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APRIL 11-17, 2012
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INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Pasta dinner
Youth group hosts fundraiser
on April 15. PAGE 3
P r e - s o r t e d
S t a n d a r d
U S P o s t a g e
P A I D
B e l l m a w r N J
P e r m i t 1 5 0 1
P o s t a l C u s t o m e r
JULIE STIPE/The Princeton Sun
At the Arts Council of Princetons Arts Exchange program, kids involved with Trentons HomeFront program come to the Paul Robeson Arts
Center in Princeton for an art class and a hot meal.
Bank
zoning
focus of
meeting
BY JULIE STIPE
The Princeton Sun
A work session by the
Princeton Borough mayor and
council held April 3, focused
on details of a zoning ordi-
nance for the Service Business
Zone on Nassau between
Olden Street and just past
Marry Place.
Much of the discussion cen-
tered on whether banks should
be permitted within the zone,
and, if so, what limitations
should be placed on their size.
Because the average size of
banks in the borough is 4,500
square-feet (and a similar 4,600
square-feet in the township),
planning director Lee Solow
said he felt comfortable recom-
mending a 5,000 square-foot
limit on banks in the zone.
The ordinance already pro-
hibits bank drive-thrus.
Some council members,
however, felt the square-foot
limit was too high, and others
felt banks should not be per-
mitted in the zone at all.
Councilwoman Barbara
Trelstad argued banks tend to
be dead areas that dont en-
courage public interaction.
Five-thousand square feet
is a lot of space, Trelstad
said. If were trying to create
Outreach program shares art, meals
By JULIE STIPE
The Princeton Sun
In the Childrens Studio at
the Paul Robeson Center for the
Arts, Eva Mantell and Bob Jenk-
ins are busy setting out scissors,
construction paper, glue sticks
and markers for the outreach pro-
gram Arts Exchange. On a table
behind them is a large tray of
pasta, a pile of bread, and cartons
of organic milk and orange juice.
The most unusual thing about
this program is that its an art
class and a hot meal, said Man-
tell. The second most unusual
thing about the program is that
the kids are age 5 to 20.
The Arts Exchange program
represents a partnership between
the Arts Council of Princeton
and HomeFront, an organization
based in Trenton, which works to
end homelessness and create sta-
ble home situations for families.
Kids whose families are in-
volved with HomeFront come to
the Robeson Center every Thurs-
day night for dinner and a cre-
ative activity.
Mantell, who has been involved
with the program for the past 10
years, stressed the great variety
of creative outlets that the pro-
gram provides for the kids.
We just finished having a
West African theme to many of
the classes, she said. Children
not only worked on art using
African symbols, they also had
African dance lessons, drumming
please see PROGRAM, page 4 please see COUNCIL, page 6
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The Princeton Elks Youth Or-
ganization, The Antlers, is excit-
ed to announce that they will be
organizing and hosting the third-
annual pasta dinner in memory
of Michael R. Damato on Sunday,
April 15, from 5:30 8 p.m.
The dinner will be held at the
Princeton Elks Lodge located at
354 Route 518 in Blawenburg. The
dinner is $12 for adults and $6 for
children younger than 6.
A portion of the proceeds will
be given to the Michael Robert
Damato Foundation.
Over the past two years, the
foundation has granted scholar-
ships to four graduates from
Montgomery High School and
will continue to do so this year
and in the future. In addition, the
foundation will be funding a
prom this May at Robert Wood
Johnson University Hospital for
teenage cancer patients who are
unable to attend their high school
prom due to their illness.
The Michael Robert Damato
Foundation is both a lasting cele-
bration of Michael, and a tribute
to all the amazing character traits
that he embodied. He was a
source of inspiration and motiva-
tion, heightening everyones ap-
preciation of life.
Michael was a gift from God, he
was an adored son and brother,
loyal friend, straight-A student,
committed Christian and so
much more.
His family, friends and those
that hear his story are inspired by
the love of life he had and the joy
he found in all he did. Although
Michael was given just 12 years
on this earth, his passion for life
has touched, changed and in-
spired many.
