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INSIDE THIS ISSUE
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AvalonBay to hold
neighborhood meeting. PAGE 2
Hop on board the Dinosaur
Train Live! tour at McCarter
Theatre on Jan. 27 at 3 p.m.
Join Buddy, Tiny, Shiny, Don
and all their adoptive
Pteranodon family in this
upbeat, interactive, whimsi-
cal, multi-media trip back
through pre-historical jun-
gles, swamps, volcanoes and
oceans.
Based on the top-rated PBS
series, this live musical the-
ater show embraces and cel-
ebrates the fascination that
preschoolers have with both
dinosaurs and trains. So
bring the whole family along
on this larger-than-life adven-
ture back to an age when
dinosaurs roamed the earth
and rode in trains!
Tickets, which range from
$20 to $45, are available at
www.mccarter.org.
SPOTLIGHT
Dinosaurs on trains
By KATIE MORGAN
The Sun
Students at Princeton Day
Schools Lower School devoted
their morning on Jan. 17 to proj-
ects that will benefit local people
and animals.
The Morning of Service,
held in honor of Martin Luther
King, Jr.s 85th birthday, involved
students from Pre-K to fourth
grade.
As a way to honor Dr. Kings
important legacy and his passion
for helping others, each grade
level has developed a unique com-
munity service project, Lisa
Surace, head of the Lower School,
said in a release.
The Pre-K classes assembled
personal hygiene kits for the
Trenton Area Soup Kitchen. Each
bag included a toothbrush, tooth-
paste, soap, shampoo and other
bathing necessities. Pre-K stu-
dents worked in assembly-line
fashion to fill the bags while their
classmates used markers to make
colorful cards for the recipients.
Kindergarteners worked in
small groups in the schools
teaching kitchen to create no-
bake dog biscuits for animals in
local shelters, including the West
Trenton Animal Hospital and
SAVE.
First graders mixed birdseed
and used cookie cutters to make
creative birdfeeders. The feeders
will be hung around the Prince-
ton Day School campus to feed
birds during the winter months.
Second graders worked dili-
gently to create rubber band
bracelets called Rainbow Looms
that will be donated to the Pedi-
atric Unit at the Princeton Med-
ical Center at Plainsboro.
Off-campus, third graders
worked at the Nearly New Shop, a
used clothing store operated by
Princeton Day School families.
Fourth graders incorporated
technology into their community
service. The students spent the
morning at Elm Court, a nearby
senior housing center, interview-
ing residents about their life sto-
ries using their Princeton Day
School-issued iPads.
The interviews will be com-
KATIE MORGAN/The Sun
Kindergarteners at Princeton Day School roll out dough to make dog biscuits for animals in local shelters
during a Morning of Service on Jan. 17 in honor of Martin Luther King Jr.s birthday.
Morning of Service at local school
From dog biscuits to
bracelets, Princeton
Day School kids get
to work volunteering
please see STUDENTS, page 7
2 THE PRINCETON SUN JANUARY 2228, 2014
AvalonBay to host neighborhood meeting
By KATIE MORGAN
The Sun
AvalonBay, the developer that
will build a 280-unit housing com-
plex on the former site of the Uni-
versity Medical Center, plans to
hold a meeting with nearby resi-
dents in anticipation of the start
of demolition.
Were going to schedule a
neighborhood meeting after the
demolition plan is approved to go
through the process and schedule
in more detail, Jon Vogel, vice
president of development at Aval-
onBay, told the Princeton Council
on Jan. 13.
The people around the site
will understand whats going to
be happening over the next few
months.
John Muka, a representative
from Yannuzzi Demolition, a
Hillsborough-based company
contracted by AvalonBay, detailed
the plans for demolition of the
former hospital buildings.
The site will be isolated by a
chain-link fence that will have
gates on Witherspoon Street and
Franklin Avenue, and an emer-
gency gate between the parking
garage and the professional serv-
ices building, Muka said. The
entrance during the entire activi-
ty will be from Witherspoon, and
the exit will be out onto Franklin.
There will be no parking permit-
ted on the street.
Muka said that all combustible
and hazardous material, includ-
ing asbestos, would be removed
from the buildings prior to demo-
lition.
Well take all hazards out of
the buildings, Muka said. Fol-
lowing that removal, the demoli-
tion permits will be applied for
with the county. Well start demo-
lition from the east side of the
site at Harris Street, and work
our way across. Last to go will be
the far wall of the eight-story
building on Witherspoon. Well
need a one-day street closure, and
well have our 95-foot high-reach
excavator pull that wall into
pieces.
Muka said all recyclable mate-
rials, including wood, masonry
and metal, would be transported
to recycling centers.
All masonry, all trees and most
materials that can be recycled
will be done at a facility we own
in Hillsborough, Muka said. All
metals will be recycled at a New
Jersey Department of Environ-
mental Protection facility.
Council members raised var-
ied concerns about the noise
level, air contamination and the
dust that will be created during
demolition.
Theres dust air monitoring,
and theres asbestos air monitor-
ing, Muka said.
If there is any concern for a
particular portion of the demoli-
tion to have the possibility for as-
bestos to become airborne, that
section will be maintained in a
wetted condition so as not to cre-
ate any airborne dust.
