Road. 82.53 acres,
14 buildings and additional land
parcels zoned light industrial for office, warehouse, lab, or entertainment use; free on-site parking. Asking price: $105/SF.
Vacant rental space: 100,000, divisible to 5,000. Net rent, $21. Conditions: plus all utilities; warehouse
$7/SF plus operating expenses. Approximate per-month rent: $8,750,
net.
NAI Fennelly, Matt Meade, 609520-0061.
Ewing
146 Scotch Road. Size of building: 17,600 square feet. Industrial
warehouse. Asking price:
$1,175,000.
Vacant rental space: 17,600, divisible to 2-3 units. Gross rent, $4.25.
Approximate per-month rent: Gross
monthly, $6,233.33.
Weidel Realtors, 609-737-2077.
1660 North Olden Avenue Extension. Size of building: 3,352
square feet. One-story brick bank
branch building zoned business
highway with three drive-through
windows, seven teller stations, bank
vault, private offices, kitchenette,
parking for 51 cars. Asking price:
$795,000.
Vacant rental space: 3,352. Net
rent, $19.50. Conditions: plus CAM,
tenant electric, and heat; ground
lease $65,000/year NNN. Approximate per-month rent: $5,447, net.
Hamilton
1440 South Olden Avenue. Size
of building: 3,200 square feet. Onestory free-standing building zoned
HC with parking for 15 cars. Office or
retail use. Asking price: $470,000.
Vacant rental space: 3,200. Net
rent, $10.50. Conditions: plus operating expenses. Approximate permonth rent: $2,800, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061.
1653 Route 33. Office/retail property zoned HC currently used as residence. Asking price: $299,900.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
3620 Nottingham Way. 2.5 story
Victorian-design building suitable for
residential, office, or professional
use. Asking price: $299,900.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
1111 Route 33. Size of building:
2,100 square feet. Retail/office. Asking price: $695,000.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
4314-4324 & 4352 South Broad
Street. Size of building: 8,525
square feet. Income-producing property; mix of commercial and residential on seven acres. Asking price:
$949,900.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
Forest Glen Shopping Center,
1800 Route 33. Size of building:
21,200 square feet. Zoned HC with
parking for 106 cars. Asking price:
$699,000.
Vacant rental space: 4,756, divisible to 2,375 and 2,398. Net rent, $13.
Conditions: NNN. Approximate permonth rent: $2,573, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Monroe
10 Abeel Road. Size of building:
45,000 square feet. Investment property on 2.3 acres. Net leased for seven years. Asking price: $3,400,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061.
North Brunswick
827 Ridgewood Avenue Building 5. Size of building: 6,000 square
feet. 22’ ceilings, fully air conditioned, loading docks and drive-in
doors. Asking price: $2,550,000.
Vacant rental space: 6,000, divisible to 1,050. Net rent, $5. Conditions: plus operating expenses;
$10.50/SF office plus operating expenses. Approximate per-month
rent: $437.50, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061.
Robbinsville
1226 Route 130. Size of building:
10,000 square feet. 3,200 SF office
and 6,800 SF production space on
2.34 acres zoned OC-1 office. Asking
price: $895,000.
Vacant rental space: 10,000. Net
rent, $7.50. Conditions: plus all operating expenses. Approximate permonth rent: $6,250, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061.
1088-1090 Route 130. Size of
building: 14,000 square feet. Office/warehouse/retail in various
buildings zoned TC-2. 825-1,700 SF
units for lease at varied rates. Asking
price: $2,550,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Trenton
292 Third Street. Size of building:
75,000 square feet. 44,500 SF warehouse and 10,000 SF office in UEZ
with outside storage/parking. Asking
price: $2,995,000.
Vacant rental space: 54,500. Net
rent, $4.50. Conditions: plus operating expenses. Approximate permonth rent: $20,437.50, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061.
309 North Willow Street. Size of
building: 67,363 square feet. Retail
store, offices, warehouse, storage
space, interior walkway. Located in
UEZ. Asking price: $595,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
1000 Brunswick Avenue. Size of
building: 6,000 square feet. Retail
space with attached large storage
area and upstairs apartment. Asking
price: $199,900.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
11 West Paul Avenue. Currently
used as church with seating for 85;
additional lot included. Asking price:
$85,000.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
1600 Calhoun Street. Size of
building: 4,000 square feet. Commercial lot zoned business B and
mixed use with cinder block building
shell in poor condition. Asking price:
$225,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
2 Chelten Way. Size of building:
77,636 square feet. Two-story brick
industrial building on 1.84 acres in
UEZ being sold as-is. Asking price:
$409,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Arena 129, 120 Hamilton Avenue. Size of building: 12,000
square feet. Existing building in need
of rehab. Asking price: $399,900.
Brian Rushing, 609-731-0378.
Land
East Windsor
Old Trenton Road & Millstone
Road. 79.34 acres with possible capacity of 500,000 SF approved for office/research; 65 percent improvement coverage. Asking price: call.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061.
Ewing
4 Ludlow Drive. Potential for
15,000 SF warehouse zoned IP-1.
Asking price: $327,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061.
240 Scotch Road. 2.07 acres in
professional/research/office zone.
Asking price: $66,000.
Weidel Realtors, 609-737-2077.
Hamilton
Klockner Road & Horizon Center Drive. 10.1 acres with approval
for 53,000 SF building zoned PMUD.
Asking price: $1,800,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061.
Lawrence
4000 Quakerbridge Road. 2.28
acres zoned office. Asking price:
$339,000.
Weidel Realtors, 609-737-2077.
Princeton
775 Route 206. Size of building:
2,000 square feet. 2.14 acres zoned
for office, retail, medical, or service
station. Asking price: $1,900,000.
Commercial Property Network,
Al Toto, 609-921-8844.
Robbinsville
2340-2342 Route 33. Two-acre
redevelopment site zoned for most
uses including fast food, banks, and
high-density housing. Asking price:
$1,699,000.
Howco Management, Howard
Cohen, 609-896-0505.
113 North Gold Drive. 1.07 acre
lot with approvals for a 12,000 SF
two-story office/warehouse building.
Asking price: $189,900.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
West Windsor
3496-3500 Route 1. Zoned
ROM1, farmland assessed. Asking
price: $2,995,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly
& Matt Meade, 609-520-0061.
861 Alexander Road. Zoned RP6, current building of 20,000 SF on
3.37 acres. Asking price:
$1,350,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061.
Offices
Bordentown
GREAT HAMILTON
RETAIL SPACE
PRE-CONSTRUCTION SALE
WITH OFFER OF FREE RENT
Hamilton, NJ. The property is improved with a
one story 4,600± square foot retail center with a
1,600+ square foot unit available for lease.
Located on a busy intersection, the three unit
building also has Rita’s and Hamilton Kitchen
as tenants.
Hamilton, NJ. A 5,950+ SF shopping center with
(3) three units totaling 2,700+ square feet that is
available for lease. The unit is open space with
a clear floor plan. Each unit is 900 +, two of the
units are contiguous. The Highway Commercial
zoning allows for a wide array of office, retail,
repair and service type uses.
LAWRENCEVILLE
RETAIL SPACE
BUCKS COUNTY
AUTO BODY SPACE
Lawrenceville, NJ. A 4,015± square foot retail
building that is available for lease. Free standing building on heavily travelled road. Ideal for
office or retail user that is looking to maximize
their exposure on a highly visible site.
Bristol, PA. A one story 10,000± square foot
building, which consists of 1,500+ square feet of
office space, Auto Repair/Body Shop and a
showroom equipped with a sealed OSHA
approved paint room as a part of the Auto Body
function. The prominent location on high traffic
road makes it ideal for a business with a need
for visibility.
HAMILTON FLEX SPACE
MAJOR PRICE REDUCTION
Hamilton, NJ. A 41,500+ SF building with 3,800+
square feet of flex space and 1,500+ SF of office
space on the second floor that is available to
lease. Flex space is also for sale. Perfect for the
contractor that is just starting to expand his or
her business.
Trenton, NJ. The property is improved with a
one story masonry constructed building occupying a total of 3,240+ square feet of gross floor
area. The buildings have housed an automotive
radiator sales and service company for many
years. Prior use was as an auto body shop.
Located near Waterfront Park, visible from
Route 1.
MAJOR PRICE REDUCTION!!
FORMER BURGER KING
Trenton, NJ. A fully leased 18,774± square foot
mixed use property consisting of luxury apartments, retail and office space available for sale.
In addition to great visibility, the property has a
lot of character and charm. It is located in the
historic district of Mill Hill near the Sun National
Bank Arena.
Bordentown, NJ. Former 3,000± quick-service
restaurant with a drive through and expansion
potential available for sale or lease. Located on
Route 130 adjacent to an existing Denny’s, this
site has excellent visibility and over 46,000±
vehicles per day! With the recent major price
reduction, this site will not last.
163 Route 130. Size of building:
38,000 square feet. Building 1: 5,470
SF on first floor and 2,900 SF on second; building 2: 1,100 SF on first
floor and 2,035 on second. Also
3,600 SF medical unit on first floor.
Asking price: $3,950,000.
Divisible to 1,100 SF. Net rent,
$10. Conditions: plus operating expenses, utilities, and janitorial. Approximate per-month rent: $916.67,
net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly
& Matt Meade, 609-520-0061.
598 Route 206. Size of building:
2,270 square feet. Existing plans for
a new approved building with six
parking spaces, zoned commercial.
Asking price: $349,900.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
Ewing
2000 Spruce Street. Size of
building: 6,300 square feet. Six-suite
office building; can be delivered vacant. Asking price: $395,000.
OCTOBER 10, 2012
U.S. 1
Vacant rental space: 4,000, divisible to 900. Net rent, $7.80. Approximate per-month rent: $585, net.
Howco Management, Howard
Cohen, 609-896-0505. Owner:
Spruce Investments.
1440 Pennington Road. Size of
building: 12,068 square feet. 1.42
acres zoned PRO with approved additional 4,500 SF retail building.
Large basement for storage, 50-car
parking lot. Asking price: $750,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates, Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-5814848.
Hamilton
1540 Kuser Road A-3. Medical
office condo with seven exam
rooms, waiting room, reception
desk, handicap-accessible bathrooms, tile and carpet flooring, hardwired alarm system, hot air gas-fired
heating, and central air. Asking
price: $185,000.
Vacant rental space: 1,375. Net
rent, $9. Conditions: plus $5.20/SF
CAM and all tenant operating expenses. Approximate per-month
rent: $1,031.25, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates, Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-5814848.
2610 Nottingham Way. Size of
building: 2,000 square feet. 2.5-story residential dwelling with two-car
detached garage and extra 80’x20’
lot zoned community commercial.
Asking price: $279,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates, Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-5814848.
Longford Corporate Center,
3379 Quakerbridge Road. 5,200
SF condo on second floor. Asking
price: $1,066,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly, 609-520-0061.
Lawrence
680-690 Whitehead Road. Size
of building: 11,000 square feet.
6,000 and 5,000 SF buildings zoned
office with full basements and parking for 40 cars. Asking price:
$995,000.
Vacant rental space: 6,000. Net
rent, $13.50. Conditions: NNN plus
$3.50/SF CAM plus tenant heat and
electric for 680 building. Approximate per-month rent: $6,750, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates, Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-5814848.
Lawrence Office Park, 168
Franklin Corner Road. Size of
building: 36,146 square feet. Condos zoned RD/C. Asking price:
$225,000.
Vacant rental space: 9,658, divisible to 1,500. Net rent, $; Gross rent,
$13.16. Conditions: plus utilities. Approximate per-month rent: Gross
monthly, $1,645.
Thompson Management, 609921-7655.
Pennington
Pennington Office Park, 114 Titus Mill Road. Size of building:
12,000 square feet. Condo units.
Asking price: call for price.
Vacant rental space: 9,000, divisible to 1,500. Net rent, $17. Conditions: plus utilities. Approximate permonth rent: $2,125, net.
Commercial Property Network,
Al Toto, 609-921-8844.
Trenton
21 Hillside Avenue. Size of
building: 11,070 square feet. Twostory office building on .4744 acres
built in 1984. Asking price:
$675,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly, 609-520-0061.
West Windsor
191 Clarksville Road. Size of
building: 13,000 square feet. Freestanding contemporary building with
huge windows. Asking price:
$2,340,000.
Vacant rental space: 13,000.
Gross rent, $23. Approximate permonth rent: Gross monthly,
$24,916.67.
Commercial Property Network,
William Barish, 609-921-8844.
