May 22, 2024

To the Editor:
After two days of a special meeting of the Historic Preservation Commission (HPC), the HPC on May 14 recommended to the Planning Board against the developer’s application for major site development at 344 Nassau Street and denied the application for demolition of the rear of the Hornor House, a cornerstone building of the Jugtown Historic District and recently recognized by Preservation NJ as one of the 10 most threatened historic buildings in New Jersey.

The HPC correctly decided based on the historic preservation ordinance and the affordable housing overlay ordinance. At the HPC meeting, members of the Princeton community expressed strong support for the Save Jugtown Coalition’s opposition to this development. more

To the Editor:

I am writing to encourage your readers to support and vote for our incumbent Congresswoman Bonnie Watson Coleman in the June 4 Democratic primary, where she is being challenged by a conservative ex-Republican.

As a congresswoman, Bonnie has been an indefatigable fighter for the people of our state, and especially for its most vulnerable groups. She is a fair and thoughtful legislator, aiming to ensure that millions of Americans, and New Jerseyans in particular, do not live below the poverty line nor experience permanent financial fallout from a single unexpected crisis. She has worked tirelessly to rectify the environmental inequalities found in poor neighborhoods where environmental violations often go unpunished. She is also a member of the Congressional Caucus for Women’s Issues, and founder and co-chair of the Congressional Caucus on Black Women and Girls, fighting for women’s rights and equality. Before her tenure in Washington, she was the majority leader in the New Jersey Assembly, where she championed pioneering legislation for prisoner rehabilitation and re-entry programs, earning praise from the New York Times as “a model for the rest of the nation.” more

To the Editor:

Much has been written about the proposed four-story addition to the historic Horner House at the corner of Harrison and Nassau streets. Let us add just one additional piece of information.

Recently we received from our municipal police department their accident reports for this intersection for the past three years  During the period, 22 accidents occurred requiring police presence at this location: 17 were for two-car vehicle accidents, two for hit-and-run accidents, two for single car crashes, and one for a three-car crash. This information is just one more tile in the mosaic of why this project should not be allowed to go forward.

To add a 15-unit residential building with a garage emptying onto Harrison Street just a few yards away from this intersection is a recipe for disaster unless one hopes to raise the annual accident total above double figures.

Lydia and Walter Frank
Riverside Drive

To the Editor:

Over the next 10 years, Princeton appears fated to lose nearly all of its beech trees. A new disease, called beech leaf disease, is sweeping through our nature preserves and neighborhoods. It’s caused by nematodes — a worm tiny enough to overwinter in the beech’s long, coppery buds, causing contortions and curious stripings in the emerging leaves.

Information online is not encouraging. Since first being discovered 12 years ago near Holden Arboretum in Ohio, it has spread quickly, extending thus far south to Virginia and east to Maine. Though I had heard rumblings of some sort of disease affecting beech trees, I managed to keep my head in the sand, basking innocently in the beauty of the great tree’s smooth gray bark, admiring its dramatic root flare and towering canopy. In the Institute Woods, there’s a massive beech with a split trunk you can walk through. more

To the Editor:

I noticed with dismay that we can now get another yellow recycling bin here in Princeton, and I assume throughout Mercer County. This doubles down on an inefficient and illogical program as the Mercer County Improvement Authority has actively banned the use of standard, wheeled, and covered blue recycling bins. more

To the Editor:

Princeton Active Circle (PAC), a Princeton nonprofit organization, successfully hosted the recent AAPI 5K Run and Walk event which took place on May 11 at the Carnegie Center. With over 200 enthusiastic participants from various ethnic backgrounds, the AAPI 5K brought together individuals of all ages and walks of life to promote mutual understanding and appreciation. It was heartwarming to witness the spirit of inclusivity in the event, as people of different cultures came together to support a common cause. more

Paula McGuire

Paula McGuire died on May 6 of this year 2024, in Princeton, New Jersey.

She was born Paula Van Doren, in Chicago, IL, on May 23, 1931. She was daughter to Paul and Jesse Van Doren, and younger sister to Peter Van Doren. Her father Paul was a brother of the distinguished literary Van Doren family. Paula spent her formative years in Glen Ridge, NJ.

She was an Oberlin alumna, and subsequently studied at the Sorbonne in Paris and in Germany, where she learned both countries’ languages.