In addition, Muka said the
noise level would not exceed the
municipal maximum of 64 deci-
bels.
A number of members of local
labor unions and concerned resi-
dents attended the meeting.
In the public comment portion
of the meeting, Shelly McKnight
asked that AvalonBay consider
using local workers.
The developer should use
Mercer County residents for the
job, McKnight said. They are
skilled in safety issues and demo-
lition practices. And if the devel-
oper does use Mercer County res-
idents, they should be required to
pay proper health and benefit
packages.
Vogel said preparations for
demolition would begin once
AvalonBay officially acquires the
property from the hospital.
Were still a contract purchas-
er, Vogel said.
We hope that will change
soon, maybe even this month. As
soon as we close, we can take the
next step.
Prosecutor asked to
review charges against
Port Authority executive
David Wildstein, a former Port
Authority executive appointed by
Gov. Christie, may face contempt
charges in the wake of the
Bridgegate scandal.
Wildstein appeared before the
Assembly transportation commit-
tee under subpoena on Jan. 9, but
on the advice of his lawyer, Wild-
stein invoked his Fifth Amend-
ment rights and refused to an-
swer any questions.
Assemblyman John Wisniews-
ki, who is heading the investiga-
tion, said on Jan. 13 that he asked
Mercer County Prosecutor
Joseph Bocchini Jr. to review the
contempt charges brought
against Wildstein.
The charges were brought
under a state statute that says
that refusing to answer questions
after waiving your constitutional
right to remain silent is a misde-
meanor.
Wisniewski believes Wildstein
waived that right when he sup-
plied the Assembly with text and
email transcripts that revealed
the sudden closure of lanes on the
George Washington Bridge in
September may have been politi-
cal retribution against the mayor
of Fort Lee, who did not endorse
Christie in the 2013 election.
Top Christie aide Bridget Anne
Kelly orchestrated the closures
with the help of Wildstein and
Bill Baroni, another Port Author-
ity executive appointed by
Christie, officials said.
Kelly was fired when the scan-
dal broke on Jan. 9, and Wildstein
and Baroni resigned in December.
While the Assemblys investi-
gation is ongoing, Wisniewski
said in a release that he believes
Wildstein should be charged for
impeding the investigation.
The committee unanimously
believes that Mr. Wildsteins ob-
fuscation of our investigation
rises to the level of contempt
under existing state statutes,
Wisniewski said in the release.
Im hopeful that the Mercer
County prosecutor will see it fit to
take up this matter in an effort to
aid our quest to protect taxpayer
resources from further abuse.
Negotiations over
university contribution
going smoothly
Council President Bernie
Miller said last week that negotia-
tions with Princeton University
over the schools voluntary finan-
cial contribution to the town were
going smoothly.
Well meet again this week
and pick up the discussion,
Miller said. I believe it will con-
tinue to go smoothly. Weve had a
good exchange of ideas to date.
Its fair to say we share some com-
mon objectives.
Miller said one of those objec-
tives is increased diversity, both
in the municipality and the uni-
versity community.
Were both very interested in
arriving at a long-term arrange-
ment, Miller said. A multi-year
arrangement would grant both
sides some stability.
University officials confirmed
to the Daily Princetonian in De-
cember that the amount of this
years contribution would not be
less than the 2013 contribution of
$2.475 million.
Princeton Police
Department seeking
accreditation
The Princeton Police Depart-
ment announced on Jan. 15 that it
would undergo an assessment to
achieve accreditation.
The final step in the process
will be a Jan. 26 assessment com-
pleted by a team from the New
Jersey State Association of Police
Chiefs.
Verification by the team that
the Princeton Police Department
meets the commissions best
practice standards is part of a
voluntary process to achieve ac-
creditation, a highly prized recog-
nition of law enforcement profes-
sional excellence, Capt. Nick
Sutter said in a press release. Ac-
creditation results in greater ac-
countability within the agency,
reduced risk and liability expo-
sure, stronger defense against
civil lawsuits, increased commu-
nity advocacy and more confi-
dence in the agencys ability to
operate efficiently.
Accreditation is valid for three
years, during which time the de-
partment would be required to
submit annual reports document-
ing its compliance with the best
practices standards.
Members of the public are in-
vited to provide comments re-
garding the work of the police de-
partment to the assessment team.
Comments can be given by
phone at (609) 924-0026 on Jan. 27
between 9 and 11 a.m., or by email
to cmorgan@princetonnj.gov.
Downtown traffic circle
at Alexander-University
set to open Jan. 26
The intersection at Alexander
Street and University Place,
which has been closed since the
middle of October, is set to reopen
on Jan. 26.
The temporary bypass road,
news BRIEFS
please see NEWS, page 3
which served as a detour around
the intersection, will be closed.
Princeton police confirmed
that they would monitor the area,
as the traffic circle will create
new driving patterns to which
drivers may need to adapt.
According to municipal engi-
neer Bob Kiser, the roundabout
will be similar to the three-legged
roundabout at Faculty Road.