Elks youth organization
hosts pasta dinner on April 15
The India Foundation of Met-
ropolitan Princeton (IFMP) pres-
ents a spring festival at West
Windsor Community Park at 176
Princeton Hightstown Road
(Route 571) in West Windsor on
Sunday, April 14 from 1 to 4:30
p.m., rain or shine.
Admission is free for IFMP
members, $3 for students and $5
for non-members. Children
younger than 6 are free.
Holi, or Phagwah, is the most
colorful festival celebrated in
India. It is the Hindu festival that
welcomes the spring and cele-
brates the new life and energy of
the season. Holi is the most ener-
getic Indian festival, filled with
fun and good humor, spraying col-
ors, dancing on traditional Holi
songs, musical drum beats and
wild processions are the common
scenes during this festival. It is
also the messiest festival because
people throw powder paint (called
gulal) at each other and even at
complete strangers.
But no one seems to mind.
IFMP cordially invites you,
your family, your relatives and
your friends to the first event of
this year.
We will be playing with colors;
therefore, you should wear
clothes that you dont mind get-
ting color on. The tradition is to
wear all white so you can see all
of the fun Holi colors. Please feel
free to bring your own gulal (holi
color).
Play holi, fly kites, water bal-
loons, Henna competition, great
live music and refreshments.
For more information about
this event, please contact us via
email at ifmp@ifmpnj.org or by
phone at (609) 297-7116.
Spring festival at West Windsor Community Park
4 THE PRINCETON SUN APRIL 11-17, 2012
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lessons and even an African
feast.
The program often draws on
actors, singers, dancers and oth-
ers who perform at McCarter
Theater in Princeton, Mantell
said. The African theme grew out
of an interactive play that ran at
McCarter in late February called
Sunjata Kamalenya.
The play focuses on a West
African boy destined to become
king.
The shows choreographer,
Dyane Harvey, came in to teach
the kids African dance, and Heidi
Schoenenberger, McCarters
teaching artist intern, took the
initiative to cook African food for
the kids.
Chris Parks, the director of ed-
ucation at McCarter Theater, has
also been very involved with Arts
Exchange, Mantell said.
People kind of fall in love
with our class, Mantell said. Its
like a big, rowdy family.
Even local businesses have fall-
en for the class.
Each week the Princeton
restaurant Olives provides din-
ner, while Witherspoon Bread
Company donates bread. Organic
milk and orange juice is provided
by Whole Earth Center, and once
a month, The Bent Spoon donates
ice cream.
Each of the businesses that do-
nate, Mantell added, have been in-
credibly generous and each
seems to love being a part of the
program.
You should see the smiles on
their faces at Olives when I go to
pick this food up, Mantell said.
Arts Exchange is funded
through a number of organiza-
tions, including the Concordia
Foundation, the Mary Owen Bor-
den Foundation, Colgate-Palmo-
live, Firmenich, Janssen Pharma-
ceuticals and an annual fundrais-
er held by the Arts Council of
Princeton called Dining by De-
sign.
Last weeks class was a story-
telling class, which Mantell de-
scribes as part drama, part lan-
guage and part storytelling.
During class, the kids collec-
tively invented a story, which they
will turn into a collage during
this weeks class, Mantell said.
The storys protagonist, named
Denny, is loosely based on the
Easter Bunny, but has rainbow
powers, which he uses during a
face-off with a boogeyman who is
armed with a bow and arrows.
As the class began, about 16
kids trooped into the small room,
took seats on stools around a
large table, and began cutting
rabbits out of construction paper.
Mantell and Jenkins circled
around the room giving aid and
suggestions. Although there is a
specific project for each class,
Mantell said, there is a lot of free-
dom within the project.
We encourage everyone to ap-
proach it from their perspective,
she said.
Chris Marchetti, director of
HomeFronts Joy, Hopes and
Dreams program, also supervised
the class.
Every Thursday, Marchetti
picks each kid up in a bus and
drives to arts center. Arts Ex-
change, he said, is just one of a
slew of enrichment activities,
including a basketball team and
school tutoring, that HomeFront
offers for children involved with
the program.
Its all about well being and
empowerment, Marchetti said.