Paula was married to William (Bill) McGuire in May of 1965 in New York City, becoming part of his family including Bill’s two early-teenaged sons Jack and Eddie.

In 1967, the family moved to Princeton. Both were writers and editors; Paula had worked as an editor with Pantheon Books, and later, Random House. She was editor for Alan Watts, Mary Renault, and worked with Dr R. Burack on his important The Handbook of Prescription Drugs, raising awareness of generic alternatives. Bill worked at the Bollingen Series, editing the collected works of C.G. Jung, and other scholars, and other projects, as well as writing several related books.

In 1972, Paula joined Vis Ed in Princeton as a freelancer, editing, notably, Nobel Prize Winners: Supplement 1987-1991, and writing a series of books for teens: Putting It Together (about divorce), Must Try Harder (about anxiety), Alcohol, It Won’t Happen To Me (about teen pregnancy); and a series of books about immigrant groups, Coming to North America: From Mexico, Cuba, & Puerto Rico, and others. Colleagues praised her organization, helpfulness, and generosity to staff. She was cited as a role model.

All along, she maintained her piano playing.

Mary McGuire was born in 1972, the great pride and happiness of her parents. Tragically, within months of completing her studies at the University of Pennsylvania, Mary was killed by a drunk driver in 1994, in San Antonio, TX, while working at Habitat for Humanity. Though she had only been there a month, the overflow crowd at her memorial in San Antonio was a testament to the kind of person she had become. Paula maintained, over the years, relationships with several of Mary’s friends and classmates, and other new friends from the community in San Antonio.

Paula retired from Vis Ed at that time, and she and Bill spent the next seven years rebuilding their lives.

Paula generously and devotedly donated her time and skills for several local causes. She was a major force on a state-sanctioned committee of New Jersey citizens that worked on alternative plans for the Penns Neck bypass. As part of that, she was a forceful leader in preserving the Washington Road Elms.

Paula’s beloved husband Bill died in September of 2009.

Paula is survived by sons Jack and Eddie, her grandchildren and their families, her Van Doren family — and her dear friends, the Fiori family.

———

Judith L. Pinch

Judith L. Pinch, 92, died at her home in Princeton on May 17, 2024.

She was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, where she graduated from Fort Hamilton High School. She received her B.A. in English literature from Drew University in Madison, New Jersey, and her M.A. in English literature from Penn State University. At Penn State, she met her husband, Harry L. Pinch. They married in 1955 and moved to Princeton in 1957.

She had a long, illustrious career at the former Woodrow Wilson Fellowship Foundation (now the Institute for Citizens and Scholars), directing programs that fostered the expansion and inclusiveness of  humanities education, teacher education, the arts, and women’s and gender studies. In 2003, she retired as Vice President of the Foundation.

Along with her husband, Judith was one of the founders of The Evergreen Forum, a learning-in-retirement program in Princeton. She also served a term as a member of the New Jersey Council for the Humanities.

Judith was preceded in death by her husband, Harry L. Pinch, and her parents Jacob and Anna Emdin. She is survived by her sister Josepha Cook (Stuart), her children Adam and Adela (Webb Keane), and her granddaughter Clara Keane. She will be remembered forever by her family and friends for her warmth, her keen intelligence, her love of literature, and her strength of character.

May 15, 2024

Visitors learned about sheep shearing, wool spinning and use, sheep herding and care, fleece cleaning, and more at Howell Living History Farm in Hopewell Township on Saturday. The program was part of the farm’s series of weekly Saturday events. (Photo by Sarah Teo)

By Donald Gilpin

Nineteen days after its start on April 25, the Princeton University Gaza Solidarity Encampment appeared to be preparing to leave Cannon Green on Tuesday, May 14 following a warning sent by Princeton University President Christopher L. Eisgruber the previous evening.

About 40 demonstrators continued to occupy the space in the early afternoon on Tuesday, but signs of decamping included piled up blankets, tarps, and other supplies, as well as barriers surrounding the green with signs stating: “This space is closed in preparation for University events.” About a dozen public safety officials were present around the perimeter of the green, and a number of University facilities workers were hanging electrical cords and lights in the trees.