Continued on following page
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The Hilton Realty Difference
Diverse UÊ Long-Term Focus UÊ Private Company U Financially Conservative U Stable UÊ Professional U Relationship Oriented
Winner of the 2012 BOMA NJ Outstanding Building of the Year Award for 902 Carnegie Center
1. 101 Interchange Plaza
4. 821 Alexander Road
Cranbury, NJ
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Excellent location at Exit 8A of NJTP
Renovated common areas, restrooms
and office suites
934 SF, 1,779 SF, 2,033 SF, 2,769 SF,
3,787 SF, 3,456 SF & 7,088 SF
CALL FOR LEASE INCENTIVES
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Walk to the train
Class A office with high-end finishes
Fitness room and showers
2nd floor – 13,652 SF divisible
1st floor – 4,637 SF
5. 300 Carnegie Center
Princeton, NJ
2. 104 Interchange Plaza
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Monroe, NJ
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Convenient access to 8A of NJTP
Well maintained, high-end finishes
2nd floor – 2,445 SF
Suite 101 – 4,446 SF
Suite 102 – 4,160 SF
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3. Windsor Business Park
186 & 196 Princeton Hightstown
Rd, Princeton Junction, NJ
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4 building office park
1.5 miles from Princeton Junction
Train Station
Passenger elevators
Newly constructed office spaces
895 SF, 1,058 SF, 1,399 SF, 1,576 SF to
8,839 SF
7. 902 Carnegie Center
Princeton, NJ
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New headquarters quality, Class A,
green building
On-site gym, showers, day porter
Route 1 visibility
Estimated completion on or before
June 1, 2013
Generous tenant improvement
allowance
4,420 SF to 88,274 SF
6. 301 Carnegie Center
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609 921 6060
Landmark, Class A, Carnegie Center
building
Renovated in 2007
On-site gym, showers, café, security
and day porter
Route 1 visibility
Quality corporate tenant base
Suite 301 – 2,830 SF
Suite 402 – 5,622 SF
Class A building constructed in 2007
On-site gym, showers, café, day porter,
management and basement storage
Adjacent to Princeton Marketfair
Plug & play space
Suite 160 – 4,886 SF
Suite 430 – 5,288 SF
2012 TOBY award winner
8. Princeton Executive Center
4301 Route 1, Monmouth Jct, NJ
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Princeton, NJ
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10. North Brunswick
Commerce Center
Princeton, NJ
Pending common area and restroom
renovations
Across from Dow Jones
2.9 miles from the hospital
1st floor – 8,525 SF divisible to
3,879 SF and 4,646 SF
Suite 210 – 5,027 SF
Suite 220 – 5,892 SF
CALL FOR LEASE INCENTIVES
9. Lawrence Executive Center
3120 Princeton Pike, Lawrenceville, NJ
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Matt Malatich
[email protected]
Office/medical building
New landscaping
New common area improvements
and office suites
Great visibility
Easy access to 95 and Route 1
1st floor – 1,321 SF
Suite 301 – 2,235 SF
Suite 304 – 6,320 SF
Jon Brush
[email protected]
North Brunswick, NJ
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Single story flex, office and lab
Easy access to NJ Turnpike & Route 1
Walking distance to numerous
amenities
Units ranging from 2,226 SF to
13,117 SF
11. Research Park
Wall Street, Princeton, NJ
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18 building office and medical complex
Adjacent to Montgomery Park and
a retail shopping center
On-site café, business services and
fee based gym
Great value with flexible lease terms
Units ranging from 540 SF to
16,000 SF
12. Enterprise Park
800 Silvia Street, West Trenton, NJ
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4 Building flex and warehouse complex
New construction with high bay
space and roll up doors
Adjacent to the West Trenton Train
Station
24,000 SF warehouse divisible
10,000 SF flex (3,821 SF office)
5,072 SF flex (641 SF office)
9,358 SF storage
9,663 SF office
Mark Hill
[email protected]
902 Carnegie Center, Suite 400, Princeton, New Jersey 08540 www.hiltonrealtyco.com
45
46
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Continued from preceding page
Office Opportunities
Pennington - Retail, 23,000 SF
Rt. 31 South @ Tree Farm Road.
1,265 SF Available - Retail
Retail Spaces
Bordentown
56 Route 130. Size of building:
2,460 square feet. Masonry building
plus two storage sheds zoned HC.
Asking price: $299,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
East Windsor
521 Route 130 North. Size of
building: 12,450 square feet.
Sale/lease/redevelopment opportunity with 250’ highway frontage and
three acres. Asking price:
$1,695,000.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
Al Toto - [email protected]
Ewing
Office - Pennington Point
450 - 2,370 SF Office
1660 North Olden Avenue Extension. Size of building: 3,352
square feet. One-story brick bank
branch building zoned Business
Highway. Asking price: $795,000.
Vacant rental space: 3,352. Net
rent, $19.50. Conditions: plus tenant
heat and electric; ground lease
$65,000/year NNN. Approximate
per-month rent: $5,447, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
926 North Olden Avenue. Size of
building: 4,412 square feet. Firstfloor storefront for rent; three apartments on second and third floors
with tenants. Asking price: $399,000.
Vacant rental space: 2,250. Net
rent, $20.27. Conditions: sale includes all furniture, fixtures, and
equipment. Approximate per-month
rent: $3,800.63, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Bob Sherer, 609-581-4848.
1855 North Olden Avenue. Highvolume, established restaurant. Asking price: $649,000.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
FREE RENT and FLEXIBLE LEASE TERMS.
Immediate occupancy.
Al Toto [email protected]
Visit www.penningtonpointoffice.com
Hopewell Boro, Office/Professional/Records
500-30,000/SF Office & low priced storage, warehouse
Hamilton
William Barish [email protected]
Pennington Office For Lease
1500 SF - 9000 SF office available for lease or sale. Free rent
available and very aggressive rental rates.
Al Toto [email protected]
Pennington Office For Lease
Howe Commons, 65 S. Main St., Downtown Pennington.
342 SF - 1,315 SF. 1 to 5-Year Term. Close to
restaurants, banks and shopping. Ample parking on site.
578 Route 33. Fast food drive-in
establishment in business for over
50 years. Asking price: $995,000.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
Operating Restaurant. Size of
building: 2,008 square feet. Asking
price: $95,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
1801 South Broad Street. Size
of building: 4,000 square feet. Zoned
HC. First floor 2,100 SF storefront
with kitchen; second/third floor fivebedroom apartment; full basement
storage; chain-link fence. Asking
price: $275,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
1726 Genesee Street. Size of
building: 4,000 square feet. Two-story masonry building with cycle repair
shop and retail showroom on first
floor and storage on second floor.
Asking price: $249,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Lawrence
1811 Princeton Avenue. Size of
building: 5,244 square feet. One-story building with waiting room, free
span interior, concrete floors, paved
lot. Asking price: $510,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Trenton
923 North Olden Avenue. Size of
building: 4,950 square feet. Two-story masonry storefront. Asking price:
$165,000.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061.
1222 Hamilton Avenue. Size of
building: 1,800 square feet. Asking
price: $189,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
12 South Warren Street. Size of
building: 5,300 square feet. Storefront commercial four-story. Asking
price: $259,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
1222 Hamilton Avenue. Size of
building: 1,800 square feet. Open retail and storage roomhandicap ramp
in rear. Asking price: $189,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Warehouses
Allentown
125 Route 526. Light industrial
building on two acres. Asking price:
$1,495,000.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
Ewing
94 Stokes Avenue. Size of building: 48,000 square feet. Four-story
warehouse/office building. Asking
price: $950,000.
Vacant rental space: 48,000. Net
rent, $2.25. Conditions: plus $1/SF
CAM and tenant heat and electric;
also 600 SF garage $350/month plus
electric. Approximate per-month
rent: $9,000, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
802 Prospect Street. Size of
building: 25,000 square feet. Two
loading docks and five loading
doors; fenced-in lot. Asking price:
$695,000.
Vacant rental space: 25,000. Net
rent, $3.25. Approximate per-month
rent: $6,770.83, net.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
64 Hillman Avenue. Two buildings; asphalt paved parking; zoned
R-2. Asking price: $420,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
216 Robbins Avenue. Size of
building: 4,530 square feet. One-story building with office. Asking price:
$199,900.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
Princess Diana Lane Center, 25
Princess Diana Lane. Size of building: 84,602 square feet. Unit 1:
37,000 SF warehouse; unit 2: 1,260
SF office; unit 3: 20,000 SF office;
unit 4: 5,000 SF warehouse. Investment property. Asking price:
$1,995,000.
Vacant rental space: 63,000. Net
rent, $3. Conditions: plus operating
expenses; $9/SF office. Approximate
per-month rent: $15,750, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061.
Hamilton
533 Whitehead Road. Size of
building: 100,000 square feet. Part of
condo complex; will subdivide; security camera system plus alarms
throughout. Asking price:
$2,750,000.
Vacant rental space: 100,000, divisible to 10,000. Net rent, $2.95.
Conditions: NNN plus all tenant op-
Able Cleaning Service
877•225•3253
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call Commercial Property Network, 609-921-8844
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erating expenses. Approximate permonth rent: $2,458.33, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
180 Volusia Avenue. Size of
building: 4,439 square feet. Two-story brick building with warehouse on
ground floor and apartment above.
Asking price: $449,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
20 Nami Lane. Size of building:
7,550 square feet. 5,000 SF warehouse and 2,550 SF office on 6.47
acres, plus 1,500 SF garage. Asking
price: $1,500,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
242 Route 156. Size of building:
8,800 square feet. Office space, one
large overhead door. Asking price:
$689,900.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
55 Benson Avenue. Size of
building: 3,825 square feet. 3,000 SF
office; 225 SF mezzanine; 600 SF office area, zoned GC. Asking price:
$265,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
Trenton
66-72 Prince Street. Size of
building: 105,000 square feet.
90,000 SF warehouse space; 12,425
SF office space; 2,575 SF basement
storage; two-bay truck well. Asking
price: $995,000.
Vacant rental space: 105,000. Net
rent, $3.50. Conditions: NNN; $2/SF
for first floor rear only. Approximate
per-month rent: $30,625, net.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
70 Culbertson Avenue. Size of
building: 70,000 square feet. Heavy
power, TG loading docks, 14’ ceilings. Asking price: $1,250,000.
Vacant rental space: 70,000. Net
rent, $2. Conditions: plus utilities and
janitorial. Approximate per-month
rent: $11,666.67, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061.
550 West Ingham Avenue. Size
of building: 48,425 square feet. Industrial/manufacturing building. Asking price: $556,000.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
610 Plum Street. Size of building:
44,225 square feet. Zoned industrial
A; 3,000 SF office on second floor.
Asking price: $800,000.
Vacant rental space: 44,225. Net
rent, $3.50. Conditions: plus all operating expenses. Approximate permonth rent: $12,898.96, net.
NAI Fennelly, Gerard J. Fennelly,
609-520-0061.
746 Calhoun Street. Size of
building: 5,000 square feet. Zoned
for existing contractor’s yard or can
be divided into one lot zoned business B and four zoned residential B.
Asking price: $279,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
39-49 Tucker Street. Size of
building: 35,900 square feet. Threestory masonry building with 33,400
SF warehouse and 2,500 SF office
and full basement. Asking price:
$349,900.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
12 Pierce Avenue. Size of building: 6,840 square feet. Two-story
building with combination of
office/warehouse on both floors.
Asking price: $350,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
15 Howell Street. Size of building: 4,017 square feet. Three-story
storefront and warehouse zoned residential B. Parking for 10-12 cars.
Asking price: $199,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
803 Liberty Street. One-story
warehouse plus mezzanine with two
offices, zoned RB. Asking price:
$395,000.
Joseph R. Ridolfi & Associates,
Joseph R. Ridolfi, 609-581-4848.
461 York Avenue. Size of building: 4,000 square feet. 14’ ceilings,
one-acre fenced yard. Asking price:
$399,900.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
47 Virginia Avenue. Size of
building: 6,100 square feet. 5,000 SF
warehouse plus 1,100 SF office
space. Asking price: $389,000.
Bonnani Realtors, David Bonnani, 609-586-4300.
OCTOBER 10, 2012
U.S. 1
47
Life in the Fast Lane
T
he Rutgers University
Center for Green Building
(RCGB) has recruited West Windsor Township to be the first community to participate in a new program seeking to make existing
commercial building more energy
efficient.
The center pitched West Windsor on the idea in September due to
the town’s reputation for being a
sustainable, progressive community, said RCGB’s Jennifer Senick,
who made a presentation to the
town’s environmental commission.