PROGRAM
Continued from page 1
Program is a partnership between
Arts Council and HomeFront
please see AREA, page 7
APRIL 11-17, 2012 THE PRINCETON SUN 5
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A symposium on creating
Broadway musicals will be held
on April 21 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
at the Lewis Center for the Arts at
Princeton University.
Making Broadway Musicals:
Artists and Scholars in Conversa-
tion, will feature interviews and
roundtables with some of the
leading artists currently working
today.
Composers, lyricists, orches-
trators, designers, directors and
choreographers will discuss their
work on musicals including Jer-
sey Boys, Company, Lysistra-
ta Jones, Urinetown, Sond-
heim on Sondheim, The
Drowsy Chaperone and In the
Heights.
The symposium, presented by
the Lewis Centers music theater
lab, will be held in the James M.
Stewart Theater at 185 Nassau St.,
in Princeton, and is free and open
to the public.
The symposium has been or-
ganized by Princeton professor of
theater Stacy Wolf and Harvard
professor of music Carol Oja.
Among the Tony and Drama
desk award-winning artists to be
featured are director John Rando;
director and choreographer Dan
Knechtges; lyricist and composer
Lisa Lambert; orchestrators
Mary-Mitchell Campbell, Alex
Lacamoire and Michael Starobin;
and costume designer Jess Gold-
stein.
Through interviews by Prince-
ton undergraduates along with
theater scholars and graduate
students from across the country,
the artists will discuss their roles
and experiences in creating and
bringing musical productions to
Broadway.
In addition to Wolf and Oja, the
theater, dance and music scholars
participating are Lynn Garafolo
of Barnard College; Liza Gen-
naro and Tamsen Wolff of
Princeton University; Raymond
L. Knapp of University of Califor-
nia Los Angeles; Jeffrey S. Magee
of University of Illinois at Ur-
bana-Champaign; David Savran
of the City University of New
Yorks Graduate Center; Dominic
Symonds of University of
Portsmouth in England; and Eliz-
abeth Wollman of Baruch Col-
lege.
Leading up to the symposium,
the Lewis Center featured a series
of conversations with other
Broadway musical theater artists,
including director John Doyle
(Sweeney Todd, Company), assis-
tant stage manager Jenny Slat-
tery (Spider Man: Turn Off the
Dark), scholar David Romn, and
writer Winnie Holzman (Wicked),
an interview with whom can be
heard on a Jersey Arts podcast at
www.jerseyarts.com/blog/index.
php/nj-theater/2012/02/winnie-
holzman/.
A conversation with Tony
Award-nominated actress Mon-
tego Glover (Memphis) will con-
clude the series on April 16.
The conversation series and
symposium are part of a spring
2012 course being taught by Wolf
called, Isnt It Romantic: The
Broadway Musical from Rogers
and Hammerstein to Sondheim.
The course, which is cross-list-
ed with theater, American studies
and English, explores how musi-
cal theater artists work to create
this quintessentially American
form of art and entertainment
built on the basics of love and ro-
mance.
Pre-registration is not re-
quired. For additional and up-to-
date information on the sympo-
sium, visit princeton.edu/mbm.
Broadway musical symposium set for April 21
6 THE PRINCETON SUN APRIL 11-17, 2012
in our opinion
W
hile virtually no one antici-
pates property values to
skyrocket anytime soon,
there are signs that the housing mar-
ket is beginning to get back on its feet.
Prices are up. Sales are solid. And
while foreclosures and short sales will
keep a lid on prices for some time, it
appears the market is moving in the
right direction. A report from The As-
sociated Press cited the National Asso-
ciation of Realtors point that Febru-
arys sales pace was the second high-
est since May 2010.
So what does that matter? Obviously
it matters a lot if youre buying or sell-
ing a home. But, even if youre not,
your homes value affects how you
handle your budget.
From a practical side, a higher
value might allow you to tap into your
homes equity. You might spend that
extra cash on home improvements, for
example, which helps to boost the
economy.