Now that the bulk of the road-
work is complete, the university
will move to the next phase of the
$330 million arts and transit proj-
ect, which includes the construc-
tion of a new Wawa and a new
Dinky train station.
Regular updates on the con-
struction calendar can be found
on the universitys website.
Brush and leaf
pickup schedule
will be lengthened
At a press conference on Jan.
13, Mayor Liz Lempert said the
brush and leaf pickup schedule
for the spring would be longer
than last years schedule.
Were going to start earlier in
March and go later, Lempert
said. I think this is really going
to be a benefit for the communi-
ty.
Lempert said the changes are a
result of data collected during the
2013 pickups, the first completed
by a consolidated Public Works
department.
The past year has been a
learning experience on a number
of levels, Lempert said. We had
two departments of people com-
ing together and working togeth-
er, learning the streets. By the
end of the year, people were a lot
happier. I think the final leaf
pickup in particular was a huge
success.
The full leaf and brush collec-
tion schedule will be available on
the municipal website at
www.princetonnj.gov.
Water treatment
program will affect
towns drinking water
New Jersey American Water
announced on Jan. 14 that the
water treatment process at two
central New Jersey plants would
undergo a temporary change.
As part of annual pipeline
maintenance, the process will
switch from treatment with chlo-
ramine, a combination of ammo-
nia and chlorine, to free chlorine.
The change, scheduled to begin
Jan. 21, will last through March.
According to a press release from
NJ American Water, customers
may notice an increase in the
taste and smell of chlorine in
their water.
The release said that while all
customers water will continue to
meet state and federal standards
during the treatment, some resi-
dents might dislike the taste of
chlorine. To remove the taste, af-
fected customers are advised to
place water in a glass container
in the refrigerator overnight to
allow the chlorine to dissipate,
bring water to a boil for five min-
utes and let it cool, or add a slice
of lemon to water to counteract
the taste and smell of chlorine.
Katie Morgan
JANUARY 2228, 2014 THE PRINCETON SUN 3
NEWS
Continued from page 2
Evenings with Friends, the
popular series of conversations
between acclaimed authors and
experts, continues this winter
and spring at Princeton Public Li-
brary. Attendance is limited to 60
people who will have the chance
to interact with the authors and
join in a discussion at the end of
the authors presentation.
The first event will be Thurs-
day, Jan. 23 with Merry White, au-
thor and professor of anthropolo-
gy at Boston University. White, an
acclaimed cultural anthropolo-
gist who specializes in Japan, will
talk about her books, including
her groundbreaking Cooking for
Crowds, which is currently back
in print in a special 40th-anniver-
sary edition.
On Thursday, Feb. 20, author
and editor Robert Wilson will talk
about Mathew Brady: Portraits
of a Nation, his narrative biog-
raphy of the 19th-century Ameri-
can photographer.
Evenings with Friends contin-
ues Wednesday, March 26 with au-
thor and sociology professor
William Helmreich who will talk
about his recent book The New
York Nobody Knows: Walking
6,000 Miles in the City. The series
concludes Tuesday, April 29.
Drinks and light dinner will
begin at 6:30 p.m. in the librarys
Community Room. Conversa-
tions start at 7:30 p.m. The cost to
attend is $50 for an individual
evening, $175 for a four-evening
package. For tickets, visit prince-
tonlibrary.org/friends/conversa-
tions. For more information, call
(609) 924-9529, ext. 280 or
friends@princetonlibrary.org.
First Evenings with Friends Jan. 23
news briefs
Carl Clifton Faith
Jan. 12, 2014
A resident of Princeton since
1960, Carl Faith died on Sunday,
Jan. 12 of heart failure at Prince-
ton Hospital.
Faith was born in a house on
Fifth Street near the Ohio River
in Covington, Ky. He was raised
in Covingtons Peaselburg neigh-
borhood, where he and his late
brother Fred went to the 5th and
7th District Schools and Holmes
High School.
Faith was drafted into the U.S.
Navy in 1945, trained to be a radio
technician, and was graduated
with the rank of aviation techni-
cian mate, third class, in August
1946.
With the help of the GI Bill, he
attended the University of Ken-
tucky, Lexington, graduating
magna cum laude with honors in
mathematics. In 1955 he received
his PhD in mathematics from
Purdue University, West
Lafayette, Indiana, where he stud-
ied with the late Dr. Sam Perlis.
He taught at
Pennsylvania
State, Purdue
University
and Michigan
State, and was
a Fulbright-
NATO post-
doctoral fel-
low at Heidel-
berg Universi-
ty, Germany.
He was ap-
pointed full professor of Mathe-
matics at Rutgers University, New
Brunswick and Piscataway, in
1962, and taught there until his re-
tirement in 1997.
Faith was a National Science
Foundation postdoctoral fellow
and a member of the Institute for
Advanced Study, Princeton, from
1960-1962. He was also a visitor at
the IAS in 1973-74, 1977-78, and
summers 1960-79. In 1970, he at-
tended Tulane Universitys Alge-
bra Year, and in 1965-1966, he was
a visiting scholar at the Universi-
ty of California at Berkeley.
