*-
Planning Board Continues Ettl Farm Hearing to October 4 3
Township Celebrates 150th Birthday Under the Mercer Oak 6
First Aid Squad. Lacking Weekend Help, To Study Paid Staff. H
Holy Cross Heartbreak May Spur Tigers To Greater Effort against Brown.. ..37
Feature of the Week:
Can the Area Support 966 More Housing Units behind Mercer Mall? 18
VOL. XLIII, NO. 29
Wednesday, September 28, 1988
40C at all newsstands
f
L
The Loser in Collision with Dinky
This 1 987 Oldsmobile Cutlass is a total loss, after colliding with the "Dinky" shortly before noon Tuesday at the Facul- ty Road crossing. The 19-year-old driver, Michele Daniels. 180 Klockner Avenue, Trenton, though shaken by the acci- dent, miraculously escaped serious injury. She was treated for aches and bruises at Princeton Medical Center and fit- ted with a neck brace. Witnesses to the accident told Ptl. David Leiggi, (shown here) and Lt. Mario Musso that neither the warning lights nor bells were working, and the crossing gate had not descended as the Daniels car approached the tracks, headed toward Alexander Road. The front end of her car struck the Dinky and was pushed aside. "She ran into the Dinky. "There's just a hair's second difference between who got there first," said Lt. Musso, who described the driver as very lucky.
Collins Presents New Plan for Hulfish North; Number and Design of Housing Units Altered
Hulfish North — the final phase in Collins Corporation's Palmer Square redevelop- ment project — will be substantially altered from the original plan approved by the Regional Planning Board in 1983. The changes are sub- ject to new approval by the Board.
While the office building, stores, and underground garages remain the same, the number and design of the housing stock will change dramatically, according to Ar- thur Collins, president of Col- lins Corporation.
And Borough Mayor Bar- bara Sigmund couldn't be happier.
At a press conference Mon- day evening in Borough Hall, she lauded the decrease in the number of housing units from the original 1 40 to 84, an- nounced by Mr. Collins, and praised the increase in public open space and the inclusion of six units for middle- and moderate-income families.
The Mayor compared the proposed new look of Palmer Square North to Jackson Square in New Orleans, Rit-
tenhouse Square in Philadel- phia, and to the great town squares of European cities, in- cluding Florence, Italy. "Move over Lorenzo de Medici, and make way for Arthur Collins," she said with characteristic ex- uberance.
Palmer Square North is bounded by Chambers Street, Witherspoon Street, Paul Robeson Place, and Hulfish Street.
Mr. Collins said the change in plans reflected the Prince- ton market. "We had originally thought the kind of person who wanted to live in a downtown area would want a relatively smaller unit," he said. "But as time went along. Princeton changed a lot. A good deal of housing satisfied that market within five miles of Palmer Square ."
YM-YWCA, Concerned Parents, at Standoff on Asbestos
The YM-YWCA and a group of parents urging further checks for asbestos in the Y building are locked in a stand- off. Each group has labeled ^he other "uncooperative," and the parents — who have organized into "The Concern- ed Parents and Users Group" — continue to demand that \ the Y building be checked J again for asbestos. This would J be the fifth such check in the f month-and-a-half since the Y closed for plumbing renova- tion and asbestos removal. Four clean-ups and four checks were done during this period, at a cost to the Y of ap- ' proximately $95,000. I i Wendy Rayner, president of J 'he YWCA, said Northeast j Analytical Corporation did
checks for asbestos in six areas of the Y last week, in- cluding two nurseries. This fol- lowed work on September 17 to remove asbestos debris found in plumbing closets. "All checks showed the Y well below State levels," she said. "We have met all standards, and our building is hazard- free."
Mrs. Rayner said she found the need for so many clean- ups "incredible," but has come to believe that firms will not do the job correctly unless they are monitored. She ex- pressed confidence in the job done by Northeast Analyti- cal. "They did more sophisti- cated tests, and they found no asbestos fiber on surfaces. "
The YW president, who serves in a volunteer capaci- ty, declined to release the re- port until the YM-YW Board of Trustees reviews it at its next meeting, scheduled for Oc- tober 17.
No official representative of the Y appeared at a public meeting called by the parents and users' group this past Thursday at Borough Hall. Ms. Rayner said that the Y felt no purpose would be served by attending. She noted that the Y had permitted Dee Buc- ciarelli, organizer of the group, and Edward Swoszowski, an indoor air quality consultant hired by the group, to check
CooWMjed on Page 21
NEW PLANS FOR HULFISH NORTH: Arthur Collins, president of Collins Development Corporation, goes over the revised plans for housing at Hulfish North with Borough Mayor Bar- bara Sigmund. The plans, which lower density and increase open space, were unveiled at a Monday night press con- ference at Borough Hall.
Princeton Developments Receive Sewers In Allocation Decision by Judge Serpentelli
A variety of Princeton devel- opments received sewer allocations from Superior Court Judge Eugene Serpentelli this week. Developers were vying for the remaining limited sewer capacity at the Stony Brook Regional Sewerage Authori- ty's (SBRSA) River Road plant.
In Princeton Township, sewer capacity reservations were made for the West Drive housing site and the Arcaro
tract, both pah of the afford- able housing program. In the Borough, capacity was ruled to go to affordable housing sites on Maclean, Clay and John streets and to the Medi- cal Center addition. Nine new University buildings were also granted sewer capacity.
The biggest loser in the Judge's decision was Linpro Company's Walker Gordon
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VOL XUII. NO 29
Wodno*day Soplombor ?B ttJBH
Pa/mer Square
He added thai these changes in the market gave the develop- ment company the opportunity to review the plan. "We had a j Hiit opportunity to go to a plan in keeping with the charm of downtown Princeton, one less dense and urban, in the tra- dition of Georgetown and Alex- andria. "
Mr. Collins described the pro- posed 84 units as mostly three- to four-story townhouses, each with its own garden, front area, parking space, and elevator from the garage.
Open space has been increas-
ed from 34 to 40 percent of the 193.357-square-foot site, and will allow for larger courtyards that are clearly designed for
town usr
The units, to range from $275,000 to $750,imi will vary in size, from large flats above the stores that face Huffish street io murh larger
townhouses The MX pi middle-income units will be subsidized by an extra cost added to some townhouse units.
Mayor Sigmund said that the Borough and Collins Develop- ment are now in the process of discussing the size and cost of these six units with the Witherspoon- Jackson Develop ment Corporation This non- profit Princeton group, long ac- tlve in helping to provide af- fordable housing to members of the black community, had sued Collins over its omission of af- foi dable housing from Palmer Square
Mayor Sigmund said that, if Collins can have its new plans to I he iiorough by the end of Oc- tober, the Planning Board will review them in December or January Meanwhile, work will continue on those sections of Hulfish North that have not changed, such as the stores and flats
Two months ago, Collins hired the Hillier Group to design the houses at Palmer Square North. The West Wind sor firm replaces RTKL, which had earlier replaced Yankee Planning Alan Chimacoff and Frank Moya are the architects.
Mr. Chimacoff said that they haven't gotten down to the design of buildings, but have had discussions of layout and interiors. Citing the unquestion- ed charm of the brick homes in Washington, D. C.'s George- town section, he said he would like to keep "a similar flavor, without being replicative."
Mayor Sigmund said that those members of Borough Council and the Planning Board she has talked with have been very pleased with the new Collins plan. "This is a great day for Princeton," she said 1 can't praise Arthur Collins enough for showing sensitivity to the whole Princeton "
— Mvrna K. Bearse
INDEX
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Calendar of the Week 29
Classified Ads 15-61
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Current Cinema 27
Engagements 52
Mailbox >:'
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30 Obituaries 25
22 Real Estate Sales 4A
Religion 2">
37 Theatres 26
Topics of the Town 3
Registration Available For 30 Artisans' Classes
The YWCA Artisans Guild is offering some :io classes and special workshops this fall, in- cluding stenciling, early Amer- ican tole painting, pressed flower design, English smock- ing, and needlepoint.
Barbara Costa, a jewelry designer, whose work is sold locally and abroad, will offer a six-session evening course in beaded jewelry design Par- ticipants will design and con- struct their own semi-precious bracelet or necklace Helen Post will offer three sessions in marbleizing paper.
Special knitting workshops featuring hats and mittens, and a holiday stocking will be taught by Suzanne
Tractenberg. A twice-monthly Tuesday evening quilt group is an opportunity for quilters of all levels to share skills and ideas, and a special all-day workshop on precision hand- piecing, followed by an evening lecture, will be presented by Pat Morris, a quilting teacher and judge this Friday
The Artisans Guild Consign- or Gallery, located in the YWCA Bramwell House, will open for the season on Monday at 9:30 a.m. The Gallery features original designs by area crafters — handknits. pot- tery, quilts, jewelry, weaving, children's toys and other items.
Classes will start soon and space is limited Registration is available in the YWCA office For further information, call the YWCA. 497-2)00
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Hearing on Ettl Farm Continued to October 4
The Planning Board heard two more hours of testirhony and public comment relating to the development of the Ettl Farm property last Thursday, and it scheduled another hear- ing for Tuesday, October 4.
Sanford Nalitt proposes to subdivide the 188-acre proper- ty off Rosedale Road into 177 lots for single-family homes. The tract is zoned R-l/AH under the Township's afford- able housing ordinance, but, in- stead of building Mt. Laurel units on a designated area of the property, the developer will contribute $1.8 million to the Township's housing fund These monies will be used to re- habilitate units in the Borough under a regional contribution agreement, the details of which are still to be worked out.
The 13 Borough units in a regional contribution agree- ment are needed to fulfill the s Township's affordable housing quota if neither graduate stu- dent housing nor 22 units of the Elm Court senior citizens hous- ing project are allowed to count. The master appointed by Judge Eugene D. Serpentelli to review the Township's afford- able housing plan has argued in his report that neither should
0 count.
Thus there is some pressure for approval of the Ettl Farm
• application for preliminary subdivision and site plan ap- proval, and for final approval for the first 67 units, so that the
• $1.8 million contribution to the
1 housing fund is assured and the 13 units are that much closer to actuality. The Planning Board met in closed session Thursday night before the hearing on Ettl
° Farm to get an update from at- » torney Gerald Muller on the » Mt. Laurel compliance hear- " ings before Judge Serpentelli Earlier in the week, Town- ship Committee passed a 9 resolution on behalf of the Township Housing Board to ac- cept the $1.8 million when it became available.
Two Stenographers. Two
stenographers were present
during the Ettl Farm hearing,
_ one taking down every word for
• the applicant's use, the other for the Planning Board. The
9 hearing began with a review by o planning director Duggan Kim- ■ ball of the 20 issues of concern to the Township staff in regard
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to the site plan. The developer is asking for a variance From the zoning ordinance which sets the maximum height of homes in the Township at 30 feet.
The developer wants a variance allowing homes of 43 feet in height, but it was not made clear last Thursday whether this is to apply to the whole site or just to certain homes or areas on the site. The height variance request is of concern to the board and is op- posed by neighbors on Fairway Drive.
Another issue of concern to the neighbors is the developer's request for an "exception" to the requirements that say that there should be no disturbance to a 40-foot buffer area in the rear yards of the homes border- ing on Fairway Drive. Kenneth Najjar, engineer with Van Note Harvey, said the exception was requested in order to create drainage swales designed to channel storm water to deten- tion areas.
Everett Garretson, 94 Fair- way Drive, pointed out that houses could be built 40 feet from the property boundaries and said the buffer should in- clude large evergreen trees planted close together so that he wouldn't have to wait 20 years to get the screening he was asking for.
Public Access. Beryl Collins, 112 Fairway Drive, was em- phatic in asking the Planning Board not to grant the variance for higher buildings. She said that the higher elevation of the Ettl property, the lack of tree cover, the "unusually small" building lots with large ratio of building footprint would add to the detrimental impact of the additional height. Mrs. Collins also asked that the 46 acres in- cluding steep slopes along Stony Brook be deeded to the Township and that public ac- cess be provided.
Planning Board member Michael Landau asked wheth- er the fire department had ap- proved the narrower-than- standard roads that are being proposed. Mr. Landau was par- ticularly concerned about the 18-foot wide roads in "eyebrow" areas. James H Britt Jr., attorney for the developer, said such a review had not yet taken place but it would.
Another issue raised, but not resolved, was how children in the development will get to school: where they could walk safely and where bus stops would be located. There will be no sidewalks on any of the roads within the development, although the developer will be required to extend the sidewalk along Rosedale Road to the Johnson Park School entrance. A path covered in "stone dust" will run through the central open space, but it is designed as more of a recreational walking path than as a place for youngsters to walk or bicycle.
Neighbors have complained about the foot or more of water that accumulates in the low area of Fairway Drive in rainy
Firemen's Parade Set
The Annual Fire Inspec- tion Parade will be held on Saturday beginning at 6:30 p.m. on Chestnut Street. The Princeton Fire Depart- ment's three companies, the First Aid and Rescue Squad, and two bands will parade up Nassau Street to Borough Hall on Monument Drive
An antique fire truck, seven modern fire fighting vehicles, and the fire chief's car will parade with the fire department members. At Borough Hall the event will continue with speeches and awards. Fire Department Chief Richard McKee will be among the speakers.
