Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 16

www.theprincetonsun.

com
NOVEMBER 1319, 2013
FREE
Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . 14-15
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Police Report . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Undocumented immigrants
BOE votes to support
tuition equality bill. PAGE 2
On Nov. 15 at 7 p.m., author
Matthew Quick will discuss
this years Princeton Reads
book, The Silver Linings
Playbook, and his latest
novel for young adults,
Forgive Me, Leonard
Peacock.
The author talk, sponsored
by the Princeton Public
Library and held in the John
Witherspoon Middle School
Auditorium, is the culminat-
ing event of the biennial com-
munity-wide reading pro-
gram.
I think its fantastic that
they chose my book, Quick
said. Its an interesting book
because its a blend between
commercial and literary. I did-
nt intend to do that; its just
how I write. But there are
people who dont read super
literary stuff who like my
work, and there are people in
the highbrow camp who read
it and enjoyed it as well. Its a
book that will appeal to a lot
of people.
More than 100 copies of
The Silver Linings Playbook
are available to borrow at the
library, and an official guide
to the program, featuring dis-
cussion questions, mental
health resources, football
resources and a profile of
Quick, is available at the
library in a limited-edition
binder while supplies last.
SPOTLIGHT
Author talk
By KATIE MORGAN
The Sun
More than 1,000 runners gathered
on Paul Robeson Way just after dawn
on Nov. 3, stretching for the start of
the inaugural Princeton Half
Marathon.
The race started at 7:30 a.m., and
the runners wound through down-
town Princeton, Princeton Battlefield
State Park and the Princeton Univer-
sity campus. Sections of the course
were named for the homes of famous
figures along the route, including
Presidents Promenade, past the
homes of Grover Cleveland and
Woodrow Wilson, and Superhero
Highway, named for Princeton resi-
dent and Superman actor Christo-
pher Reeve.
Mike Davis, 32, who was training
for the Nov. 15 Philadelphia
Marathon, won the 13.1-mile race in
one hour, 21 minutes and 23 seconds.
Davis, a Scotch Plains native, had an
average pace of 6:12 per mile.
Albert Lee, a sophomore at Prince-
Running for a cause
please see HALF, page 7
COURTESY JOHN LIEN
Runners crest one of the many hills peppered
throughout the 13.1-mile course of the Princeton
Half Marathon on Nov. 3.
2 THE PRINCETON SUN NOVEMBER 1319, 2013
BOE supports tuition equality bill
By KATIE MORGAN
The Sun
The Princeton Board of Educa-
tion voted to support legislation
that would change state law to
allow undocumented immigrants
in New Jersey to pay in-state tu-
ition at public colleges.
The tuition equality bill, now
in the Legislature, would level the
playing field for the academically
motivated children of undocu-
mented NJ residents, known as
DREAMers. Passage of the bill
would effectively cut college costs
for these students in half.
At Rutgers University, in-state
tuition is $10,718, while out-of-
state residents and undocument-
ed students pay $24,742. At The
College of New Jersey, in-state tu-
ition is $23,492, while tuition for
out-of-state students starts at
$33,897 before housing costs. Un-
documented students, many of
whom are ineligible for state or
federal financial aid of any kind,
are currently required to pay the
out-of-state prices.
Currently, first generation im-
migrants who are New Jersey res-
idents, but are not U.S. citizens or
green-card holders, are treated as
foreign residents and must pay
out-of-state tuition to attend pub-
lic institutions of higher educa-
tion, the resolution passed by the
Board of Education read. It is in-
herently unfair to exclude young
people who are raised as Ameri-
cans from educational opportuni-
ty solely on the basis of their or
their parents immigration sta-
tus.
Maria R. Juega, executive di-
rector of the Latin American
Legal Defense and Education
Fund, spoke at the Oct. 29 meet-
ing, and was accompanied by a
Princeton High School senior,
who identified herself as Cindy,
the child of undocumented immi-
grants. Cindy is not a citizen and
does not have a green card.
It seems like all my doors are
closed right now, even though I
have good grades, Cindy, a native
of Guatemala, told the board. I
work hard, and I know I deserve to
be in a better place. I cannot go to
the good colleges because of the
fact that I wasnt born here.
Members of the board praised
Cindy for her courage, and called
her a remarkable young lady.
The resolution was approved
by a 7-0 vote, with two board mem-
bers abstaining.
The Princeton Public Schools
Board of Education supports the
provision of in-state tuition to stu-
dents who have attended high
school in New Jersey for at least
three years, and graduated, and
who are legally present or intend
to regularize their immigration
status as soon as able to do so, the
resolution read. The board is
very aware of the social, cultural
and economic contributions of
immigrants and the importance
of integrating them into the so-
cial and economic fabric of our
community. It is important to the
economy to provide equitable ac-
cess to higher education to young
immigrants raised and educated
in the U.S.
The tuition equality bill,
which has been before the Legisla-
ture for the better part of this
year, lost its biggest roadblock
when Gov. Christie, who was pre-
viously a strong opponent of the
measure, signaled his support for
the bill at a debate with opponent
Barbara Buono before a Latino
group in October.
It is unclear how many New
Jersey residents would be affected
by the bills passage, but a Rutgers
spokesman indicated that there
are approximately 600 currently
enrolled students who live in New
Jersey, but are charged for out-of-
state tuition.
The bill is expected to move for-
ward in the Legislature before the
end of November.
By KATIE MORGAN
The Sun
Incumbent Councilmembers
Jenny Crumiller and Patrick
Simon were re-elected to the
Princeton Council on Nov. 5, win-
ning three-year terms. Crumiller
received 3,971 votes, and Simon
received 4,190. Challenger Fausta
Rodriguez-Wertz had 2,173 votes.
In the state Senate race, Prince-
ton voters cast 1,833 votes for Kip
Bateman, and 4,128 for Christian
Mastondrea.
In the General Assembly race
for the 16th district, Marie Cor-
field won with 4,266 votes from
Princeton residents. Ida Ochoteco
had 4,106 votes, Donna Simon
earned 1,714 votes, Jack Ciatarelli
got 1,679 votes, and Patrick McK-
night got 94 votes, all from Prince-
ton residents.
In the Mercer County Free-
holders race, incumbent Democ-
rats Anthony Carabelli of Tren-
ton and Andrew Koontz of
Princeton beat out Ron Cefalone
and Paul Hummel of East Wind-
sor. Carabelli had 46,861 votes and
Koontz had 44,208. Cefalone had
31,977 votes, and Hummel re-
ceived 30,643. Carabelli and
Koontz will both serve three-year
terms.