A homes value also has a psycho-
logical impact. Even though your
home might not be on the market,
there is a sense of security knowing
that you have your homes value to fall
back on if times get tough. That, in
turn, might prompt you to feel more
comfortable about buying new furni-
ture, taking a vacation, etc. Again, all
of these things help to spur the econo-
my.
To issue an all is well with the
housing market proclamation would
be premature. The aforementioned
distressed properties will continue to
be a burden. Credit is still tight. Inter-
est rates remain low, but could rise, sti-
fling a robust recovery.
But, hopefully, the days of watching
your homes value plummet are over,
or about over. The economy is showing
signs of growing albeit at a modest
pace. The reports indicate that more
people once again are looking at home
ownership as they feel better about
their employment status.
All of which is good news for home-
owners.
Home, sweeter home?
The numbers show that the real estate market might be stabilizing
Maybe the worst is over
Its not yet time to pronounce the
housing market as cured, but recent
reports indicate that it perhaps has
stabilized. Thats good news for both
homeowners and an economy that
continues to grow.
20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A
Princeton, NJ 08542
609-751-0245
The Sun is published weekly by Elauwit
Media LLC, 20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A,
Princeton, NJ 08542. It is mailed weekly to
select addresses in the 08042 and 08540 ZIP
codes. If you are not on the mailing list, six-
month subscriptions are available for
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email advertising@theprincetonsun.com.
The Sun welcomes suggestions and com-
ments from readers including any infor-
mation about errors that may call for a cor-
rection to be printed.
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Brief and to the point is best, so we look for
letters that are 300 words or fewer. Include
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to news@theprincetonsun.com, via fax at
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you can drop them off at our office, too. The
Princeton Sun reserves the right to reprint
your letter in any medium including elec-
tronically.
PUBLISHER Steve Miller
GENERAL MANAGER & EDITOR Alan Bauer
VICE PRESIDENT OF SALES Ed Lynes
NEWS
MANAGING EDITOR, NEWS Kevin Canessa Jr.
MANAGING EDITOR, PRODUCTION Mary L. Serkalow
PRINCETON EDITOR Julie Stipe
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CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Russell Cann
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VICE CHAIRMAN Alan Bauer
a lively neighborhood, 5,000 square-feet
seems counterproductive.
Councilman Roger Martindell wondered
why banks should be allowed at all, point-
ing out that 13 banks already exist in the
immediate area.
Why do we need another bank? he
asked.
On the other hand, said Councilwoman
Jo Butler, a bank could provide a stable ten-
ant that could move the project forward
and avoid leaving large amounts of empty
space in the area.
Business owner and member of the
Princeton Merchants Association Jack
Morrison noted he does business with five
different banks, all of which are on the
board of the Princeton Merchants Associa-
tion. They are a valuable asset to the com-
munity, Morrison said. I would like to
see a bank across the street.
Morrison noted the area has always
been a mix of different businesses and or-
ganizations, and banks form part of that
diversity.
Robert Bratman said hes in favor of the
new zoning, but also cautioned council
members against making the zoning too re-
strictive.
Limiting use is going to keep the build-
ings empty, he said.
Bratman said businesses have already
come and gone in the area because they
couldnt bring in enough revenue to stay
afloat, and tight limits on use will make it
difficult to find businesses able to stay in
the area.
The council also discussed the difficulty
of limiting fast food restaurants.
Attorney Henry Chou said limiting fast
food restaurants according to some defini-
tion is a slippery slope that could prohibit
restaurants similar to what already exists
in the area.
Martindell suggested the council look
for precedents for limiting fast food estab-
lishments.
Im sure this is not a unique issue, he
said.
The definition, he said, could include
wording that would eliminate establishments
in which food is not eaten on premises.
Trelstad argued the prohibition would
be too broad, and could eliminate establish-
ments such as Small World Coffee.
To eliminate fast food totally might be a
mistake, Martindell said.
The difficulty, Solow said, would lie in
defining fast food in a way that is fair to
everyone, and in enforcing the limitation.
At the councils last meeting, he said, the
issue had been dropped because of the dif-
ficulties of defining fast food.
The zoning ordinance prohibits fast-food
establishments with drive-thrus.