In 1968, Faith was a consultant
for the National Science Founda-
tion and the U. S. Agency for In-
ternational Development in
India, lecturing in New Delhi,
Bombay, Madras, Calcutta and
Jaipur. In spring 1986 and fall
1989, Faith was a visiting profes-
sor at Centre Reserca Matematica
in Barcelona, where he worked
with the late Professor Pere
Menal and his students Drs.
Jaume Moncasi, Pere Ara, Dolors
Herbera and Rosa Camps.
In May 2003, he was honored by
his alma mater in Covington and
inducted into Holmes High
School Hall of Distinction.
In 2007, Faith and Professor
Barbara Osofsky of Rutgers, his
PhD student, were feted at an In-
ternational Conference at
Zanesville, Ohio, in celebration of
his 80th and her 70th birthdays.
Faiths mathematical research
was in abstract algebra, Galois
theory, ring theory including
module theory; he is the author of
numerous publications and
books, including Rings and
Things and a Fine Array of
Twentieth Century Associative
Algebra, American Mathemati-
cal Society, 1999; FPF Ring Theo-
ry, with S.S. Page, London Mathe-
matical Society, 1984; Simple Noe-
therian Rings, with J.H. Cozzens,
Cambridge University Press,
1975; and a definitive two-volume
Algebra, Spring-Verlag, 1973,
1976.
Faiths hobbies included travel-
ling, multi-media art, photogra-
phy, and poetry. He studied art at
the Baker-Hunt Foundation in
Covington and later at the Univer-
sity of California, Berkeley, as
well as at the Princeton Art Asso-
ciation. Two of his works were
selected for a juried show at Mc-
Carter Theater.
A book of poems, The Seduc-
tion of Hummingbirds and other
Poems, and a memoir of his first
19 years, The Sun Shines Bright:
A Kentucky Boyhood during the
Great Depression and World War
II, were published by Xlibris,
and are accessible at his website:
carlfaith.com
Faith is survived by his wife,
Molly Sullivan, his daughter
Heidi Faith of Mt. View, Calif.,
four adopted sons: Zeno Wood, of
Brooklyn, N.Y., Dr. Japheth Wood,
of Kingston, N.Y., Malachi Wood,
of Princeton, and Dr. Ezra Wood,
of Amherst, Mass; and their re-
spective spouses, Jill Dowling,
Mariel Fiori, Dr. Jhilam Iqbal,
and Dr. Simi Hoque. He is sur-
vived by eight grandchildren:
Clio Dowling Wood, Leila Yorek
Sundin, Tarquin Iqbal Wood,
Maya Iqbal Wood, Vesper Wood-
hoque and her twin siblings,
Esme and Quinn, and Daphne
Wood-Fiori. He is also survived
by his first wife, Betty Frances
Compton Selberg.
In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made to Princeton Public
Library or charity of choice.
4 THE PRINCETON SUN JANUARY 2228, 2014
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obituary
FAITH
OBITUARIES
The Sun will print obituaries, free of charge.
By KATIE MORGAN
The Sun
The Institute for Advanced
Studys plans to build 15 units of
faculty housing on a section of
the Princeton Battlefield were
shot down by the Delaware and
Raritan Canal Commission on
Jan. 15.
The Princeton Planning Board
approved the project in March
2012, on the condition that the In-
stitute acquire waivers and ap-
proval from several entities, in-
cluding the DRCC.
After a hearing, the DRCC de-
nied the request for a waiver by a
4-3 vote. The DRCC has a buffer
zone around a stream on the prop-
erty, and the housing units would
have encroached on that bound-
ary.
They have very careful regu-
lations for allowing a waiver,
said Kip Cherry, the first vice
president of the Princeton Battle-
field Area Preservation Society, a
group that has been fighting the
project for more than a year. The
DRCC made it clear that they are
not willing to provide that waiver
for environmental reasons.
The Battlefield Preservation
Society opposes the Institutes
plans because even though the In-
stitute owns the land, it has his-
torical significance.
This spot is where the coun-
terattack occurred during the
Battle of Princeton, Cherry said.
It was not a small skirmish. This
is where Gen. George Washington
won the battle.
Cherry said the DRCCs deci-
sion represents a win for the Bat-
tlefield Preservation Society.
It was a very big step for us,
Cherry said. But were not done
yet. We dont know what the Insti-
tute might do next. They still
have several options, and Im sure
theyre considering those now,
but its a major victory for us.
Bruce Afran, attorney for the
Battlefield Preservation Society,
said there is almost no chance of
an appeal overturning the DRCC
decision.
They can appeal it, but theres
almost no chance of success,
Afran said. Normally, the deci-
sion of an expert agency is given
great deference by the courts.
Afran said that to move for-
ward with construction, the Insti-
tute would have to submit a new
proposal to the Princeton Plan-
ning Board.
It would mean starting the
whole thing over from scratch,
Afran said. Right now, they have
no permission to build. Their
Planning Board approval was
contingent on that waiver, and so
that approval is now invalid.
Institute spokeswoman Chris-
tine Ferrara said the Institute
does not consider the project to be
tabled.
Were looking at all of our op-
tions, Ferrara said. Were confi-
dent that this decision on a tech-
nical issue will not be an obstacle
to our moving forward with the
project.