This was the first year that
Princetonians voted for school
board members on the general
election ballot. The district made
the decision early this year to
move school board elections to
November, a cost-saving measure
that has been enacted in nearly
every New Jersey school district.
Andrea Spalla and Molly
Chrein were re-elected to the
Board of Education, along with
newcomer Tom Hagedorn. Spalla,
Chrein and Hagedorn won their
seats with 2,308 votes, 2,265 votes,
and 1,999 votes, respectively. Chal-
lenger Meeta Khatri received 958
votes. Dennis Scheil, who previ-
ously dropped out of the race, but
whose name appeared on the bal-
lot, received 1,048 votes.
Incumbent Republican Gov.
Christie sailed through election
night, receiving 93 percent of Re-
publican votes, nearly a third of
Democrat votes and two-thirds of
all Independent votes, according
to early New York Times exit
polls. Christies opponent, Demo-
crat Barbara Buono, got the votes
of 75 percent of black male vot-
ers, and 80 percent of black fe-
male voters, but it was not
enough to edge out Christie.
In Princeton, however, Buono
beat out Christie by a significant
margin. Initial numbers showed
3,632 votes for Buono and 2,492
votes for Christie.
The ballots included two
statewide questions. The first in-
volved a constitutional amend-
ment to permit money from exist-
ing games of chance to be used to
support veterans organizations.
4,071 Princeton voters voted yes,
and 1,550 voted no. Statewide, the
question received overwhelming
support. 1,335,934 people, or 81
percent of New Jersey voters
voted yes, and 308,415, or 19 per-
cent of state voters, voted no.
The second question asked if
there should be a constitutional
amendment to set a state mini-
mum wage that includes annual
cost-of-living increases. In Prince-
ton, 4,366 people voted yes, and
1,447 voted no. Statewide, 1,020,429
voters said yes, and 653,373 said
no. The measure passed statewide
61 percent to 39 percent.
The re-election of Crumiller
and Simon will have the most im-
mediate impact on Princeton.
Both said they look forward to
continuing the work they have
done on the Council in the first
year of municipal consolidation.
Simon said his priorities for
the next three years include budg-
et management, and the creation
of advisory planning districts
within Princeton.
I expect to start working late
this year on creating advisory
planning districts or the equiva-
lent, Simon said prior to the elec-
tion. He called the APDs a way to
safeguard neighborhood interests
in the consolidated municipality,
giving residents a voice and a for-
mal role in the decisions that af-
fect the character of their neigh-
borhoods.
The next meeting of
the Princeton Council will be Nov.
25.
CRUMILLER SIMON
Incumbents Crumiller, Simon re-elected to council
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 edi-
tor at 609-751-0245.
The following are reports from
the Princeton Police Department.
On Oct. 28 at 6:14 p.m., a victim
called police to report that upon
returning home that evening,
they found the inside of their
home was in disarray and that
several items were missing. The
investigation revealed that some-
time between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. on
Oct. 28, an unknown person or
persons gained entry to the home
through a broken window. The
victim estimated that more than
$1,800 worth of jewelry was taken
from the home.
On Oct. 28 at 3:33 p.m., patrols
responded to a business in the 700
block of State Road on the report
that two people had climbed on
the roof of an unoccupied build-
ing. Upon arrival, police located
an 18-year-old woman and a 17-
year-old male on location. The in-
vestigation revealed that both
were in possession of suspected
marijuana (under 50 grams), and
the 17-year-old was also in posses-
sion of controlled substance para-
phernalia. Both were placed
under arrest, transported to po-
lice headquarters, and later re-
leased with a pending court date.
On Oct. 28 at 2:07 p.m., a man
was located by patrols near the in-
tersection of Paul Robeson Place
and Wiggins Street, having been
previously identified as a suspect
in a burglary and theft that oc-
curred at the Princeton YWCA
earlier in the week. Upon contact
with patrols, the man provided a
fake name and personal informa-
tion when asked to identify him-
self. He was charged with hinder-
ing his own apprehension and
with burglary and theft in the ear-
lier case.
On Oct. 29 at 6:51 p.m., a victim
called police to report that they
had been involved in a minor
motor vehicle crash on Wither-
spoon Street near Green Street,
and that the driver of the other
vehicle had fled the scene. As the
victim followed the second vehi-
cle, both came to a stop on Cherry
Hill Road at State Road, at which
time a verbal altercation began.
The driver of the other vehicle
then ran into the victim with
their vehicle and fled the scene.
As a result of the impact, the vic-
tim suffered injury to his right
foot and was treated at University
Medical Center of Princeton for
his injuries. The vehicle that fled
the scene is a new model Dodge
Dart, black in color, and has white
paint transfer on the drivers side
mirror from the original crash.
4 THE PRINCETON SUN NOVEMBER 1319, 2013
When news h|ts
the street,
We Tweet!
Fo||ow us at
tw|tter.com/pr|ncetonsun
police report
please see POLICE, page 5
NOVEMBER 1319, 2013 THE PRINCETON SUN 5
The driver is a female
with a medium skin tone, brown
hair, a large nose and possibly a
European accent. Anyone
having information about the car
or the driver should contact Bill
Kieffer at (609) 921-2100, ext. 2158.
On Oct. 30 at 4:16 a.m., patrols
responded to Quaker Road on the
report of a disabled motor vehi-
cle. Upon contact, it was
determined that the vehicle had
been involved in two crashes, in-
cluding a hit-and-run crash re-
ported to police minutes earlier.
After an investigation, it was de-
termined that the driver had
consumed alcoholic beverages
prior to operating his vehicle. The
driver was placed under arrest,
transported to police headquar-
ters and processed. He was later
released to a relative. He was ad-
ditionally charged with leaving
the scene of an accident and fail-
ure to report a motor vehicle col-
lision.
police report
POLICE
Continued from page 4
BIRTHS
Did you or someone you
know recently welcome a baby
into the family? Send us your
birth announcement and we
will print it, free of charge.
ENGAGED?
Did you or someone you know recently get engaged, maybe even
married? Tell everyone the good news! Send us your announcement
and we will print it, free of charge.
in our opinion
6 THE PRINCETON SUN NOVEMBER 1319, 2013
1330 Route 206, Suite 211
Skillman, NJ 08558
609-751-0245
The Sun is published weekly by Elauwit
Media LLC, 1330 Route 206, Suite 211,
Skillman, NJ 08558. 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
news@theprincetonsun.com. For advertis-
ing information, call (609) 751-0245 or
email advertising@theprincetonsun.com.
The Sun welcomes comments from readers
including any information about errors that
may call for a correction to be printed.
SPEAK UP
The Sun welcomes letters from readers.