The parade was rescheduled from the last week of June because of the town's water crisis.
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weather. Mr. Najjar said the impact of water runoff downstream would be lessened after the storm water drainage system, including underground pipes, swales and detention basin, was in place.
Traffic Problems. Garmen Associates, the Township's traffic consultants, report that the northbound approach of Province Line Road at the Rosedale Road intersection will operate at level of service F ( in a ranking from A to F. with F indicating failure) during the morning peak hours. The Garmen report also says that traffic leaving the site during peak morning traffic and at tempting to make a left turn to- ward Princeton will have a dif ficult time doing so because of the lack of gaps in the traffic flow.
Thus Garmen recommends a traffic light at Province Line and Rosedale roads. It was noted that ETS is required to provide this traffic light as a condition of approval of its ex-
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Notice to Town Topics Readers Receiving the Paper by Mail
Within the last two months, all Princeton resi- dents receiving Town Topics BY MAIL should have received a notice about continued tree de- livery with a postcard to be returned to Town Topics. Many residents have responded, but lor those who missed this card and would like to Insure continued tree delivery, here Is another chance.
Fill out the form below and either mail it to the address below or drop it oil at 4 Mercer Street, Princeton. II you prefer, you may call 924-2200 between 9 and S Monday through Fri- day and leave your name and address.
REMEMBER, only those who receive Town Topics BY MAIL (In your mailbox) should re- spond. Solicitation of residents receiving the paper by the news services will begin In the fall. Thank you tor your help In enabling us to sat- isfy Postal regulations.
Please continue to deliver Town Topics by mail.
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Topics of the Town
pension plans ButtheETSex-
pan Ion is tied up in litigation, and ii \t uncertain when that will he resolved so that con- Btruction can begin,
Township Engineer Robert v Kiser suggested that the light be in place l.eloi'c hall <>l iii« certificates of occupancy h>i Hie Kill Harm project arc issued He also recommended thai ii ETS 'Iocs not put in the traffic light, the developer be asked to do bo In lieu of the con- tribution for off -tract im- provements, on the theory that the light itself will solve the problems created by the devel opmenl
Barbara l Johnson
Woman in Car Target
Of Flasher I.;tst Friday
While a 28 year old East Windsor resident was seated alone in her car Frldaj aftei noon in the boa) house lol ofl the Princeton Kingston Road, a black male approached and ex posed himself.
The suspect then fled on foot. Police, called by the victim, searched the area without suc- cess.
Workman Burns Hands When Glue Pot Ignites
A 29-year-old tile setter suf- fered first and second degree burns to both hands Friday when a bucket of tile glue he was carrying caught lire .is he was working in a Palmer Square apartment
The victim, Frank Metivier
Ol Beverly was treated ftl Princeton Medical Center and released
According to police, Mi
Metivier was installing new
tiles in s bathroom in anapart-
tnenl above Clayton's when the glue suddenly flamed up around 1:30. He rushed from the apartment, carrying the flaming bucket.
I'll Konald Wohlschlegel and l'tl Gary Mitchell spotted a plume of smoke rising from the roof, ran upstairs and doused the fire with extinguishers from their patrol car. Lt, Peter Hanley commented that their quick action prevented a major blaze
Two firetrucks arrived and stood by while firemen used ex- haust fans to vent smoke from the apartment.
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: Township Celebrates 150th Birthday; I 200 Gather in Battlefield Beneath Oak
nd the air touched Willi oarlv autumn chill as about 200 peoj ered Saturday mornii eorate the 150th anniversar) ol Princeton Township : on the Princeton Battlefield, . Mercer Oak, symbol of the Township
Seated on rows of folding chairs were aboul 100 area res idents who are descended from Princetonlans listed in the ijmh census — b census made two > ears after the incorporation of the Township. Ranging in age from the elderly lo babies seated on their parents' laps, they held the place of honor during the ceremony
Speakers included Township Mayor Kate Lilvack, Anniver- sary chairman Herb Hobler, Clark House curator John Mills, Princeton Bank presi dent and former Planning Board member Aristides Georgantas, and actress Georgine Fleming DuVivier (.known professionally as Georgine Hail), a descendent of four 1838 families.
Ms. Hall spoke of what Princeton was like circa 1838: "... Charles Steadman ... was putting up more houses than any other man in Princeton Jackson, Green and Quarry Streets were laid out ... The Episcopal Church, a Grecian building, had been erected in 1833 on the lot where the pres ent church stands . In 1840 the Witherspoon Street Church asked permission of the First Presbyterian Church to form
its own community ol parishioners, and in 1 846 became 'Ihe first Presbyterian Church of color of Princeton "The Post Office stood at the corner of Nassau and Wither streets the Van devenler skating pond at the bottom of Witherspoon and whal is now Spring sir ■ aboul to be dug the Resolu- tion Fire Gompanj m Princeton was incorporated with a capital
Of $1.000.. "
Hero and Spy. One of Prince Ion's early settlers, whose ex- ploits were recalled by Mr Hobler. was Timothy Webster, a star operative of the Pinker- ton Detective Agency who sav- ed the life of President Lincoln and was later hanged as a Union spy His descendent, Mary Alise Cook, lives on Pat- ton Avenue
In 1861. Mr Webster heard of a plot to assassinate President Lincoln, and re-routed Lin- coin's train He later became a spy for the Union and was cap- tured by the Confederacy. President Lincoln tried to save him through a prisoner ex- change, but the request was refused.
So ill was Webster that he could barely walk to the gallows. The occasion had the air of a carnival, as southerners came to see "the first American military spy to die on the soil of his own coun- try since Nathan Hale "
Continued on Nom Pago
SK _js^
LEAVES ON THE FAMILY TREE: Katherine Drake, of Lawrenceville, holds her son, Benjamin, 3 months, at the Township's 150th anniversary celebration. Young Benjamin is a descendent of Garrett Durling, one of Princeton's 1838 residents, unta pr<,.i*.o pmc
A DESCENDENT OF FOUR 1838 FAMILIES, actress Georgine Hall reads a report she prepared for the Township's anniversary celebration on what Princeton was like in 1838, the year the Township was incorporated. unda prO,pgr0 Ph0l0
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HELPING TO CELEBRATE: Shown at Saturday's celebration of the Township's 150th anniversary are, from left, Malcolm Closterman, descendent of Princeton Bank's first president, Robert Voorhees; Aristides Georgantas, president of Princeton Bank: and Robert Field Stockton, descendent and namesake of Commodore Robert Field Stockton (grandson of Richard Stockton, signer of the Declara- tion of Independence.) lm» pmp„o pi,ok.
Topics of the Town no,take a positlon on the pleb
Coniinued from F
iscite but will report to the in ternational community on their observations of the electoral A 17-year old oak tree, grown pr0Cess While in Chile the from a Mercer Oak acorn, was delegation will meet with scheduled to be dedicated at the government and election of ceremony - "a living link be- finals, leaders of both the tween past and future," said -Yes'- and the "No" cam- Mayor Litvack. But this will paigns, and representatives of have to wait until next year, other institutions. The delega- since the tree, planted in the tion will watch the voting and spring, died in the summer - counting process in Santiago
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,a victim of the drought
lAn event like this might have changed the opinion of Dr John Witherspoon, sixth presi- dent of Princeton University, who, in about 1838, called Princeton's climate "salu- brious and healthful,")
Fortunately, four other Mer- cer Oak acorns were also begun 17 years ago, and an attempt will be made in the spring to have a second take root on the Battlefield.
— Myrna K. Bearse
Mayor Joins Delegation To Chile Plebiscite
Borough Mayor Barbara Sig- mund will be part of a delega- tion of more than 50 political leaders and election experts from five continents that will leave Saturday to observe the October 5 plebiscite in Chile. . The delegation is sponsored and organized by the National Democratic Institute for Inter- national Affairs iNDI), It will be led by Bruce Babbit, the former Arizona governor and presidential candidate; Peter Dailey, former ambassador to Ireland and special envoy to NATO countries; and former presidents Adolfo Suarez of Spain and Misael Pastrana of Colombia.
The delegation includes former heads of state, parliamentarians, political party leaders and election ex- perts from 21 countries. The U.S. component is comprised of prominent Republicans and Democrats.
More than seven million Chileans have registered to vote in the plebiscite, called under the terms of Chile's 1980 constitution If President Augusto Pinochet wins the re- ferendum, he will serve as president for an additional eight years. If he is rejected, he will remain in power for anoth- er year, at which time open, competitive elections would be held. The observer missions will
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Topics of the Town
W«ekend Staff Problems Plague First Aid Squad
Mans to study the need for a paid w eekend crew for the Princeton First Aid and Rescue Squad were approved by Town- ship Committee at its Monday night meeting The action came after Squad Captain Ed Obert and President David Cromwell outlined the problems facing the volunteer organization
"The longer we can postpone this the better," said Mr Obert, referring to paid crews He ex plained that professional crews tend to take over leadership during calls, leaving volunteers who usually lead in secondary roles
A two-man paid crew was hired ten years ago for weekdays after the Rescue Squad found it could no longer
staff daytime shifts with volun- teers Nights, weekends, ind
administration of the Squad continue to be volunteer
Recently staffing problems have become acute on weekends, leaving Princeton dependent on mutual aid, a pro- gram in which squads from oth- er communities cover calls that can't be answered According to Mr Obert, Princeton has always given mutual aid but has never relied on receiving it until recently
The Squad was to appear before Borough Council to pres- ent its problems on Tuesday night and the Council was to be asked to join the study of future weekend staffing solutions.
Township Committee also approved, subject to approval by the Borough, a pay hike from $5.50 to $7 per hour for vol- unteers who cover for weekday
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paid crew members when they are on vacation
Manpower continues to be an enormous problem despite an extensive advertising cam- paign that ran early this year "The recruitment drive ads won critical acclaim and en- joyed full cooperation of radio, TV, and newspapers." said Mr. Cromwell "But we didn't get one volunteer "
Within the last two months five new volunteers have join- ed the squad. Mr Cromwell credits recent articles in TOWN TOPICS and other local papers for prompting several of the recruits to join.
"If we could gel five or sev- en adult members of the com- munity it would make a big dif- ference," said Mr Obert. He explained that the squad tradi- tionally has had around 30 to 35 members with 10 to 15 key peo- ple. The number of key people has dwindled to five and several will be leaving the squad in the spring. In anticipa- tion of this, the squad began considering a paid weekend crew.
Mr. Obert also proposed the formation of a joint public safe- ty committee with members of the rescue squad, fire depart- ment, and both police depart- ments "We don't want meetings for meetings' sake," he commented. Outlining some of the items that should be dis- cussed, he mentioned radio communication noise in the Township, the need for a repeater system to let people know who has responded, notification of road closings, traffic coordination at the scene of an emergency, and other communication prob- lems.
He also emphasized the need for better disaster planning.
Student's Koom Entered In Forbes College Dorm
A University student who left his room in Forbes College dor- mitory unlocked for 15 minutes early Tuesday morning return- ed to discover someone had entered and ransacked dresser drawers, a closet and his night stand Taken were a Walkman radio, a knapsack, $10 in coins and about $100 is cash
Another student in Brown Hull on campus reported to po- lice last week the theft of 17 compact discs valued at $260 from his room. Because there was no forced entry, he told po- lice he did not notice the theft immediately, and later check- ed to see if any of his friends had borrowed the discs. The victim told police that the room is never locked
When two black males who were carrying a television set down the main stairway of the Peacock Inn on Bayard Lane early Monday morning were observed by a resident and em- ployee of the Inn, they dropped the set, fled down the stairway and out the front door with the employee in pursuit as they ran north on Bayard
Police report the two ap- parently entered the unlocked front door shortly before 7 and had made their way upstairs to Koom 3 where they removed the $300 set. The two suspects, in their early 20s, wearing blue jeans and short-sleeved dark blue shirts, managed to escape but the TV set was recovered
An apparent attempted bur- glary last week at a Dempsey Avenue home was reported by Township police.
A first-floor bedroom window screen that was found on the ground had been pried off, po- lice said, and a screen for a sliding glass door had also been pried off its (rack, but ap-
parentl) no entry was gained Nothing inside was disturbed or stolen
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DEMOCRATIC HEADQUARTERS OPEN: W. Hodding Carter III, right, spokesman (or the State Department In the Carter administration, addressed party workers at the opening of Princeton Democratic Campaign Headquarters. He is show with, trom left, Mark Freda, Jane Terpstra, and Lucy Mackenzie, candidates tor Borough Council, and Leonard Godfrey, candidate (or Township Committee.
TV.nl/>. nf tUo Tmnn the l"nch a half-hour later, the "ry apartment building at 100
lopiCS Of the lOWtl knapsack conlaminB ,ex. Stockton Street, was stolen last
ow.nu.0 to f>.0. a (books, two purses and keys week, and a boy's 20->nch bicy- valued at $128 was gone c'e. valued at $80, was stolen
Campus Thefts Reported During the summer, a stu- during one night last week from
As Students Come Back dent, police said, had left a box 'he front yard of a Murray
Several campus thefts of clothing in the storage room Place home. It had been left
campus were reported by police last week, as students returned to the Princeton University cam- pus.
