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www.theprincetonsun.com
NOV. 7-13, 2012
FREE
Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . 14-15
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Storm fatality
Princeton man trapped under
tree, dies. PAGE 3
KATIE MORGAN/The Princeton Sun
Hurricane winds tore trees from the ground Oct. 29, severely damaging a large number of homes and businesses.
Princeton faces major cleanup after Sandy
Downed trees,
damaged homes,
power outages left
in storm’s wake
By KATIE MORGAN
The Princeton Sun
Hurricane Sandy tore through
Princeton Oct. 29, tearing trees
from the ground and leaving
power lines and debris strewn
across the municipality. One fatal-
ity was reported in Princeton as a
result of the storm.
Nearly 75 percent of residents
were still without power on Oct.
31, and township officials advised
these residents to prepare for a
longer duration without power.
Public works and cleanup
crews worked through the night
and into the morning on Oct. 30
in an effort to make roads accessi-
ble to PSE&G trucks. Route 206,
which was closed due to debris
and downed wires, was reopened
Oct. 30.
Princeton Township and Bor-
ough operated a joint Emergency
Operations Center from Town-
ship Hall. The center was contin-
ually staffed by individuals from
the university, public safety, pub-
lic works, fire and police depart-
ments.
please see GOVERNOR, page 10
2 THE PRINCETON SUN — NOV. 7-13, 2012
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As Irish musician Bono puts it,
“Music can change the world, be-
cause it can change people.” This
idea is the inspiration behind the
Princeton Girlchoir’s 5th annual
Children Making a Difference
benefit concert, to be held on Nov.
11 at 3:30 p.m. Associate Director
Melissa Malvar-Keylock started
this tradition in memory of her
mother, Adrienne Todd Keylock,
who died in 1998. According to
Mrs. Malvar-Keylock, her mother
“spent her professional life as a
social worker, and her free time at
church singing in the choir.” She
adds that since “helping others
and singing were her great joys, I
combined them and began the
Children Making a Difference
benefit concert.” Each year, PGC
selects a non-profit, charitable or-
ganization in the community, gen-
erally focusing on groups that
serve children, and prepares a
concert to benefit them.
This year the concert will raise
funds for CASA of Mercer and
Burlington Counties (Court Ap-
pointed Special Advocates for
Children). CASA recruits,
screens and trains community
volunteers to speak up for the
best interests of abused and neg-
lected children in Family Court.
This benefit concert highlights
how fitting it is that our choris-
ters with their joyful, powerful,
collective voices help shore up
support for an organization that
gives neglected children a voice!
Speaking of this musical memo-
rial to her mother, Mrs. Malvar-
Keylock says: “I know my dear
mother would be proud of this
event, and she would love seeing
all of these beautiful girls experi-
encing joy from service to oth-
ers.”
Princeton Girlchoir’s 5th annu-
al Children Making a Difference
benefit concert, held at Trinity
Cathedral of Trenton, is a signa-
ture event for the organization,
and the first public concert of the
season. PGC also welcomes back
the Training Choir of The Ameri-
can Boychoir, their guests in the
Benefit concert on Nov. 11
please see SUGGESTED, page 4
NOV. 7-13, 2012 – THE PRINCETON SUN 3
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By KATIE MORGAN
The Princeton Sun
A Princeton man died Oct. 29
after being trapped beneath a fall-
en tree. William Sword, a 61-year-
old resident of the 1000 block of
Great Road, was clearing storm
debris from his driveway around
8:30 p.m. when the tree fell. A wit-
ness called emergency services,
and Princeton First Aid and Res-
cue Squad responded.
“Due to the storm and severe
damage occurring at the time it
was difficult for them to reach
him quickly,” said Captain Nick
Sutter of the Princeton Borough
Police Department. “Considering
the circumstances, they got there
very fast.”
According to a release from the
Township Police Department on
Tuesday, responders “initiated
lifesaving measures, which ulti-
mately proved to be unsuccess-
ful.”
Sword was pronounced dead at
the scene. Sutter said an official
cause of death has not been re-
leased.