The DRCC, established in 1974
by then-Gov. Brendan Byrne, is
tasked with protecting the D&R
Canal State Park from harmful
impacts as a result of new devel-
opment.
The stream in question in the
Institutes plans for development
runs through the property to the
Stony Brook, which feeds the Rar-
itan River.
We feel very strongly about
the importance of not developing
this property, and well continue
to do whatever we can to prevent
it being developed, Cherry said.
Our concerns are historical, but
the issues are also environmen-
tal. Its not just about the Battle of
Princeton we are very con-
cerned about the environmental
aspects of this delicate area.
Cherry said she feels a better
course of action would be for the
Institute to purchase one of the
large homes in the surrounding
neighborhood and convert an ex-
isting building into the necessary
faculty housing.
Princeton has a special legacy
in converting very large houses
into condominiums, Cherry
said. If the Institute could pur-
chase and convert some of these
buildings that have true histori-
cal and architectural value, it
would maintain the fabric of the
neighborhood. It would be won-
derful if the Institute would be-
come more engaged in preserving
the Battlefield and the surround-
ing properties. As an intellectual
institution, they have a responsi-
bility as a preserver of history.
JANUARY 2228, 2014 THE PRINCETON SUN 5
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Canal Commission shuts
down Battlefield housing plan
in our opinion
6 THE PRINCETON SUN JANUARY 2228, 2014
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INTERIMPUBLISHER
A
tlantic City has been a hub of
economic development for
New Jersey since the 1970s.
The citys casinos have long been the
states defining attraction to out-of-
state guests, even more so than its ex-
pansive beaches, which are a huge
summertime draw.
AC has been a focal point of develop-
ment, tourism and marketing, and has
generously repaid the favor in the
form of revenue and taxes to the state.
But a disturbing trend that began al-
most 10 years ago continues today: Peo-
ple are spending less and less money at
Atlantic City casinos every day.
The Center for Gaming Research at
UNLV reports that, since 2006, total
revenue at Atlantic City casinos has
dropped a whopping 45 percent. Casi-
nos brought in $2.9 billion last year,
down from $3.1 billion in 2012 the sev-
enth straight year that revenue num-
bers were down from the year before.
In the wake of surrounding states
approving expanded gambling offer-
ings at racetracks and standalone casi-
nos, New Jersey no longer has the East
Coast monopoly on gambling that it
had even 10 years ago. No longer do
gamblers have to choose between New
Jersey, Las Vegas and, to a small de-
gree, Connecticut; they can now stay
closer to home in Pennsylvania,
Delaware and even Maryland to place
a bet.
Gov. Christie and other legislators
have recognized this alarming trend
and have focused their efforts on alter-
native forms of gambling to pump fuel
into Atlantic Citys fire. Online gam-
bling began Nov. 21 with casinos re-
porting $8.4 million in related revenue
since that time and the push for le-
galized sports betting continues.
But other surrounding states are al-
ready following suit in their own push
for online gambling, and New Jerseys
case for legalizing sports gambling in
the state doesnt look promising.
So it seems about time to look else-
where outside of gambling as a fu-
ture source of significant revenue for
the state.
If Atlantic City casinos continue to
lose revenue, and if online gambling
doesnt make up those losses, then the
state as a whole will suffer.
What else is out there? What else is
available? What else can attract
tourists all year round?
It might not be possible to answer
these questions now, but lawmakers
need to recognize the need to come up
with a revenue solution soon. Our
states long-term economic health
could depend upon it.
A gambling alternative?
New Jersey needs to find a new source of revenue, not a new form of gambling
Your thoughts
Should New Jerseys tourism industry
continue to rely so heavily on gambling?
Or should the state search for alternative
revenue? Share your thoughts on
the subject, and others, through a letter
to the editor.
Russian pianist returns to McCarter Jan. 28
Two seasons ago, Russian pianist Kirill
Gerstein served as a last-minute replace-
ment for the renowned Chinese pianist,
Yundi. Walking onstage that night, many
in the McCarter audience were unaware of
Gersteins skills. By the end of the night,
however, a full standing ovation made it
clear that a deeply powerful impression
had been made on the Princeton audience.
Now, Gerstein triumphantly returns to Mc-
Carter for a special evening of music on
Tuesday, Jan. 28 at 7:30 p.m. on the
Matthews stage.
With a masterful technique and a musi-
cal curiosity that has led him to explore
repertoire spanning centuries and styles,
he has proven to be one of todays most in-
triguing and versatile musicians.
Gerstein is the sixth recipient the presti-
gious Gilmore Artist Award, presented
every four years to an exceptional pianist
who, regardless of age or nationality, pos-
sesses broad and profound musicianship
and charisma. Since receiving the award
in 2010, Gerstein has shared his prize
through the commissioning of boundary
crossing new works by Oliver Knussen,
Chick Corea, Brad Mehldau and Timothy
Andres, with additional commissions
scheduled for future seasons. Gersteins
McCarter program is an eclectic evening of
music including Haydns Variations in F
minor, Hob. XVII: 6, Mussorgskys Pic-
tures at an Exhibition, Brad Mehldaus
Variations on a Melancholy Theme
(commissioned by Gerstein with funds
from his 2010 Gilmore Artist Award),
Ligetis Etude No. 4 Fanfares and Etude
No. 5 Arc-en-Ciel, and George Gershwins
Somebody Loves Me and Ive Got
Rhythm.