Brief and to the point is best, so we look for
letters that are 300 words or fewer. Include
your name, address and phone number. We
do not print anonymous letters. Send letters
to news@theprincetonsun.com, via fax at
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 includ-
ing electronically.
PUBLISHER Steve Miller
EXECUTIVE EDITOR Tim Ronaldson
VICE PRESIDENT OF SALES Joe Eisele
MANAGING EDITOR Mary L. Serkalow
CONTENT EDITOR Kristen Dowd
PRINCETON EDITOR Katie Morgan
ART DIRECTOR Tom Engle
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Russell Cann
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Barry Rubens
VICE CHAIRMAN Michael LaCount, Ph.D.
ELAUWIT MEDIA GROUP
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Dan McDonough, Jr.
EDITOR EMERITUS Alan Bauer
Councilwoman will not be
charged for making 911 call
Princeton Councilwoman Jo Butler will
not be charged criminally for a 911 call she
made in September. The Mercer County
Prosecutors office investigated the call,
which was made without an emergency.
Making a false 911 call is a fourth-degree
offense.
In a statement to the press on Oct. 30,
prosecutors office spokeswoman Casey
DeBlasio said the investigation was fin-
ished, and Butler would not be charged for
the Sept. 18 call.
No charges will be filed in the matter,
DeBlasio said. At our discretion, it was
deemed appropriate to issue Ms. Butler a
warning.
Butler called 9-1-1 from the Dinky sta-
tion on Sept. 18, and did not report details
of an emergency. In a later interview, she
said she placed the call over concern about
where 911 calls made from the Princeton
University campus are routed.
Calls from landlines on the campus go
directly to University Public Safety, while
calls from cell phones are routed to the
Princeton Police Dispatcher.
According to NJ Criminal Code, a per-
son is guilty of a crime in the fourth de-
gree if the person knowingly places a call
to a 9-1-1 emergency telephone system
without purpose of reporting the need for
9-1-1 service.
The Mercer County Prosecutors Office
has jurisdiction over any criminal matter
that involves a municipal employee or
elected official.
Man indicted for manslaughter
in death of retired rabbi
Eric Maltz, 21, was indicted on Oct. 30 on
charges of manslaughter, death by auto
and assault by auto. Maltz caused a crash
in front of Riverside Elementary School on
March 28 that killed James Diamond, a re-
tired Princeton University rabbi.
According to police reports, Maltz was
driving a BMW down Riverside Drive at a
high rate of speed when he hit a parked
Toyota Camry, which in turn hit a parked
Toyota Prius.
BRIEFS
please see BRIEFS, page 10
E
very year, on Nov. 11, our coun-
try celebrates Veterans Day.
America has been honoring its
veterans around this date, in some
fashion, by some name, since 1919
the one-year anniversary of the
armistice of World War I, then known
as The Great War.
Fighting stopped between the Allied
nations and Germany on the 11th hour
of the 11th day of the 11th month in
1918. President Woodrow Wilson pro-
claimed Nov. 11 as the first commemo-
ration of Armistice Day a year later.
In 1938, the government passed an
act that made Nov. 11 an official holi-
day dedicated to the cause of world
peace and to be thereafter celebrated
and known as Armistice Day. In 1954,
after World War II and the Korean
War, Congress revised the act, replac-
ing the word Armistice with the
word Veterans.
The remembrance shifted to Oct. 25
in 1971 after some governmental con-
fusion, but was returned officially to
Nov. 11 by President Gerald Ford in
1975.
The name and date of what is now
known as Veterans Day may have
changed in the 94 years since the first
celebration, but the spirit has not.
Veterans Day commemorations are
held throughout the country, and our
local region does an excellent job of
paying homage to the servicemen and
servicewomen who have served, and
are still serving, to protect our free-
doms.
These men and women of the
Armed Forces past and present risk
their lives, day in and day out, so that
we can live the lives we enjoy today in
America. They risk their lives, day in
and day out, so that we can live better
lives in the future. They risk their
lives, day in and day out, so that people
around the world can hopefully live a
life that is free like ours.
Fighting for freedom is not always a
popular choice, and it may be debat-
able, at times, whether its even the
right choice. But that does not, and
should not, take away from the people
who serve to protect our country.
Hopefully, you commemorated Vet-
erans Day in some fashion. And hope-
fully, youll continue to honor our vet-
erans throughout the year.
Honor our veterans
With Veterans Day over, our support for those who serve should not stop
Your thoughts
How did you commemorate Veterans
Day this year? How can we continue to
honor the servicemen and service-
women throughout the year?
NOVEMBER 1319, 2013 THE PRINCETON SUN 7
Coupon must be presented at time of purchase. *Ad-
ditional parts & labor in excess of one hour will be
billed at our scheduled rates. One coupon per cus-
tomer / per household. Expires 10/31/13.
Coupon must be presented at time of purchase. Not
accepted at time of installation. Not valid with any
other discounts, repairs or prior purchases. One
coupon per customer / per household. Coupon has no
cash value. Expires 10/31/13 .
Coupon must be presented at time of purchase. Not accepted at time of
installation. Not valid with any other discounts, repairs or prior purchases.
One coupon per customer / per household.
Coupon has no cash value. Expires 10/31/13.
93
Half marathon took more
than two years of planning
ton University and a West Wind-
sor-Plainsboro High School South
graduate, finished second with a
time of 1:22:20 and an average
pace of 6:17.
Denise Peterson, 42, a New
Yorker who finished in 1:31:17 and
15th overall, was the first female
finisher. Peterson led the race
start to finish in the womens di-
vision and held a pace of 6:58.
Christen Rillo, a 32-year-old
Howell native, was second in the
womens division with a final
time of 1:31:31.
HiTOPS, a Princeton-based
nonprofit organization with a
mission to promote adolescent
health and well being, sponsored
the race. All proceeds from regis-
tration fees went to support Hi-
TOPS nearly 400 programs,
which benefit youths with emo-
tional, mental and behavioral is-
sues, families in need, and LGBT
adolescents and teens.
Elizabeth Casparian, executive
director of HiTOPS, said the race
benefitted not only the organiza-
tion, but the town and the down-
town merchants as well.
HiTOPS is holding the event
both as a fundraiser, but also as a
means to highlight the concept
that health decisions made dur-
ing adolescence have an impact
on community health, Caspari-
an said. We are excited that the
race facilitates new business and
community collaborations, and
provides revenue for merchants
and others as well as providing
fundraising dollars for us.
The Nov. 3 race took more than
two years of planning. Runners
initially registered for the inau-
gural Princeton Half Marathon
in 2012, but the race was cancelled
three days before its scheduled
date because of the damage
Princeton sustained from Hurri-
cane Sandy.