The incident was the only re-
port of death or serious injury in
Princeton in the wake of Hurri-
cane Sandy. The storm swept
through Princeton on Oct. 29,
downing trees across the munici-
pality.
Sword was a 1976 alumnus of
Princeton University. He was the
managing director of Wm. Sword
& Co., a Princeton-based invest-
Storm claims life
While clearing debris, Princeton
man trapped under tree, dies
please see SWORD, page 6
4 THE PRINCETON SUN — NOV. 7-13, 2012
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ONSITE CATERING
Caring for Couples is providing
free seminars that will give
proven, practical advice for cou-
ples based on many years of
counseling experience. Each one
will be full of insights and tech-
niques you can use to immediate-
ly improve your relationship.
The clinics are scheduled on
Saturday nights at 7 p.m. for your
convenience. All seminars will be
held at the Princeton Church of
Christ, 33 River Road, Princeton,
NJ 08540.
The Nov. 10 seminar is titled,
“What Every Couple Expects of
Love.” We expect our partner to
be our best friend, committed to
us only, and our romantic soul
mate. We will need to understand
the practical steps required to
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since it does not happen acciden-
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Free child care is available if
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inaugural year. The group is con-
ducted by Fred Meads, director of
Vocal Studies at the school and a
fellow associate director of PGC.
Highlights of the event include
performances by the Grace Notes
and Semi-Tones choirs of the
Princeton Girlchoir, a presenta-
tion by CASA, a performance by
the Training Choir of The Ameri-
can Boychoir School, and two
closing selections by the com-
bined choir of over 100 voices.
Admission is by donation, with a
suggested donation of $10 per per-
son.
For more information, call
(609) 688-1888, or visit
www.princetongirlchoir.org.
Caring for Couples on Nov. 10
Suggested donation is $10
SUGGESTED
Continued from page 2
NOV. 7-13, 2012 – THE PRINCETON SUN 5
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YWCA seeks women
of achievement nominees
The YWCA Princeton is seek-
ing nominations for women of
achievement to honor at its signa-
ture event, the Tribute to Women
Awards Dinner, to be held March
7 at the Hyatt Regency in Prince-
ton. The event will honor women
who have made significant contri-
butions to the community across
central New Jersey or who have
paved the way for women today in
the areas of career, community
service, and philanthropy. Nomi-
nees should exemplify the YWCA
mission of eliminating racism,
empowering women, and promot-
ing peace, justice, freedom and
dignity for all.
For the past 30 years, the annu-
al Tribute to Women event has
recognized and celebrated women
who are role models professional-
ly or in a volunteer capacity. Hon-
orees have included women in the
community, management, and en-
trepreneurs, and in organizations
including insurance, banking,
personnel, pharmaceutical,
health, law, social services, sci-
ences, education, volunteer
groups, not-for-profits, and the
arts.
Examples of nominees to sub-
mit for this special tribute in-
clude women who demonstrate a
commitment to helping women
and families build strength and
stability; create programs that
build confidence and self-esteem
in women; champion diversity
and inclusivity, lead, inspire, mo-
tivate, and educate; support ini-
tiatives addressing women’s and
children’s issues; and drive posi-
tive change for women and girls
directly or by example.
If you know a woman who
should be recognized and hon-
ored, please let us know.
Nomination forms are due Nov.
9 and may be obtained by contact-
ing Jenn Attridge at (609) 497-2100
ext. 333 or online at www.yw
caprinceton.org/tributetowomen.
ment banking firm. Sword’s father, also a
Princeton University alumnus, founded
the firm. Sword has been at the helm of the
major firm since 1981.
The Daily Princetonian reported Oct. 31
that Sword majored in politics and was a
member of the University’s prestigious Ivy
Club.
“He was a very well-respected, well-con-
nected guy, an old-school gentleman in
every sense of the word,” Daniel B. Rowe,
Sword’s co-managing director, said in an
Oct. 31 interview with Businessweek. “He
was a righteous person who was very char-
itable. He’s literally got dozens of friends
and business colleagues who have reached
out to me and the firm since they
heard.”