Gerstein will perform at 7:30 p.m. on
Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2014 in the Matthews The-
atre. Tickets start as low as $20, and can be
purchased online at www.mccarter.org, by
phone at (609) 258-2787, or in person at the
McCarter Theatre Ticket Office, located at
91 University Place in Princeton.
JANUARY 2228, 2014 THE PRINCETON SUN 7
12 Winfield Road
RECENTLY
SOLD HOMES
Sold: $1,225,000
Real estate tax: $31,567 / 2013
Approximate Lot Size: 3.84
This one-story rancher has five bedrooms
and five full bathrooms. Features include
an in-ground pool, three fireplaces, stone
patio, two-car attached garage, and
entrance court surrounded by brick wall
and antique metal gates.
82 Harris Road
Sold: $790,000
Real estate tax: $12,196 / 2013
Approximate Lot Square Footage: 11,761
This split-level traditional home has five
bedrooms and three full bathrooms.
Features include a state-of-the-art eat-in
kitchen with granite counter tops, great
room fireplace, sunroom, new HardiPlank
siding, new roof and new systems.
piled into a short film, which the
fourth graders will premiere at
Elm Court in the spring.
Elena and Maddy, second
graders working diligently on
rainbow looms, said their lessons
on Martin Luther King, Jr. helped
them to understand the spirit of
community service.
Were making rainbow looms
for Martin Luther King Day,
Elena said. He wanted every-
body to be able to do what they
wanted to do, and not have to be
separate.
Were working together to
help people like he wanted people
to do.
Maddy said she hoped the
Rainbow Loom bracelets would
help children in the pediatric unit
to know that someone was think-
ing of them.
The kids that are in the hospi-
tal might be there for a day or for
a while, Maddy said. We dont
want them to feel bad. It makes us
feel really good to help other peo-
ple.
KATIE MORGAN/The Sun
First graders at Princeton Day School mix birdseed to make feeders
during a Morning of Service on Jan. 17 in honor of Martin Luther
King, Jr.s birthday.
STUDENTS
Continued from page 1
Email us at news@theprincetonsun.com
Students in various grades took part
WEDNESDAY JAN. 22
Fences, McCarter Theater. 91 Uni-
versity Place. (609) 258-2787.
7:30 p.m. August Wilson play
directed by Phylicia Rashad. $20
and up. Post show discussion.
www.mccarter.org.
Contra Dance, Princeton Country
Dancers. Suzanne Patterson
Center, 1 Monument Drive, Prince-
ton. (609) 924-6763. 7:30 p.m. to
10:30 p.m. Instruction followed by
dance. $8. www.princetoncoun-
trydancers.org.
Cornerstone Community Kitchen.
Princeton United Methodist
Church, Nassau at Vandeventer
St., Princeton. (609) 924-2613. 5
p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Hot meals
served, prepared by TASK. Free.
www.princetonumc.org.
Guided Tour, Drumthwacket Foun-
dation. 354 Stockton St., Prince-
ton. (609) 683-0057. 1 p.m. New
Jersey governor's official resi-
dence. Group tours are available.
Registration required. $5 dona-
tion. www.drumthwacket.org.
Encore Careers, Princeton Senior
Resource Center. Princeton
Public Library. (609) 924-7108. 7
p.m. 'Doing Good While Doing
Well' presented by Carol King.
www.princetonsenior.org.
European American Chamber of
Commerce. Nassau Club, Prince-
ton. 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Welcome to
2014 with EACCNJ. New year net-
working event over wine and
cheese. $35 members, $75 non-
members. www.eaccnj.org.
THURSDAY JAN. 23
Fences, McCarter Theater. 91 Uni-
versity Place. (609) 258-2787.
7:30 p.m. August Wilson play
directed by Phylicia Rashad. $20
and up. Pride night.
www.mccarter.org.
Argentine Tango, Viva Tango.
Suzanne Patterson Center, 45
Stockton St., Princeton. (609)
948-4448. 8 p.m. All levels class
at 8 p.m. Intermediate level class
at 8:30 p.m. Open dance, socializ-
ing and refreshments from 9:30
to 11:45 p.m. No partner neces-
sary. $15. vivatango.org.
Evenings with Friends. Princeton
Public Library, 65 Witherspoon
St. (609) 924-8822. 6:30 p.m.
Merry White, author of 'Cooking
for Crowds' and a professor of
anthropology at Boston Universi-
ty. Presentation followed by inter-
action with the author. Register.
$50. www.princetonlibrary.org.
Nutrition Event, McCaffrey's.
Princeton Shopping Center, 301
Harrison St. (215) 750-7713. 1:30
p.m. 'What's Next in Food Trends
for 2014?' presented by dietitian
Jill Kwasny and executive chef
Eric Blackshire. Register by E-
mail to
nutitionist@mccaffreys.com or
call. Free. www.mccaffreys.com.