It is not clear how and when the withdrawal from Cannon Green will be completed. A mid-day Instagram notice from the protesters stated that Eisgruber “failed to let us know how, when, or on what timeline the camp would be cleared,” and the “urgent update” concluded, “Administration and public safety are currently encircling the camp as we deliberate our next steps.”  more

By Anne Levin

Testimony was set to continue at Witherspoon Hall Tuesday evening on an application for a 15-unit addition to the Joseph Hornor House, an 18th century property at the corner of Nassau and Harrison streets that was recently listed by Preservation New Jersey as one of the 10 most endangered historic places in New Jersey.

Some 40 people, many of whom live in the Jugtown Historic District where the house is located, attended Monday’s 5 p.m. special meeting of the Historic Preservation Commission (HPC) to express their views on the proposed project. Because Princeton Council was to meet in the room at 7 p.m., the HPC ran out of time before any of them had an opportunity to speak. With this in mind, the commission scheduled a second meeting for 5 p.m. Tuesday, after press time, without a time limit. more

By Anne Levin

At its meeting on Monday evening, May 13, Princeton Council held a work session on the 2024 Bicycle Facilities Implementation Plan. Assistant Municipal Engineer Jim Purcell talked about how to work elements of the Master Plan Bicycle Mobility Plan into programs that are taking place to resurface roads, make capital improvements, and repave sidewalks.

“We have some opportunities this year,” he said. “PSE&G’s gas system modernization project is underway. Twelve miles of gas mains are being replaced, so they are tearing up the roadways.”

PSE&G is required to replace existing markings on the roadways, and will be asked to add some new ones. “Given limited resources, we want to implement these elements when we can,” Purcell said. “With all the construction and PSE&G work, this is an opportunity.” more

ONE THOUSAND TREES: The Watershed Institute and its partners embarked last week on a tree planting project in Cadwalader Park that aims to increase Trenton’s tree canopy and combat climate change while adding 1,000 trees throughout the city in the next three years. (Photo courtesy of the Watershed Institute)

By Donald Gilpin

With a plan to plant 1,000 trees in Trenton in the next three years, the Watershed Institute, the New Jersey Conservation Foundation (NJCF), and other partners began planting trees last week in Cadwalader Park to improve climate resiliency and enhance the environment.

“At the Watershed we really believe that trees are such an important component of the green infrastructure that protects our waterways and so important as we enter this year of climate change,” said Watershed Chief of Operations Sophie Glovier. more

By Anne Levin

Celebrating its 40th anniversary during the pandemic in 2021, Isles, the Trenton-based community development organization, came up with the idea for a week-long series of free webinars, workshops, and panels focused on timely topics such as environmental concerns, violence prevention, and building community. The Virtual Forum was such a success — attracting more than 650 participants from New Jersey and beyond — that it has become an annual event.

This year’s Virtual Forum takes place Monday to Thursday, May 20-23, with sessions from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The focus is Environmental Health on day one, Building Wealth on day two, Transportation and Mobility on day three, and Innovative Approaches to Violence Prevention on the final day. Each webinar is followed by a discussion. more

By Donald Gilpin

Mark Eastburn

Mark Eastburn, Princeton High School (PHS) science teacher and a leader of the school’s award-winning research program, reflected on some of the key experiences and influences in his life: an interest in reptiles, a Quaker upbringing, a semester-abroad program followed by two years in the Peace Corps after college, and an affinity for pursuing his own interests regardless of popular opinion.

The PHS research team, with its remarkable cross-cultural Indigenous language project, was recently chosen for the second time as a National Grand Prize Winner in the Samsung Solve for Tomorrow Competition with a prize package worth $100,000 — the only school in the country to have won the national competition twice.

Eastburn first came to Princeton Public Schools as a Spanish teacher at Johnson Park Elementary School, where he taught for 10 years, then a science specialist at Riverside Elementary for seven years before coming to PHS in 2018, where he has taught chemistry, biology, and engineering, as well as overseeing the research program and serving as adviser to a wide variety of clubs. He has a bachelor’s degree in biology from St. Mary’s College of Maryland and master’s degrees in biology from Villanova University and in neuroscience education from Columbia University Teacher’s College.