In 2003, Sword was at his home on Great
Neck Road when a 24-year-old man named
Jelani Manigault crashed his car nearby.
According to a New York Times report
from Jan. 25, 2003, Manigault went to
Sword’s doorstep and when Sword invited
him in, Manigault stabbed the then 51-
year-old several times with a 12-inch knife
from the family kitchen.
Sword was hospitalized, underwent sur-
gery and ultimately recovered from those
injuries.
Sword was a life-long Princeton resi-
dent. He is survived by his wife and three
children.
6 THE PRINCETON SUN — NOV. 7-13, 2012
20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A
Princeton, NJ 08542
609-751-0245
The Sun is published weekly by Elauwit
Media LLC, 20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A,
Princeton, NJ 08542. It is mailed weekly to
select addresses in the 08042 and 08540 ZIP
codes. If you are not on the mailing list, six-
month subscriptions are available for
$39.99. PDFs of the publication are online,
free of charge. For information, please call
609-751-0245.
To submit a news release, please email
[email protected]. For advertis-
ing information, call (609) 751-0245 or
email [email protected].
The Sun welcomes comments from readers –
including any information about errors that
may call for a correction 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
your name, address and phone number. We
do not print anonymous letters. Send letters
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609-751-0245, or via the mail. Of course,
you can drop them off at our office, too. The
Princeton Sun reserves the right to reprint
your letter in any medium – including elec-
tronically.
PUBLISHER Steve Miller
GENERAL MANAGER & EDITOR Alan Bauer
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V
eterans Day traces its history
to the end of World War I.
Then known as Armistice Day,
Congress, in the mid-1950s, formally
made it Veterans Day. It’s one of those
days of the year that has, or should
have, special meaning for every Ameri-
can.
The sacrifices made by the men and
women of the Armed Services are
well-documented. They protect the na-
tion every day. Without their service,
America isn’t the land of the free.
We encourage everyone to not only
recognize veterans on this day, but also
to make a commitment to do some-
thing tangible in their honor.
There are numerous groups that
help veterans and their families, espe-
cially those who have fallen on hard
times. Volunteer for one of these
groups, or make a donation.
Or get involved in a different organi-
zation that is trying to better your com-
munity. Help to feed the hungry or ad-
vance research into a deadly disease.
Gather clothing and other items and
drop them off at a center that will use
them to help the less fortunate. Do
something to make a difference, to give
back to those around you who can use
a helping hand.
We are heading into the holiday sea-
son. It’s the easiest time of the year to
get involved because there are so many
ways to give.
In the coming weeks, we invite
everyone who is holding a drive or
fundraiser to contact us with the de-
tails so that we can share them with
the entire community. Give us the days
and times, the drop-off locations and
the items requested, and we’ll do the
rest.
And then we invite our readers to
jump in with generosity.
We can never say “thank you” too
many times to our veterans. We can
never fully repay them for what they
have done and continue to do for us.
But we can honor them by doing
what we can to make a difference in
our communities.
in our opinion
Honor veterans Sunday
Veterans Day a time to honor those who protect our freedom every day
Make a difference
Honor those who serve this Veterans
Day by making a tangible contribution
to your community.
Sword was a life-long Princeton resident
SWORD
Continued from page 3
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.
NOV. 7-13, 2012 – THE PRINCETON SUN 7
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On Wednesday, Nov. 14, two
writers whose work spans the
breadth of poetry, fiction, journal-
ism and playwriting will read
from their works as part of the
Althea Ward Clark W’21 Reading
Series of the Program in Creative
Writing at the Lewis Center for
the Arts. Princeton student Maia
ten Brink will also read from her
poetry. The reading, beginning at
4:30 p.m. at the Berlind Theatre at
the McCarter Theatre Center, is
free and open to the public.