A student left his backpack in an Elm Club coat room last weekend and returned two hours later to find that the pack had been stolen. It was later found in a batiiroom in the club, minus a wallet containing $60 to $80. Still later, the wallet was recovered outside the club Monday evening, minus the cash
Earlier in the week, a student left her knapsack unattended in the lounge area of Mathey Col- lege When she returned from
in the basement of 1922 Hall It unlocked was stolen. The victim's
clothing plus a Class of 1990 One of three blank checks,
banner were valued at a com- slolen August 10 from a Bor-
bined $550. oufih Public Assistance check
book in an office at 389 Wither-
Two bikes were taken, in- spoon Street, was cashed for cludinga student's 10-speed red $200 last week al the United Huffy model valued al $120 Jersey Bank on Nassau Street from outside the second entry cap' Thomas Michaud said of McCosh Hall where it had this week that police have a been left unlocked During the suspect and an arrest is forth- summer, a student had left her coming He identified the vic- $250 Raleigh 10-spced. locked to tun as the Borough and Town- itself in a rack outside Pyne ship Department of Public Hall When she returned to Welfare, campus this month it was gone
A $100 dirt bike, chained to Township police report that itself in a private hallway in the about $30 in coins were remov- Princeton Theological Semin- ed overnight last week from the
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coin box of an ice-vending ma chine in the Princeton Shopping Center Lt .Mario Musso said that there was no forced entry and police believe a key was us ed to gain access to the box The machine is owned by An- drew Teague of Princeton
When the occupants of a car parked in the Battlefield Park lot of Mercer Road last week, they encountered a swarm of bees and took shelter in near- by Clark House Returning to their unlocked car 15 minutes later, they discovered it had been looted The driver, a resi- dent of Utah, lost a $2S0 camera and a nylon book bag worth $15; a passenger from Prince- ton lost a child's jacket, rain jacket and sweat jacket valued at $10 each.
Confrontation At Wawa Students, Blacks Clash
Two 21-year-old university students and four black youths, all said to be 19 to 20. clashed last week at the Wawa Store on lower University Place
According to police, some loud words had been exchang- ed between the two groups while they were in the store around 2 Friday morning. As
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New Charges Against Eating Club?
New charges by the Borough against Cloister [nil?
That is a possibility, according to Borough Prosecutor Michael Barrett who said this week that he is reviewing a list of student witnesses against the Inn, preparatory to a possible new trial He expects to complete his review in a cou- ple of weeks.
Last March, Borough police, after a protracted investiga- tion, charged Cloister Inn land Charter Clubi with maintain- ing a public nuisance in the wake of excessive student drink- ing during sign-in festivities February 6 at the clubs.
In May. Borough Judge Russell W. Annich Jr dismissed the charge, saying that Mr Barrett had filed the charges under the wrong section of two subsections of the Borough's nuisance ordinance Judge Annich also dismissed a motion by Mr Barrett at the time to amend the charges under the proper subsection.
In an article in the Daily Princetonian, Richard Altman, attorney for Cloister Inn, commented that he believes the pro- posed new charges would place the club in double jeopardy and might be unlawful He charged that Borough police had harassed the club last week by entering without a warrant
Capt Thomas Michaud this week acknowledged that po- lice had visited the club on several occasions but were there to investigate complaints of excessive noise. Mr. Altman claimed police had used that as a guise to check on a party at the club.
Capt. Michaud denied it. "We are not going to the clubs randomly." he said, "to determine if liquor is being served."
I !
72 Elm Road, 130, overdue in gpection
Madden (use Forwarded. In
Borough criminal court last week, the paper- ol Lai | . Had den. 80 Alexander Street, were forwarded to the Mercer Coun- ty Prosecutor's Office for ac- tion. Mr Madden has been charged by Borough police with five counts of possession of stolen property, possession of marijuana and possession of narcotic paraphernalia
This week. Borough police re- port that Mr Madden has fur- ther been charged with posses- sion of two wooden folding cots valued at $60 that were taken from Pyne Hall on the Univer- sity campus two years ago. Owned by Taylor Rental on Route 206. the cots had been
Continued on Ne«i Page
Tonid nf the Trillin J James- Grandview Road. lOpiCSOJ me lOWn skillman; Felicia Alfieri, 2809
Conlinoed from Page 10 pQX Run Drjve, p|ainsooro-
\ the two students exited, they Christopher K. Lawler, 440
{ were confronted by the four Walnu' Lane; Constance E
• blacks. There was some push- Kel|y' 6A Brookline Court;
! ing and shoving and fists began Adele C Riddle, 21 Grover Av-
i j flving, police said. enue. and Max H. Stern, 1903
r t Hall. Princeton University.
| One of the students was Fined $6° each are Paul D.
! | treated at McCosh Infirmary Spagnoli Jr.. 2203 Fox Run
•Eileen B Sanm<; < for contusions and a laceration Drive, Plainsboro, and Paul T.
\ ' under his right eye; the second Ferrara, 6A Newlin Road.
Allied Member A.S.I.D.j was not injured but there were
speaks on How tot red marks on nis face- Police . Pennis A- Spivey. 175 ' Js t — . ' said Johnson Avenue, Lawrence-
i Gef Furniture to\ After the fight, the four ville, was fined $515 for driving i Help You With\ youths entered a car and left, while his license was suspend- to, t Police were notified of the inci- ed Fined for moving violations : Storage. ! dent by princeton University are Barries. Royce, 23 Univer- | No home ever seems to have! Security. sity Place, $75, illegal backing enough storage - but you can Witnesses told pol.ce the four ?r turning ,„ street . Salley M. i do something about It >™ths in the store had been ac- Moren. 14 Tee-Ar Place. $75, ( :.. 1 ting rowdv and were either in- failure to give proper signal; ; v™, „, ,,,„ a „ , I toxicated or "high " Martin J. Brophy, 172 Hunt
1 You can use various fur- J *_ Drive, $60, leaving scene of an
' r,ehP'eCn? '°r ,S,0'T T 5 Shoplifting. In another inci- accident ; Prabhu Nott, Dept. of r thereby not only add the, dent at the same store, a shop- Chemical Engineering, Prince- | necessary convenience to your 1 lifter ordered some items from ton University, $60, careless the sandwich counter late Mon- driving, and Patricia A. Ziobro. day night and started to walk 18 Ardsley Road, Belle Mead, out the store past the cash reg- and Roselee Everett. 198 ister. Princeton Arms, Cranbury,
j As the suspect was approach- Dotn $6u- red tight For instance, you can con- r ed by an employee, he ran from Manuel L. Davis, 97 Lawn { sider any one of a number of j the store up University Place Park Avenue. Lawrenceville. J difterent kinds ot beautiful) with the employee in pursuit. Pa'd three fines: $115 no in- 1 cabinets that give you shelves 1 The suspect threw a hoagie, hot suranee, $60 red light, and $20, ) or drawers, such as credenzas, \ dog, Doritos and candy bars overdue inspection. \ breaklronls. and so many ( worth $8.39 into the roadway
t more. Then, loo. as one more [ and disappeared into the cam- _.._,, ., „ .
example, are the coffee and Pus ™ar Spelman Hall. Da^el Black 234 N. Harrison
end tables .hat have storage Capt. Thomas Michaud said Street, paid $25 each on two
! soace underneath qr, mam, „i i this week that Police have a charges of overweight truck, a
mese Teces are both suspect and expect to make an violation of a Borough or-
1 these pieces are both J arreSt The suspect he said is dlnance. and William D.
\ storage-full^ and beautilul j not a student. Cavanaugh, same address, was
j \ fined $20, for storage of an un-
j A room divider that has 1 registered vehicle on private
r dowers or compartments can MoreSdersAreFined property ' not only be used between a hv- 1 —^ .,. ,, M . Others: Vassdis Kertsikoff,
jmg room and dining room to i ln lra'»c Lourt Monday i940 Ha|| Princeton Univer- J\ both unify and separate the two \ Eight Princeton-area drivers sity. and Joachim Harlem, 1 \ rooms, but can also be used to ( were fined Monday in Borough Shirley Court, both $20. no r store things for both rooms, r traffic court for speeding. license or registration in pos-
• • ■ 1 Fined $70 each are Barbara session; and Stephen E. Foss,
j There are more and more J 1 things that combine good looks 3 \ with efficient use to help solve J (the ever-present storage t
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• -,— ■ <
~- rented to the University for the
<* t;*S6 reunion weekend
5 dpi riiom.is Michaud said
g thai the cots were recovered in
5 Mr Madden's aparbnenl and
J that he has been charged with
|)j iheir possession Hie
- added, had been marked and
< identified bv Tavlor Kenfal
o '
CO
w Township Court In Township
o court last *ek, John A
j McKoy, Route 27, Kingston,
. was fined S275 and $30 to the
■? \'iolent Crime Compensation
z. Board for shoplifting at the
5 Acme Market
i- Patricia \ Freeman. 173 Old
o Oranbury Road. Cranbury, was
3E fined $515 and had her license
at suspended for 30 days for driv-
m- ing while her license was
o revoked She also paid 130 (or
q unregistered vehicle William
I- E Brown. Broad Street. Hope
| well, was fined 5115 as an
* unlicensed driver and $30. un
K registered vehicle
'
Plans are Under Way For Christmas Boutique
This year marks a milestone for the annual Christmas Bouti- que. It is the 25th year this event has been sponsored by the Auxiliary of the Medical Center at Princeton. Co- chairmen Caroline Angrisanl and Lindsey Fraser and their committees have spent this summer and fall planning for the Silver Anniversary yeai Honorary co-chairmen are Mrs Josiah Bunting and Mrs Chandler Simonds.
Twenty-three exhibitors will offer shoppers unique gifts, such as contemporary jewelry from the southwest , hiind-made
children's sweaters, per- vations and additional informa sonalized canvas luggage, tion.
Lindsey Fraser and Caroline Angrisani
Co-Chairmen of The Christmas Boutique
treats for holiday entertaining. Shopping hours for the rest of Stocking stuffers, unusual gifts the week will be Tuesday, Oc- for the home, and clothing for toner 25, from 10 to 5:30; men, women and children. Wednesday. October 26. .rom intoKpm ; and Thursday, Oc- The Christmas Boutique will tober 27, from 10 to A p m. A be held at the Lavino Field corporate evening is planned on House of The Lawrenceville Wednesday from 5 to 8 p.m. School It will begin with the Employees of area corpora- patrons" party on Monday, Oc- tions will be invited to shop and tober 24, from 5:30to8:30p m enjoy complimentary hors Patrons' party co-chairmen d'oeuvre The admission price Irene Farley and Lucinda for the Christmas Boutique is Mezey are planning a tasting $3.50, three days inclusive buffet, with stations of gourmet
food, plus an open bar The cost The Boutique will also offer
is $60 for sponsors and $40 for the Auxiliary-sponsored shops
patroas Call 924 5881 for reser- of Bulbs 'n Blooms, Holiday
Jjk COUNTRY
Eon house
Gifts and Home Accessories You are ii.vlted to come and see our
unusual selection of gifts that are j§J
both functional and decorative. \(\
• Unique hand-crafted Pottery and Ceramics • ffi
• Quilts handmade to order • Glassware • ©
• Fine hand-crafted Jewelry (many one of a 5J kind) * Primitive Art and more * (5
Warm-Up Sale Now In Progress x\
IV ALL SWEATERS $
Qj Reg. S48-S52 - NOW $39.99 rV
47 U Broad St.. Hopewell X
14 466-0222 Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30: Sun. II-S »
IB *;■«'<■;«, SS «.■•«•,«;•<» sass ■<,>«,• -«i «; «SS p\
r ^EWllOURS-
Gourmet, and Ribbons Wraps, as well as the silent auction. Refreshments served each day by the volunteers of Sip 'n Snack will include morn- ing coffee, luncheon and after- noon tea. A "Festival of Gifts," a ten-day $2,500 shopping spree, will be given away.
The Christmas Boutique began on a much smalle: scale at a private residence in Princeton where exhibitors displayed their wares on pink felt tablecloths. The small in- timate setting continued at Guernsey Hall for several more years, and then the boutique moved to the Prince William Room of the Nassau Inn. In 1982. its home became the La vino Field House. Through- out its 25-year history, tne fa- miliar Christmas tree logo designed by Cintra Sander has been used to publicize and iden- tify the event.
Proceeds of the Silver An-
7nivers;iry Christmas Boutique will benefit the Medical Center
AINSTREE
TI LI
T
With more fresh home cooking for great lunches and take-home dinners.
OUR NEW HOURS
Monday - Friday
10am . 7 pm
Saturday 8:30am - 3 pm
f PS We will still be making our delicious breakfast pastries
• Fresh Home Cooking To Go — Bakery • Catering
56 Main Street, Kingston i 921-2777
Parking in Hear
at Fnnceton.
Vandalism l,ess Frequen In Princeton's Schools
A report issued bv Princeton Regional Schools shows that the number of total incidents of vandalism, violence and substance abuse during the 198*1 mi school year was 53. a de crease trom 67 during the pre- vious school year.
Total estimated cost of van- dalism this year was $3,912. down from Run the preceding year
However, the number of re- ported incidents ol alcohol abuse rose from three to eight, and something new was added this yeat There were two bomb
sci i, compared to none the
preceding school yeai
Put Bottle Rill on Ballot Orders Supreme Court
The New Jersey State Su preme Court voted to allow Mercer County voters to decide the fate of the bottle hill on the November ballot.