Casparian said the race organ-
izers from HiTOPS worked with
Princeton police, the Mercer
County Sheriff s office, West
Windsor police and Princeton
University Public Safety.
The police are calling this the
biggest event that Princeton has
ever had, Casparian said. Not
in terms of numbers, because ob-
viously things like Communiver-
sity bring in more people, but in
terms of space and land covered,
and the amount of logistical re-
quirements that covering that
space requires.
Full results are available at re-
sults.midatlantictiming.com/Mid
-Atlantic-
Timing/events/2013/Princeton-
Half-Marathon/results.
A few days after the half
marathon, the races organizers
put out an alert via the races
Facebook page.
The Princeton Half Marathon
still has hundreds of gallons of
water left over from the race, the
update read. We are looking to
donate these to local organiza-
tions, charities or any other
places that may require 1 gallon
and 2.5 gallon containers of
water. If you know of a group or
groups that could pick up some of
this water from around the
course, please email Michael
Franken at HiTOPS, at
mfranken@hitops.org.
HALF
Continued from page 1
Food, volunteer drive prepares
for the Thanksgiving season
Area congregations, schools,
businesses and clubs are invited
to join the Crisis Ministry of Mer-
cer County in its annual CAN-U-
Copia food and volunteer drive
during the Thanksgiving season.
The community effort helps fill
the shelves of the nonprofit orga-
nizations three food pantries and
raises awareness and funds to
support its Hunger Prevention
initiatives.
The 2013 CAN-U-Copia drive in-
cludes: All Saints Episcopal
Church in Princeton, Bristol-
Myers Squibb, Christ Congrega-
tion of Princeton, First Baptist
Church of Trenton, First Church
of Christ Scientist, Princeton,
Hopewell United Methodist
Church, Klatzkin and Associates
in Hamilton, Lutheran Church of
the Messiah in Princeton, Nassau
Presbyterian Church of Prince-
ton, Princeton United Methodist
Church, Trinity Church Prince-
ton, Trinity Church Rocky Hill
and Unitarian Universalist Con-
gregation of Princeton.
Organizations that have ques-
tions or wish to participate in the
2012 CAN-U-COPIA drive are in-
vited to contact Mark Smith
(marks@thecrisisministry.org) or
Sarah Unger (sarahu@thecrisis-
ministry.org) at (609) 396-9355.
WEDNESDAY NOV. 13
Open Mic, Alchemist & Barrister.
28 Witherspoon St., Princeton.
(609) 924-5555. 10 p.m. 21-plus.
www.theaandb.com.
Lewis Center for the Arts, Prince-
ton University. 185 Nassau St.,
Princeton. (609) 258-1500. 8
p.m. 'I Land: An Odyssey of You.'
Free. www.princeton.edu/arts
Contra Dance, Princeton Country
Dancers. Suzanne Patterson Cen-
ter, Monument Drive, Princeton.
(609) 924-6763. 7:30 p.m. to
10:30 p.m. Instruction followed by
dance. $8. www.princetoncoun-
trydancers.org.
Program in Creative Writing
Series, Princeton University.
Berlind Theater, McCarter The-
ater Center, (609) 258-1500.
4:30 p.m. Readings by David Fer-
ry, author of 'Bewilderment;' and
Jamaica Kincaid, author of 'At
the Bottom of the River' and a
staff writer for 'The New Yorker.'
Introductions by Susan Wheeler
and Jennifer Gilmore. Free.
princeton.edu/arts.
Author Event, Labyrinth Books. 122
Nassau St. Princeton. (609) 497-
1600. 6 p.m. Lincoln Paine,
author of 'The Sea and Civiliza-
tion: A Maritime History of the
world.'
Author Event, Princeton Public
Library. 65 Witherspoon St.,
(609) 924-8822. 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Katrina Van Grouw, author of
'The Unfeathered Bird,' a book on
the anatomy of birds that fea-
tures nearly 400 anatomical
illustrations of 200 species.
www.princetonlibrary.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.
Boot Camp, Healthy and Fit. 27
Witherspoon St., Princeton. (877)
454-9991. 6:30 a.m. Register.
www.healthyandfitbootcamp.
com.
Tour and Tea, Morven Museum. 55
Stockton St., Princeton. (609)
924-8144. 1 p.m. Tour the
restored mansion, galleries and
gardens before or after tea. Reg-
ister. $20.www.morven.org.
Spotlight on the Humanities: Phi-
losophy, Princeton Public Library.
65 Witherspoon St., (609) 924-
8822. Noon. 'A Brief History of
Freedom' presented by Philip Pet-
tit, a professor of politics and
human values at Princeton Uni-
versity, and co-author of 'Just
Freedom: A Moral Compass for a
Complex World.' www.princetonli-
brary.org.
Moms Night Out, Mercer Friends,
Blue Mercury. 72 Palmer Square
West, Princeton. (609) 683-7240.
7 p.m. Desserts, samples of skin-
care and cosmetics, makeovers
and consultations. Register for
event by email to mercer-
friends@gmail.com or call. Open
to moms of children and adults
with special needs.www.mercer-
friends.com.
Princeton Chamber, Nassau Club. 6
Mercer St. (609) 924-1776. 7:30
a.m. Business Before Business
networking Tony Auth, Philadel-
phia Inquirer cartoonist,
$40.www.princetonchamber.org.
THURSDAY NOV. 14
Cat Moon Daddy, Alchemist & Bar-
rister. 28 Witherspoon St., Prince-
ton. (609) 924-5555. 10 p.m. 21
plus. www.theaandb.com.
Center for African American Stud-
ies, Princeton University. Arts
Council of Princeton. 102 Wither-
spoon St., (609) 258-4270. 7 p.m.
Yosvany Terry Quintet perform-
ance in conjunction with 'Cul-
tures of the Afro-Diaspora' a
class at Princeton University.
Free. www.artscouncilofprince-
ton.org.
Art Exhibit, Morven Museum. 55
Stockton St., Princeton. (609)
924-8144. 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Opening reception for 'The Age
of Sail: A New Jersey Collection'
featuring the collection of mar-
itime artifacts and art assembled
by Richard W. Updike. The exhibit
features more than 100 objects
exploring the history of shipbuild-
ing, sail making, naval warfare,
daily life of sailors, and more.
$6.www.morven.org.
Lewis Center for the Arts, Prince-
ton University. 185 Nassau St.,
Princeton. (609) 258-1500. 8
p.m. 'I Land: An Odyssey of You.'
Free. www.princeton.edu/arts.