Denis Johnson is the author of
several novels, plays, and books of
verse. His novel “Tree of Smoke”
was the 2007 winner of the Na-
tional Book Award. He attended
the Iowa Writers’ Workshop at
the University of Iowa, and pub-
lished his first book of poetry,
“The Man Among the Seals,”
while there. During the next few
years, he published “Inner Weath-
er” (1976), “The Incognito
Lounge” (1982), and “Veil” (1987),
as well as four novels. One of his
novels, “Angels” (1983), won the
Sue Kauffman Prize for First Fic-
tion. Johnson often talks about
his struggles at that time with al-
coholism and drug abuse. He cap-
tured the reclusiveness and dark-
ness of addiction with the publi-
cation of Jesus’s Son (1992), a crit-
ically-acclaimed collection of
short stories later turned into a
film. The film version, released
in 1999, was widely proclaimed as
one of the top ten films of the
year by The New York Times.
In addition to a National Book
Award, he is the recipient of a
number of awards ranging from
the Aga Khan Prize for Fiction
from the Paris Review to a Whit-
ing Writer’s Award. He is the Roy
F. and Joann Cole Mitte Endowed
Chair in Creative Writing at
Texas State University. As a jour-
nalist, Johnson has reported from
Somalia, Afghanistan, and
Liberia.
Johnson will be introduced by
Professor of Creative Writing in
the Lewis Center and Pulitzer
Prize-winning novelist Jeffrey
Eugenides.
Tom Sleigh is the author of
eight books of poetry, including
“Army Cats,” winner of the John
Updike Award from the Ameri-
can Academy of Arts and Letters,
and “Space Walk” which won the
$100,000 Kingsley Tufts Award.
He has also published a book of
essays, “Interview with a Ghost,”
and a translation of Euripides'
“Herakles.”
Widely anthologized, his
poems and prose appear in “The
New Yorker,” “Virginia Quarterly
Review” and other literary maga-
zines, as well as “The Best Ameri-
can Poetry,” and “The Pushcart
Anthology.” He has received the
Shelley Prize from the Poetry So-
ciety of America, a Fellowship
from the American Academy in
Berlin, an Academy Award from
the American Academy of Arts
and Letters, an Individual
Writer's Award from the Lila Wal-
lace/Reader's Digest Fund, a
Guggenheim grant, and two Na-
tional Endowment for the Arts
grants, among many others. He
teaches in the MFA Program at
Hunter College and lives in
Brooklyn.
Sleigh will be introduced by
Professor of Creative Writing in
the Lewis Center and Pulitzer
Prize and National Book Award-
winner C.K. Williams.
The Lewis Center’s Program in
Creative Writing is sponsoring
this event as part of the Althea
Ward Clark W’21 Reading Series
which provides an opportunity
for students, as well as all in the
greater Princeton region to hear
and meet the best writers of con-
temporary poetry and fiction.
All readings are free and open to
the public and take place on select
Wednesdays at 4:30 p.m. at the
Berlind Theatre at McCarter The-
atre Center.
To learn more about the Pro-
gram in Creative Writing, the
Reading Series, and the more
than 100 events offered annually
by the Lewis Center visit prince-
ton.edu/arts.
SLEIGH JOHNSON
Writers to read works at Lewis Center
WEDNESDAY NOV. 7
Princeton Township Zoning Board
of Adjustment meeting: 7:30
p.m. For more information visit
www.princetontwp.org.
NaNoWriMo: 5:30 to 6 p.m. at
Princeton Library Princeton
Room. To celebrate National Nov-
el Writing Month, members of the
Wednesday Writers Workshop
invite everyone to join in the chal-
lenge of writing 50,000 words by
Nov. 30. NaNoWriMo is a national
effort and is believed to be the
world’s largest writing challenge
and nonprofit literary crusade.
Citizenship Exam Prep Class: 7 to
9 p.m. at Princeton Library Con-
ference Room, second floor. The
Latin American Task Force offers
this series of eight classes includ-
ing history and civics lessons to
assist those preparing for the
U.S. Citizenship Test. A review of
English is also covered. Classes
continue Wednesdays through
Nov. 21.