Butler said that by prohibiting fast-food
establishments, the borough might end up
cutting off its nose to spite its face, by
making it impossible for certain kinds of
restaurants to come into the zone.
It could prevent us from having some-
thing quite lovely, she said.
No action was taken at the meeting.
If the zoning is revised, Mayor Yina
Moore says a public hearing would be held.
COUNCIL
Continued from page 1
Council discusses limiting fast food restaurants
Visit us online at www.theprincetonsun.com
APRIL 11-17, 2012 THE PRINCETON SUN 7
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Depending on their situation
and how long they are involved
with HomeFront, kids may par-
ticipate in the Arts Exchange pro-
gram for a year or more, or for
only a couple of months.
The kids that need to be here,
we try to keep them here, Mar-
chetti said.
HomeFront also attempts to
stay supportive of kids whose
families may no longer be in-
volved with organization.
We always try to keep a con-
nectivity there with all who come
through our door, Marchetti
said.
The enormous enthusiasm of
all those who make Arts Ex-
change possible is apparently
matched by the kids involved in
the program, many of whom
began reaching for pencils and
markers before Mantell had a
chance to describe the project.
One 13-year-old girl, who said
she had been in Arts Exchange
for a couple of months, said she
likes the creativity of the pro-
gram.
It gives you the ability to ex-
press yourself, she said.
Her favorite project was using
blocks to make a building, which
expressed emotions. Mine was
calm and relaxed, she said.
Another teen in the program
said his favorite part was
learning how to play an African
drum.
I have a similar drum at
home, he said. Its kind of fun
to see how other cultures play
their instruments.
A 10 year-old, who said she had
been in the class for a long
while, was wary of choosing a
favorite project.
I like to do all of it, she said.
AREA
Continued from page 4
Area restaurants
donate dinners to
Arts Exchange
Please recycle this newspaper.
WEDNESDAY APRIL 11
Princeton Township Site Plan
Advisory Board meeting: 7:30
p.m. in conference room A of the
Princeton Township Municipal
Building, 400 Witherspoon St.
Visit www.princetontwp.org for
agenda.
Mother Goose: Ages 15 to 24
months. 10 a.m. at Princeton
Library Story Room. Stories,
songs, fingerplays for little ones.
Lapsit Stories: Ages newborn to 15
months. 11 a.m. at Princeton
Library Story Room. Stories,
songs, fingerplays and move-
ment.
Playgroup for Babies: Ages new-
born to 15 months. 11:30 a.m. to 1
p.m. at Princeton Library Story
Room. Moms, dads, caregivers
and babies can socialize and
interact. Library provides play-
mats and simple toys.
Downloading eBooks: 6 to 7 p.m. at
Princeton Library. Learn how you
can read popular fiction and non-
fiction books from your home
computer, eReader or smart-
phone. This class will cover the
steps needed to download
eBooks from the library. Students
should bring a smartphone or
eReader with appropriate cables
to practice. Register online at
www.princetonlibrary.org or call
(609) 924-9529, ext. 220.
Origami Club: 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at
Princeton Library Activity Room.
Anyone interested in traditional
Japanese art of paper folding is
invited to meet for 90 minutes of
new, often seasonal, folding.
Beginners welcome. Not just for
kids; adults invited, too.
Project Management with Frank
Ryle: 7 to 9 p.m. at Princeton
Library Community Room. In his
book, Keeping Score: Project
Management for the Pros, Frank
Ryle combines his extensive proj-
ect management experience with
lessons from a lifetime of golf to
present a how-to approach to
successfully accomplishing any
project, any time. Book signing
and reception will follow lecture.
Talking Politics Book Group: 7:30
to 9 p.m. at Princeton Library
Quiet Room. Joan Goldstein of
Mercer County Community Col-
lege leads the discussion of The
Tea Party and the Remaking of
Republican Conservatism by
Theda Skocpol and Vanessa
Williamson, which explains the
forces that gave rise to the move-
ment and its impact on the GOP.
Authors also offer possible impli-
cations of Tea Party.