By a vote of 5-0. the State's highest court rejected the re
quest of business interests to reconsider an earlier ruling by the Appellate Division of Superior Court
The Appellate Division had reversed a lower-court decision by Judge Paul Levy, who had stated that the proposed Coun- ty ordinance had been pre- empted by a State law which mandated all counties in the State to implement more comprehensive recycling pro- grjms
If the bottle bill is approved by Mercer County voters, it would require ten-cent deposits on all recyclable glass and aluminum containers and 25 cents on all other containers
Twin Girls Are Born At Medical Center Here
In the week ending Septem-
Conlmued on Pa .
BOARDWALK
Have Fresh Seafood Tonight EAT IN - TAKE OUT
19 Market Mall
Princeton Forrestal Village
609-520-1106
Nassau Liquors
Uquors • Wines • Beer 1 36 Nassau St. Princeton
924-0031
'Finally. . .great -tasting pizza
Delivered! I !"
921-2195 * 921-2446
PIZZA STAR
* Regular or Sicilian Pizza J
* Homemade Italian Dinners ^
Hot «r Cold Subs i
* fresh Salads ^ » Soda by the Bottle <
w
Fresh Off the Boat.
The freshest seafood in the neighborhood, only at Nassau Street Seafood Company.
Last off the Season
Soft Shell Crabs 2 for $5.00
Fresh Gazpacho $2.99/pint
Fresh Large Shrimp - 21 per lb.$12.99/lb.
We Deliver!
256 Nassau Street. Princeton, NJ (609) 921-0620
Open Monday-Thursday 9-7 30. Friday 9-8. Saturday 9-6
15 minute courtesy parking in front of store
Finer Foods For Finer Living
The Meat Place
lresh i Lbs. or More Oil'
Chicken Drumsticks SihO"
Fresh 3 lbs. nr More |~il"\tT
Chicken Thighs f±\ ib .""
BluftBonr. IrnhGrnuinr American l.imh S^%40
Shoulder Lamb Chops ib. L
Lamb Stew ib.""
Lamb Shanks ib 1
Fresh wilh I highs 3 lbs. or More
Chicken
Legs
79%
The Service Meat Counter — / ■ —
C erlified Angus Beet Extra Lean
Ground $^49
Beef ». L
Lancv
Game Quail
uftril Miih Swi-i\< ii
Veal Breast Roll-Lp
$799
lb. /
$^99
lb
With Mor/arella Cheese tresh Parsles
Flank Steak $/|99
Roll-Up ,b 1
\
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables.
California 6 Si/e Large
Honeydew Melons
$129
Super Select
Cucumbers
S\6 Si/e
Fresh Tomatoes
I .i i< ni 12(1 Si/e
Mcintosh Apples
4,99* ,89'
,b79e
Fresh Carrots
2 lb. bag
69
C
Washington Stale Extra Fancy 120 si/e T«TkC
Golden Delicious Apples ib /"
Western 120 Si/e £_(\$
Bartlett Pears n. W
Eastern dZf\t
Bosc Pears ib.O" The Fresh Bake Shop
All Varieties
Scones
Fresh Made Dailv
Napoleons
Great for School, Store Made
Cupcakes
$125
ea. I
$150
ea. 1
2to,99*
The Deli
/
l>av idson's Slore Made
Roast Beef
$C99
Fresh I > ni . Lxlra Lean
Corned Beef Round id
Black Forest, Eresh Daii)
Smoked Turkey Breast ib
Low Salt
Extra Lean Ham it.
Prepared Just For You .
$^99 $C99 $459
lresh Made I>ail\
Waldorf Salad
$T99
Dijon S->l|t|
Red Bliss Potato Salad ». 2
Boasted Lemon Prepared Eresh l)ail> \ *><IS
Rosemary Chicken ii>. J
Fresh Seafood—
Fresh Daily
Tuna Steaks
Pollock Fillet Haddock Fillet
31-35 cl. Previously Kro/cn
Large Shrimp
$7'
lb. /
$799 $349 $499 $799
Fresh Dairy
Wine or Creamed
Axelrod's Herring
12 OJ.
com
$189
Minule Maid Premium Choice
Orange Juice
I and o Lakes sale or s««i Quarters Co
Morning Blend
Koodlown, Assl. Varieties
Cottage Cheese The Grocery Place •
64o,.$'>49 cont. J-»
> iib.$149 pi>s A
2 ib. $ -f 99
cont. I
Bounty Towels
3 roll plsg
$^>39
Heavy Duly Liquid Laundry
Solo Detergent
II /ill, <l /ill Kigali, 'in II. _ -t> 1. in "1
mo,.$/>99
btl. «-
Regular or Lite
Log Cabin Syrup
Bathroom Assorted Varielies
White Cloud Tissue in PV
btl. 4 roll!
$199
99*
Cheeses From Near & Far
Jarlsburg Cheese
$^99
Pepper Cheese Monterey Jack Alouette Cups
SA9»
S/J98
s2"
6.5 01. $^69
cup
String Cheese
$*<49
6
The Frozen Food Case >
Minute Maid Orange Juice
<aWconls! %J
Srm.mr Sili.hur, Sl.jL < h„k.„,.»,n
& si, 1, 1, ,,„,„,. ,,( \rjp r, ,„,,.. ,,, C -^ 1 4
1(1.75 01. v> I />4 Plsg- Corn on Cob
Dinner Classics 'VC^T
Corn on Cob _ *
Green Giant NibblersinX 74
T
Bints I ,,Oii„l, Iha»
Strawberries
io„,.$129
pkg.
Srm„ur( hnUn Hun^unds, c h,,Li-n Starsala or Sa.i.bur, sir.k.
Lite Dinner $ 1 74
Classics "XI' J.
Davidson's
'
Mi Dm, ><■■.. ( >•■■' !■■ ,, . i . . Awirtrd Havon slier or
Pepsi i Cola
,.79' i
III! I Ills ( oi PON io.i ...t.i lalSTJOormorrpuithaw.
'mil ..n. ill per Ijmtls. ( 'ihi|hhi |0Od jl I I ■, N,jniia.. Sept. 15
.<.. v.i.ir.p.,, on i, iww -^ q
Davidson's
I
$179
J Premium Choice
J Minute Maid
l Orange Juice tiS.
I WITH THIS COUPON *•»* j*lilni"«al 51 SQot im>rr purchii<c
I I imii niw tllptrnUnll) I MlpOflgOOdal Davkhmft -mnduv S*pi 15
llS.ll.fll4. Hll I. I'»
I
I )a> idson's
i
■ California Larj;* Si/e 6
I Honeydew
! Melons
I vs n it i his < <u i-i i- ■ u..i 1..1 si so in
I I i m. i our III pCT family ( fiupnn E""<' »' lhtn*»m'»: SiiihIjv "»cpl 15
1 ri,,. n.1,.,,1,, ti. i i I9M No II 1
.99* I
No. II
"|MKR.< Ol 1
COUPON
_,
I
I «2/ili.«l /in Kigali,*" Regular or »« Ihin
Ronzoni ^m,,, $
j Spaghetti %Jl'l"'
Davidson's
fine foods since 19/6
Our Location: 225 Nassau Street, Princeton, N.J.
Our slore hours: Monday thru Saturday 8:00 A.M. 'til 9.00 P.M.
Sunday 8:00 A.M. 'til 6:00 P.M. Our Special Order It's: Meat & Seafood 924-0503
Deli & Bakery 924-0405 Our parking area: No more need to waste time looking for a parking space. Our location includes a lot with ample space for parking.
Prices effecti.e thru Salurdas, tk tuber I. ItXX. We reserse the right to limit quanliUc. Nut responsible Inr typographical ernirs.
. topics 01 uw tvwn S
m
- ber tz, then- wore :i boys and • 23 girts born at the Medical tt Center Twin girls were born to £ Kevin and Patricia s Michalkowski, 6-j Benson Ave- h nue, Trenton, on September is £i Sons wore born to Mark and *" Susan Benmson. IS Hancock > Drive. Kendall Park, Joel and a Laurie Phillips. 1-3 Shirley 2 Lane. Lawrenceville. Timothy g and Karen Septak, 55 Sharon u Road, Apt Bl, Robbinsville, * and Blaine and Louise Garner, ~i 208 Washington Avenue. z Newtown, Pa., all on Septem- z* ber 16.
o
uj Also to Michael and Helen z Rosenberg. 6 Marc Drive, £ Davton. Gregory and Carol . Brodeur. 46 Wilton Street, both {5 on September 17 ; Michael and E Darlene Kuzmic, RD2 Box 469. £ Ringoes. on September 18, 2 Robert Redwine and .lac- 5 queline Hewitt, 8 Shaw Drive. £ Box 458, Kingston, William and
Mary Dampier. 52 Cambridge HERE THEY ARE! The Bread and Puppet Theatre came to town on Saturday Way, Princeton Jet ; Peter and afternoon to per1orm "A Passion Play lor a Young Tree" at Westminster Choir Rhonda Belza. 369 Collier Ave- Co„e e ¥ * L,nda Pro^ro PHot0
nue. Trenton, all on September W"PMP'
19;
Also to John and Helen Tarnecki. 71 Quince Court, Lawrenceville, Douglas and Sarah Lewing, 122 Lesla Drive. Morrisville. Pa.; William and Gayle Riesser, 21 Plymouth Street, Hopewell; James and Mirka Powell. 1 Jonathan Way. Washingtons Crossing, all on September 20;
Also to Richard and Gail Van Doren, 687 Laurel Place, North Brunswick. Neil and Gretchen Lundberg, 140 South Stanworth Drive; Wesley and Lisa Bolton, 556 Chestnut Avenue, Trenton, all on September 21;
Also to Scott and Alison Pur- vis, 198 Pennington Drive, Pennington, Brian and Denise Bulchalski. 84-02 Hunters Glen, Plainsboro; David and I^aurie Csillan, 186 Princeton Arms N2, Cranbury; and Richard and Ruth Mercondetti, 4 Charred Oak Lane, East Windsor, all on September 22.
Daughters were born to David and Robin Meirs. Rd 2 855 Harvey Road, Cream Ridge; Gary and Nancy Dalon- zo, 383 Merion Place, Allen town; Rich and Debbie Roset- ty, Cedarville Road, East Windsor; Rory and Tina Zagarella, 24 Cedarbrook Lane, Spotswood, Patrick and
Jay's Cycles
PRINCETON RALEIGH • SCHWINN
(609) 924-7233 249 Nassiu Si Princeton
EXERCISE BIKES
150 BIKES ON DISPLAY
PRINCETON MEADOW";
SHOPPING CENTER
SCHWINN • RALEIGH
16091275*34 660 Plainiboro Rd Plimsbo,,
Elizabeth Callahan, 211 Daval Amy Franklin, 267 Hampshire Historic Familv Tonic Road, Neshanic. all on Septem- Drive. Plainsboro. all on Sep- ™ . r amnj lujm.
tember22 Of Lecture on Sunday
Annual Fall Walk Set In Sourland Mountains
The Sourland Regional
Tjedy Shepard §
195 Nuuu StrMt • Pnncaton. NJ • (609> S3 1-0682
45 Eut Afion Awnua ■ Ywday, PA • (216) 493-1732
VIS A/Mm WrCard
ber 17;
Also to Robert and Ronnie Rudolph, 28 Hannah Drive, Dayton; Shian-Siann and MeethuoyLin, 1106 West Drive, both on September 18. William andSonia Pickett. PO Box 996, Onalaska, Texas; Mark and Amy Kaczowski, 12 Exeter Court, Bordentown, Barry and Rosemarie Karen, 6 Van Gogh Court, Ewing; Elhan Nadelmann and Donna Sher- man, 54B Western Way, all on September 19;
Also to Timothy and Ellen Fahey, 239 Wyndham Place, Robbinsville; John and Ann DiDonato, 9 Wayne Way, East Windsor, both on September 20; John and Shirley Brunk- horst, 14 Franklin Drive, Plainsboro, William and Lisa Applegate, 174 Railroad Ave- nue, Hightstown; John and Patricia Muka, 2495 Sylvan Av- enue, Hamilton; Robert and Cynthia Hilias. 68 Herrontown Lane, all on September 21;
Gerald and Susan Walker, 843 President Avenue, Law- renceville, Vasilios and Lucy Molfetas, 22 Washington SI reel . Rocky Hill; GautamandShab-
nan Sharma, 31 Linden Lane, The historic walks will leave Plainsboro; and James and from tne Johnson & Johnson parking lot at 10:30. noon, 1 : 30 and 3 Nature hikes will depart from the lot continuously be- tween 9: 30 and 3. Refreshments will be available A fee of $1 50 will be charged to help defray the cost of bussing hikers to and from the trails.
Registration is requested Call Bob Garrett at (201 > 874- 8046 or Chris Sturm at 466-1899 The Johnson & Johnson facili- ty is located on Grandview Road off Route 601 about 1'2 miles north of Route 518 and 1% miles south of the Carrier Clinic
The Sourland Regional Citizens Planning Council was organized as a not-for-profit group in the spring of 1986 to en- sure comprehensive planning, conservation, preservation of open space, and protection of natural and historic resources of the mountain area without regard to arbitrary political boundaries. The group's recent activities include a public meeting with representatives from the New Jersey Office of State Planning, an ice cream social, and the creation of a soon -to- be -published booklet describing the region's cultural, natural, and political characteristics
The Sourland Mountain area spans three counties, Somerset, Mercer and Hunterdon, and four townships, Hopewell. East Amwell. Montgomery and Hillsborough.