Story Time: 10 to 10:30 a.m. at
Princeton Library Story Room,
third floor. Stories, songs,
rhymes, fingerplays and move-
ment for children 16 months and
older. All children must be accom-
panied by an adult.
Baby Story Time: 11 to 11:30 a.m.
Stories, songs, rhymes, finger-
plays and movement for children
up to 15 months. All children must
be accompanied by an adult.
Baby Playgroup: Ages newborn to
15 months. 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at
Princeton Library Story Room,
third floor. Socialize and interact.
Library provides playmats and
simple toys. Caregiver must
attend.
THURSDAY NOV. 8
Story Time: 10 to 10:30 and 11 to
11:30 a.m. at Princeton Library
Story Room, third floor. Stories,
songs, rhymes, fingerplays and
movement for children 16 months
and older. All children must be
accompanied by an adult.
Fiction Book Group: Discuss “Hotel
on the Corner of Bitter and
Sweet” by Jamie Ford from 10:30
to 11:30 a.m. at Princeton Library
Conference Room. Led by librari-
an Kristin Freberg.
Architect Robert Geddes: Noon to 1
p.m. at Princeton Library Com-
munity Room. The architect,
urbanist and dean emeritus of
the Princeton School of Architec-
ture discusses his new book, “Fit:
An Architect’s Manifesto,” about
architecture and society. Geddes
argues that buildings, landscapes
and cities should be designed to
fit their purpose, place and future
possibilities. Geddes will lead a
walking tour of Princeton Univer-
sity following his talk. Part of the
Spotlight on the Humanities:
Architecture series.
Mac Time for Teens: 4 to 6 p.m. at
Princeton Library Technology
Center. Designed to encourage
creative collaboration on the
library’s new iMacs.
FRIDAY NOV. 9
Let’s Dance: 4 to 5 p.m. at Prince-
ton Library Community Room.
Join the fun as we spin favorite
tunes from the ‘60s through
today to get the preschool set
(and their parents) moving at this
popular monthly program.
One Hit Wonders: 7 to 9 p.m. at
Princeton Library Community
Room. Music trivia fans can show
off their knowledge and vie for
prizes at this event featuring
music by Pi Fight and other musi-
cians who are members of the
Einstein Alley Musicians Collabo-
rative. Pi Fight and Friends will
play songs by one-hit wonders as
participants fill in trivia forms.
There will also be a team round
and speed round. Prizes provided
by the Princeton Record
Exchange.
MONDAY NOV. 12
Princeton Township Historic
Preservation Commission
meeting: 4 p.m. For more infor-
mation visit
www.princetontwp.org.
Princeton Library Closed: The
Princeton Library will be closed
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. for staff
development. It will be open in
the evening until 9 p.m.
Poetry in the Library: Terry Black-
hawk and Judith Michaels: 7:30
to 9 p.m. at Princeton Arts Coun-
cil, 102 Witherspoon St. Black-
hawk and Michaels read from
their works followed by an open
mic session. Blackhawk is the
founding director of Detroit’s
Inside Out Literary Arts Project
and the author of six collections
of poems. Michaels, a retired Eng-
lish teacher and poet-in-resi-
dence at Princeton Day School, is
the author of several collections
of verse, including “The Forest of
Wild Hands” and “Reviewing the
Skull.” She is the author of three
books on teaching writing. For
this date only "Poetry in the
Library" is being hosted in the
CALENDAR PAGE 8 NOV. 7-13, 2012
WANT TO BE LISTED?
To have your 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 Sun, 108 Kings Highway
East, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. Or by email: news@theprinceton-
sun.com. Or you can submit a calendar listing through our website
(www.theprincetonsun.com).
Lic #10199 • Cont Lic #13VH01382900
please see CALENDAR, page 10
The Lewis Center for the Arts’
Program in Theater in collabora-
tion with the Department of
Music will present the world pre-
miere of Der Bourgeois Bigwig
on Nov. 9, 10, 15, 16 and 17 at 8 p.m.
at the Berlind Theatre at Mc-
Carter Theatre Center. Der Bour-
geois Bigwig is a new adaptation
by James Magruder of the
Molière comedy Le Bourgeois
Gentilhomme written to comple-
ment Richard Strauss’ well-
known orchestral suite and inci-
dental music from 1912. The pro-
duction is directed by Tim Vasen,
Director of the Program in The-
ater, with the Department of
Music’s Michael Pratt conducting
the Princeton University Orches-
tra. The project is made possible
in part through the university’s
Arts Initiative program.