Lewis Center for the Arts, Prince-
ton University. Berlind Theater,
McCarter Theater, 91 University
Place, Princeton. (609) 258-1500.
8 p.m. 'Much Ado About Nothing,'
a new interpretation of Shake-
speare's comedy.
$15.www.princeton.edu/arts.
Argentine Tango, Viva Tango,
Suzanne Patterson Center. 45
Stockton St., Princeton. (609)
948-4448. 7 p.m. Beginner work-
shop followed by regular practica.
No partner needed. $12 includes
refreshments.vivatango.org.
FRIDAY NOV. 15
Fall Musicale, Princeton Symphony
Orchestra. Private home in
Princeton. (609) 497-0020. 6:30
p.m. The Lark Quartet featuring
string players Caroline Stinson,
Basia Danilow, Kathryn Lockwood
and Deborah Buck. Cocktails and
canapes. Register. www.prince-
tonsymphony.org.
Princeton University Glee Club,
Princeton University. Richardson
Auditorium, (609) 258-9220.
7:30 p.m. Annual football concert
with the chamber choir, a 100
year old tradition as Princeton
hosts Yale. Conducted by Gabriel
Crouch. Register. $15.
princeton.edu/gleeclub.
Bryan Bowers, Princeton Folk Music
Society. Christ Congregation
Church, 50 Walnut Lane, Prince-
ton. (609) 799-0944. 8:15 p.m.
Singer and autoharp virtuoso.
$20. www.princetonfolk.org.
Gallery Talk, Princeton University
Art Museum. Princeton campus,
(609) 258-3788. 12:30 p.m. Short
docent led tour of the museum.
Free. artmuseum.princeton.edu
Lewis Center for the Arts, Prince-
ton University. 185 Nassau St.,
Princeton. (609) 258-1500. 10
a.m. 'Fiddler at Fifty' to recognize
the 50th anniversary of 'Fiddler
on the Roof.' Interviews with
Sheldon Harnick, the lyricist; and
John Doyle, author of 'Wonder of
Wonders: A Cultural History of
Fiddler on the Roof.', www.prince-
ton.edu/arts.
All My Sons, Theatre Intime. Hamil-
ton Murray Theater, Princeton
University, (609) 258-1742. 8 p.m.
Arthur Miller's drama explores
family dynamics, lies and betray-
als. $12. www.theatreintime.org.
Folk Dance, Princeton Folk Dance.
Suzanne Patterson Center, 45
Stockton St., Princeton. (609)
912-1272. 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. Begin-
ners welcome. Lesson followed
by dance. No partner needed.
$5.www.princetonfolkdance.org.
Lewis Center for the Arts, Prince-
ton University. 185 Nassau St.,
Princeton. (609) 258-1500. 4:30
p.m. A conversation with Enda
Walsh, a Tony Award winning
playwright for the musical,
'Once.' In conjunction with the
Fund for Irish Studies. Free.
www.princeton.edu/arts.
Princeton Reads, Princeton Public
Library. John Witherspoon Mid-
dle School, (609) 924-8822. 7
p.m. Matthew Quick, author of
'The Silver Linings Playbook' and
his latest novel for young adults,
'Forgive Me, Leonard Peacock.',
www.princetonlibrary.org.
Triangle Show: Zero Gravitas.
McCarter Theater (Matthews), 91
University Place, Princeton.
(609) 258-2787. 8 p.m. Punch-
lines, puns, and a kickline. $25 to
$35. www.mccarter.org.
SATURDAY NOV. 16
Meet the Music Family Concert
Series, Princeton University Con-
certs. Richardson Auditorium,
(609) 258-2800. 1 p.m. 'A Trilling
Event' features musicians from
the Chamber Music Society of
Lincoln Center. The concert fea-
tures music of Telemann, Handel,
and Bach. $10. princetonuniversi-
tyconcerts.org.
Degas's Dancers, Princeton Univer-
CALENDAR PAGE 8 NOVEMBER 1319, 2013
Heating, Plumbing,
Cooling and Fuel
SINCE 1925
Licensed On-Staff
PIumbers FuIIy Insured
16 Gordon Ave. Box 6097 Lawrence, NJ 08648
609-896-0141 IawrenceviIIefueI.net
S50 OFF
Separate Hot Water Heaters
Must present this coupon at the time of purchase.
May not be combined w/ any other offer. Expires 11/30/13.
10% OFF
Any Service
Up to $100. Must present this coupon at the time of purchase.
May not be combined w/ any other offer. Expires 11/30/13.
S100 OFF
Heating/Air Conditioning InstaIIation
Must present this coupon at the time of purchase.
May not be combined w/ any other offer. Expires 11 /30/13.
Lic. #13VH00927200
Donna M. Murray
cell 908-391-8396
donnamurray@comcast.net
www.donnamurrayrealestate.com
Donna Murray and BHHS Fox & Roach
will continue to stand for the same things:
Integrity, Trust, Experience, Strength, and
Knowledge.
A New Era in Real Estate
253 Nassau Street, Princeton, NJ
office 609-924-1600
ANNOUNCING.
please see CALENDAR, page 9
sity Art Museum. Princeton cam-
pus, (609) 258-3788. 10:30 a.m.
Family fun. Free.
artmuseum.princeton.edu
Art Workshop, Morven Museum. 55
Stockton St., Princeton. (609)
924-8144. 1:30 p.m. Chinese
brush painting led by Wen Shui.
Register. www.morven.org.
Highlight Tour, Princeton University
Art Museum. Princeton campus,
(609) 258-3788. 2 p.m. Free. art-
museum.princeton.edu
All My Sons, Theatre Intime, Hamil-
ton Murray Theater. Princeton
University, (609) 258-1742. 8 p.m.
Arthur Miller's drama explores
family dynamics, lies, and betray-
als. $12. www.theatreintime.org.
Triangle Show: Zero Gravitas.
McCarter Theater (Matthews), 91
University Place, Princeton.
(609) 258-2787. 8 p.m. Punch-
lines, puns, and a kickline. $25 to
$35. www.mccarter.org.
Meeting, Bhakti Vedanta Institute.
20 Nassau St., Princeton. (732)
604-4135. 2 p.m. Discussion,
meditation, and Indian vegetari-
an luncheon. Register by email to
princeton@bviscs.org.
Princeton Canal Walkers, Turning
Basin Park. Alexander Road,
Princeton. (609) 638-6552. 10
a.m. Three-mile walk on the tow-
path. Bad weather cancels. Free.
Ghost Tour, Princeton Tour Compa-
ny. Witherspoon and Nassau
streets, (609) 902-3637. 8 p.m.