The second lecture in the Rockingham Lecture Series will be presented on Sunday, at 2 p.m. at Rockingham historic site. Route 518 in Rocky Hill
Entitled "Berrien History,"
Citizens Planning Council will |( wi]] be given b Elizabeth sponsor several autumn walks Carnck, author of the Rock. on Sunday from 9 : 30 to 3. They will start from the Johnson & Johnson parking lot in Skill- man Last year's highly suc-
is free.
Conlinued on Page 16
ngham guide book. Ms Car- rick has made a study of the Berrien family, who owned Rockingham when Washington
cessful walks allowed more sta d there in 1783 Admission
than 300 participants of all
ages, interests and physical
conditions to experience some
of the unusual trails and vistas
that are part of the Sourland
Mountain region. Participants can choose from
five different walks: either an
historic stroll on meandering
country roads to the former
Lindburgh estate and through
the village of Zion, or one of the
four more rugged hikes
through dense forests to
unusual areas such as Roaring
Rocks and/or Devil's Half
Acre. Two hikes will use new
trails broken by the Somerset
County Parks Commission just
this summer.
J <% ft ,/s^
°^>,
i
& 1
*>;*
a little bit of
tit
wfet yoa Fawcy
The Beatrix Potter Collection
of tins, napkins,
poper plates, cards
and buttons
has arrived!!!
1989 Calendars and Diaries
HOURS Monday through Saturday 1 0 am - 500 pm
20 NASSAU ST PRINCETON 924-1270
i
&
"T3",
w*
6 30
ft
c±
%'
»%»»»<
And all the wonderful new
looks., the marvelous new
colors and fabrics... in
smashing separates, suits.
evening wear, lingerie
and accessories
All with that very special
Hedy look
And all at gld'ous discounts!
The LANDAU Catalog
now available
with deep appreciation to
ROB THACKER & ASSOCIATES
"The little agency that could" It is, and more importantly it really does.
PRINCETON BANK - Financing
LONNI SUE JOHNSON - Cover Art
TINA LEWIS & CO. - Styling and Props
LOCATION PHOTOGRAPHY
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY - Princeton, N.J.
SPRINGDALE GOLF CLUB - Princeton N J
EQUINOX HOTEL, RESORT & SPA - Manchester Vt
ROBERT TODD LINCOLN'S HILDENE - Manchester, Vt.
THE WOOL BUREAU INC.
Product development and the opportunity to introduce the "Wool of the Future" to the world...
And an additional thank you to the entire
Wool Family, from product selection to customer
satisfaction, we could not do it without you.
Shop Hours:
Open Monday - Saturday 9 30 am - 5 30 pm Closed Sundays
MAILBOX
.oad and Route 206 Griggs fownhouses. with rentals at Farm will have a mix of $212 to $646 per month, depend- market-priced, reduced-price ing on family size Approx- and low-rental housing inter imate current income limits mingled into one community subject to change, range from with landscaping, two tennis $10,500 to $30,700. •
courts, three tot lots, half-court Employees in Princeton basketball, walkways, common We hope, at the very least, May Apply for Housing grounds' club nouse J™ wi" tel1 y°ur employees
t n, m The housing units include: about this unique opportunity to
1 o the Editor of Town Topics : .One hundred forty market- live in Princeton at reasonable The following is an open let- priced townhouse con- costs If you think having more ter to Princeton employers, dominiums for sale to buyers of employees living in Princeton In the belief that employers an>' income who plan to live — is really important to your busi- would prefer more of their em- not Just invest — in their own ness, you might consider some ployees to live in Princeton and home way of helping employees
that the high price of Princeton " Slx'y two-bedroom and 80 financially by offering loans for real estate is the chief deter- three-bedroom townhouses at down payment and closing rent to that goal. Princeton estimated starting sale prices costs at reduced interest rates Community Housing is pleased °' S142.500 and $154,500 respec- — and even consider forgiving to announce their new Griggs l've'y the loans for employees who
Farm development which of- stay with you and stay in their
fers townhouse condominium * forty-seven reduced-price Griggs Farm homes for a units at very low prices condominium "nits that are significant period of time ($142,500 for two bedrooms and smaller for much lower prices
$154,500 for three bedrooms, for sale on terms restricting Construction has just plus reasonable condominium resale Incomes must be with- started, the deadline for ap- fees), as well as one, two- and 'n government set levels to plications to get in the initial three-bedroom condominiums °,ualily lottery is October 27, 1988, The
for sale and rent to households * Twenty-two one-bedroom sole purpose of the lottery is to who can meet certain income an<' 17 two-bedroom con- solicit nonbinding reservations criteria. These latter units sell dominiums and eight three- The first units should be avail- for much lower prices ($32 800 bedroom townhouses at prices able for occupancy in March, to $63,800) depending on rar>gmg from $32,800 to $63,800 1989 and the entire project corn- household size (hence unit size) * Ninety-three reduced- pleted by Spring, 1990. and income There are resale rental units. Incomes must be AJ1 sales and rentals will be restrictions. Rent levels are within government set levels to handled by Karl M Light Real commensurately low. qualify. Estate. 247 Nassau Street,
Griggs Farm "will consist of Forty-three one-bedroom and Princeton, NJ 08540. Telephone 280 new housing units on 26.5 3^ two-bedroom apartments, '6091 924-3822. Selection will be
by lottery Applications for the
lottery are available at Town- ship and Borough halls, the Princeton Public Library, Princeton Community Village, as well as the KM. Light office. That office will provide any employer with application forms upon request
Any questions you might have may be sent either to the Karl M Light office or to Princeton Community. Hous- ing, P.O. Box 1548, Princeton, NJ 08542. Telephone 683-7251. ROBERT CAWLEY Princeton Community Housing
FLOOR SANDING REFINISHING & INSTALLATION 921 3939 National Floors, Inc.
Over 23 years flupencncfl
FLORISTS HYDROPGNIC PLANT SHOP
Enter Our Autumn Plant Contest
WIN!Upto$150in
hydroponic (soil free) plants
our plants are HYDROPONIC; a
clean, easy-care growing system that*
needs walering only once every
3-4 weeks. Any would be a
-,SK prize in your home or
^j<5*j^(wSv office. We turn
,'\v>ji:Vf;j;oK. brown thumbs
..'-:*\';
mm
924-7718
green at The
Greener
House.
Watch for entry
form
next week'
/
LaVake requests the pleasure ol
assisting you
in the selection of your
Wedding Invitations
and
Social Stationery
featuring fine papers
by
Crane
54 \ ussau Street Princeton, New Jersey 0X540 (609)924-0624
A Happier Future Seen For the Nassau Inn?
To The Editor. Town Topics: Some years back you printed my letter of distress, from Tex- as, over the arrival at Palmer Square of the Collins Corpora- tion developers. Now, in Egypt, I read that the Collins people have, after seven years, final- ly figured out what a mess they have made of the Nassau Inn ( nee Tavern ) . May we hope for an accelerated awareness (and correction) of their other missteps at the Square? Let's hope so
HERMAN ARCHER Dokki, Giza, Egypt
Article on Griggs Family Evokes Memories of War
To the Editor of Town Topics: Kay Bretnall's warm and sensitive story about Burnett Griggs and his family brings back memories of some 45 years ago. It was during World War II and RCA Laboratories (now David Sarnoff Research Center) had recently been established in the area. The staff numbered 400 and was engaged in various projects supporting the wartime effort. I was part of a team developing high frequency magnetrons to improve the resolution of radar, then a very ne'w technol- ogy. A post-war evolution of these tubes powers the ubi quitous microwave ovens of to- day.
Some of the engineers and scientists at the "Labs" were young and single. We used to get together regularly for din- ner in the evening. Griggs was one of our frequent haunts. It was friendly, alive - and inex- pensive. It was also one of the precursors to racial integra- tion in Princeton. The presence and imprint of Mr. Griggs was very evident, but I never knew 'the rest of the story" until the recent article appeared in TOWN TOPICS
— ' i- hum iwtaurami Iff
that era helped provide some variety of diet and scenery, Renwicks. Viedts and The Bait were all nearby on Nassau Street and have also disap- peared Perhaps there are more stories to be told,
JEROME KURSHAN 72 Random Road
Small Animal League Deserves Our Support
To the Editor of Town Topics: Today we sent our contribu- tion to the Princeton Small An- imal League in the name of our two grandchildren. Erica and Jesse Abrams-Morley, to thank Mrs. Graves and the Small An- imal League for their help and encouragement when our grandchildren's cat was lost, In August, while Erica and Jesse were on vacation, we were caring for Charlotte, their calico cat ; and so, after several days into her visit, we thought she would plav in our yard as she did at home in Penn- sylvania. However, she must have explored too far, and sad to say, we have searched in vain for about one month.
We learned during our search that people in Princeton, and even all around our area, are caring and eager to help, And we also learned, once again, how fortunate Princeton is to have Jeanne Graves, who not only gives all.of us support and encouragement, when we call for her help, but who has work- ed long and hard, for many years, to build the Small Ani- mal League and with the League has worked with dedi- cation to meet the needs of pets and their families.
We hope our letter will help Erica and Jesse to say a public thank you to Mrs. Graves by generating other contributions to the Princeton Small Animal League.
ESTHER & BILL ABRAMS 175 Broadmead
PATRICIA'S HAIR DESIGN
357 Nassau Street. Princeton
We specialize in
sculptured hair cuts • long hoir • braids
body G carefree curl • hoir relaxing
color • highlights • style dry • perms
(609)683-4114
Ricchard's
shoes lor the discriminating
Van Eli.
.skimmers
JAGUAR by VAN ELI
Black Call/Black Suede Trim Brown Calf/Brown Suede Tnm
Narrow & Wediun 10 Size 1 1
150 Nassau Street Princeton. N.J. 924-6785
Mon.-Frl. 9-6 Thur. 9-8 - Sat 9-5
HINKSON'S OFFICE SUPPLIES & FURNITURE
REGISTERED
- APPROVED BY Consume'! FOR Consumers
HINKSON'S
STATIONERY - OFFICE SUPPLIES
82 NASSAU STREET
PRINCETON. N.J. 08542
(609)924-0112 FAX (609) 924-3612
Serving Mercer County
j upu * uj me i own
B- Cabaret KnlertainnuMit £ To Benefit Dance Group
Id The Nassau Inn will be the 3j setting on Friday, October 21, j- b1 B for .) special evening of uj cabarel entertainraenl devised directed by John Watson £ Slew art. a dancer who has per- o formed with PJ&-B and other m area musical productions ^ A benefit tor Teamwork w Dance, the Princeton -based * company which Mr Stewart S and Man Pat Robertson found- z ed in 1981. the evening will be z highlighted by his "Ex- £ travagant Follies," an original ^ Broadway-musical revue to be 2 presented later this season in g New York City The Teamwork - company, joined by many per- o formers familiar to area g theater-goers, will supplement k the cast for a benefit perform z ance $ o
.:■>::?: '
I
W i FOUND ITI . C »r the
PRINCETON W RECORD EXCHANGE 921-0881 / { ZO Tulann Si'»
'Micawber Books ^
new. used and rare
106 Nassau Street
^Princeton, New Jersey!
(609) 921-8454
LARGE BAGS OF RED CEDAR
SNEAK PREVIEW: Members of the planning committee for a cabaret evening to benefit Teamwork Dance include, from left, Anne Reeves, Robin Austen, Nora Orphanides, Mary Pat Robertson, Janell Byrne, Pam Good and Mary Ann Cook. The song and dance revue, entitled "Extravagant Follies," will be held Friday, October 21, at the Nassau Inn. rcharie* j Device photo)
Appearing as soloists in the song-and-dance revue will be John Criscitiello, C Peter Kauzmann. Dcrry Light, Ellen MacDonald. Mary Lee Marson, Susan Niedt. and Mr. Stewart.
The eabaret committee, headed by Teamwork Dance's board of trustees, includes Rob- in Austen. Jill and Bill Bureh-' field, Janell Byrne, Mary Ann Cook, Petie and Slu Dun can, Laurie and Mitch Forest, Pam and Carl Good. Rachel and Charles Gray, Sandy and Ifaglc Jackson, Cathy and Ashok Kapoor, Maria and C Peter Kauzmann. Harry and Ellen Levine, Carol and Bill Munson, Lucy Anne Newman, Nora and Jim Orphanides, Jean and Fran Pariso. Anne Reeves, the Honorable Bar- bara Sigmund. Joyce and Bob Stahl. Sally and Bill Sword, Nancy Thiel, Gail anil Petei Vielbig, and Gloria and Bob Woodside.
Since its inception seven years ago, Teamwork Dance has presented its blend ol mod ern dance, theater, and athletics to audiences through- out New Jersey. Pennsylvania, and New York. Teamwork has also presented a special 'Teamwork Demonstration" to thousands of New Jersey elementary school children over the past six years.