The X Factors How to Reach
Peak Performances in Business:
7:30 to 9 p.m. at Princeton
Library. Join Peak Performance
Expert, Ed Tseng for a one-of-
kind workshop on how to take
your business/job to the next lev-
el. To register, call (609) 924-
9529, ext. 230, and leave a mes-
sage with name and phone num-
ber.
THURSDAY APRIL 12
Princeton Township Information
Technology Subcommittee
meeting: 8 a.m. in conference
room A of the Princeton Town-
ship Municipal Building, 400
Witherspoon St.
Shade Tree Commission meeting:
5 p.m. in room B at the Princeton
Township Municipal Complex. Vis-
it www.princetontwp.org for
agenda.
Princeton Township Planning
Board meeting: 7:30 p.m. in the
main meeting room. Visit
www.princetontwp.org for agen-
da.
Mother Goose: Ages 15 to 24
months. 10 a.m. at Princeton
Library Story Room. Stories,
songs, fingerplays for little ones.
Indoor Farmers Market: 11 a.m. to 5
p.m. at Princeton Library Com-
munity Room. Locally made prod-
ucts such as artisanal cheeses
and honey from farmers and the
works of many craftspeople are
available for purchase during this
five-hour event.
Toddler Stories: Ages 2 to 3. 11 a.m.
at Princeton Library Story Room.
Stories, songs, fingerplays for lit-
tle ones.
Family Stories: Ages 2 to 6. 2 p.m.
at Princeton Library Story Room.
Stories, songs, fingerplays for lit-
tle ones.
Mac Time for Teens: 4 to 6 p.m. at
Princeton Library Technology
Center. Designed to encourage
creative collaboration on the
librarys new iMacs.
SATURDAY APRIL 14
QuickBooks: 10:30 a.m. to 12:30
p.m. at Princeton Library Tech-
nology Center. Free, hands-on
workshop conducted by Oria
Gonzales, a certified QuickBooks
trainer, provides basic training in
the use of QuickBooks. Registra-
tion required at www.score
princeton.org.
Saturday Stories: Ages 2 to 8 with
an adult. 10:30 to 11 a.m. at
Princeton Library Story Room.
Stories, songs and movement.
Score Small Business Fair: 11 a.m.
to 3 p.m. at Princeton Library.
Four-hour annual event brings
together experts in entrepre-
neurship, financing, web design
marketing and franchising for the
benefit for those looking to start
a new business or keep an exist-
ing one healthy.
Stories in Russian: Noon to 12:30
p.m. at Princeton Library Story
Room, third floor. Stories and
songs read and sung in Russian
for children 2 to 8 years old and
their families.
Folk Tales from Afar: 2 p.m. at
Princeton Library Story Room.
Princeton University students will
read stories and tales that origi-
nated in faraway lands.
SUNDAY APRIL 15
Sunday Stories: 3:30 to 4 p.m. at
Princeton Library Story Room,
third floor. Stories, songs and
movement for children 2 to 8
years old with their families.
MONDAY APRIL 16
AARP Tax-Aide Program: Appoint-
ments at 9, 10 and 11 a.m. and
noon at Princeton Library. Sen-
iors and people of low- and mod-
erate-incomes can get free elec-
tronic tax preparations for feder-
al and New Jersey state returns.
Bring a copy of last years return,
along with official documentation
for all current-year income. For
more information, visit
www.princetonlibrary.org. To
schedule an appointment, call
(609) 924-9529, ext. 220.
Advanced Microsoft Excel 2007:
One of three sessions. Register
online at www.princeton
library.org or call (609) 924-
9529, ext. 220.
Princeton Family Dinner Week:
6:30 to 9 p.m. at Princeton
Library Community Room.
Potluck family dinner. Bring your
family and a baked good in a por-
tion to serve eight to 10 people;
all other menu items will be pro-
vided. Register online at
CALENDAR PAGE 8 APRIL 11-17, 2012
WANT TO BE LISTED?
To have your Princeton meeting or affair listed in the Calendar or
Meetings, information must be received, in writing, two weeks prior
to the date of the event.
Send information by mail to: Calendar, The Princeton Sun, 20
Nassau Street, Suite 26A, Princeton, N.J. 08542. Or by email:
news@princetonsun.com. Or you can submit a calendar listing
through our website (www.princetonsun.com).