The township council approved the
deal with Rutgers on October 1.
Michael Hornsby, chairman of the
West Windsor environmental commission said the program is being
funded by a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.
Included in the program would
be properties along Route 1 with a
Princeton address but that are
physically located in West Windsor. These include Carnegie Center, Carnegie Center North, and the
offices on Alexander Road and surrounding the Princeton Junction
train station.
“West Windsor would pilot
some new initiatives to promote
the reduction of carbon emissions
from township commercial buildings — examples would be examining green building codes and perhaps have a green building recognition program,” said Hornsby.
According to Senick, the goal of
the project is to reduce annual energy use in commercial buildings in
the greater Philadelphia region by
20 percent by 2020. Senick said the
project is focused on existing commercial buildings, which includes
multi-family buildings over four
stories high. Other residential housing is excluded from consideration.
“The plan is to use the greater
Philadelphia region as an incubator
to see how close one can come to
reaching this goal, and then to see
what policies come out of it that
can be disseminated throughout
the U.S. It’s the equivalent of a new
Department of Energy laboratory
for decreasing energy use,” Senick
said.
Senick says the focus for the initiative results from the fact that the
building industry has been slower
to decrease its energy consumption
than other sectors — such as automotive, aircraft, and train — and
the Department of Energy outlined
the need to appeal to builders.
“This recognizes that the part of
the country we are talking about is
largely built-out: there’s a large existing building stock and a lot of it
is very inefficient, and there are a
lot of barriers to improving energy
efficiency in these buildings.
Those barriers are market-based,
policy-based, and technologicallybased. There’s a lot of challenges
to overcome,” Senick said.
The DOE program is a $129
million, five-year initiative involving universities and companies as
well as interested private entities.
Rutgers is in charge of coordinating central and southern Jersey
municipalities, and West Windsor
was targeted first.
“One of the recommendations,”
says Senick, “was if an existing
commercial building was being
renovated by more than 50 percent
of its square footage, let’s see if we
can get that building up to an EnergyStar portfolio manager’s score
of 75.”
That would place it in the top 25
percent of other buildings that are
its cohort (same type or built in the
same year). “In pursuing something like this, we would have to
tell private sector owners about the
Edited by Bill Sanservino
New President For Theological Seminary
R
everend
M.
Craig
Barnes, pictured at right, has
been named the seventh president of Princeton Theological
Seminary effective January 1,
replacing Reverend Iain Torrance who announced his intention to retire last year.
Barnes, a 1981 master of divinity graduate from the seminary, is currently a professor of
pastoral ministry and leadership
at the Pittsburgh Theological
Seminary, and is pastor of the
1,100-member Shadyside Presbyterian Church in Pittsburgh.
Barnes earned his doctorate in
American church history from
the University of Chicago and
has previously served pastorates
at the First Presbyterian Church
of Colorado Springs, Christ
Presbyterian Church in Madison, WI, and the National Presbyterian Church in Washington
D.C. He is the author of eight
books and is a columnist for The
Christian Century magazine,
based in Chicago.
“I fell in love with Princeton
Seminary in 1978 when I began
my master of divinity studies
here,” said Barnes. “By the time
I left the seminary, the words
faith and learning were permanently engraved together on my
heart.”
“I am eager to help Princeton
be the best it can be,” he added.
“A winsome community that is
incentives available to help them
get there,” Senick said.
Elements pertaining to the interior of commercial properties, such
as indoor lighting and fixtures inside the building, are the primary
focus points of the Rutgers initiative.
The first step to implementing
the program in West Windsor is
making an inventory of commercial properties in the town and then
reaching out to corporations and
property owners through phone
calls, surveys, and other methods.
Jennifer Souder, RCGB project
manager, graduate students from
the Bloustein School recently
worked with the environmental
commission to identify 274 commercial properties that could qualify. Yet to be identified are multifamily buildings.
— Rikki N. Massand
PJS & Rider Start
Internship Program
S
tudents from Rider University will work as interns at Princeton Junior School (PJS) under a
new program between the school
and Rider’s department of teacher
education.
Under the program, graduate
and undergraduate students from
Rider associate professor Tamar
Jacobson’s developmental methods and assessment in early childhood education class will begin internships with PJS’ preschool and
kindergarten teachers.
PJS, located on Fackler Road, is
holding an open house on Sunday,
October 14, from 2 to 3:30 p.m. for
families interested in learning
more about the program, which began on September 24.
“This partnership provides opContinued on following page
committed to developing church
leaders who are theologically
formed, intellectually curious,
and equipped to serve the church
of Jesus Christ in a dramatically
new cultural context.”
John Buchanan, pastor emeritus of the Fourth Presbyterian
Church of Chicago and editor of
The Christian Century, said,
“Craig Barnes and the presidency of Princeton Theological
Seminary is a match made in
heaven. He is an exquisitely
trained scholar, an eloquent proclaimer of the Gospel, a thoughtful analyst of culture, and a
graceful and prolific author.”
Barnes plans to move to
Princeton with his wife Dawne,
and teenage sons Karl and Erik.
Princeton
Theological
Seminary, 64 Mercer
Street, Box 821, Princeton
08542; 609-921-8300; fax,
609-924-2973. M. Craig
Barnes, president. www.ptsem.edu.
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48
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Medical/Office Space
The
Atrium
at
Lawrence
Located midway between 2 new hospitals!!
Adjacent to highways U.S. 1, I-95, I-295,
Princeton Pike and U.S. 206 Great access!
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• All areas with a view of the ATRIUM
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Continued from preceding page
portunities for teachers to conduct
action research and pose critical
questions of their own teaching
practices and student learning in
their classrooms and then work
collaboratively with interns to examine these questions,” said Silvana Clark, PJS head of school.
Princeton Junior School, 90
Fackler Road, Box 672,
Princeton 08542-0672; 609924-8126; fax, 609-9247456. Silvana Clark, head of
school. www.pjs.org.
Rider
University,
2083
Lawrence Road, Lawrenceville 08648; 609-896-5000;
fax, 609-895-5681. Mordechai Rozanski, president.
www.rider.edu.
PPPL Gets $12.25 M
Grant Award
133 Franklin Corner Rd., Lawrenceville, N.J. 08648
Fax: 609-219-1330
[email protected]
T
he Center for Edge Physics
Simulation (EPSI), based at
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory on the Forrestal Campus, has
won a $12.25 million federal grant
for the development of software to
simulate a key component of plasma, the substance used to fuel fusion energy.
The scientists hope to develop a
computer model of the harsh pressure, temperature, density, and
flow conditions that occur at the
edge of intensely hot fusion plasmas. Plasma is the gas confined inside magnetic fields in fusion reactors called tokamaks.
Controlling the plasma edge is
crucial for maintaining confinement so fusion can take place and
energy can be produced. Failure to
do so causes the plasma to grow
unstable, leak from magnetic confinement, and damage tokamak reactor walls.
C.S. Chang, the PPPL principal
research physicist who heads the
ESPI, offered an everyday example to explain the concept of confinement. “If you want to confine
soup, the bowl should not leak,
wobble, or be broken by the heat.”
“The DOE grant is terrific for
the laboratory because it allows us
to work in the forefront of the simulation of the edge region of fusion
plasmas,” said Stewart Prager, PPPL director. “This code could go a
long way toward modeling and understanding this pivotal region.”
Princeton Plasma Physics
Laboratory, Princeton University, James Forrestal
Campus, Box 451, Princeton
08543-0451; 609-243-2000;
fax, 609-243-2751. Stewart
Prager, director. www.pppl.gov.
New in Town
Logic Planet, 101 College
Road East, Second Floor,
Princeton 08540; 732-5120009; fax, 732-512-0003.
Sudhir Varma, president.
www.logicplanet.com.
Logic Planet, provider of software development and IT services,
moved its corporate headquarters
from Brunswick Avenue in Edison
to 101 College Road East.
The company was founded in
2001 with a focus on providing
clients with services in open source
technologies, data warehousing,
business intelligence, enterprise
resource protocol, e-commerce
client service, and object-oriented
technologies
The company was ranked number 3,016 on Inc. magazine’s 2011
ranking of 5,000 fastest-growing
companies. According to Inc.,
Logic Planet has more than 130
employees worldwide, adding 50
in the last three years. Revenues
were $5.9 million in 2007 and $10
million in 2010.
The company also has offices in
Irvine, CA, and Hyderebad, India.
Crosstown Moves
SDB (Sturhahn, Dickenson &
Bernard), 100 Overlook
Center,
Second
Floor,
Princeton 08540; 609-9216880; fax, 609-924-8991. Jay
Bernard, president.
Sturhahn, Dickenson & Bernard
moved from 152 Alexander Road
to 100 Overlook Center. The firm
is an authorized, independent Mercury Insurance Agency for auto insurance.
Lucid Technologies, 231
Clarksville Road, Suite 4-A,
West Windsor 08550; 609945-5921; fax, 888-8994901. www.lucidcom.com
Lucid Technologies, a provider
of IT consulting services, has
moved to 231 Clarksville Road
from 51 Everett Drive.
“We specialize in transforming
IT operations so that it complements business directions and priorities, and delivers IT services
consistently and effectively,”
states the company’s website. “We
provide a roadmap to support
clients through the IT change
process while aligning the business
and achieving stakeholder agreement. The result is dramatic improvements in collaboration between users, applications, and
technology components, generating significant value for any business and creating competitive advantage.”
Infosolve Technologies, 4365
Route 1 South, Suite 102,
Princeton 08540; 732-9400516; fax, 732-875-0853.
Subbu Manchiraju, vice president. www.infosolvetech.com.
Infosolve Technologies, which
integrates business data and improves its quality, moved from
2088 Route 130 in South
Brunswick to an office at 4365
Route 1 South.
The company offers a “Zero
Based Solutions” approach, which
utilizes open source data services
that require no licenses, term contracts, or up front hardware investments from customers. When it
formed in 2003, the company previously sold software but then in
2007 moved to a model where it
would only charge for professional
services.
Witt Law LLC, 4478 Route 27,
Kingston 08528; 609-2790599; fax, 609-385-0142.
Jared Witt, attorney at law.
www.wittlawus.com.
Attorney Jared Witt has moved
his firm, Witt Law, from 304 Wall
Street to 4478 Route 27 in
Kingston.
Witt concentrates his legal practice in the fields of business and
commercial law, and real estate
law. He has served as general counsel of TerraCycle, a green consumer products company. Previously he practiced corporate law,
securities law, banking law, and real estate law at the Princeton-based
firm, Jamieson Moore Peskin &
Spicer (now Pepper Hamilton).
Witt received his JD in 1995
from Rutgers University School of
Law. While at Rutgers, he studied
international environmental law in
Nairobi, Kenya.
Richard J. Lucash CPA, 690
Lawrenceville Road, unit 5,
Lawrenceville 08648; 609584-0448; fax, 609-5840458.
www.rjlucashcpa.com.
The accounting firm of Richard
Lucash has moved from 1799
Klockner Road in Mercerville to
690 Lawrenceville Road in
Lawrenceville. The move occurred
in February.
Nassau Transportation Inc.,
31 Crescent Avenue, Rocky
Hill 08553-7276; 609-9211362; fax, 609-921-1409.
William D. Albert, president.
www.NassauTransport.com.
Nassau Transport has moved
out of its Research Park office at
418 Wall Street and is now operating from a home-based location in
Rocky Hill.
Operations
manager
Ron
Raynor said the company, which
provides delivery services and also
operates Nassau Courier, decided
to close the physical location and
concentrate on doing business over
the Internet.
Deaths
William Joseph Kush, 78, on
October 2. He worked at Mobil
Corporation's technical service
laboratory in Princeton.
John C. Henzler, 93, on October 2. He owned and operated two
Exxon stations in East Windsor.
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Survival Guide
Continued from page 8
says she had “no reason to think I
would not be able to do it all.”
Harris returns to Jacksonville
frequently. It is also her husband’s
hometown, and, says Harris, “he’s
one of six kids,” so there is lots of
family to visit. The two met in a
bowling alley when she was 12 and
he was 15. A bet ensued. If he won
the next game, she would give him
her phone number. He didn’t win,
but he got the number anyway.
Dedicated to her career, Harris didn’t marry her childhood sweetheart, who is now in a master’s program, training to be an adult ed
teacher, for another 26 years.
Harris, who turns 50 this year,
shows no signs of slowing down.