His own experience as a high school student was not a high point of his life. “I had some good teachers in high school who encouraged me,” he said. “Biology and chemistry were something I was interested in and I worked hard at that, but I did not have a good time as a teenager. I had so many bad memories. I threw out my yearbook. I didn’t enjoy middle school or high school at all.”

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By Nancy Plum

Instrumental concertos have been audience blockbusters for centuries. Such composers as Mozart and Beethoven cast themselves as leading stars in their own compositions, and contemporary performers have made stellar careers of exploring the repertory. Princeton Symphony Orchestra presented one of Ludwig van Beethoven’s challenging piano/orchestral works this past weekend, featuring a soloist who maintains an active repertoire of more piano concertos than almost anyone. Led by conductor Rossen Milanov and with soloist Sara Davis Buechner at the keyboard, the musicians of Princeton Symphony Orchestra brought Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 1 in C Major to life, bracketed by a contemporary work honoring nature and a towering Schumann symphony.  more

By Stuart Mitchner

I’ve been writing the same sort of thing since I was 15 years old — about people who are a little cracked.

—Patricia Highsmith (1921-1995)

The line I’ve quoted is from an August 1991 interview Patricia Highsmith granted the International Herald Tribune shortly before publishing the last novel in the Ripley series, Ripley Under Water (Knopf 1992), which I read in a day, swept along in a fever of morbid anticipation. Whenever that most civilized of psychopaths Tom Ripley is involved, it’s not what happens next that carries you along but the need to know when it will happen and to whom and how, and then how Ripley will get away with it, which he always does. There’s no denying you’re in the grip of the writer Graham Greene called “the poet of apprehension.”

Even before she started writing about “cracked” people, Highsmith was reading Karl Menninger’s The Human Mind, which she found in her parents’ library when she was “8 or 9,” and going through “case histories with footnotes about murders, sadists, crackpots, if they could be cured or not and what the psychiatrist decided to do about them.” more

FINAL CONCERT OF THE SEASON: Westminster Conservatory Honors Music Program students, from left, Julianna Wong, Madeleine Nieman, and Tanvi Patl, will perform with the Westminster Community Orchestra on Sunday, May 19.

The Westminster Community Orchestra, conducted by Ruth Ochs, will present its season finale “Nature and Magic” on Sunday, May 19 at 3 p.m. in Hillman Hall in the Marian Buckelew Cullen Center on the Westminster Campus on Walnut Lane.

Suggested admission is $10 (cash) which will be accepted at the door. Audience members requiring seating assistance should arrive at 2:30 p.m. more

The Trenton Film Society will present the world premiere of Once a Child Soldier on Saturday, May 18 at 1 p.m. as part of its celebration of documentaries produced by regional filmmakers, at Mill Hill Playhouse in Trenton.

The 31-minute film was co-produced by Sopheap Theam and Princeton-based filmmaker Janet Gardner, who also directed. It is the latest documentary from The Gardner Documentary Group. The film explores the Cambodian genocide through the eyes of a former Khmer Rouge child soldier. In his own words, Sayon Soeun confronts his childhood experiences during Cambodia’s darkest hour, revealing what he witnessed and struggled with as he came of age. more

NEW BOARD MEMBERS: From left, Susie Henkel, Lynn DeClemente Losavio, Stephen Webb, and Grant Peterson have joined the board of directors at the Hopewell Valley Arts Council.

The Hopewell Valley Arts Council has welcomed Stephen Webb, Lynn DeClemente Losavio, Susie Henkel, and Grant Peterson to its board of directors. These professionals bring a wealth of experience, expertise, and passion for the arts, enriching HV Arts Council’s mission to foster creativity and cultural engagement in the community bringing “art in the everyday!”  more

Kimberly Camp

Trenton City Museum invites artists to submit artwork for consideration in “Ellarslie Open 41.” Kimberly Camp, renowned as an artist, educator, museum leader, and gallery owner, will jury the 2024 show. Trenton City Museum will accept online entries through June 13.