This season Teamwork Dance is performing at several colleges in New Jersey and Pennsylvania Teamwork will offer its annual spring concert at Kelsey Theater of Mercer County Community College next May 6.
The price of the benefit cab- aret is $25 per person, and in- cludes the show, a first drink "on the house." and dancing following the cabaret. A cash bar will be available For infor- mation and reservations, call Teamwork Dance at (201) 359- 6752.
inary applications will be avail able at the meeting for students who wish to be considered for one of AFS's exchange pro- grams
Princeton High School stu- dent David Goldstein, who travelled to Germany, and PDS student Elizabeth Bylin, who participated in a sports pro- gram in Australia, will be among the speakers who will share their experiences.
Two exchange students cur- rently spending the year in Princeton will be introduced. Susanne Dulovits is from Austria and Alexandra Maranhao is from Brazil. The high school is also hosting an ATS teacher from Thailand, Sin on Rhattani-Udom.
AFS is seeking volunteers in the Princeton area to assisi in organizing and other tasks For more information call AFS Princeton Chapter president Victoria Moy, 924-002H.
Senior Citizens' Fair Planned for October 15
The second annual Senior Citizens Autumn Fair, spon- sored by the Joint Commission on Aging and the Regional Health Commission, will be held at the Suzanne Patterson Center, Monument Drive, on Saturday, October 15. A box lunch will be served free of charge to all Princeton seniors attending. The program, which is also free, starts wilh regiS' tration at 9 a.m. and runs to 1 :30 p.m For reservations, call 497-7650.
The theme of this year's pro- gram is "Debunking Myths and Stereotypes Concerning the Elderly." Among the prevalent myths that the Joint Commis sion hopes the program will help in debunk are those that say older people are generally frail and weak; and thai they no longer have sexual appeal or
desires
movements between work- shops .
Two local singing groups, the Gospel Singers and the Double Trebles, will perform and will lead group singing The pro- gram will close with an original song by composer Malcolm ' Dodds.
Radio Youth Forum Has Golden Anniversary
The nation's longest, con- tinuously running radio vouth discussion program celebrated its 25th anniversary with a reu- nion dinner on Saturday at the AT&T Training Facility off Carter Road in Hopewell.
"Youth Speaks Up" was in- itially heard in September. 1963, over WHWH-AM. Prince- ton, when a handful of Central Jersey high school students met to air their views on a va- riety of issues ranging from dating to the Cold War
Since then, thousands of students from more than 30 high schools in Mercer, Mid- dlesex, Somerset and Bucks (Pa.) counties have debated politics, evaluated teen values, interviewed newsmakers, and
Continued on Page 20
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Ann an opening reception and registration period, the In- *\FS Students Address '"generational council ol
Informational Meeting nX'I'T "'gh Scho0' wi"
The Princeton Chapter of American Field Service i AFS i will hold an informational meeting for students and parents on Wednesday, Oc- tober 5. at 7:15 p.m: in the Princeton High School band room
The meeting will provide in- formation for families who want to host a student from a
:i Short presentation This will be followed by four work shops the luncheon speaker. Dr. Gerald Blandford, director of geriatric programs at The Medical Center at Princeton, will expand on the theme Myths and Stereotypes
Workshops will deal with ed ucational opportunities for sen- ior citizens at the high school presented by Ronald Horowitz
SOFABEDS...
foreign country and explain the and several students . physica ' fitness for the elderly.' with Anne Knudson ol the Princeton Fitness Center and George Dower of the Division on Ag- ing, sexuality among the elder ly. with Dr. Naomi Vilko, a Princeton psychiatrist and sex therapist, and the persistence and expression of the creative urge among people of all ages, demonstrated by local artisans Jocelyn Helm, director of the Senior Resource Center at Spruce Circle, will lead every- one in stretching and dance
programs for students abroad, A short video will show how it is possible to spend a full year, a semester or a summer abroad. Students can choose from a variety of programs in- cluding homestay, language study, a sports program, or a new semester program in South America or Japan.
Programs are open to all students from grades 10 through 12 and to all area schools Scholarships are avail- able for all programs Prelim-
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AUSTRALIAN WINES
1984 Angoves Cabernet Sauvignon
1986 Angoves Chardonnay 1984 Tyrrells Long Flat Red
1987 Tyrrells Long Flat White
FRENCH RED BURQUNDY
1987 Jean Bedm Cote-Du-Rhone
Village Rouge $ 5.49
N/V Fessy Rouge 4.99
1986 Jadot Beaujolais Regme 8.99
1987 Jadot Beaujolais Villages 8.99 1986 Latour Beaujolais Regme -8.49 1986 Latour Beaujolais Villages 7.99 I986 La Vielle Ferme Rouge 4.99
FRENCH WHITE BURGUNDY
N/V Fessy Blanc $ 4.99
1986 Gaudry Pouilly Fume "... 12.99
1986 Jadot Macon Villages 11.29
1986 Jadot Pouilly Fuisse 18.99
1987 Jadot Chardonnay 11.99
1987 Jadot Saint Veran 11.79
f986 Laboune-Roi Pouilly Fuisse 16.99
1985 Laneyne Pouilly Fuisse 15.99
1986 Henri Laroche Chablis 12.99
1986 Henri Laroche Puligny Montrachet 33.99
1986 Latour Chardonnay 6.99
1986 Latour Montagny 13.99
1986 Latour Pouilly Fuisse 19.99
1987 La Vielle Ferme Blanc $6.99
FRENCH RED BORDEAUX CHATEAUX
1985 Chateau Meyney Saml Estephe $27.99
FRENCH BORDEAUX REGIONALS
1967 Chateau Les Hauts De
Sainte Mane . ,..$ 5.99
1985 Maitre DEstournel Red 7.59
1986 Maitre D"Estoumel White 7.59
CALIFORNIA ROSE WINES
1987 Bel Aberes White Zintandel $ 4.99
1987 Beringer White Cabernet 7.49
1987 Beringer White Zinfandel 7.89
1987 Cypress Lane White Zinfandel 6.69
1987 Deloach White Zmlandel 7.49
1987 J Lohr White Zintandel 5.69
1987 McDowel White Zintandel 6.99
1987 Mill Creek Cabernet Blush. . 6.35
1987 Napa Ridge White Zintandel 4.99
1987 Poppy Hill White Zmlandel 6.69
1987 Robert Mondavi White Zintandel 6.99
1987 Sebastiani Eye of the Swan 5.79
1987 Simi Rose of Cabernet Sauvignon 8.59
CALIFORNIA RED WINES
1985 Acacia Pinot Noir Saint Clair $19.99
1985 Arrowood Cabernet Sauvignon 23.99
1982 Beringer Cabernet Sauvignon Chabot .33.99
1983 Beringer Cabernet Sauvignon
Private Reserve 24.99
1986 Beringer Zinfandel 9.49
1984 Burgess Cabernet Sauvignon 19.99
1985 B.V. Rutherford Cabernet Sauvignon 10.49
1985 Cakebread Cabernet Sauvignon 24.99
1983 Calera Pinot Noir Reed ' 28.99
1983 Calera Pinot Noir Sellack 29.99
1983 Caymus Cabernet Sauvignon Reserve 44.99
1985 Caymus Cabernet Sauvignon Napa 16.69
1986 Caymus Liberty Cabernet Sauvignon 9.59
1982 Conn Creek Cabernet Sauvignon 17.99
1983 Cuvaison Cabernet Sauvignon 14.99
1984 Cuvaison Cabernet Sauvignon 14.99
1985 Cuvaison Cabernet Sauvignon „ 14.99
1983 Domaine Saint George Cabernet 5.99
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1986 Fetzer Cabernet Sauvignon Lake 7.99
1985 Fieldstone Cabernet Sauvignon.
Hoot Owl 15.99
1984 Flora Springs Cabernet Sauvignon 16.69
1984 Flora Springs Merlot 10.69
1984 Franciscan Cabernet Sauvignon Napa 11.25
1985 Hess Collection Cabernet Sauvignon 15.99 1985 William Hill Cabernet Sauvignon
Reserve 22.49
1985 William Hill Cabernet Sauvignon Silver Label 14.49
1985 J Lohr Cabernet Sauvignon 6.99
1986 Kendall-Jackson Clear Lake
Cabernet Sauvignon 3,99
V/V Kenwood Vintage Red 6.49
1984 Kenwood Cabernet Sauvignon 15.99
1985 Kenwood Cabernet Sauvignon
Jack London 19.99
N/V Laurel Glen Cabernet Sauvignon Counterpoint... 16.99
1986 Napa Ridge Cabernet Sauvignon 7.49 1985 Parducci Cabernet Sauvignon 9.69
1984 Pine Ridge Cabernet Sauvignon
Stags Leap Vineyard 29.99
1985 Pine Ridge Merlot Selected Cuvee 16.99
1985 Poppy Hill Cabernet Sauvignon 9.29
1986 Qupe Syrah 14.85
1983 Raymond Cabernet Sauvignon , Private Reserve 22.99
1985 Ridge Zinfandel Geyserville 15.99
1985 Ridge Zinfandel Howell Mountain , 15.49
1985 Ridge Zinfandel York Creek 16.99
1984 Robert Mondavi Cabernet Sauvignon
Reserve 33.99
1983 Rombauer Cabernet Sauvignon 14.99
1983 Rombauer Cabernet Sauvignon
Meilleur 20.99
1986 Round Hill House Cabernet
Sauvignon 7.99
1983 Saint Clement Cabernet Sauvignon 16.69
1985 Saint Frances Merlot 15.85
1985 Saint Frances Merlot Reserve ,. 20.65
1985 Sequoia Grove Cabernet
Sauvignon Napa 35.99
1983 Shafer Cabernet Sauvignon Hillside
Select 26.99
1984 Simi Cabernet Sauvignon 14.99
CALIFORNIA WHITE WINES
1986 Arrowood Chardonnay Sonoma $20.99
1987 Au Bon Climat Chardonnay 19.49
1984 Beringer Fume Blanc Reserve 15.49
1986 Beringer Sauvignon Blanc.
Knights Valley 10.98
1987 Beringer Chenm Blanc 7.49
1987 Beringer Fume Blanc 8.35
1987 Buena Vista Chardonnay Cameras 9.99
1987 Buena Vista Sauvignon Blanc 8.59
1986 Burgess Chardonnay 15.99
1987 Byron Sauvignon Blanc... , 9.65
1986 Caymus Liberty Chardonnay 9.59
1986 Caymus Liberty Sauvignon Blanc 7.69
1984 Chateau Saint Jean Chardonnay
Frank Johnson 18.99
1984 Chateau Saint Jean Chardonnay
Napa 18.99
1985 Chateau Saint Jean Chardonnay
Belle Terres 20.99
1985 Chateau Saint Jean Chardonnay
Robert Young 28.49 -
1985 Chateau Saint Jean Fume Blanc
Robert Young 14.79
1985 Chateau Saint Jean Pilot Blanc
Robert Young ■ 12.99
1986 Chateau Montelena Chardonnay
Alexander 26.75
1986 Chateau Montelena Chardonnay
Napa 26.75
1986 Chateau Saint Jean Chardonnay
Sonoma 15.99 J
1986 Chateau Saint Jean Fume Blanc ,
Sonoma 10.35
1986 Chateau Saint Jean Fume Blanc
La Petit Ettoile 15.39
1986 Chateau Saint Michelle Chardonnay 11.49
1987 Chateau Saint Jean Gewurztra miner
Sonoma 11.79
1987 Chateau Saint Jean Vin Blanc 6.45
1986 Clos Pegase Chardonnay 13.99
1986 Clos Pegase Sauvignon Blanc 9.99
1986 Clos Robert Chardonnay 7.99
1987 Cuvaison Chardonnay 16.99
1987 Domaine Saint George Chardonnay 6.99
1987 Domaine Saint George Sauvignon
Blanc La Gravelle 5.99
1987 Ferran-Carano Fume Blanc 10.79
1986 Fetzer Chardonnay Barrel Select 11.99
1987 Fetzer Fume Blanc Valley Oak* 7 49
1987 Fetzer Sundial Chardonnay 8.49
1986 Flora Springs Chardonnay Barrel I Fermented 23. 99
1986 Franciscan Chardonnay Napa 11.25
'1986 Girard Chardonnay 17. 99
1986 Grand Cru Sauvignon Blanc 10.49
1987 Grand Cru Chenm Blanc 7.55 1986 Hess Collection Napa Chardonnay 15.49 1986 Hidden Cdllars Chardonnay 14.49
J'1986 William Hill Chardonnay Gold Label «
Reserve 17.99
j 1986 Jepson Sauvignon Blanc 8.99
1985 Jordan Chardonnay 22.99
1986 J Lohn Chardonnay Greenfield 9.99
1987 Kendall Jackson Chardonnay 11.99
V/V Kenwood Vintage White 6.49
, 1986 Kenwood Chardonnay, Yalupa 14.49
1 1986 Kenwood Sauvignon Blanc 10.29
1987 Kenwood Sauvignon Blanc 10.69
1985 Landmark Chardonnay 10.99
1986 Long Chardonnay 36.99
1987 Long Sauvignon Blanc 16.99
1 1986 Matanzas Creek Sauvignon Blanc 14.99
1986 Matanzas Creek Sonoma Chardonnay 22.99
1987 McDowel Fume Blanc 7.35
1986 Monticello Corley Chardonnay 18.69
1986 Monticello Jefferson Chardonnay 11.65
1966 Monticello Sauvignon Blanc
Est Btl'd 7.99
' 1987 Napa Ridge Sauvignon Blanc 5.99
V 1987 Pacifica White .4.79
f£ 1986 Parducci Chardonnay 9.69
Y 1986 Pine Ridge Chardonnay Knollside
\ Cuvee 16.89
C 1987 Pine Ridge Chenm Blanc
^, Yontville Cuvee 7.99
§ 1986 Poppy Hill Chardonnay - 9.29
v» 1986 Poppy Hill Sauvignon Bianc 7.49
^ 1985 Raymond Chardonnay Private
Reserve 22.99
1985 Robert Mondavi Chardonnay
Reserve 29.99
1986 Robert Mondavi Chardonnay 17.99
1986 Robert Mondavi Fume Blanc 11.99
1985 Rombauer Chardonnay Napa 15.99
1986 Round Hill House Fume Blanc 5.99
1987 Round Hill House Chardonnay 6.99
1987 R.H. Phillips Chenin Blanc 5.69
1985 Saint Clement Chardonnay 15.99
1986 Saint Clement Sauvignon Blanc 11.49
1987 Saint Frances Chardonnay
Barrel Select 16.49
1987 Saint Frances Chardonnay 11.99
1985 Simi Chardonnay 15.99
1986 Sonoma Cutrer Chardonnay Russian
River Ranches 13.99
1986 Sonoma Cutrer Chardonnay
Les Pierres 21.99
1986 Vichon Chardonnay 17.99
ITALIAN RED WINES
1985 Convito Chianti Classico * $ 5.99
1983 Duchi Montepulciano Oro 9.49
1985 Rubmo Montepulciano D'Abruzzo 7.99
1982 Salice Salentino Rosso 4.99
ITALIAN WHITE WINES
1987 San Quirico Vernaccia $ 6.99
1987 Santa Margernta Chardonnay 10.99
1987 Strozzi Vernaccia 8.59
1987 Vaselli Orvieto Secco 5.99
RIOJA RED WINES
1975 Marques De Caceres Riserva 522.99
1978 Marques De Caceres Riserva 20.99
1981 Marques De Caceres Riserva 16.49
1985 Marques De Caceres Rioja Red 6.99
987 Marques De Caceres White 4.59 I
1984 Los Vascos Cabernet Sauvignon 4.99
1985 Marques De Riscal Red 889
1986 Royal Privilege Red 3.49
All sizes 750 ML unless otherwise noted.