Increasingly busy with speaking
engagements, taking on ever more
responsibility at Morgan Stanley,
and working hard at her music, she
harkens back to her mother when
she says, “she didn’t make a lot of
compromises. She was not overwhelmed.” Perhaps that’s what life
looks like when the role of Type A
Wall Streeter is played by “a Southern girl from Florida.”
— Kathleen McGinn Spring
Tuesday, October 16
Don’t Give Up On Being A Better Speaker
Start with a bang. Literally.
Or maybe with a clap of thunder.
The sharp report of a baseball rocketing over an outfield wall could
work, too.
“You need to draw the audience
in,” says Jim Samuel, 20-year veteran of Toastmasters, the non-profit devoted to developing speaking
and leadership skills. The beginning of any talk is important, as is
its body and conclusion, along
with the vocal tones and gestures
with which it is delivered, he says.
This is true whether the speaker is
addressing a gathering of hundreds, a few colleagues, or a job interviewer.
Samuel leads a free three-part
“Better Speaker Series,” a Mercer
Free School event, on three consecutive Tuesdays, beginning on
October 16 at 7 p.m. at the Ewing
Library. Call 609-403-2383.
The Mercer Free school was
launched in March 2010 as a voluntary association by users of the
Ewing branch of the Mercer County Library System. It was initially
called Ewing Free School, but the
name was changed a few weeks later the name was changed to Mercer
Free School to be identified with a
wider geographic area.
“It is a ‘free’ school in the sense
that no monetary exchange is involved and it is not controlled by
obligation or the will of another,
according to the school’s website.
Samuel, a Jamesburg resident
whose day job for the past 10 years
has been investing in real estate,
helping others to invest, and giving
talks on investing, attended high
school on Long Island, where his
father, Jerry, was an ophthalmologist, one of the first to use lasers,
and his mother, Frieda, was a stayat-home mom who became an accomplished artist despite “not
picking up a paintbrush until she
was in her 50s.”
Samuel earned a B.S. in math at
Syracuse University (Class of
1971), an MBA in finance from the
University of Connecticut, and an
M.S. in computer science from the
State University of New York at
Stony Brook. Admittedly a leftbrain guy, he spent the better part of
three decades as an independent
contractor, working on computers
— “testing, doing analysis, manag-
ing projects, fixing whatever needed fixing.”
While this background doesn’t
seem to have much to do with
speaking, Samuel points out that he
was constantly meeting people and
interviewing for new assignments.
It takes verbal skill to sell yourself
in these situations, even when demand for computer professionals is
high.
On one of those assignments, at
Warner Lambert, he met a Toastmaster who convinced him to give
the organization a try. He saw the
appeal right away. “As the oldest of
four boys, I didn’t get much attention,” he jokes, adding that the
chance to hold the attention of an
entire room for five minutes was irresistible.
In a Toastmaster meeting, several members stand up and give talks
while others evaluate them in a
friendly, no-pressure setting. During a typical meeting there are also
opportunities for members to give
impromptu talks. The practice and
feedback lead to more skill and assurance in any situation requiring
polished verbal communication
skills.
And while the need to speak can
arise every day — at work, at networking events, with new acquaintances — the kind of speaking that
causes many to ice over with terror
is the talk to a roomful of people.
Here are some hints on taming the
fear and delighting audiences:
Train your butterflies. “There
will always be butterflies,” says
Samuel, “but with practice, you
can teach them to fly in formation.”
He works with his butterflies by visualizing his talk in advance — not
only practicing what he will say,
but also picturing his gestures.
Another important tactic is to
make eye contact with as many
members of the audience as possible, holding each for about three
seconds. Making these connec-
Nothing is more gripping than a personal
story of life and
death, but everyone
has stories. Sharing
them helps to pull listeners in.
tions, one-by-one, can make it feel
like the talk is just between the two
of you.
Moving around is helpful, too.
Samuels suggests ditching the
lectern if possible, moving closer
to the audience, and walking to the
right and left during the speech.
This movement also serves to
“give some sense of whether
you’re getting through.”
Questioned on the efficacy of a
pre-talk, nerve-steadying drink,
Samuels replies right away, but
gently enough, that he is a teetotaler who doesn’t think alcohol or
drugs have any place in speech
preparation. “Besides,” he says,
“you want to be sharp.”
Mistakes Happen. Among other reasons for keeping your wits
about you, says Samuel, is the fact
that, inevitably, there will be mistakes. You will lose your train of
thought or stumble over a word. It
happens, he says, recounting his
worse gaffe, which involved shooting a paper airplane right into the
forehead of a speech judge. (He recovered with a joke, the judge
laughed with him, and the speech
was a success.)
A big reason not to worry about
an upcoming speech, mistakes and
all, he says, is that “the audience is
with you. They want you to do
well.”
Toss a grenade. “You need to
draw your audience in, to make
them pay attention,” says Samuels.
“I like to start with a question or an
unusual sound, something to focus
people.” The opening gambit could
also create a feeling of crisis, asking the audience to imagine themselves in a very different reality.
“We had a speaker whose son
has a disability,” Samuels gives as
an example. “He started a talk by
asking ‘What if you couldn’t
hear?’ It was a pretty effective
opening.”
Another of Samuels’ fellow
Toastmasters, a top speaker, is an
ovarian cancer survivor who asks
her audiences to imagine how they
would function on medication or
while awaiting surgery.
Let the question hang in the
air. Whether the opening is the
crack of a bat or a sobering question, Samuel says he likes to toss it
out, and then leave it hanging in the
audience’s mind. He goes on to the
body of his talk, which may seem
to be going in a very different direction. Then he circles back to the
opener at the very end.
Make it personal. The best
speech that Samuels has ever
heard? “Jim Valvano’s speech
when he received his lifetime
achievement award,” he says without hesitation.
The legendary college basketball coach had been diagnosed with
cancer and had two months left to
live. At one point in his acceptance
speech, the teleprompter said he
had 30 seconds left. Seeing it, he
said “they got that screen up there
flashing 30 seconds, like I care
about that screen. I got tumors all
over my body and I’m worried
about some guy in the back going
30 seconds.”
Nothing is more gripping than a
personal story of life and death, but
everyone has stories. Sharing
them, going to the first person, often gives any talk an immediacy
that pulls listeners in.
Don’t go it alone. “Fifty-five
percent of what an audience will
take away is visual,” says Samuels.
This is a big reason why moving
around and making appropriate
gestures is important. It’s a good
idea to get feedback on gestures, he
adds. Toastmasters is an excellent
place to learn whether your arms
appear to be superglued to your
sides or your hands look like they
are ready to take flight. But friends
can also give valuable feedback.
Another visual element that can
enhance a speech is a prop. According to Toastmasters, a prop is different from a visual aid. “Props are
thrown, dropped, picked up, put
down, talked to, fondled, swung,
flung, and more. This active quality adds spice to your speeches.”
Examples of potentially effective
props are the daily portion of food
for a refugee, the uniform worn by
George Washington’s troops at
Valley Forge, or even the paper airplanes that Samuel sometimes uses.
Be a copycat. This strategy is
for one-on-one talks, and Samuel
says it is important in job interviews. Under the theory that people are attracted to people who are
like themselves, he says that it is
important to mirror the body language of the person interviewing
you. Lean forward if he does. Cross
your arms if his arms are crossed.
Copy his voice, too. If his tone is
slow and measured, match it.
Stop talking. In a one-on-one
speech, whether it be a job interview, a sales call, or a networking
chat, be sure to listen more than
you speak. Samuel, a veteran of
dozens of job interviews, says that
he knows he has done well when
his interviewer has done most of
the talking.
Ask at least one question.
Samuel recalls one job interview
during which time was short. Not
U.S. 1
49
Toastmaster: Jim
Samuel talks about
being a better public
speaker in a threepart series that begins on Tuesday, October 16.
only that, but he knew that the interviewer was aware that he was
completely qualified for the assignment.
“He asked if I had any questions,” Samuel recounts. He didn’t
really have any, and he knew the interviewer was in a hurry, but even
in that situation, he said, “It would
have been rude not to ask a question.”
Always, always have questions
ready, he says. Not asking any, in
his opinion, shows arrogance.
Rally the troops. The very best
way to leave an audience is with a
call to action. “Salesmen know
this,” says Samuel. No matter how
great the presentation speech, it
will not be effective if it doesn’t
end with the salesperson asking for
an order. Likewise, job seekers
need to make it clear that they hope
to leave with the job.
Great public speakers know that
their messages need to win the
hearts and minds of their audi-
ences. There is, for example,
Patrick Henry’s “Give me liberty
or give me death!”
Not every speech will have the
emotion and impact that carried the
patriot to this conclusion, but every
speech can give listeners something to think about. Whether the
speaker is hoping that his audience
will pledge to give up texting while
driving, embrace wildlife preservation, or vow to make it to the
polls in November, he needs to
throw out a call to arms that leaves
them eager to act.
Continued on following page
COMMERCIAL
DIVISION
PREMIER PROPERTY
PENNINGTON - 1440+/- square feet of Class A office space
with abundant natural light in park like setting in the heart of
the commercial district. Private office, large staff area and two
handicap accessible rest rooms and ample parking in lighted
paved parking areas. Close to the new Capital Health facility,
with easy access to I-95,I-295, US Route 1 and the Capitol
government, court and business district.
OFFICE SPACE
Ewing - Entire second floor 2400 +/- SF includes 3 private offices,
4 half baths & mini kitchen $9.00 p/SF - mod gross.
Ewing - Chiropractic office for lease. Retiring chiropractor is vacating
this turn key office after 20 plus years. Great opportunity to step right in.
1,000 sf close to the new Capitol Health Systems Facility. Could also be
used for many other medical or professional uses. Call for details.
Ewing - 1,000 SF up to 2,000 SF available for lease close to new Capital
Health facility.
Ewing - Professional/Medical office suites available. 620 SF, 1,368 SF and
1,882 SF. Close to Capital Health facility, 1-95 & US 1. Easy access to
Princeton and State Capital office buildings and courts. $12.00/SF gross.
EWING - 6,000 SF masonry bldg. ideal for prof. or medical, church or day
care. 10 offices/exam rooms and large staff area. Near Capital Health.
FOR SALE/FOR LEASE.
Pennington - Two (2) suites available for lease. 1,584 +/- SF. Rt. 31
near I-95.
RETAIL SPACE
Ewing Twp. - 1,000 SF up to 2,000 SF available for lease located
in neighborhood shopping center. Close to New Capital Health facility
and 1-95.
COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS
Ewing - 6,000 +/- SF, masonry single-story bldg., ideal for medical,
10 exam/treatment rooms plus large offices. One mile south of Capital
Health’s new hospital – FOR SALE.
Ewing - 17,600 sf Industrial/warehouse available. Easily divisible into
2 or 3 units. 45 x 100 paved and fenced parking lot included. Available For
Sale or Lease.
LAND
Ewing Twp. - 2.07 acres FOR SALE in professional, research, office
zone, one mile south of I-95, Merrill Lynch facility and Capital Health’s
new $400 million hospital. Ideal for medical group. REDUCED!
Lawrence Twp. - 2.28 +/- acres in zoned office. Also good for day care
or church. PRICE REDUCED!
West Amwell Twp. - 5.4 +/- acres zoned highway commercial,
conceptual plan with some permits for 15,592 +/- SF bldg.
Weidel Realtors Commercial Division
2 Route 31 South • Pennington, N.J. 08534
609-737-2077
Individual Member
Certified Commercial
Investment Member
50
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Recreation-Office-Warehouse U.S. 1 Classifieds
Princeton, 5000-15,000/SF-Signage
741 Alexander Road
- Immediate
occupancy
★
- 5000/SF office
- 5000-15,000/SF,
flex, recreation
HOW TO ORDER
Fax or E-Mail: That’s all it takes to order a U.S. 1 Classified. Fax your ad to
609-452-0033 or E-Mail [email protected]. We will confirm your insertion and the price. It won’t be much:
Our classifieds are just 50 cents a word,
with a $7 minimum. Repeats in succeeding issues are just 40 cents per
word, and if your ad runs for 16 consecutive issues, it’s only 30 cents per word.
(There is a $3 service charge if we send
out a bill.) Questions? Call us at 609452-7000.
OFFICE RENTALS
$1,500/mo. Furnished office space
on Nassau Street overlooking Princeton
University. Includes kitchen with fridge
and microwave. Secretary/paralegal, internet, color printer, parking available.
Call Suzanne 609-921-8660.
- Flexible lease
terms
William Barish, [email protected]
609-921-8844 Cell 609-731-6076
www.cpnrealestate.com
Commercial Property Network, Inc.