Artists may submit a total of up to four pieces. Entry categories are Sculpture, Paintings, Works on Paper, Photography. and Digital Art, which will include video for the first time. Entry instructions and schedule are at ellarslie.org/EO41. The top award, Best in Show Overall, carries a prize of $1,000. Monetary awards are also given for first place in each category and for special sponsored awards whose criteria and subject matter vary. Best in Show Overall in 2023 was awarded to David Orban of Hamilton, whose work is on view in the new show “Space & Clutter,” along with works by Jackie Lima of Easton, Pa., and Paul Smith of Brooklyn, N.Y. more

ARTS & CRAFTS SPRING SHOW: Craftsmanship is displayed at the 2023 Arts & Crafts Show, presented by the Montgomery Arts Council. This year’s show is on May 18 and 19 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Regional artisans will have their talents on display when the Arts & Crafts Spring Show returns May 18 and 19. Presented by the Montgomery Arts Council, this year’s indoor event spotlights local community talent in woodwork, textiles, glass, ceramics, fine arts and more.

“We are excited to provide a platform to these prodigiously talented creatives for our Arts & Crafts Spring Show,” said Montgomery Township Mayor Neena Singh. “We will continue taking every opportunity to support local artisans, while presenting our residents with some of the most talented work in the region.” more

“SMALL TAKES ON BIG PLACES”: Images by John Stritzinger are on view at Gallery 14 Fine Art Photography in Hopewell May 18 through June 16. Works by Dutch Bagley are also featured. An opening reception is on May 18 from 1 to 3 p.m.

Gallery 14 Fine Art Photography in Hopewell will present exhibits by two of its members May 18 through June 16. Both are award-winning artists who regularly exhibit in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. They have also had images included in a variety of professional national and international media.

An opening reception with the artists is on May 18 from 1 to 3 p.m.

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“ECHOES OF ABSTRACTION”: Works by four ceramic artists are at The Center for Contemporary Art in Bedminster through June 2. Two other exhibitions are also display at the center this spring.

The Center for Contemporary Art in Bedminster has announced three exhibitions on view through June 2.

“Echoes of Abstraction,” curated by John Reinking, brings together the work of four contemporary ceramic artists: Ruth Borgenicht, Eric Knoche, Joris Link, and Tina Opp.  more

HELPING HANDS: “We make sure that our atmosphere offers everyone a sense of belonging and getting along. We take into consideration everyone’s personality as we help them develop skills to participate in activities and work projects to create useful products,” report founders Violetta and Sergio Neri and founder and executive Svein Hansen of Pennington Adult Living Services (PALS). Shown, in foreground from left, are PALS participants Nicole, Jack, and Keller. Seated at top are David and Robert.

By Jean Stratton

You never can predict how one step, one decision can set in motion a series of events that lead to something unexpected, and yet with ramifications that will benefit people for years to come.

Consider PALS: that is, Pennington Adult Living Services. This organization offers programs, activities, and learning opportunities for adults with special needs. Founded in 2017 by Sergio and Violetta Neri and Svein Hansen, it has filled an important need for adults with a variety of conditions and challenges, including the autism spectrum, Down syndrome, cerebral palsy, and seizure disorders, among others. more

SOMETHING TO SHOUT ABOUT: Members of the Princeton University softball team show their joy as they greet Allison Ha after she hit a homer against Cornell in a regular season game on May 4. Last Saturday, the Tigers had a lot to celebrate as they edged Harvard 1-0 in a winner-take-all contest in the final round of the double-elimination Ivy League Tournament and earned the league’s automatic bid to the upcoming NCAA tournament. Princeton, now 29-16, will head south to the Louisiana Regional in Lafayette, La., where it will face host Louisiana on May 17 in the opener of the double-elimination competition. The two other teams at the site are Ole Miss and Baylor. (Photo by Steven Wojtowicz)

By Bill Alden

It was a blast that gave the Princeton University softball team a huge lift as it headed into the Ivy League Tournament last week.

With Princeton trailing Cornell in the bottom of the seventh inning in its regular season finale on May 4, Lauren Sablone slammed a three-run walk-off homer that gave the Tigers a 5-4 win. In the wake of the triumph Princeton earned the top seed in the Ivy tournament and the right to host the double elimination competition at the friendly confines of Strubing Field.

“That was one of the top three sports moments I have been a part of, it was unbelievable, it was electric,” said Princeton head coach Lisa Van Ackeren. “There is genuine belief that anything can happen and when you have a moment like that you remember what sports are all about. Nobody knows who is supposed to win and really anything can happen on any given day. I think that gave our team a huge boost of momentum going into the tournament.” more