$20. www.princetontourcompa-
ny.com.
Open House, The Lewis School. 53
Bayard Lane, Princeton. (609)
924-8120. 10 a.m. Information
about alternative education pro-
gram for learning different stu-
dents with language-based learn-
ing difficulties related to dyslexia,
attention deficit, and auditory
processing. Pre-K to college
preparatory levels. www.lewiss-
chool.org.
Artisans Market, Princeton Friends
School. 470 Quaker Road, Prince-
ton. (609) 683-1194. 11 a.m. to 5
p.m. More than 31 vendors pres-
ent handmade creations includ-
ing art, photography, jewelry,
knitwear, children's clothing, arti-
san food products, and more.
www.princetonfriendsschool.org..
SUNDAY NOV. 17
Concert, Dryden Ensemble, Miller
Chapel. Princeton Theological
Seminary, 64 Mercer St., Prince-
ton. (609) 466-8541. 3 p.m. 'Bach
and the Italians.' $25. www.dryde-
nensemble.org..
Benefit Concert, Princeton Girl-
choir. Trinity Cathedral, Trenton,
(609) 688-1888. 3:30 p.m. 'Chil-
dren Making a Difference' con-
cert features the Girlchoir's
Grace Notes and Semi Tones
along with the Philadelphia Girls
Choir to benefit One Simple Wish.
$10. www.princetongirlchoir.org..
Global Cinema Caf. Princeton Pub-
lic Library, 65 Witherspoon St.,
(609) 924-8822. 4 p.m. Screen-
ing of 'War on Whistleblowers:
Free Press and the National Secu-
rity State.' Free.www.princetonli-
brary.org.
Author Event, Labyrinth Books. 122
Nassau St. Princeton. (609) 497-
1600. 3 p.m. Joshua Dubler,
author of 'Down in the Chapel:
Religious Life in an American
Prison.'
Triangle Show: Zero Gravitas.
McCarter Theater (Matthews), 91
University Place, Princeton.
(609) 258-2787. 2 p.m. Punch-
lines, puns, and a kickline. $25 to
$35. www.mccarter.org..
Blood Drive, Princeton Jewish Cen-
ter. 435 Nassau St., Princeton.
(609) 921-1944. 7:30 a.m. to 1:30
p.m. Walk-ins welcome. www.the-
jewishcenter.org..
Walking Tour, Historical Society of
Princeton. Bainbridge House, 158
Nassau St., Princeton. (609) 921-
6748. 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Two-hour
walking tour of downtown Prince-
ton and Princeton University
includes stories about the early
history of Princeton, the founding
of the University, and the Ameri-
can Revolution. $7; $4 for ages 6
to 12. www.princetonhistory.org.
Honey Demonstration, Monday
Morning Flowers. 111 Main St.,
Princeton. (609) 520-2005. 10
a.m. Learn how local honey, hon-
ey comb, pollen, and premium
bee wax polish are made. Demon-
stration presented by Yellow Bee
Honey of Princeton, Pennington,
and Lawrenceville. www.send-
ingsmiles.com.
MONDAY NOV. 18
Holiday Wreath Making. Morven
Museum, 55 Stockton St., Prince-
ton. (609) 924-8144. 10 a.m. In
the Carriage House. Register.
www.morven.org.
Shakespeare: One Man in His
Time. McCarter Theater, 91 Uni-
versity Place, (609) 258-2787.
7:30 p.m. Created and performed
by Kevin Kline. $30 to $60.
www.mccarter.org.
Center for African American Stud-
ies. Princeton University, Betts
Auditorium, (609) 258-4270.
4:30 p.m. Screening of 'Lovelace,'
2013, with a post film conversa-
tion with director Jeff Friedman
and professor Jill Nolan.
www.princeton.edu
A Gathering for Techies, Princeton
Tech Meetup. Princeton Public
Library, 65 Witherspoon St.,
(609) 301-5088. 7 p.m. Techies,
creative people, entrepreneurs,
and investors meet for demos, a
speaker, networking, and socializ-
ing. E-mail vmoola@gmail.com
for information.
www.meetup.com/princeton-tech
Lunch and Learn, Princeton Senior
Resource Center. Suzanne Patter-
son Building, 45 Stockton St.,
(609) 924-7108. Noon. 'Medicare
Updates for Open Enrollments'
presented by Joni Sampson of
State Health Insurance Program.
Bring your own lunch. Beverages
and desserts provided. Register.
Free. www.princetonsenior.org.
TUESDAY NOV. 19
Princeton Sound Kitchen, Arts
Council of Princeton. 102 Wither-
spoon St., (609) 924-8777. 8 p.m.
Works by Cameron Britt, Dave
Molk, Cenk Ergun, and others.
Free. www.artscouncilofprince-
ton.org.
Holiday Wreath Making, Morven
Museum. 55 Stockton St., Prince-
ton. (609) 924-8144. 10 a.m. In
the Carriage House. Register.
www.morven.org.
Spank: The Fifty Shades Parody.
McCarter Theater, 91 University
Place, (609) 258-2787. 7:30 p.m.
Musical comedy that brings the
book to life. $20 to $45.
www.mccarter.org.
International Folk Dance, Princeton
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 wel-
come. Lesson followed by dance.
No partner needed. $3.
www.princetonfolkdance.org.
Open House, The Laurel School.
407 Nassau St., Princeton. (609)
466-6000. 1 p.m. For students in
grades 1 to 8 with dyslexia.
www.laurelschoolprinceton.org.
Princeton Merchants Association
membership meeting. Princeton
Public Library Community Room.
8 a.m. General meeting on sus-
tainable investing. www.prince-
tonmerchants.org.
NOVEMBER 1319, 2013 THE PRINCETON SUN 9
Save money and make money Very simple
Huge demand Residual revenue
Save money and make money Very simple
Huge demand Residual revenue
calendar
CALENDAR
Continued from page 8
Diamond, 74, was getting into
the Prius at the time, and was
thrown from the vehicle. He was
pronounced dead at the scene.
Robert Freedman, who was in the
drivers seat of the Prius, was se-
riously injured.
According to police, Maltz has
a history of mental health issues,
and was taken to a psychiatric
hospital after the accident. Maltz
is currently free on $100,000 bail.
Maltz criminal trial will begin
before the end of November. If
convicted of manslaughter, a
first-degree offense, Maltz faces
30 years in state prison.
Case challenging Dinky
move goes to court
Attorneys presented opening
arguments in a Mercer County
chancery court case challenging
Princeton Universitys move of
the Dinky train station and rail-
road track.
Judge Paul Innes heard the
case in Trenton.