SPARKLING WINES
1983 Robert Hunter Brut De Noirs S16.89
1985 Pierre Leon Brut 6.99
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Princeton-Hightstown Road (609) 799-0530
(1st left over the bndge from Princeton)
sponsible for rypoftr&prucAJ errors SheH pnces prevail in cam of error
966 Unit Yorkshire Village Will Put Added Pressure on This Area
With prime developable land becoming Increasing!)
scarce marginal properties that have not been developed — " often for good reason — become the only land available j IV\ elopers, hoping to cash in on Ihe building boom while it I lasts, purchase these properties, often at high prices, and find J themselves faced with various building constraints around I which they must try to develop a site plan. Meanwhile, stif- 1 ter State and Federal regulations have been enacted to pro- : tect the environment, and State, county and local agencies \ are competing for areas in which to locate badly needed in- j frastructure for the region
'■ Yorkshire Village, a proposed residential development of j 966 townhouse and apartment units on 160 acres behind the : Mercer Mall, is an example of all these forces at work The i property is an irregularly shaped tract bounded on the east : bv the D&R Canal and on the west by the Mall A tnangular. f piece touches Route 1 close to the Quaker Bridge Mall over- l pass, but for the most part the land lies behind properties { fronting on Route 1 and stretches north and south from merg- j ed Quaker Road'Province Line Road to woodlands iwhich ; are also wetlands > near the intersection for the Motor Vehi- f cle Inspection Station.
At one corner is the historic Port Mercer area, which in- j eludes an early canal house on the State and national historic , register which is owned and managed by the Lawrence : Historical Society Most of the land was owned by the Vae- * caro family, and over the years asparagus was grown and chickens and beefalo were raised on the open areas The pro- perty was zoned at five units an acre, but it was rezoned a year ago to six units an acre as a site for Mt Laurel ROUS ing. The proximity of the tract to Route i jolis, shopping centers and public transportation made it seem well suited for Mt Laurel housing, and it is part of Lawrence Township"s Mt Laurel compliance package approved by Judge Eugene I) Serpentelli
Revised Site Plan
A partnership from Florham Park and Hackensack call- ing itself Lawrenceville Associates proposes to build 966 units on the property, reserving 193 units as Mt. Laurel housing. The site plan has undergone several revisions since it was first shown to the Lawrence Planning Board in 1987 In the most recent version, four five-story apartment buildings have been.included, two behind the Mall and two toward the mid- dle of the property.
Each building would have 14 units a floor, for a total of 280 one- and two-bedroom apartments. The remaining 686 units will be in three-bedroom townhouses. 72 "luxury" units loose- ly clustered near Port Mercer, the rest lined up along a "spine" road through the tract and filling every nook and cranny of the developable portion of the site. Tennis courts and swimming pools are planned for recreation and are located close to Route l.
Yorkshire Village could add 2,500 to 3,000 new residents to the Lawrence Township population, including many children to an already burdened school system Parking for some 2,200 cars is proposed on site.
Building Constraints
Although the property is flat, there are many constraints to development There are extensive wetlands to the south
and along the Canal which are regulated by the stale and by a federal permitting process Present D&R Canal Commis- sion regulations prohibit development within 250 feet of the (anal the Commissions proposed regulations, if approved, would be more stringent
In addition, the Mercer County circulation plan proposes secondary roads parallel to Route 1 to relieve Route 1 con- gestion. One of these secondary roads is proposed to come through lands in West Windsor west of Route 1 and through this tract to connect with a cloverleaf at Route 1. •
The County also proposes to extend Province Line Road through a corner of the property across a new bridge over the Canal to connect with the new overpass over Route 1, making Province Line an east -west artery The new bridge is proposed to be built south of the existing bridge at Port Mercer, at the point where Province Line makes a sharp bend The County believes a three-lane bridge would be necessary, with a traffic light at the juncture of Quaker Road to allow left and right turns to and from Princeton Lawrence planners want to keep the rural character of Province Line Road and thus favor a two-lane bridge. There is also a ques- tion of whether the bridge could be built at all. because of the disturbance to wetlands that would be required.
Access Problems
The main access to Yorkshire Village will be from existing merged Quaker/Province Line Road west of the Canal However, for public safety as well as convenience for the residents, a development of this size is required to have a second access. Stiffer wetland legislation may preclude an access through the south end of the property to Route 1 — where the County's proposed parallel route is shown — and thus force it to go through Mercer Mall, exiting on Route 1 at Denny's and Toys 'R' Us. The revised site plan shows the spine road ending in a circle at the edge of the woodlands /wet lands, on the theory that the road could be ex- tended to Route 1 at a later date if the wetlands issue is resolved.
The problems associated with the site led the Lawrence Planning Board to call a special meeting recently to give all the interested agencies an opportunity to speak their piece and perhaps to get some resolution of the issues But as Plan- ning Board member William Agress remarked close to the end of the five-hour session, "Rarely have so many people from so many different agencies sat so long and accomplish- ed so fittle."
Much of the discussion centered on the proposed new bridge across the D&R Canal. Canal Commission policy states that when a new bridge is built an old bridge must be removed or retired to pedestrian status. This would mean that the ex- isting bridge at Port Mercer would be limited to pedestrians or bicyclists.
All of the Canal bridges are two-lane, and executive direc- tor James Amon said the Commission would favor a two-lane bridge here as well. Mr. Amon also suggests that that the stretches of Quaker Road and Province Line Road that run along the Canal dyke be closed to traffic. In this scheme Quaker Road would serve the farm properties along it but end at the Canal. Province Line Road would continue along the new bridge, which the developer has agreed to construct
Continued on Neil Page
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Yorkshire Village Development
Continued t'O"1 Pieeeding Page
The County believes a traffic light would be necessary im- mediately west of the new bridge, to ailow those travelling from Princeton to make a left hand turn onto the bridge. The Canal Commission favors putting that light at the intersec- tion of Princeton Pike and Province Line Road.
Robert Rodgers, Lawrence Township's traffic consultant, believes a three-lane bridge is necessary, and points out that the proposed bridge makes a major intersection with Pro- vince Line Road. "If you can't deliver that intersection pro- perly, you may have a bridge that can't function.'' he told the gathering of experts last week. He argued for keeping the existing bridge at Port Mercer to accommodate heavy traffic from Princeton.
Donald Doele, president of Province Line Region Preser- vation Association, pointed out that Province Line Road is flooded several times a year with a foot or more of water Thus the bridge would have to be high enough to be passable, and in his opinion, would become "a major structure," block- ing the view of one of the loveliest areas of the canal.
Mr. Doele also expressed dismay that the road plan "puts all the traffic at North Lawrence," where traffic conditions are already very severe.
Location Of Mt. Laurel Units
Another issue of concern was the fact that 165 of the 193 _Mt. Laurel units would be located in the four apartment "buildings The remaining 28 would be three-bedroom units at the end of rows of townhouse units.
Jack Underwood, chairman of the Lawrence Affordable Housing Board, told the developer that the key to success in Mt. Laurel projects is to disperse the units. "When you cram them into one place, you have friction," Mr. Underwood said. He warned the developer that, if the units were not dispers- ed throughout the project, the Affordable Housing Board would vote against recommending the project to the town.
Samuel Herzog, a financial backer for the project, argued that the ratio of townhouses to flats was "crucial" to the suc- cess of the project. Pressed to incorporate one- and two- bedroom Mt. Laurel units throughout the site plan. Mr Her- zog balked, on the grounds that they would look out of place But he did agree, somewhat reluctantly, to consider adding a few more three-bedroom units as Mt. Laurel units.
Site Plan Faulted
The site plan itself was criticized by Anton Nelessen, part- ner in the planning firm Heintz/ Nelessen Association, Lawrence Township's planning consultants. Mr. Nelessen pointed out that "buildings come and go, but the road system remains," and thus the road structure becomes really critical But his main concern was that the architect and site planner had not used the building "to create a sense of place."
Mr. Nelessen said that a more traditional urban form would be preferable, with buildings placed in such a way as to define "an enclosure or give a focus. He called the plan "a jumble of buildings without structure' ' and criticized the lack of semi- private or interior space for the residents. "The pedestrian network goes from one parking lot to another," he com- plained.
Lawrence Stern, of Stern Ring, architects for the project, agreed with him in principle, but said that designing the pro- ject had been complicated by the fact that the "givens" kept changing. He cited the alignment of Province Line Road through the project, the extensive wetlands and the issues surrounding the 250-foot buffer and the requirement not to site the detention ponds in that buffer. "The site is hindered by all these forces acting on it," Mr Stern said. Density Too High?
Leo Laaksonen, Mercer County planner, questioned whether the 966 units are a "given ." "The Mercer County Planning Board may not accept that," Mr. Laaksonen said. He told the group that the County is undertaking a com- prehensive traffic study of the entire area and would include this tract and its effects on Princeton Pike and Route 206. He suggested that a fifth apartment building ought to be con- sidered in order to free up space within the development
Mr. Doele agreed there should be a comprehensive traffic study, pointing out that whenever there is a problem on Route ■i traffic floods the local roads, which are already operating at or near capacity. He also agreed that the problem with the Yorkshire Village proposal "is that the density is too high." He said members of his neighborhood organization would be out in force when the application next comes before the Lawrence Planning Board on November 11.
Dickey Dyer, vice chairman of the Ewing Lawrence Sewer Authority, reminded the developer that although there is capacity in the treatment plant there are hurdles to surmount in obtaining permission to extend the sewer lines. Under the terms of the ELSA contract with Lawrence, enlargement of existing sewer lines can be arranged with ELSA, but permis- sion to extend new lines must be authorized by the Lawrence Council. Both are involved in this project, he said.
Lawrence Township Mayor Carol Harle raised many issues related to traffic and safety. She asked whether motorists driving 50 miles per hour on the overpass over Route 1 would slow down as they passed through Yorkshire Village, and whether residents would have difficulty entering and leav- ing the project. She asked whether there should be a traffic signal at the Mercer Mall exit by the K-Mart. and would the developer pay a pro rata share.
* But principally, Mayor Harle was concerned about impact on municipal services. She suggested there should be an economic analysis. "Is this going to be a net gain?" she
Recognizing that this site will contribute a substantial number of Lawrence Township's 911 Mt. Laurel units, other planning board members seemed more ready to "make the best of it " as Dr Douglas Megill, Planning Board chairman put it. But they asked for a better design, and some questioned the density
—Barbara L. Johnson
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* Topics of the Town
; taken their microphones on ! location to such places as : Washington P C . Boston. ! Montreal, and Williamsburg.