We will run photos if space is available and the quality of the photo
is sufficient. Every attempt is made to provide coverage to all
organizations.
Princeton Shopping Center
on Harrison St.
683-7133
Bring us your unwanted gold any day
Well swap or pay you top dollar immediately!!
25%
OFF!
THIS FRIDAY & SATURDAY,
APRIL 13 & 14TH
Beautiful Time Pieces @ Marlowes Jewelry
PREPARE FOR THE
OUTDOOR DINING SEASON!
Princeton Shopping Center on Harrison St.
609-683-9400
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nt|| Apr|| 30th
please see CALENDAR, page 9
www.princetonlibrary.org or call
(609) 924-9529, ext. 230.
TUESDAY APRIL 17
Princeton Joint Pedestrian and
Bicycle Advisory Committee
meeting: 7:30 p.m. in conference
room A of the Princeton Town-
ship Municipal Building, 400
Witherspoon St.
Optimizing Your LinkedIn Profile:
8:30 to 10 a.m. at Princeton
Library. Matthew Levy, job coach
with two decades of HR experi-
ence, will show participants how
to elevate the visibility of profiles
on LinkedIn, the professional
social media site. Topics include
increasing profile views and con-
nections, being discovered by
recruiters and creating a recog-
nizable brand. Part of the Tues-
day Networking Breakfast series.
Toddler Stories: Ages 2 to 3. 10 a.m.
at Princeton Library Story Room.
Stories, songs, fingerplays for lit-
tle ones.
Lapsit Stories: Ages newborn to 15
months. 11 a.m. at Princeton
Library Story Room. Stories,
songs, fingerplays and move-
ment.
Playgroup for Babies: Ages new-
born to 15 months. 11:30 a.m. to 1
p.m. at Princeton Library Story
Room. Moms, dads, caregivers
and babies can socialize and
interact. Library provides play-
mats and simple toys.
Locating Articles on Companies
for a Job Search: 10:30 a.m. at
Princeton Library. Librarian Jane
Brown shares specialty databas-
es available with a library card.
Register online at www.prince-
tonlibrary.org or call (609) 924-
9529, ext. 220.
Mac Time for Teens: 4 to 6 p.m. at
Princeton Library Technology
Center. Designed to encourage
creative collaboration on the
librarys new iMacs.
SCORE Seminar Promotion and
Advertising for Small Business-
es: 6:45 to 8:45 p.m. at Princeton
Library. Advertising executive
Alan Yarnoff draws on his many
years experience creating adver-
tising for major consumer prod-
ucts and services to lead this
seminar on making an advertis-
ing budget pay off. Register
online at www.score
princeton.org.
APRIL 11-17, 2012 THE PRINCETON SUN 9
CALENDAR
Hours: Thurs & Fri 7-4:30pm Sat 7-4pm
B09-2BS-029B ghone B09-2BS-01S? Iax
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by the Iood Court AgrII 19
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Columbus, NJ 08022
Visit us at www.jlcrafts.com
Approximately 60 New
Sheds Coming In Soon!
Order your pavillions
and cabanas now!
Celebrate the Year of the Dragon
with us on April 14th!
@ the Princeton Shopping Center
on Harrison Street
www.incredibleme.com
683-8907
40% off any regularly priced item
&
50% off any regularly priced item
for new customers!
DRAGON PARADE @ 2pm
PR/ZES, GOOD/ES
CALENDAR
Continued from page 8
Send us your Princeton news
Have a news tip? Want to send us a press release or photos? Shoot
an interesting video? Drop us an email at news@theprincetonsun.
com. Fax us at (856) 427-0934. Call the editor at (609) 751-0245.
Princeton Day School (PDS)
senior Beau Horan, a four-year
starter at shortstop for the Pan-
thers, has committed to play base-
ball at Williams College in
Williamstown, Mass. Williams
competes in the New England
Small College Athletic Confer-
ence (NESCAC).