We Have a Place For Your Company
Center of Hightstown: Newly renovated building. Only 1 store left - ground
floor 2,180 sq. ft. Very low rents - excellent for retail or offices. Call Mel Adlerman 609-655-7788.
Cranbury Office or retail on Main St.
Continued from preceding page
If new public speakers don’t hit
the right note from the start, there is
no reason to despair. Rather, they
can heed Jim Valvano’s call to action when he used his lifetime
achievement acceptance speech to
launch a foundation to fight cancer.
“Don’t give up,” he said. “Don’t
ever give up!”
— Kathleen McGinn Spring
Business Meetings
Wednesday, October 10
1 p.m.: Team Nimbus, “Small
Business Insight,” monthly lunch
talk, every second Wednesday,
free. Camillo’s Cafe, Princeton
Shopping Center. www.teamnimbusnj.com. 908-359-4787.
6:30 p.m.: PEAC Fitness, “Inside
the Admissions Office: What
Every Family Needs to Know in
an Increasingly Competitive College Environment,” Don Betterton, financial aid and admissions
expert. Free. 1440 Lower Ferry
Road, Ewing. www.peachealthfitness.com. 609-883-2000.
7 p.m.: Linux Users Group, Free
Lawrence Library, Darrah Lane.
www.lugip.org. 609-937-7442.
Painting - Interior & Exterior
Powerwashing
Where Green Meets Quality
Owner Operated. Licensed & Insured. Working in Your Town for Over 40 Years.
“Professional Painting Pays!...in many Ways.”
A Princeton business for over 40 years.
JULIUS GROSS PAINTING &
HOME IMPROVEMENT CO.
220 Alexander Street • Princeton, New Jersey 08540
www.juliushgrosspainting.com • [email protected]
609-924-1474
SHOPPING IN PRINCETON?
Don’t miss out on the
best deals in town!
Retail • Dining• Entertainment
www.PrincetonDeals.biz
Thursday, October 11
7 a.m.: BNI Top Flight, weekly networking, free to attend. Clairmont
Diner, East Windsor. 609-7994444.
7 a.m.: Central Jersey Business
Association, weekly networking
breakfast, free. Americana Diner,
East Windsor. 800-985-1121.
7:30 a.m.: ActionCoach Business
Coaching, BusinessRICH Business Bootcamp, Sal Levitano.
Cost: $795. Bridgewater Manor,
1251 Route 202/206 South,
Bridgewater. actioncoach.com.
609-799-7177.
8 a.m.: Mercer Chamber,
Hopewell Chapter: “College Planning 101,” Gregory Viscomi of
Premier College Funding. Cost:
$25. Laugh, Craft, & Be Well!, 25
Route 31 South, Pennington.
www.mercerchamber.org. 609689-9960.
8:30 a.m.: Princeton Chamber,
First Annual Women’s Leadership
Conference. The first half-day
women’s conference in central
New Jersey. Keynote speaker:
Carla Harris, managing director
Morgan Stanley Investment Management. $75. Princeton Marriott.
www.princetonchamber.org. 609924-1776.
5:45 p.m.: International Association of Administrative Professionals, Central Jersey Chapter, Digital Business Etiquette, Katie DeVito. Cost: $25. RSVP by Tues-
OFFICE RENTALS
OFFICE RENTALS
AREA OFFICE RENTALS
Princeton,
Trenton,
Hamilton, Hopewell,
Montgomery,
For All Your
Commercial
Real Estate
Needs
Ewing,in
Hightstown,
Lawrenceville
and
other
Mercer,
Mercer and Surrounding Area.
Somerset & Middlesex Communities. Class A, B and
Sale orAvailable.
Lease • Office • Warehouse
C Space
Retail and Business Opportunities
For
For details
ondetails
space on space
and
rates,
and rates, contact contact:
Weidel Commercial 609-737-2077
www.WeidelCommercial.com
near Post Office corner Park Place, good
visibility. $1,200/month. 609-529-6891.
Hopewell Boro 83 Princeton Ave.
near Main St. Rent one or more of five
rooms with shared waiting room and
kitchenette from $300 to $700 per
month all inclusive. In elevator office
building good parking. 609-529-6891.
Pennington - Hopewell: Straube
Center Office from virtual office, 12 to
300 square feet and office suites, 500 to
2,400 square feet. From $100 per
month, short and long term. Storage
day, October 9 to [email protected] or at 609-481-7416.
Mercer County Italian-American
Cultural Center, 2421 Liberty
Street, Hamilton. www.iaap-centraljersey.org. 609-481-7416.
6:45 p.m.: SCORE Princeton,
“The Art of Closing the Sale,” Carmen Morris, business coach, entrepreneur, and speaker. Free.
Hamilton Township Free Public
Library, 1 Justice Samuel A Alito
Jr Way, Hamilton.
www.scoreprinceton.org. 609393-0505.
Friday, October 12
8:30 a.m.: Mercer Chamber, “The
Power of Networking,” RD Colon
of Consulting LLC, executive
coach and professional speaker.
Presented by United Way of
Greater Mercer County Latino Vision Council, PNC Bank, YWCA,
and Mercer Regional Chamber of
Commerce/La Liga. Cost: $20.
Robert Wood Johnson Wellness
Center, 3100 Quakerbridge
Road, Hamilton. www.mercerchamber.org. 609-689-9960.
10 a.m.: Professional Service
Group, weekly career meeting,
support, and networking for unemployed professionals, free.
Princeton Public Library.
www.mercopsg.net. 609-2927535.
Saturday, October 13
10:30 a.m.: SCORE Princeton,
QuickBooks Workshop, Oria
Gonzales, certified QuickBooks
Pro advisor. Free. Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon Street.
www.scoreprinceton.org. 609393-0505.
Monday, October 15
8:30 a.m.: Trenton Small Business
Week, Many events for entrepreneurs, most free. Downtown
Trenton. www.smallbizweek.com.
609-989-3603.
8:30 a.m.: Institute of Management Consultants, N.J. Chapter,
“Consulting in the 21st Cen tury.”
Four roundtable sessions: “Consulting Opportunities with Young
Companies”; “New Challenges to
Executive Leadership”; “New
Tools for Market Intelligence”; and
“Delivery of Products in the 21st
Century.” $35. Nassau Club, Mercer Street. www.imcusa.org. 732842-8634.
4:30 p.m.: Human Resources
Management Association, Careers In-Transition Group. Open
to people of any job background.
Free. Hyatt Regency Princeton.
hrma-nj.shrm.org. 609-844-0200.
5:30 p.m.: Human Resources
Management Association, “We
Can’t Just Work In It, We Have to
Work On It,” Jack Gottlieb, Total
Solutions Group. Cost: $60. Hyatt
Regency Princeton. hrmanj.shrm.org. 609-844-0200.
space, individual signage, conference
rooms, copier, Verizon FIOS available,
call 609-737-3322 or e-mail [email protected] www.straubecenter.com
Plainsboro - 700 SF to 3,000 SF Office Suites: in single story building in
well maintained office park off Plainsboro Road. Immediately available. Individual entrance and signage, separate
AC/Heat and electricity. Call 609-7992466 or E-mail [email protected]
Continued on page 52
Tuesday, October 16
7 a.m.: Capital Networking Group,
weekly networking, free. Princeton United Methodist Church, 7
Vandeventer Avenue, Princeton.
609-434-1144.
8 a.m.: Mercer Chamber, Women
in Business Speed Networking
Event. Sun National Bank Center,
Trenton. www.mercerchamber.org. 609-689-9960.
8:30 a.m.: Trenton Small Business
Week, Many events for entrepreneurs, most free. Downtown
Trenton. www.smallbizweek.com.
609-989-3603.
10 a.m.: Mercer Chamber, Central
N.J. Expo. Conference and networking event for business and
consumers. Sun National Bank
Center, Trenton. 609-689-9960.
6:45 p.m.: SCORE Princeton,
“The Business Plan — A Tool for
Funding,” Bill Litchman, SCORE
counselor. Free. Princeton Public
Library, 65 Witherspoon Street.
www.scoreprinceton.org. 609393-0505.
7 p.m.: Mercer Free School, Better
Speaker Series, Jim Samuel. Also
on Tuesdays, October 23 & 30.
Free. Ewing Library. 609-4032383.
7:30 p.m.: JobSeekers, networking and job support, free. Trinity
Church, 33 Mercer Street.
www.trinityprinceton.org. 609924-2277.
Wednesday, October 17
7 a.m.: BNI West Windsor chapter,
weekly networking, free. BMS
Building, Pelletieri Rabstein & Altman, Nassau Park. 609-4623875.
7:30 a.m.: Princeton Chamber,
Business Before Business networking, $40. Nassau Club, 6
Mercer Street. 609-924-1776.
8:30 a.m.: Trenton Small Business
Week, Many events for entrepreneurs, most free. Downtown
Trenton. www.smallbizweek.com.
609-989-3603.
6 p.m.: N.J. Food Processors Association, “How to Build a Socially
Responsible and Sustainable
Business that Improves Your
Profitability,” Kevin Lyons, professor Rutgers Business School,
and Niki Kelley, corporate social
responsibility communications
manager, Campbell Soup Company. Cost: $60 Rutgers EcoComplex, Bordentown. www.njfoodprocessors.org. 609-3925558.
6:30 p.m.: PEAC Fitness, “Getting
into a College of Choice is Half
the Battle...Figuring Out How to
Pay for it is Another,” Stephen
Molinelli, founder Wealth Management Partners. Free. 1440
Lower Ferry Road, Ewing.
www.peachealthfitness.com.
609-883-2000.
OCTOBER 10, 2012
U.S. 1
51
52
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
Employment Exchange
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Client Assistant Part time position in
East Windsor. Start out working 10
hours per week with potential 20 hours
after training period. We require mature
individuals with strong organizational
and communication skills. Business
computer knowledge, bookkeeping experience are desirable. Please email resume with salary requirements and references to: [email protected].
Executive assistant to Princeton entrepreneur - strategic communications
consulting business. Require good interpersonal, organizational, computer
and writing skills. Very interesting job, interfacing with high profile clients in Fortune 500 companies. Can work from
your home some days. Some travel.
Must live locally. Minimum 30
hours/week. Send resume to [email protected].
Leasing Administrator — entry level
for small commercial property firm. A/R
a plus. Immediate fulltime position with
benefits.
Send
resumes
to
[email protected].
Property Inspectors: Part-time
$30k, full-time $80k. No experience, will
train. Call Tom, 609-731-3333.
SALES - REAL ESTATE Need a
Change? Looking to get a RE License?
We take you by the hand to ensure your
success and income! FREE Coaching!
Unlimited Income! No Experience needed! Contact Weidel Today! Hamilton:
Judy 609-586-1400, [email protected]; Princeton: Mike 609-9212700, [email protected].
JOBS WANTED
Job Hunters: If you are looking for a
full-time position, we will run a reasonably worded classified ad for you at no
charge. The U.S. 1 Jobs Wanted section
has helped people like you find challenging opportunities for years now. We
know this because we often hear from
HELP WANTED
Can You Deliver?
Every Wednesday we deliver 19,000 copies
of U.S.1 Newspaper to 4,500 business locations
in the greater Princeton area. Every other Friday
we deliver the West Windsor & Plainsboro News
to homes in those towns. We welcome people
with common sense, curiosity, and a reliable car
to help us do the job.
Earn $100 per day! Plus Mileage!
Plus Bonuses for information you provide our editors!
Mail or fax us a note. We hope to hear from you.
Tell us about yourself and why you
are free to deliver on Wednesdays.
JOBS WANTED
JOBS WANTED
the people we have helped. We reserve
the right to edit the ads and to limit the
number of times they run. If you require
confidentiality, send a check for $4 with
your ad and request a U.S. 1 Response
Box. Replies will be forwarded to you at
no extra charge. Mail or Fax your ad to
U.S. 1 Jobs Wanted, 12 Roszel Road,
Princeton, NJ 08540. You must include
your name, address, and phone number
(for our records only).
panionship care. Call 609-309-5537 and
leave message.
Capable Caring Female Assistant
available to shop, run errands, drive to
appointments, paperwork, meal preparation, provide complete personal/com-
Communications/Content Manager: Excellent editorial and web strategy
skills. Years of experience with Cisco
systems. Able to transfer skills to a university or high-tech setting. Call David:
609-933-8366
or
e-mail
[email protected].