This classic comedy takes place
in the Paris home of Mr. Jordan,
a middle-aged “bourgeois,” whose
one aim in life is to rise above his
middle-class background and be
accepted as an aristocrat. Jor-
dan’s social climbing requires
splendid new clothes and an elab-
orate renovation of his house,
which audiences will see “in
progress” as the production un-
folds. Despite his age, he pursues
schooling in the gentlemanly pas-
times of fencing, dancing, music
and philosophy, while his instruc-
tors ridicule him behind his back.
His hunger for fame makes him
easy prey for a cash-strapped no-
bleman who takes advantage of
Jordan’s vanity and aspirations.
To his dismay, his daughter wants
to marry a middle-class man, but,
falling for another con job, Jor-
dan jumps at the chance to marry
his daughter to a Turkish prince.
The Berlind Theatre is an ac-
cessible venue. Assistive listen-
ing devices are available upon re-
quest when attending a perform-
ance, and large print programs
will be provided. Patrons in need
of other access accommodations
are invited to contact the Lewis
Center at 609.258.5262 or LewisC-
[email protected] for as-
sistance at least two weeks prior
to the selected performance.
Tickets for Der Bourgeois Big-
wig are $15 general admission,
$10 for students and seniors, and
are available through the Mc-
Carter box office at 609.258.2787 or
on-line at www.mccarter.org/
TicketOffice/buytickets.aspx?pag
e_id=22, through Princeton Uni-
versity Ticketing by calling (609)
258-9220 or on-line at www.prince-
ton.edu/utickets/, or at the Frist
Campus Center Ticket Office.
NOV. 7-13, 2012 – THE PRINCETON SUN 9
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‘Der Bourgeois Bigwig’ premieres on Nov. 9
10 THE PRINCETON SUN — NOV. 7-13, 2012
Princeton Arts Council Gallery.
TUESDAY NOV. 13
Story Time: 10 to 10:30 a.m. at
Princeton Library Story Room,
third floor. Stories, songs,
rhymes, fingerplays and move-
ment for children 16 months
and older. All children must be
accompanied by an adult.
Baby Story Time: 11 to 11:30 a.m.
Stories, songs, rhymes, finger-
plays and movement for chil-
dren up to 15 months. All chil-
dren must be accompanied by
an adult.
Baby Playgroup: Ages newborn to
15 months. 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at
Princeton Library Story Room,
third floor. Socialize and inter-
act. Library provides playmats
and simple toys. Caregiver
must attend.
Mac Time for Teens: 4 to 6 p.m. at
Princeton Library Technology
Center. Designed to encourage
creative collaboration on the
library’s new iMacs.
Stephen Wade, author of the
CD, Banjo Diary: Lessons from
Tradition and the book, “The
Beautiful Music All Around Us:
Field Recordings and the Amer-
ican Experience” will perform a
narrated, multimedia, musical
stage performance with veteran
singers and instrumentalists,
Mike Craver, Danny Knicely,
James Leva, and Zan McLeod at
the Nov. 16 concert of the
Princeton Folk Music Society.
The concert will be at Christ
Congregation Church, 50 Wal-
nut Lane, in Princeton.
Stephen’s show ran for 13
months in Chicago. Then, after
a White House appearance, the
show ran at the Arena Theater
in Washington for 10 years. His
book takes, as its starting point,
13 iconic performances cap-
tured on Library of Congress
field recordings between 1934
and 1942 in locations reaching
from Southern Appalachia to
the Mississippi Delta and onto
the Great Plains. Through
decades of research and detec-
tive work, Stephen has tracked
down surviving performers and
their families, fellow musicians,
and community members.