Williams has a long tradition of
baseball excellence having played
in the first college baseball game
against Amherst in 1859. Alumni
include George Steinbrenner, the-
late former owner of the New
York Yankees and Fay Vincent,
former commissioner of Major
League Baseball.
Williams outstanding academ-
ic reputation is equally matched
by athletics. In 2011, Williams
won its 13th consecutive Direc-
tors Cup. The Directors Cup
competition is sponsored by the
National Association of Colle-
giate Directors of Athletics
(NACDA) and Learfield Sports, in
NCAA Divisions I, II, and III and
in the National Association of In-
tercollegiate Athletics (NAIA).
The Directors Cup is emblem-
atic of athletic excellence, with
points awarded for a schools fin-
ish in NCAA post-season team
championships.
Horan, an All-Prep League
standout at PDS, played 2011 sum-
mer baseball for the nationally
recognized All-Star Baseball
Academys (ASBA) 17U showcase
team. After an outstanding sum-
mer of tournament play includ-
ing at the Perfect Game 17U Na-
tional Championship in Marietta,
Ga., the University of Pittsburgh
Pastime Showcase, the University
of Delaware Blue Hen Tourna-
ment and the Battle at the Beach
Tournament in Virginia Beau
led ASBA, batting over .400 while
turning nine double plays.
Irish theater scholar Patrick
Lonergan will present a lecture
entitled, Irish Drama After the
Celtic Tiger, on Friday, April 13
at 4:30 p.m. at the Lewis Center
for the Arts James M. Stewart
Theater, 185 Nassau St. The lec-
ture is part of a series presented
by Princeton Universitys Fund
for Irish Studies.
The event is free and open to
the public.
Lonergan is a professor of Eng-
lish and drama at the National
University of Ireland in Galway.
His first book, Theatre and Glob-
alization: Irish Drama in the
Celtic Tiger Era, won the 2009
Theatre Book Prize.
More recently, he has pub-
lished The Theatre and Films of
Martin McDonagh, and the edit-
ed collection Synge and His In-
fluences. Other publications in-
clude Interactions: The Dublin
Theatre Festival 1957-2007, (with
Nicholas Grene), Echoes Down
the Corridor: Irish Drama Past,
Present and Future, (with Riana
ODwyer) and The Methuen
Drama Anthology of Irish
Plays.
He is currently working on a
book called Performance, Nation
and Globalization: Modern Irish
Drama and Its International Con-
texts.
Lonergan is academic director
of the JM Synge Summer School
for Irish Drama, a vice-president
of IASIL (the International Asso-
ciation for the Study of Irish Lit-
eratures) and the director of the
Irish Theatrical Diaspora project.
With Erin Hurley, he is editor
of Methuen Dramas Critical
Companions to Drama and The-
atre series.
Lonergans lecture will focus
on contemporary drama created
after the so-called Celtic Tiger
era, the period of significant eco-
nomic growth in Ireland from
1995 to 2007, when Ireland, like
many countries, went from eco-
nomic boom to deep
recession and how that societal
change impacted the nations the-
ater.
Lonergan will be accompanied
by five students from the National
University of Ireland in Galway,
an institution that hosted Prince-
ton students and faculty during a
2011 summer global seminar on
Modern and Contemporary
Irish Theatre and Performance.
To learn more about the Fund
for Irish Studies and all the
events presented by the Lewis
Center for the Arts, visit prince-
ton.edu/arts.
Horan to play baseball at Williams College
Irish Drama After the Celtic Tiger on April 13
To submit news and photos to the Princeton Sun, send an email to news@theprincetonsun.com
classified
T HE P R I N C E T O N S U N
APRIL 11-17, 2012 PAGE 11
BOX A DS
W H A T Y O U N E E D T O K N O W
All ads are based on a 5 line ad, 15-18 characters per line. Additional lines: $9, Bold/Reverse Type: $9 Add color to any box ad for $20. Deadline: Wednesday - 5pm for the following week.
All classified ads must be prepaid. Your Classified ad will run in all 10 of The Sun newspapers each week! Be sure to check your ad the first day it appears.
We will not be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion, so call us immediately with any errors in your ad. No refunds are given, only advertising credit.
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