Home security and home maintenance all in one. Retired police officer
available for security and home maintenance. Power washing. Also do lawn
and garden, siding, new construction,
replace doors and windows and door
locks and house sitting, personal security and driving. Call 609-937-9456 or email [email protected].
Need Help??? Very reliable home
health aide, caregiver. Can travel anywhere to you. Please call if you need
help. Thank you. Cell 609-222-2727 or
home 609-392-2610.
COMMERCIAL RENTAL
LAND
Griggstown - Princeton mailing address- ready to go building lot.
3 acres approved for 5 bedroom home. Price : $129,900
East Amwell - 11 acres 1 lot. $99,900
Vernon - 1 acre building lot near Great Gorge and Scenic Lake.
Price $99,900
Hopewell Twp - 2+ acres ready to go. Cul-de-sac location near Princeton
with a Princeton mailing address $499,900
Hopewell Twp - Prestigious “Elm Ridge Park” 4 home sites remain.
2.09 acres-6acres. Builder can purchase as a package - terms available
South Brunswick - Route 1 frontage- 1,300 sq ft
office space. Private entrance with great parking and signage. New condition & still time
to design build out. Price: $3,000/month plus
CAM 5-year lease minimum.
HOMES
NEW
CONSTRUCTION
Hopewell Twp with Princeton mailing
address - Prestigious “Elm Ridge Estates”
4 Home sites remaining Private culdesac
location - Minutes to downtown Princeton
and Capital Health Hospital.
Home sites from 2-6 acres Ranging in sq ft
4000-7500 - custom Built by Rifai Homes Elegant Architectural Design with Quality
and Attention to Detail.
South Brunswick - Historic Village of Kingston. Great access to restaurants, canal, shopping, and NYC bus. 3 bedrooms with open
floor plan, updated kitchen, and pretty yard.
Price: $339,900
South Brunswick - Village of Kingston 130 year old colonial being restored to “like
new” condition. Granite, stainless steel, central a/c, gas heat, basement, garage. Still time
to make selections. A rare find! Price:
$479,900
Lawrence - Princeton mailing address.
“Foxcroft” gracious 4/5 bedroom colonial on
a wonderful lot with patio, deck, hot tub,
in-ground pool, 2 car attached garage, 3 car
detached garage. Grand foyer, new kitchen,
updated bathrooms, and finished basement.
Nice home for extended family situation.
Price $678,900
Montgomery - Car Collector’s Dream!! 2500 sq
ft “Morton Building” w/heat/electric-Plus
Wonderful 4 bed Colonial Great room w/FP,
County Kitchen, cherry cabs., granite lg center
island - pottery barn like mudroom, mstr. ste.
feels like a lavish hotel rm - FP - whirlpool, sitting area for morning coffee, FP - fin. bsmt,
ingrd pool, hottub, patio, gazebo One of a
Kind home. $799,900
Princeton Twp - Prestige and unparalleled
luxury. 7300 sq foot home by Rifai Builders on
2.05 wooded acre lot with privacy gate.
Elegant 2 story foyer and Great Room.
Custom millwork, 3 fireplaces, and gourmet
kitchen. Family suite. Fully brick house,
5/6 bedrooms, 7 bathrooms, sauna Jacuzzi.
Perfect home for entertaining. Offered at
$2,695,000.
Franklin Park - 2 bed, 2.5 bath townhome.
$1900
South Brunswick - 4 bed, Kendall Park Ranch.
$2250
Princeton Twp - Gracious 7300 sq ft home,
5/6 bed, 7 bath. $11,900
Offered at $1,250,000-$2,200,000 Plans available on request.
Dawn Petrozzini
Broker /Owner
Re/Max Greater Princeton
www.HOUSESBYDAWN.com
112 Village Blvd. • Princeton, NJ 08540
Email: [email protected]
Office: 609-951-8600 x111 • Cell: 732-501-0686
Each office independently owned and operated
Continued from page 50
Prime Princeton Office Space
available for rent. Beautiful 1st floor
690 sq ft., 5-room suite. Walking distance to arts center, library, downtown
restaurants and shopping. Quite, friendly office environment. On-site parking
and utilities included. Reasonable rent $1600/month. Interested parties contact [email protected], Doug 603642-8692 or Jill 603-315-9867.
Princeton Office Suite for Lease
Central downtown location w/ University view. Great layout, 1,400 SF, reception + 3 private offices. Weinberg Management 609-924-8535 [email protected]
INDUSTRIAL SPACE
Mail to U.S. 1 Delivery Team, 12 Roszel Road,
Princeton 08540; or fax to 609-452-0033
Administrative Talents to the Rescue: If you need a right hand, I am a college grad., with over ten years of administrative/legal experience, excellent
computer skills and references. If you
need someone who is great on the
phone, reliable and productive give me a
call. Somerset County. Medical benefits
not necessary. Permanent position with
part-time schedule preferable. 908-7258528.
OFFICE RENTALS
Unique Rental Space zoning (I3), ordinance passed for retail and recreation
activities, ample parking all utilities, one
1200’, one 2000’, one 2500’ one 3600’,
and one 10,000. Located at 325 and
335 New Road, Monmouth Junction.
Call Harold 732-329-2311.
Wet Chemistry Lab for rent, located
at Levittown, PA, easy commuting, low
rate, 5,000 or 10,000 sf. 609-865-5071
or [email protected].
COMMERCIAL SPACE
HAMILTON & LAMBERTVILLE 300
to
50,000
SF
Office/WH/Flex/Showroom/Studios.
Amazing spaces in extraordinary buildings! Low rents / high quality units with
all you need! Brian @ 609-731-0378,
[email protected].
PARKING
Princeton Borough Parking Spruce Street near Nassau Street for
$95 monthly, includes snow removal
and maintenance. Call 609-924-9201,
or e-mail [email protected].
STORAGE
902 Carnegie Center, Princeton:
Clean, dry, humidity controlled storage
on Route 1 in West Windsor. Spaces
start at 878 SF. Please call 609-9216060 for details.
Kuser Plaza, Hamilton: 1077 & 6333
SF (divisible) storage/warehouse space
available immediately. Please call 609921-6060 for details.
HOUSING FOR SALE
House for Sale: 3 BR, 2 and a half bath
ranch - like new, in Lawrenceville at 21
Fernwood Lane. $299K. Mortgage available from owner. Call Lou: 609-933-1875.
HOUSING FOR RENT
FOR RENT - PLAINSBORO - 1 & 2
BR units - $2250 - $2475. Call Gloria
Hutchinson, Owner/Sales Associate,
Century 21 Abrams, Hutchinson & Associates. 609-658-4383
INVESTMENT
PROPERTY
Princeton Investment Opportunity
197 Witherspoon Street. Three Unit
Apartment. Building with rear storage
garage RB Zone - Possible conversion
of first floor to office use. Broker: Weinberg Management. [email protected]. 609-924-8535.
CLEANING SERVICES
Monica’s Cleaning Service. Highest
quality, reasonable prices, free estimates. 609-577-2126.
Polish cleaning service by Lucy.
Trustworthy, responsible, excellent references. Please call for free estimate.
201-786-3877.
Window Washing and Power
Washing: Free estimates. Next day
service. Fully insured. Gutter cleaning
available. 609-271-8860. References
available upon request. 30 years experience.
OCTOBER 10, 2012
U.S. 1
53
HOME MAINTENANCE
BUSINESS SERVICES
TRANSPORTATION
INSTRUCTION
MERCHANDISE MART
A Quick Response Handyman: will
give you a free estimate for electrical,
plumbing, painting, repair or other project around your house. Please call 609275-6631
McKinsey Quarterly editor. Drafted Wall
Street Journal columns, wrote New York
Times articles. Helped Bobby Kennedy
Jr. write Harper Collins book. Business
plans used to raise $70 million.
[email protected] or 646-528-3231.
Personal Driver seeking to transport
commuters, shopping trips, etc. Modern, attractive car. References provided.
E-mail to [email protected] or call
609-331-3370.
Outstanding HS Chemistry Teacher. AP,
Hon, Reg. UPENN-Stanford Ed. Call
Matt 609-919-1280. Near Market Fair,
Princeton.
For sale: Furniture, 2 wing chairs
$75. each, cherry curio cabinet $ 225. All
in excellent condition. Please call 609577-8244.
Fear Away Driving School Learn to
drive from the best. Special rate. 609924-9700. Lic. 0001999.
For sale: Used electronic motor
scooter, wheelchair, Windsor chair, and
highboy. 609-424-3629.
Learn to play the Cello. Special Introductory Summer Rates. 6 lessons for the
price of 5. Certified NJ and Suzuki Cello
Teacher. Now accepting new students
ages 4-8. Call Alan for details. 609-5586175. E-mail [email protected].
www.thecellolearningcenter.com
GARAGE SALES
Amazing
house
painting.
Interior/exterior. Wallpaper removal,
deck & fence refinishing, powerwashing, stucco/aluminum siding (painting).
Licensed and insured. Owner operated.
Free estimates. 215-736-2398.
Painting: Interior/exterior. Experienced craftsmanship. Reasonable
rates. Small jobs. Call Brian. 609-6729446.
robthehandyman- licensed, insured,
all work guaranteed. Free Estimates.
We do it all - electric, plumbing, paint,
wallpaper, powerwashing, tile, see website
for
more:
robthehandyman.vpweb.com [email protected], 609-269-5919.
Sump Pump Failed? How can you
survive when your sump pump fails or
the power is out? Want to avoid a flooded basement? For a low cost plan,
please call 609-275-6631.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Bookkeeper/Administrative Specialist: Versatile & experienced professional will gladly handle your bookkeeping and/or administrative needs. Many
services available. Reasonable rates.
Work done at your office or mine. Call
Debra @ 609-448-6005 or visit www.vyours.com.
Cinema Quality Video: Large sensor
digital filming and post production. High
end results for corporate video, trade
shows, spirit videos and web production, without the barrier of a traditional
film
budget.
Visit
www.RandomThought.tv.
Contact:
[email protected]
Writer/editor for books, articles,
business plans and other projects.
Expertise in business, technology, investments. Former Computerworld and
COMPUTER SERVICES
Computer problem? Or need a
used computer in good condition $80? Call 609-275-6631.
GRAPHIC ARTS
Graphic Design Services: Logos,
Newsletters, Brochures, Direct Mail,
etc. Reasonable rates. Fast turnaround.
Call
732-331-2717
or
email
[email protected]
www.kathysmythdesign.com
MARKETING SERVICES
Sales assistance: Experienced marketing and sales executive with extensive portfolio available for small business retail/consumer consulting and assignments. Call Chuck Rose for confidential, no obligation discussion about
your needs, my portfolio and successes.
609-434-1146.
FINANCIAL SERVICES
Accounting and tax services for individuals, families, and businesses;
free initial consultation in home or office;
CPA, 30 years experience in healthcare,
small business and other areas of accounting.
908-907-3702,
e-mail
[email protected]
CHILDCARE
Do you need a NANNY? And someone to trust? I’m a reliable and mature
nanny who is EXCELLENT with children
- particularly with infants and toddlers.
Excellent references available. Marina
609-207-7366.
HEALTH
European Massage: On Route 1
North by Princeton BMW. Minutes from
Trenton. 609-716-1070.
Massage and Reflexology: The
benefits are far-reaching — release of
tension, improved health on many levels, heightened well-being. Holistic
practitioner
offering
reflexology,
Swedish, shiatsu, chair massage at the
work site, etc. Gift certificates, flexible
hours. Call Marilyn: 609-403-8403.
Shiatsu and Qi Gong: Identify health
needs early. Maintain emotional and
physical balance. Manage pain and discomfort effortlessly. Enjoy, relax, and
learn from Shiatsu and Qi Gong expert.
609-742-3140 Andrzej. www.healingtouchhealingmovement.com
MENTAL HEALTH
Having problems with life issues?
Stress, anxiety, depression, relationships. Free consultation. Working in person or by phone. Rafe Sharon, Psychoanalyst 609-683-7808.
Psychotherapy using a technique
that can help to promote self-acceptance and a sense of well-being; effective with depression, anxiety, trauma,
social issues among others. Work with
individuals, youths, and families. Aetnaparticipating provider; accept PPOs. Dr.
Kristine Schwartz, Psy.D., 609-9370987.
ROBBINSVILLE
Beautifully maintained 2 BR Townhouse in desirable Foxmoor.
Spacious Bancroft model features large LR, sunny DR, EIK, 1st flr
Laundry Rm. Full bath w/skylight, garden tub & shower stall.
Ready for new owners!