Weaving together loving and ex-
pert profiles of these perform-
ers with the histories of their
songs and tunes, he brings to
life largely unheralded farm la-
borers, state prisoners, school
children, cowboys, housewives
and mothers, loggers and min-
ers-whose music has become
part of the wider American mu-
sical soundscape.
There will be no advance sale.
Admission at the door will be
$20 ($15 for members, $10 for stu-
dents and $5 for children 11 and
under). Doors open at 7:30 p.m.
There will be no opening act
and the show will start prompt-
ly at 8:15 p.m. Ample free park-
ing is available.
For more information about
these and other Folk Music So-
ciety events, please call (609)
799-0944, email info@princeton-
folk. org or visit www.princeton-
folk. org.
CALENDAR
Continued from page 8
CALENDAR
Folk Music Society
hosts concert on Nov. 16
Narcotics Anonymous
of New Jersey
(800) 992-0401
PSA
The township kept residents
continually notified of develop-
ments through regular emails.
For residents who lost access to
email, the municipality employed
text and phone call notifications
and other means of communica-
tion.
Princeton residents were im-
pressed by the efforts of officials
in keeping them notified.
“We were getting regular
phone calls until our phones went
out,” said resident Ronda Wagner.
“I thought they did a great job.”
Schools and municipal offices
remained closed through the
week. On the university campus,
more than 50 trees were toppled
and there were dozens of reports
of blocked road, damaged vehi-
cles and property.
The university remained
closed for the week except for crit-
ical staff. At press time, a release
said, “decisions about when the
university will be fully open will
be made on a day-to-day basis.”
The university coordinated its
efforts with the borough and
township emergency operations.
The university’s dining services
provided meals for first respon-
ders. The McCosh Health Center
remained open and fully staffed
to handle emergencies, and coor-
dinated with Princeton First Aid
and Rescue Squad.
Operations at University Med-
ical Center of Princeton at Plains-
boro were disrupted by a power
outage during the height of the
storm Oct. 29. The hospital
switched to generator power until
the generators were disrupted
just after 7 p.m. Power was re-
stored to the generators 40 min-
utes later, and main power was re-
stored before 6 a.m. Oct. 30.
At the time of the outage, the
operating room was in use, and
all critical equipment ran on
backup battery power until the
generators were restored.
On Oct. 31, the Meeting Room
at the Township Municipal Cen-
ter was designated a temporary
reception area for any residents
displaced from their homes. Light
refreshments and electronics
charging stations were provided.
By Thursday morning, Nov. 1
power to many traffic lights had
not been restored. Police were di-
recting traffic in some intersec-
tions, while others had become 4-
way-stops.
On Oct. 31, Gov. Christie an-
nounced that all Halloween activ-
ities would be postponed to Mon-
day, Nov. 5.
“I've taken this action to mini-
mize additional risks to lives and
the public safety as we begin the
process of rebuilding and recov-
ering from Hurricane Sandy,”
said Christie. “In too many com-
munities in our state, the damage
and losses from this storm are
still being sorted out, and danger-
ous conditions abound even as
our emergency management and
response officials continue their
work. As Governor, it is my re-
sponsibility to use all available re-
sources of the state government
to protect against the emergency
created by Hurricane Sandy –
postponing Halloween celebra-
tions by five days is a common-
sense and necessary step to ac-
complish that.”
GOVERNOR
Continued from page 1
Governor Christie postpones
Halloween activities to Nov. 5
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.
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T HE P R I N C E T O N S U N
NOVEMBER 7-13, 2012 PAGE 14
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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20per week
H O W T O C O N T A C T U S
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Hopewell Sun • Lawrence Sun
Montgomery Sun • Princeton Sun
Robbinsville Sun • West Windsor Sun
BOX
ADS Only
$
25per week List a text-only ad for your yard
sale, job posting or merchandise.
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 12/5/12.
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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 12/5/12.
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UP TO
Any
roofing
or siding job
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 12/5/12.
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NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS.
All prices subject to sales tax. We reserve the right to
limit quantities. No further discount on sale items.
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