Community Office House. U.S. Rep-
resentative Rush Holt, Princeton
Public Library, 65 Witherspoon
St., Princeton. (609) 750-9365. 5
p.m. to 7 p.m. Staff members will
be available to assist with Social
Security, Medicare, Medicaid, the
VA, U.S. citizenship and immigra-
tion services, as well as federal
grants, flags flown over the Capi-
tol. www.holt.house.gov
Charitable Planning, Princeton
Area Community Foundation.
Nassau Club, 6 Mercer St., Prince-
ton. (609) 219-1800. 8 a.m. Work-
shop for small business owners
presented by Rebecca Rosen-
berger Smolen, co-founder Bala
Law Group. Breakfast and pro-
gram. Register. www.pacf.org.
NJ CAMA, D&R Greenway. 1
Preservation Place, Princeton. 6
p.m. to 8 p.m. 'Ten Hot Internet
Marketing Trends.' Sarah Cirelli.
Register. $20 to $25. www.njca-
ma.org.
FRIDAY JAN. 24
Fences, McCarter Theater. 91 Uni-
versity Place. (609) 258-2787. 8
p.m. August Wilson play directed
by Phylicia Rashad. $20 and up.
www.mccarter.org.
Folk Dance, Princeton Folk Dance.
Suzanne Patterson Center, 45
Stockton St. Princeton. (609) 912-
1272. 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. Beginners
welcome. Lesson followed by
dance. No partner needed. $5.
www.princetonfolkdance.org.
Divorce Recovery Program,
Princeton Church of Christ. 33
River Road, Princeton. (609) 581-
3889. 7:30 p.m. Non-denomina-
tional support group for men and
women. Free. www.prince-
tonchurchofchrist.com.
SATURDAY JAN. 25
Westminster Choir College Benefit
Concert: Ode to Joy. Westmin-
ster Conservatory, Richardson
Auditorium, Princeton University.
(609) 258-9220. 7:30 p.m. The
Westminster Symphonic Choir
and Vienna Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Mark Laycock, per-
forms Beethoven's Symphony
No. 9 and works by Bach and
Mendelssohn to commemorate
the 100th birthday of Princeton
philanthropist William H. Scheide.
$35. www.rider.edu/arts.
Art Exhibit, Princeton University
Art Museum. Princeton campus.
(609) 258-3788. 10 a.m. First day
for 'Disegno in Translation: Italian
Drawings at the Princeton Uni-
versity Art Museum.' On view to
May 11.
artmuseum.princeton.edu.
Dinosaur Train Live. McCarter The-
ater, 91 University Place, Prince-
ton. (609) 258-2787. 3 p.m. Musi-
cal theater show for the young.
$20 to $45. www.mccarter.org.
Jersey Jumpers, Central Jersey
Dance Society. Unitarian
Church, 50 Cherry Hill Road,
Princeton. (609) 945-1883. 7 p.m.
Swing, jitterbug and lindy hop.
Lesson followed by an open
dance. $12. No partners needed.
Beginners welcome. www.central-
jerseydance.org.
Contra Dance, Princeton Country
Dancers. Suzanne Patterson
Center, 1 Monument Drive, Prince-
ton. (609) 924-6763. 7:30 p.m. to
11 p.m. Instruction followed by
dance. $10. www.princetoncoun-
trydancers.org.
Central Jersey Chess Tournament.
New Jersey Chess, Princeton
Academy, 1128 Great Road,
Princeton. 1:30 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Open to kindergarten to grade 12,
players of all levels. All players
receive a medal or trophy. Regis-
ter online, $35; on site, $45. E-
mail info@njchess.com for infor-
mation. www.njchess.com.
SUNDAY JAN. 26
Organ Recital, Central New Jersey
American Guild of Organists.
Miller Chapel, Princeton Theolog-
ical Seminary, Princeton. (609)
921-7458. 4 p.m. German Luther-
an church music lecture present-
ed by Joyce Irwin. 'From Secular
to Sacred: Removing Borders in
German Lutheran Church Music
After 1700' features organ and
vocal selections. Thomas
Dressler performs on the organ
and harpsichord. Free.
Annual Dinner, Friends of the
Princeton University Library.
Richardson Auditorium. (609)
258-3155. A. Scott Berg, author of
biographies of Max Perkins,
Charles Lindbergh, Samuel Gold-
wyn and Katherine Hepburn,
recently completed a new biogra-
phy of Woodrow Wilson. Register.
ww.fpul.org./bae
Walking Tour, Historical Society of
Princeton. Bainbridge House, 158
Nassau St. Princeton. (609) 921-
6748. 2 p.m. Two-hour walking
tour around downtown Princeton
and Princeton University campus.
$7. www.princetonhistory.org.
MONDAY JAN. 27
Annual Conference, Community
Works. Princeton University, Frist
Campus Center. (609) 924-8652.
5 p.m. to 9:15 p.m. For volunteers
CALENDAR PAGE 8 JANUARY 2228, 2014
please see CALENDAR, page 10
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long gone in a compost heap, the
food is just a vague memory, and
the dress is in a box under the bed
in the hope your daughter will
want to wear it decades from now
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to learn about
advertising
opportunities
in future
special sections.
and non-profit agencies to net-
work, develop skills and raise
community awareness through
more than 20 workshops. Regis-
ter. $35 includes two workshops
and a box dinner. www.princeton-
communityworks.org.