$199,900
ID# 6091515
Writing Tutorials: Former Princeton
University writing instructor can help
with essays for college applications and
school work. All ages. www.princetonwritingtutor.com. 609-921-0916.
Biology Tutor: high school, Mercer
County only. 609-392-8897.
1966 Live Action TV series Batmobile Replica Only 2,500 made, retails
$250, now $180. Also comic books, variant covers, action figures. Send me your
wants. E-mail [email protected], 848-459-4892.
PRINCETON JUNCTION
LOCATION! LOCATION! LOCATION! 4 BR 2.5 BA Colonial on quiet
cul de sac minutes to Train, schools & shopping. HW flrs in LR, DR
& FR, recently renovated EIK, enclosed Sun Porch, finished basement.
$614,900
ID# 6119090
PLAINSBORO
Lovely 3 BR 2.5 BA
Townhouse has
many updates,
neutral carpet &
paint throughout,
renovated powder
room, spacious
finished Loft
w/skylight.
Secluded rear yard
with enclosed patio.
Short drive
to train.
$289,900
ID# 6112640
ROBBINSVILLE
Immaculately kept 4 BR 2.5 BA Colonial in the Woodside development. Hardwood floors, granite counters & gorgeous marble
backsplash. Office in partially finished basement.
$480,000
Science and Math Tutoring: Biology, Chemistry, Algebra, Geometry.
Taught by college professor. 18 years
experience. Recipient of two national
teaching awards. Discoverygenics 609581-5686.
MERCHANDISE MART
64 Princeton - Hightstown Rd
Princeton Junction, NJ 08550
609-683-5000
PRINCETON JUNCTION
Sun drenched Alstead Model in Village Grande at Bear Brook in a
lovely location offering quiet and privacy. 2BR, 2 BA, LR w/gas
fplc, large Kitchen w/separate Breakfast area. Ready for new owners!
$234,900
ID# 6065623
Music Lessons: Piano, guitar, drum,
sax, clarinet, F. horn, oboe, t-bone,
voice, flute, trumpet, violin, cello, banjo,
mandolin, harmonica, uke, and more.
$28 half hour. School of Rock. Adults or
kids. Join the band! Princeton 609-9248282. Princeton Junction 609-8970032.
Hightstown
609-448-7170.
www.farringtonsmusic.com.
INSTRUCTION
Chemistry & Math Tutoring: FullTime HS Teacher (20 years). 2012
American Chemical Society Award for
WEST WINDSOR
Beautiful 5 BR 3.5 BA Colonial features HW flrs in DR & 1st flr BR,
oversized EIK w/new granite counters, Master Suite w/den & full
updated bath, finished basement. Ceiling fans, 2 tiered deck
& more!
$699,900
ID# 6116928
Math, Science, English, ACT & SAT
Tutoring: Available in your home.
Brown University-educated college professor. Experienced with gifted, underachieving and learning-disabled students. Web: http://ivytutoring.intuitwebsites.com Call Bruce 609-371-0950.
ID# 6115646
Yard Sale: October 27 at 8 a.m. at the
Elks, 42 DeCou Avenue, Ewing. Tables
$10. Food and drinks available. 609571-1186 or 609-882-5000.
MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS
I Buy Guitars and All Musical Instruments in Any Condition: Call Rob at 609457-5501.
WANTED TO BUY
Antique Military Items: And war
relics wanted from all wars and countries. Top prices paid. “Armies of the
Past LTD”. 2038 Greenwood Ave.,
Hamilton Twp., 609-890-0142. Our retail outlet is open Saturdays 10 to 4:00,
or by appointment.
OPPORTUNITIES
Earn an extra $500 or more a week
Visit www.getpaid7.myopportunityplus.com. For additional information call
609-222-5486.
Free: Have your own business. No investment. No risk. Join today and receive $50 just for trying. I will help you
become successful. http://napower.biz/127091 http://vimeo.com/47564266.
Lightyear Wireless - At last a wireless
provider that pays you and allows you to
earn free service. 1-800-283-2819.
Looking for energetic, motivated
people for buisnes opportunity. For more
info please call Janina at 908-566-5325.
54
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
W
hat happened to
Barack Obama in that presidential
debate last week? One of the more
interesting explanations I heard
was that the president and his advisors had become so enamored of
using social media to reach their
audience that they simply lost the
edge that comes with one-on-one,
personal interaction.
I don’t know if that can fully explain the president’s lackluster performance, but I do know that the
theory also applies to journalists:
All of us these days spend far too
much time rooting around on the
Internet and cultivating our E-mail
in-boxes. Writers produce entire
stories without ever seeing or hearing voice of the person they are
writing about. Editors, in turn, convert those stories into print without
ever seeing the writer or hearing
their voice.
So the other day I left the office a
little early and headed out to press
some flesh at a realtime event —
the opening reception for Joseph
Felcone’s exhibit of historic prints
at Morven, the museum that was
once the governor’s mansion.
Walk into an art reception and
you figure out something right
away that you don’t get from a museum website: Art equals money.
OPEN SUN. 1-4 PM
Lawrenceville
12 Catbird Ct.
$269,900
Stunning
3-story 3 BR
Th on a culde-sac boasts
New Kitchen
w/39" Cherry
cabs, galaxy
black granite
countertops &
GE stainless
appliances! LR
w/cozy fireplace; main
floor FR &
paver patio! Dir: Denow Rd. to Sturwood Way
to Wexford to Featherbed Ct. to 12 Catbird Ct.
609-921-2700
ID#6056110
Richard K. Rein
At Morven I was reminded of an
online post I had read recently at
the Hall Institute, a Trenton-based
public policy think tank. The piece
by editor and non-profit management consultant Lawrence Ervin
McCollough, titled “Dancing on
Ice Floes: Survival Strategies for
Artists in the Atlas Shrugged Era of
Public Arts Funding,” pointed out
that while artists struggle for public support many private interests
see the true value of the arts.
“What a curious contradiction,”
wrote McCollough, “growing
numbers of America’s government
and school officials declaring arts
are a waste of time (and public
money) vs. legions of savvy corporate advertisers and millions of eager consumers/creators who utilize
and reference the arts continuously.”
I didn’t see anyone raising corporate sponsor flags at the Morven
show, but I did see a lot of wellheeled Princetonians. As always,
chatting up people in person is a
gold mine for a reporter. Pre-Internet (should we just call it PI?), I
once met a nationally published
writer who had a rule. After conducting a formal interview with the
[email protected]
subject of his story, he would invite
him or her to their favorite bar and
treat them to a round of drinks.
That, of course, would be when the
“good stuff” all came out.
At Morven I ran into Bob Wilson of Unionville Vineyards in
Ringoes. He reminded me that a
stunning photo of his vineyard was
Computer-bound reporters need to get
out in public, meet
the people, and hear
their stories.
used to illustrate an article we had
printed in August about Labor Day
festivities at area vineyards. U.S.
1’s article mentioned that wine
from grapes grown on Wilson’s
farm — Pheasant Hill, a few miles
away in Hopewell — won second
place in the “Judgment of Princeton” competition held in June of
this year. Better than that, Pheasant
Hill’s Chardonnay was judged best
in class at the 2010 International
Wine and Spirits Competition in
London, surpassing wines from
around the world.
As we chatted, I made a mental
note to revisit this story.
A few minutes later I ran into
Ron Smeltzer, a retired electrical
engineer from the Sarnoff Center.
Now he is also an antiquarian,
whose special interest is collecting
historic scientific papers. He and
two other curators will be mounting an exhibit next year at the
Grolier Club in New York. The
theme: “Extraordinary Women:
Science and Medicine since 1650.”
I immediately mentioned one
instance I could think of — the forgotten woman who toiled alongside Watson and Crick as they (the
men) got the credit for discovering
DNA. Smeltzer was aware of the
controversy but said that the real
story was more involved than the
popular conception. The papers of
Rosalind Franklin, in fact, will be
in Smeltzer’s exhibit at the Grolier.
More on that later, I thought to myself.
Over at the obligatory hors
d’oeuvres table, I ran into a woman
who told me she was struck by
some of the prints of early Bordentown, not far from where she had
OPEN SUN. 1-4 PM - NEW LISTING
NEW LISTING
NEW LISTING
Lawrenceville $224,900
2 Bonnie Court
Beautiful 4 BR, 3.5 baths in Tiffany Woods.
LR, DR, kit. 1-car garage & 3 car parking. Lots of
storage space. Min. To train to NY & Phil. & major
highways. Dir: Princeton Ave. R onto Spruce St. R
onto Tiffany Woods & L on Bonnie Ct.
Hightstown $189,900
9 Fryer Court
Bright well maintained, premium 1st flr 2BR/2BA
end unit. Completely renovated kitchen, newer
furnace, C/A, WA, DR and kitchen appliances
(all included). FHA APPROVED.
Robbinsville $159,872
127 Wyndham Place
Convenient 1st Fl, 2BR/1BA Condo in sought after
Robbinsville. LR, DR, EIK, MBR w/walk-in closet,
2nd BR has sliding doors that open out onto patio
w/extra storage closet, overlooking private,
common area. All appliances included.
609-921-2700
609-586-1400
609-586-1400
ID#6112717
ID#6110337
ID#6108936
NEW PRICE
NEW LISTING
CHARMING 1920'S 3 BEDROOM BRICK CAPE
Lawrence Twp. $239,000
719 Mayflower Ave.
Charming on the outside!Spacious on the inside!
Offering NEW renovations from Top to Bottom
(roof, windows, doors, kitchen, bath, waterproofed
basement, gutters, chimney & liner and so much
more!)Welcome Home!
609-921-2700
ID#5986740
Ewing Twp. $224,900
115 West Upper Ferry Rd.
Desirable W. Trenton location near train station. Nice sized lot, front and back porches and
large garage/workshop. Dir: Scotch Rd. R onto
Parkway Ave. then turns into West Upper Ferry
Rd. #115 on left.
609-921-2700
OPEN SUN. 1-4 PM - NEW LISTING
Ewing Twp. $187,000
20 Chesney Ave.
Charming & spacious 5 BR. 2 full bath expanded
Cape. Upgraded kit. & baths HW flrs, FP & fin.
Basement. Easy Commute to Phil., NYC and
Princeton. Close to Colleges & New Hosp.
ID # 6105229
609-921-2700
ID#6073336
NEW PRICE
NEW PRICE
NEW PRICE
NEW
NEWLISTING
PRICE
maintained the office for her company. The company, it turned out,
had been her father’s and after his
death she had the duty of presiding
over its dissolution. When the
woman discovered I was a reporter,
she remarked that she had been
married to one, years ago.
Reporters being reporters,
whether we are glad-handing in
public or mousing around a computer terminal at the office, are always curious. Back at the office, I
googled the reporter, whose name
was familiar to me, and discovered
the following anecdote written by
the reporter about a friend of his,
the legendary Steve Jobs:
“My former wife had been a
book editor in New York and had
worked on a project with Bo Derek
before we moved to California.
One night when she and I were
having dinner with Steve, Bo’s
name came up — as did the factoid
that Bo was a heavy duty computer
jockey, albeit of the IBM persuasion. Steve took this as a personal
challenge; he was going to convert
Bo to a Mac user — and who knew
what else. Clearly the computer
could be a foot in the door. He persuaded my wife to make him an appointment with Bo.
“And so one day shortly thereafter, Steve piled into his Mercedes, along with a Mac, and drove
down to Bo’s Santa Barbara ranch,
which she shared with her husband, John Derek. Bo was cordial
but unimpressed; she accepted the
computer but remained a PC user.
And apparently she did not find
Steve as dashing as Steve expected
she would.
“Several weeks later, Steve was
complaining to my wife about the
lackluster impression he had made.
‘Look,’ she told him, ‘she’s married. And besides, I don’t know any
woman who would want her name
to be Bo Jobs.’”
So, whether you are a presidential candidate or a reporter looking
for a story, there is the proof: It
pays to get out of the office once in
a while.
If you want to follow my footsteps through the Felcone collection at Morven, one chance comes
Tuesday, October 16, at 10 a.m.
Felcone will lead a collector’s tour
of the exhibit, “Portrait of Place:
Paintings, Drawings, and Prints of
New Jersey, 1761-1898,” and share
insight into the process of collecting as well as highlight various
pieces of his collection. Call 609924-8144, ext. 10, or E-mail [email protected] for reservations. $12, or $10 for Friends of
Morven.
SHOPPING IN
PRINCETON?