The university has already
begun relocating the station
about 460 feet south of its original
location. The move is part of a
$330 million Arts and Transit
project the university began work
on this year.
The plans to move the Dinky
station have been hotly debated
by citizen groups that fought to
preserve the historic structure,
including Save the Dinky, the
group that brought this recent
suit.
In the case heard by Innes, one
of six pending lawsuits challeng-
ing the Dinky move, Philip Rosen-
bach, attorney for Save the Dinky,
argued that the terms of an
agreement between NJ Transit
and the university do not allow
the school to move the train.
Innes noted that the language
of a 1984 agreement signed be-
tween the university and NJ
Transit implies that NJ Transit
did not intend to limit the schools
alterations to the property.
Innes is expected to issue a de-
cision in the case before the end
of the month.
Conservation group
seeks public input
The Princeton Ridge East Con-
servation Area Partnership is
seeking public input on its stew-
ardship plan for the 600 acres of
protected land in Princeton.
A 10-question online survey
asks members of the public to
weigh in on their use of the pre-
served land, and to give input
about land stewardship, forms of
recreation to be permitted and es-
sential facilities.
We are looking for advice and
insights from local residents and
others interested in protecting
this important natural area, the
organization wrote in the sur-
veys introduction. The entire
survey should take about 10 min-
utes to complete.
The survey is available at
www.surveymonkey.com/s/7MS
W2TM. At present, the Princeton
Ridge preserved land is managed
by the municipality of Princeton,
Mercer County, D&R Greenway
Land Trust, Friends of Princeton
Open Space, New Jersey Conser-
vation Foundation and the Stony-
Brook Millstone Watershed As-
sociation.
10 THE PRINCETON SUN NOVEMBER 1319, 2013
The Village Shoppes at Montgomery
1378 Rt. 206 Skillman, NJ
609.430.4600 www.kikidresses.com
Dresses for every occasion!
Mother of the Bride
Sweet Sixteen
Bat Mitzvah
Wedding guest
Cocktail
BRIEFS
BRIEFS
Continued from page 6
48 Independence Drive
RECENTLY
SOLD HOMES
Sold: $1,750,000
Real estate tax: $26,865 / 2012
Approximate Lot Size: 1.53 acres
This contemporary home featured in
Architectural Digest has two bedrooms
and three full bathrooms. Features
include stone walls, outdoor fireplace, wis-
teria-draped pergola around the in-
ground pool and a cooks kitchen.
302 Stonecliff Road
Sold: $1,370,000
Real estate tax: $25,702 / 2012
Approximate Square Footage: 4,700
This two-story colonial on a cul-de-sac lot
has five bedrooms and four full and one
half bathrooms. Features include a
screened-in porch, mahogany deck,
kitchen with granite counters, family room
wood-burning fireplace and full basement.
with purchase of 5 or more
Glide-Outs

. Expires 11/30/13. *
By KATIE MORGAN
The Sun
On Nov. 7, two men walked into
Princeton carrying an important
message.
Elliot London and Ronnie
Kroell, co-founders of the Friend
Movement, left Chicago on foot on
Oct. 5, beginning the 921-mile
journey to New York City. The
Friend Walk is dedicated to the
memory of Tyler Clementi, a Rut-
gers University student who
jumped to his death from the
George Washington Bridge three
years ago after a vicious cyber-
bullying attack.
London and Kroell collaborat-
ed with Clementis family and the
Tyler Clementi Foundation to
plan the Friend Walk, which in-
cluded stops in multiple cities
where the pair met with student
organizations and community
groups to discuss the effects of
bullying, and to relay their pro-
friendship message.
On Nov. 7, the 33rd day of their
trip, London and Kroell spoke to
students from Princeton Disabili-
ties Awareness and Princetons
Center for Jewish Life before con-
tinuing their walk to the next
stop, Rutgers University.
October is Bullying Preven-
tion Month, and we wanted to do
something really big, Kroell
said. We wanted to be on the
ground and actually meeting peo-
ple. So we said, lets walk
through these communities. Lets
talk to people on the street.
Thats really the only way to un-
derstands whats going on and
what peoples needs are. Every-
one weve met has been warm
and receptive, and everyone has a
bullying story.
London said he was amazed at
the similarities between many of
the bullying stories he heard dur-
ing the trip.
Everyone has a voice, and
were listening, London said.
Were giving these stories we
hear a platform. In Princeton, it
was incredible to sit down with
the students and hear their sto-
ries. We all come from such differ-
ent walks of life, but we all have
these common stories.
The final mile of the Friend
Walk, scheduled for Nov. 10, was
perhaps the most poignant mile
of all. London and Kroell, accom-
panied by Jane and James
Clementi, Tylers mother and
brother, led a group of people
dressed in purple across the
George Washington Bridge.
It was never really just about
getting to New York City, London
said. It was always about the
George Washington Bridge.
Crossing that bridge for us is
symbolic of overcoming bullying,
coming together and creating a
dialogue.
London and Kroell said they
were honored that the Clementi
family wanted to cross the bridge
with them. They said the bridge
is a tough subject for the family,
but they hoped that crossing the
bridge would be a step toward
healing for everyone involved.
Instead of viewing this an-
niversary as a sad occasion, we
want to celebrate [Tylers] life and
the lives of numerous others we
have lost as a result of bullying,
the pair wrote on their website,
friendmovement.com.
London and Kroell chronicled
the entire journey on their web-
site and Facebook page, which
has nearly 8,000 likes.
From Chicago to New York,
London and Kroell stopped every
mile to tie purple ribbons around
a tree, fence or signpost.
Each ribbon represents one
person who has taken their own
life as a result of bullying. Lon-
don and Kroell also received an
enormous number of personal-
ized purple ribbons from the fam-
ilies and friends of bullying vic-
tims.
We tied a bunch on the Prince-
ton campus today, London said.
In all, weve tied way over 1,000
ribbons.
The pair also planned to wrap
12,000 yards of purple ribbon
along the George Washington
Bridge as they crossed.
Kroell said that as the Friend
Walk came to an end, he wanted
the lasting impression in the com-
munities theyd visited to be a
feeling of hope.
The ideal lasting impression
would be that we inspired hope,
Kroell said. As long as hope is
there, anything is possible. If we
all do our part in communities
across the country, thats when
we really make a difference.
12 THE PRINCETON SUN NOVEMBER 1319, 2013
OPEN MIC NIGHT - Third Friday of each month
Paint
the
Roses
Teahouse and Cafe
Breakfast Lunch Desserts
Friday Dinners Sunday Live Music
New!
FRIDAY NIGHT DINNERS
Specializing in Chilean Dishes
Best Empanadas in town.