TUESDAY JAN. 28
Kirill Gerstein, McCarter Theater.
91 University Place. (609) 258-
2787. 7:30 p.m. Piano recital fea-
tures works by Mussughsky,
Mehldau, Gershwin, and Ligeti.
$10 to $48. www.mccarter.org.
Keith Franklin Jazz Group. Wither-
spoon Grill, 57 Witherspoon St.,
Princeton. (609) 924-6011. 6:30
p.m. to 10 p.m.
International Folk Dance, Prince-
ton Folk Dance. Riverside School,
58 Riverside Drive, Princeton.
(609) 921-9340. 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Ethnic dances of many countries
using original music. Beginners
welcome. Lesson followed by
dance. No partner needed. $3.
www.princetonfolkdance.org.
Centennial Speaker Series, Hun
School. 176 Edgerstoune Road,
Princeton. (609) 921-7600. 9:30
a.m. 'Unity in Diversity' presented
by Reza Aslan, author of 'Zealot:
The Life and Times of Jesus of
Nazareth.' Register. www.hun-
school.org.
10 THE PRINCETON SUN JANUARY 2228, 2014
CALENDAR
CALENDAR
Continued from page 8
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Scheides to celebrate
100th birthday
with benefit concert
By KATIE MORGAN
The Sun
Bill Scheide is a lot of things.
Hes a lifelong Princeton resident,
an extraordinarily generous phi-
lanthropist, a talented musician
and arguably the worlds fore-
most Bach scholar. He is also 100
years old.
Bill and his wife Judy will cele-
brate the century mark the same
way they have celebrated his
birthday for the past six years
with a benefit concert at Richard-
son Auditorium on Jan. 25, per-
formed by the Vienna Chamber
Orchestra.
The seventh annual birthday
concert will benefit the Westmin-
ster Choir College, where Bill was
on the board for 27 years.
Maestro Mark Laycock, the
Scheides favorite conductor, will
fly in from Berlin, Germany to
conduct the show.
We always bring his favorite
conductor over from Berlin,
Judy said. He comes over and
conducts for Bill twice a year.
Once for his birthday, and once in
the summertime.
Judy Scheide, Bills wife, said
the decision to benefit the West-
minster Choir College was simple
after Laycock suggested
Beethovens 9th Symphony.
Mark mentioned that this
100th birthday for all of us would
be an Ode to Joy, Judy said. So
of course we thought,
Beethovens Ninth, which led to
the Choir College. Bill was on the
board for 27 years, and was the
chairman for nine. They just had
to be the beneficiary.
Past concerts have benefited
Isles, Inc., Centurion Ministries,
The Arts Council of Princeton,
Princeton Healthcare System
Foundation, the Princeton Public
Library and the Community Park
Pool.
Bill founded the Bach Aria
Group in 1946, and is credited
with reviving interest in Bachs
cantatas.
He took them all over the
world, Judy said. He took them
to small towns all over America,
and to Israel, France, everywhere.
He felt that not enough people in
the world knew Bach, and knew
these arias.
The Scheide library at Prince-
ton University, Bills alma mater,
has an extensive collection of
first edition books, manuscripts
and music.
Judy said the library has re-
cently acquired a first edition
printing of Beethovens ninth.
We just bought it recently,
Judy said. Its a first edition with
the names of the backers, the peo-
ple who commissioned the piece.
Thats in almost no other edi-
tion.
The Westminster Symphonic
Choir will sing the choral
arrangement in the symphony,
led by soprano Ah Young Hong,
mezzo-soprano Leah Wool, tenor
William Burden and bass-bari-
tone Mark Doss.
The program of the concert
will also include Bachs Gloria
sei dir gesungen from Cantata
140, Brahms Academic Festival
Overture and Prelude for Piano
Four Hands, a piece Bill wrote
when he was a senior at Prince-
ton University.
This is the first time its being
played publicly, Judy said. The
whole program is rather academ-
ic, and it all has to do with having
a good time while youre young
and enjoying life. It will be quite
an amazing concert.
For more information about
the concert, visit www.schei-
deconcerts.com or call University
Ticketing at (609) 258-9220.
Visit us online at www.theprincetonsun.com
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EMERGENCY TARP SERVICE AVAILABLE RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL
FREE
ESTIMATES
FAST
EMERGENCY
SERVICE!
IP
TB
AHERIIA'S BEST
RBBFIXB & SIBIXB EXPERTS
811000
0992400

30 Years Experience Family Owned and Operated High Quality Products Senior Citizen Discount
No High Pressure Sales Tactics Professional Installation
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 1/31/14.
$1,000 BFF
UP TO
Any new
complete roofing
or siding job
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 1/31/14.
10 BFF
Any
roofing
or siding job
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 1/31/14.
FREE
ROOF AND
GUTTER
INSPECTION
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 1/31/14 .
FREE
GUTTERS
With any new roof
and siding job
UP TO

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