East Windsor $138,000
1832 Old Stone Mill Dr.
Windsor Mill condo w/ 2 BR, 2 full baths. Freshly
painted, New floors in kit. & foyer. Gas heat Lovely
complex with clubhouse, Pool, tennis courts
& playground. Near transportation and new
Hospital.
609-921-2700
ID#6102191
NEW PRICE
Hamilton $249,999
2054 Whitehorse Hamilton Square Rd
Pride of Ownership, Immaculate Split in desirable Langtree Estates. New Bay window in LR,
formal DR, remodeled kitchen w/large island,
deck with electric retractable awning, fenced
yard plus garage. A Must See!
609-586-1400
ID#5945509
Hopewell Twp. $299,999
112 Blackwell Road
4 four BR split level home on almost an acre of
land w/ HW & ceramic tile floors, E-I-K, LR, lower
level FR, and master BR w/ sliders to deck overlooking the spacious back yard.
Lawrenceville $231,999
314 American Eagel Ct.
Eagles Chase Condo. New kit. w/granite counters, laminate flrs in kit., LR &DR. 2 BRS, 2 Full
Bath, Loft & one car garage. Great commuter
Location! Move in condition!!
Hamilton $183,000
6 Laurel Court
Ravenscroft 2BR/1.5BA Townhome with garage.
LR with fireplace and French doors that lead to
paver patio, EIK with pantry, new carpeting and
freshly painted. Steinert school district.
609-921-2700
609-921-2700
609-586-1400
ID#6031515
NEW PRICE
Florence
$214,000
10 Abrams Drive
3BR/2full+2half
bath Adult
Community
Townhome with
lots of square
footage! Finished
basement with
half bath, main
floor master suite,
updated kitchen,
2 car garage.
Must see!
609-586-1400
ID#6105694
ID#6097855
ID#6098671
NEW PRICE
NEW PRICE
Hamilton $298,999
10 Rolling Lane
Completely updated 4BR/3BA home in Steinert
School District. Park-like setting w/koi fish pond,
waterfall and many beautiful plants. Handicap
accessible, 1st floor bedroom or office.
609-586-1400
ID#6096809
Ewing $329,995
30 Malaga Drive
Custom built 4BR Ranch with 2 kitchens, 3 full
bathrooms, full basement, 3 car garage and inlaw-suite. Maintenance free stone exterior.
609-586-1400
ID#6025660
Don’t miss
out on the
best deals
in town!
• Retail
• Dining
• Entertainment
www.
PRINCETONDEALS.
biz
OCTOBER 10, 2012
fennelly.com
U.S. 1
609-520-0061
Is... Class A Office Space
500 Alexander Park, Princeton, NJ
Q
Q
Q
Q
Q
Q
Class A Office for Lease
Available: 48,000 SF; Divisible to 2,000 SF
Three Story Corporate Office Building
16,000 SF on Each Floor
Multi-Tenant or Single Tenant Opportunities
Perimeter Windows Throughout
with Pond Views
Q Upscale Corporate Setting –
Corporate Headquarters Location
Q Property Manager on Site
Q Cafeteria at Adjacent Building
Q Building Signage Available
Q Route 1 Amenities Nearby
Q Walk to Princeton Junction
Train Station
Matrix Corporate Center,
Class A Office for Lease
Q
5,000 to 30,000 SF Buildings Available
Corporate Campus Setting
New Cafeteria & Amenities Building
Q
Under Construction
Q
Q Building Signage Available
Q
Q
Q
Q
Cranbury, NJ
Join AmeriHealth, Bracco
Research,
ADP & Innophos as Tenants
Own or Lease Your Own Building
Strategic & Convenient Location
with Turnpike Frontage
N
TIO
UC IT
R
T SU
NS
CO D TO
W IL
NE BU
Hopewell South Corporate Center,
Q Class A Office or Medical Space –
Q
Build to Suit
Q New Corporate Center to be Constructed
Q 175,000 SF in 2 Buildings
Q
Q Building 1: 70,060 SF & Building 2: 96,000 SF
Ewing, NJ
Central Location Near the
New Capital Health Hospital
& Merrill Lynch
Immediate Access off
of I-95
Q
Q
Q
Q
VanNest Office Park, Quakerbridge Road, Hamilton, NJ
New Office/Medical Space for Lease Q Perimeter Windows Throughout
1,000 SF to 25,000 SF Available
Overlooking the VanNest Forest
Build to Suit – 1st or 2nd Floor Units
Reserve
New Brick Construction Situated
Q Close Proximity to Hospitals, Route 1,
in an Attractive Corporate Setting
I-295 & the Hamilton Train Station
The 2nd Annual Diaper Dash for Healthy Babies
Building healthy families one birth at a time
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2012
5k Run / 1 Mile Walk
Washington Crossing State Park
355 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road
Titusville, NJ 08560
Registration at 7:30 am
Walk at 8:30 am • Race at 9:00 am
Arrive early to allow ample time for the short walk from parking lots.
$30 registration
Register before 10/13 for a $5 discount
Featuring kids activities, pet friendly walk, health screenings, cash prizes and more.
Proceeds benefit Capital Health’s baby friendly initiative assuring
that all babies receive the healthiest start at life. Register as a sponsor or participant online at
www.capitalhealth.org/foundation 609-815-7200
433 Bellevue Avenue, 1st Fl
Trenton, NJ 08618
609-815-7200
capitalhealth.org/foundation
55
U.S. 1
OCTOBER 10, 2012
fennelly.com
609-520-0061
Is... Office and Medical Space
Plainsboro Village Center, Plainsboro, NJ
Office/Medical for Lease
1 Union Street, Robbinsville, NJ
Washington Town Center
Q 800 – 10,000 SF Available
Q Built-out Units Available Between 800 SF
& 2,500 SF or Customize your Own Space
in New Building from 1,500 to 10,000 SF
Q Mixed Use Town Center Development
Q Close Proximity to New University Medical
Center at Princeton
Q Convenient to Route 1, Route 130
and NJ Turnpike, Exit 8A
Q Join Princeton Medical Group
and 10 other Medical Tenants
Constitution Center
2650 Rt. 130, Cranbury, NJ
Office or Medical for Lease
Q 1st Floor: 4,000 SF divisible to 1,500 SF
Q 2nd Floor: 1,200 SF & 3,200 SF
Q Newly Constructed Building
Q Part of Town Center featuring Retail,
Medical & Residential
Q Easy Access to Route 33, Route 130 & the
NJ Turnpike Exits 7A & 8
Q Office/Medical for Lease
Q Unit 1: 2,350 SF on 1st Floor
Q Unit 2: 4,000-6,000 SF on 2nd Floor Divisible
to 2,000 SF
Q Unit 3: 1,854 SF on 2nd Floor Built-out
Medical Space
Q Unit 4: 2,154 SF Corner Office Unit
Q Perimeter Windows Throughout
(Windows Operate)
Q Monument Signage Available
Q Convenient to NJ Turnpike Exit 8A
Q Great Location for Office or Medical Space
with Highway Frontage & Visibility
Riverview Executive Center, Trenton, NJ
Bordentown Professional Plaza
163 Route 130, Bordentown, NJ
3575 Quakerbridge Road, Hamilton, NJ
Neuman Building
Q For Lease – Office/Medical
Q Immediately Available –
Great Rental Rates!
Q 3,600 SF Medical Unit on 1st Floor –
Beautiful & Ready to Go
Q Additional Units for Lease:
1,000 to 5,000 SF on 1st or 2nd Floor
Q Plenty of Parking Available
Q Good Location Close to New Construction
Medical Facility
Q Highway Frontage on Route 130
Q Convenient to I-295, I-195 & NJ Turnpike
Office or Medical for Lease
Q 13,000 SF on the 2nd Floor
Q Divisible to 3,000 SF
Q Free-standing 2 Story Building with high
percentage of windows
Q Aggressive Rental Rates
Q Close to Route 1, I-295 & the Hamilton
Train Station
1589 Reed Road, Pennington, NJ
Q 15,000 SF Unit for Lease – Will Divide
Q 6,000 SF of Office on 2nd Floor
Q 9,000 SF of Warehouse/Production/
Lab Space on 1st Floor
Q 4 Drive-in Doors, 22’ Ceilings
Q Convenient access to I-95, Routes 1, 31,
202 & 206
200 Whitehead Road, Hamilton, NJ
Sports and Entertainment Factory
Q Warehouse: 1,000 SF
to 15,000 SF Available
Q 18’ to 32’ Clear; Drive-in
& Loading Available
Q Office: 600 SF to 2,500 SF Available
Q Newly Renovated End-unit;
Loft Style Space
Q Convenient to US Hwy. 1 & I-295
SA
LE
R
SA
FO
R
FO
R
SA
LE
LE
Is... Buildings For Sale
1880 Princeton Ave., Lawrenceville, NJ
Q Office/Warehouse for Lease
Q 13,000 SF – Will Divide
Q Heated & Air-Conditioned
Warehouse/Production space with Tile Floor
Q Large kitchen/breakroom & Bathrooms
Q 2 Loading Docks, 12’-19’ Ceiling Height,
400 Amp, 3 Phase Electric
Q Abundant Parking
Q Perfect for mailing/printing companies,
Warehouse Storage & Assembly
Q Potential Location for Sports &
Entertainment use
LE
Q For Sale or Lease
Q 5,000 to 30,000 SF Buildings Available
for Sale or Lease
Q Join AmeriHealth, Bracco Research, ADP
& Innophos
Q Own or Lease Your Own Building
Q Strategic & Convenient Location with
Turnpike Frontage
Is... Flex Space
21 Hillside Avenue, Trenton, NJ
1226 Route 130, Robbinsville, NJ
20 North Pennsylvania, Morrisville, PA
Q Flex Building for Sale or Lease
Q 10,000 SF Single Story Building
Q 3,200 SF of Office & 6,800 SF
of Air Conditioned Production/
Warehouse Space
Q 2 Loading Docks, 12-14’ Ceilings,
3 Phase Electric
Q Excellent Highway Location Close
to NJ Turnpike, I-195 & I-295
Q Sale Price: $875,000
Q
Q 8,200 SF Free Standing 2-Story Building
Q
Q 5,500 SF on 2 Floors Plus a 2,700 SF
Q
Finished Basement
Q
Q Beautiful Stone Building, Well Maintained
Q
with Many Upgrades
Q
Q Perfect for Attorneys, Banks, Architects,
Q
Real Estate Offices
Q
Q Plenty of On-Site Parking
Q Easy Access to Route 1, I-95, NJ & PA Turnpike
Q Sale Price: $675,000
Office Building for Sale
11,070 SF Two-Story Office Building
5,500 SF on both floors
Zoning: BH – Business Highway
Well-Maintained Building Built in 1984
½ Acre Lot, Gated Parking Lot with 29 Spaces
Minutes to Route 1 and Downtown Trenton
Sale Price: $675,000
SA
Matrix Corporate Center
259 Prospect Plains, Cranbury, NJ
Office Space for Lease
Unit 1: 1,500 SF – 1st Floor
Unit 2: 1,909 SF – 2nd Floor
Abundant Parking
Located Adjacent to the Waterfront Park
Minutes to Downtown Trenton
Convenient to NJ Turnpike, I-295
& the Train Station
Q Scenic Views Along the River
Prime Downtown Princeton Location
Unit Sizes from 2,150 to 5,500 SF Available
Passenger Elevators in Buildings
Parking Deck at Rear of Building
Located Across from Princeton University
Walk to Train Shuttle
Convenient to Dining & Shopping Right
within Palmer Square
R
Q For Lease or Sale – Office or Medical
Condominium
Q For Lease: 2,000 SF with 4-5 Perimeter
Offices, Conference Room & Open
Bullpen Area
Q For Sale: 5,200 SF Condo on the 2nd Floor
Consisting of Many Perimeter Offices,
2 Conference Rooms, Open Area,
Kitchen & Bathrooms
Q Elevator Serviced, Ample Parking, Building
Built in 2007
Q Convenient Location Close to Hamilton
Train Station, I-295 & Route 1
Q
Q
Q
Q
Q
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Palmer Square, Princeton, NJ
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Longford Corporate Center
3379 Quakerbridge Road, Hamilton, NJ
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56
1440 South Olden Avenue, Hamilton, NJ
Q Retail or Office for Sale or Lease
Building Size: 3,200 SF
Q 1-Story Free Standing Building
Q Parking: 15 Cars
Q Zoning: HC (Highway Commercial)
Q Lot Size: 100 x 112
Q Public Water & Sewer
Q Sale Price: $470,000
Q Location: Easy access, 1 Mile off I-295