Baby Showers Bridal Showers
Childrens Tea Parties Luncheons
Also new at
Paint the Roses:
Cathies Collectibles
Vintage & Antiques
Morris Decker
Artists & Portraits
Reserve now
for your special
event!
37 West Broad Street Hopewell
609-466-8200 teaattheroses@ gmail.com
Tuesday-Thursday 8am-6pm Friday 8am-9pm Saturday & Sunday 9am-6pm
Friend Walk duo shares anti-bullying message
Triangle Club returns to
McCarter for three shows
The famed Princeton Triangle
Club, now in its 123rd year, re-
turns to McCarter Theatre with
the world premiere of Zero
Gravitas, all-student written and
performed, for three performanc-
es on Friday and Saturday, Nov. 15
and 16 at 8 p.m. with a special
family matinee on Sunday, Nov. 17
at 2 p.m.
Houston, we have a problem:
this show is just too funny!
Join Triangle as we blast off
for the final frontier, where you'll
encounter singing space pirates,
robots with feelings, and an
ever-expanding universe of
laughs that'll split both your sides
and the very fabric of space-
time.
It's a show that's literally figu-
ratively out of this world. Come
see what all of the buzz [Aldrin] is
about its one small step away at
McCarter Theatre, one giant leap
for our long kickline!
Tickets are $25, $30, $35 and $50.
Student and child tickets are $10
(use discount code: STUTIX). To
charge tickets by phone, call the
McCarter Ticket Office at (609)
258-2787; or online at www.mc-
carter.org. McCarter Theatre is
conveniently located at 91 Univer-
sity Place, Princeton.
Triangle Club is the oldest col-
legiate musical-comedy troupe in
the nation, and the only college
group that creates an original,
student-written musical each
year that is presented on national
tour.
Triangle Club is the largest stu-
dent performing arts organiza-
tion on the Princeton campus and
the only student group to perform
on the Matthews stage of Mc-
Carter Theatre.
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.
Lic #10199 Cont Lic #13VH01382900
Concrete Masonry
Firewood
FIREWOOD
908-359-3000
Dog Boarding
Ocean City New Jerseys #1 Real Estate Team!
The Team You Can Trust!
Matt Bader
Cell 609-992-4380
Dale Collins
Cell 609-548-1539
Let the Bader-Collins Associates make all of your Ocean City
dreams come true! If you are thinking about BUYING, SELLING or
RENTING, contact us for exceptional service and professionalism.
3160 Asbury Avenue Ocean City, NJ 08226
Office: 609-399-0076 email: bca@bergerrealty.com
Gorgeous beachfront townhouse.
This 3 bedroom 3 1/2 bath
townhouse is located in
prestigious "Seaview Beach."
Located only steps from the
beach, this private community is
highly desired. This 4 level
townhouse has its own private
garage, multiple decks with a
huge roof-top deck and fantastic
ocean views. Access the beach &
boards from your own private
entrance. This property comes
mostly furnished with a fantastic
rental history! $659,000
REDUCED!
classified
T HE P R I N C E T O N S U N
NOVEMBER 13-19, 2013 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 5 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.
L I NE
ADS
Only
$
20per week
H O W T O C O N T A C T U S
Call us: 609-751-0245 or email us: classifieds@elauwitmedia.com
Hopewell Sun Lawrence Sun
Montgomery Sun Princeton Sun
West Windsor Sun
BOX
ADS Only
$
25per week List a text-only ad for your yard
sale, job posting or merchandise.
HeIp Wanted
MARKETING REP
New wireless company.
Full or part time. Unlimited income.
See our website for details.
www.getfreeceIIservicenow.com
CIeaning
MiIa's CIeaning Service
Reliable, Affordable
Free estimates
Call Mila
609-620-0849
Email:
mila.iaskevich@gmail.com
C HEC K OUT T HE S UN C L ASS I F I E DS !
Home Improvement
FNSHED BASEMENT
SPECAL $7595
All home repair and
remodeling services
Replacement
windows/doors
46 yrs exp
609-268-1737
FaII cIean-ups, muIching, seeding, pIanting,
patios, waIkways, waIIs, grading, drainage,
backhoe service, compIete tree services,
thatching & core aeration, Iot cIearing,
snow removaI, Fences & Lawn Care, firewood
FULL TREE SERVICE
Stump Removal,
Grinding, Trimming
Fully Insured Free estimates
Over 10 years experience
609.737.0171
www.lopezaparicio.com Credit Cards Accepted
Landscaping MisceIIaneous
DID YOU PICK THE WRONG
FUNDS INSIDE YOUR
401(k)?
www.SavingsPlanNavigator.com
CALL 856-316-7080
Your Dog
In A Loving Home
NOT A KENNEL!
Call Steven:
856-356-2775
OUR HOME
DOG BOARDING.com
CLASSIFIED NOVEMBER 13-19, 2013 - THE PRINCETON SUN 15
Identity
Print
Web
Tom Engle
www.spectdesigns.com
LET
THE SUNS
WORK
FOR YOU!
Call
609-751-0245
for
Advertising Info.
Considering a home
in South Florida?
Whether you're considering a move
to a better climate, or just a second
home, or investment property, Rena
Kliot of Pulse International Realty is
the broker for buyers who want a
dependable expert in the exciting
South Florida market.
Call today to start your search
for that coastal home!
Rena Kliot, Broker | Owner
Pulse International Realty - Miami
305.428.2268
rena@pulseinternationalrealty.com
www.pulseinternationalrealty.com
1oo pooped 1o scoop?
We provide weekly scooper service s1or1ing o1
$
I3/week
saving our planet, one pile at a time
856-665-6769
www.alldogspoop.com
GET $10.00 OFF YOUR FIRST SERVICE!
Locally owned and operated.
Pet Care Roofing
$1,000 BFF
Any new complete roofing or siding job
Must present coupon at time of estimate. Not valid with other offers or prior services. Expires 11/30/13.
30 Years Experience Family Owned & Operated
High Quality Products Senior Citizen Discount
No High Pressure Sales Tactics
Professional Installation Serving the Tri-State area
NEW SHINGLE ROOF SPECIALISTS SLATE ROOF REPAIRS RUBBER ROOFS
SEAMLESS GUTTERS SIDING WINDOWS & DOORS CAPPING SOFFITS
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 11/30/13.
$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 11/30/13.
10 BFF
Any
roofing
or siding job
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 11/30/13.
FREE
ROOF AND
GUTTER
INSPECTION
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 11/30/13.
FREE
GUTTERS
With any new roof
and siding job
UP TO

You might also like