Among those interviewed i over the years have been Dr '. Norman Vincent Peale. United ; States Senator Bill Bradley, au- i thor John McPhee. and David i Dodge, recording secretary at j Princeton University who had ! been held hostage in Lebanon '_ For more information about > the reunion, call Frank Clark at ■ 4661710 High school students f interested in participating in I the show should write. "Youth J Speaks Up," 120 John Street, : Princeton
m
s
W
S "Night on the Town" § To Benefit Day School
^ The Parents Association of 5 Princeton Day School plans a O two part fundraiser entitled "A Night on the Town "One part consists of the sale of an enter- tainment and leisure lime pro motional coupon book worth more than $300 and the other an evening of dinner and dancing to launch the book's publica- tion.
The party will take place Saturday, October 15, at Princeton Forrestal Village It will begin at 6:30 p.m. with champagne and hors d'oeuvre at Boomerang in the Princeton Marriott Hotel and continue with dinner and wine at Woodrow's Restaurant. The evening will conclude with desserts, dancing and enter tainment at the Market Hall
&£*
FUNDRAISING EFFORT: Princeton Day School parents, from left, Tina Greenberg, Brenda Eckardt and Muriel Rosenfeld check printer proofs for the money-saving coupon book the Parents Association Is offering for sale to the community.
"We want to make sure that people understand that they can participate in either aspect of this fund-raising activity, or both,'' nottjd Brenda Eckardt, a member of the steering com- mittee Other members are Judy Feldman. Suzanne (kildenson. Arlene Schragger and Connie Woodford
Tickets for the night on the town are $60 per person Patron tickets also are available for $100. They may be obtained by calling the development office at Princeton Day School, 924- 6700, extention 219.
The coupon book contains more than 100 money-saving discount offers from area busi- ness and cultural organizations which can be redeemed during the next 12 months. It features everything from free concert and theater tickets to special prices on fashion, flowers, din- ing, travel, exercise classes and a balloon flight
Cost of the book is $20 if pur- chased on or before October 15, and $25 after. Group sales of 10 or more bring the cost down to $15 per copy. The coupon book also may be purchased by call- ing the school
Special Programs Set At the Public Library
The Public Library will begin its fall programs on Tuesday, October 4, at 8 when William Leap, a South Jersey historian, delves into the mysteries of the Jersey Devil. The program is suggested for children in grades 7 and up and their fam- ilies.
Stories for children ages 2 to V- will be told Tuesdays at II a.m. starting October 4 Regis- tration is under way.
Preschool stories for children ages 3'^ to 5 will begin Tues- day, October 18, at 2 p.m. Reg- istration begins October 4. Oth- er programs for preschool and school-age children include films, a stamp swap, a Latin American Festival, and authors Ann Martin and Bill McCleery.
Brochures listing other events, plus times and dates of programs, are available at the Library.
St. Paul Fundraiser: Raffle for Nine Prizes
St. Paul School PTA is spon- soring its annual Ten Week Club The first ticket will be drawn on October 17 for an escape weekend at the Resi- dence Inn of Princeton and din- ner at Village Green Seafood Grill.
Every week, thereafter, for nine more weeks, a ticket will be drawn for prizes such as a "Manhattan Evening for Four'* with limousine, an Apple HE computer package, a video cam-corder, a $1000 furniture gift certificate, dinners at area restaurants, and a fur jacket. The value of all the prizes comes to more than $7,700. This is a major fundraiser for St. Paul School
Tickets cost $10 and may be obtained by calling 520-9029.
Open House Each Week At Familyborn Center
Familyborn holds open house and a tour of the birthing cen- ter every week on Mondays at 12 30 and Wednesdays at 7 30, to which families and in- dividuals interested in birthing alternatives are invited
Familyborn provides mid- wifery gynecological, prenatal and birthing care in a home- like setting and supports family -centered birth. It is located at 21 Wiggins Street, and the phone number is 683- 5100.
Rummage Sale Planned By St. Paul's School PTA
St. Paul's School PTA will hold its annual rummage sale on Friday, October 21, from 9 to 5 and Saturday, October 22, from 9 to 3 in the church hall
There will be books, shoes, quality clothing, toys, housewares, plants, linens and other items A Golden Elephant table will feature more expen- sive items, including jewelry.
Tennis Center to Host 150th Birthday Salute
In conjunction with Mercer County's 150th birthday celebration, the County's Out- door Tennis Center will be the hose site of a "County Tennis Festival'' on Saturday and Sun- day at the Outdoor Tennis Cen- ter in Mercer County Park
There is no admission to this two-day event which will fea- ture an exhibition match with Gov Thomas Keanand partner playing against Tug McGraw and" partner The exhibition match will take place on Satur- day at 4 p.m.
For further information on other activities which will in- clude adult tennis clinics, call the Park Commission office at 989-6533.
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Mountain Lake Nature Walk
I .cl.i in I Merrill will lead a walk through Mountain Lakes Nature Preserve on Sunday, October 2, from 9:30 to 11 a.m,
Dr. Merrill is on the board of directors of the Audubon Society and has led walks for the Recreation Depart- ment For more information call 924-8720, weekdays from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
5
It's Autumn Decorating Time! J Dried flowers in bunches
German or English Statice Gomphrena Baby's Brealh Bloom Broom
Eucalyptus Strawflowers
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Fall Decorations
Wooden Picks • Plastic Corn • Terra Cotta Clay or Ceramic Pumpkins
Grapevine and Straw Wreaths
Plain or Fancy
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in bud and bloom
Ornamental Flowering Kale
Fresh Cut Flowers and Arrangements ^Silk Flowers by the stem or arranged
Indoor Plants • Foliage or Blooming
Clay and Ceramic Pots Wicker Baskets . Potting Soil Pesticide, and Craft Supplies
Perna's
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189 Washington Road 452-1383
M-F 9-5:30 Saturday 94:30 Sunday 10-4
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development which was denied sewer capacity on the grounds that Plainsboro is not a mem- ber of the SBRSA and lies in the Middlesex County Utilities Authority sewer district. Al- though the 560-unit housing pro- ject includes Mount Laurel af- fordable housing, the Judge rul- ed that he could not allocate the scarce resource outside of the sewer district.
Among other area projects receiving sewer capacity is the huge Countrvside at Princeton, a 1500-unit townhouse and con- dominium development near Meadow Road in West Windsor. This project, which includes Mount Laurel affordable units, will require more than 400,000 gallons capacity per day. Also receiving reserved capacity are two affordable housing pro- jects in South Brunswick and the 39-lot Windsor/Princeton Estates housing development in West Windsor.
Developers apply directly to the SBRSA to reserve sewer capacity Early this year, how- ever, Calton Homes was con- cerned that the SBRSA was running out of capacity and fil- ed a scarce resources motion for its White Farm develop- ment before Judge Serpentelli. The judge hears Mt. Laurel cases in the Central New Jer- sey area and is currently hear- ing Calton Home's case against Princeton Township.
Other developers joined in fil- ing scarce resources restrain- ing motions along with the Bor- ough, Township and Univer- sity. Calton Homes has since received its sewer allocation from SBRSA, leaving the judge to allocate the remaining capacity.
The scarce resources order prevents towns from delaying affordable housing plans with
-i
the excuse that sewer, water or land is lacking At risk is the limited sewer capacity at the SBRSA's River Road plant With a variety of huge projects coming before the SBRSA. sewer capacity is an increas- ingly scarce resource.
Recent estimates reveal that the plant is allocated about 500.000 gallons per day short of current capacity of 10 million gallons a day The authority has applied to increase capaci- ty to 800,000 gallons per day without the need for additional construction. A project set for completion in early 1989 will in- crease capacity for re-rating to 11 4 mgd. Future construction plans will eventually increase capacity to 13.6 mgd according to the SBRSA.
The judge's ruling reserves the current remaining 10 mgd capacity, leaving developers in line for future increases. Under a court order from Judge Serpentelli, the SBRSA has not been able to act on new applica- tions pending his decision.
—Alison Connors
Asbestos
■ ■■
the facilities after the original clean-up.
"We were not satisfied with the work either," she said. "We said we'd continue the clean- up. But they left us angry and threatening lawsuits. I have never seen two people so angry "
Addressing the Thursday meeting. Dr. Richard Mann, a faculty member at the Univer- sity of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, said that there may be a potential health hazard from asbestos to users of the Y. "The risk is relative- ly low compared to people who work in industry, but it is real." He said that there are two forms of health ha i from low levels of asbc. ;: lung
cancer and a specific type of malignant tumor
Dr Melvin Benarde drew an- ger from some members of the audience when he questioned the danger involved in small levels of asbestos. Dr. Benarde, associate director of the Asbestos Abatement Center at Temple University, Philadel- phia, said that the idea that asbestos presence is deadly and dangerous is not true. "Radon is a worse problem, and that's not so terrible," he said. "If there was a problem with asbestos at low levels, there would be evidence. It has been around since the 1890's, and us- ed in over 3.000 products."
'Asbestos Free Zone.' Mrs
Bucciarelli told the audience of some 40 persons that she would like to set up a committee com- posed of concerned citizens to help building owners deal with asbestos abatement. "I would like to make Princeton an asbestos-free zone," she said.
John Hageman, a board member of the YMCA, attend- ed the meeting in an unofficial capacity: as a private citizen and not as a representative of the Y. He said that a fortune had been spent on testing "Our tests show the building is safe, and we can't afford more mon- ey."
Mr. Swoszowski told the group he would be willing to re- turn to the Y, look at the data, and walk through the building to confirm the test results. However, the bad feelings be- tween the Y and the parents' group would seem to make this an unlikely scenario.
Members of the audience of- fered to arrange bake sales and do other fund-raising activities to raise money for the Y*s asbestos abatement programs The building contains asbestos in other areas — as do many older public buildings — and these will be checked regular-
ly to make certain thai par tides do not bfcomf airborn<- Mrs Rayner said she would be glad to talk to the concern ed parents groups about the bake sales and other fund
i .ir li,;1 r!< .1
We don't have funds for this
Topics of the Town I
G22GJ ! ' «.."■ i=h ran*
US Highway 130 Windtor 448-1667 FR£l
Rummage Sale Planned For Waldorf Scholarship
The Waldorf School will hold a Rummage Sale to benefit the scholarship fund on Saturday. October 8, from 9 to 3 at Johnson Park School
The sale will include books, toys, furniture, baby items, household goods and tools. For more information call 466-3568.
Open House Friday For Prospective Students
University League Nursery School will hold an Open House for prospective students and their parents. Friday from 12 to 1 : 30 p. m . There w i 1 1 be oppor- tunities to visit classrooms, meet teachers and sample play experiences available to ULNS children,
Located at 171 Broadmead, University League Nursery School is a parent cooperative program. It offers classes for children ages 3 to ready-for- kindergarten. Classes meet from 8:45-11:30. Four-year-olds attend five days a week, while three-year-olds may be enroll- ed in either three- for five-day- a-week sessions. There is also an optional noncooperative ex- tended day program from 11 : 30 to 1
The Open House also laun- ches registration for the 1989-90 school year. Registration forms will be available at the Open House or may be obtained by contacting registrar. May Kaplan, at 924-6370.
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PEOPLE in the News
; \rea Furniture Maker
] Receives State Grant
John Hein. of Ewing. a studio
\ furniture maker, has been
J awarded a 1988-89 New Jersey
■ State Council on the Arts m- i dividual fellowship in crafts. : He plans to use the fellowship ; to develop new. more expres
: statistic forms, and to write
: about his work i His furniture has been ex
i hibited at the New Jersey State
■ Museum, the Delaware Art ; Museum, the Trenton City ; Museum, and galleries such as I Pritam & Karnes, the Snyder- ; man Gallery', and the Mogul ! Gallery
; Lois A. Madsen, 23 Laurel Road, has been awarded the CREA (Certified Real Estate Appraiser) designation from the National Association of Real Estate Appraisers. She is an appraiser with Edgar B Madsen
Cadet Michael Stefanchik IV. son of Michael and Martha J Stefanchik, 151 Hamilton Ave nue, received practical work in military leadership at the US. Army ROTC advanced camp. Fort Lewis, Wash He is a stu
dent at the University of Notre Dame.
Navy Midshipman Christo- pher A. Pellegrlno, son of Ar- thur P. and Manon Pellegrino, 77 Copperbeech Drive, Rocky Hill, received the American Veterans of World War II. Ko rea and Vietnam Award.
He was cited for dedication to duty and willingness to serve the United States while serving
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3730 LawrencevUle Road (Rt. 206) between LawrencevUle 8t Princeton
with Navy ROTC Unit, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y.
Cadet Keith V. Delcampe, son of Victor Delcampe. 4 Hathaway Drive. Princeton Junction, received practical work in military leadership at the US Army ROTC advanc ed camp. Fort Bragg, N.C. He is a student at St. Lawrence University, Canton, N.Y
Marine 1st Lt Adrian S. Villaruz, son of Augusto A. and Amelita S Villaruz, 370 Burnt Hill Road, Skillman, has been promoted to his present rank while serving with 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing. Marine Corps Air Station, Camp Pendleton. Calif
A 1982 graduate of Mont- gomery High School, he joined the Marine Corps in July. 1983
Works by Jennifer Carch- man, 4 Howe Circle, a student at Princeton High School, and Joni Owen, 255 Harrison Street, a Princeton High School grad- uate, are among contributions by 88 high school students in- cluded in the seventh issue of The Apprentice Writer, an an- nual Susquehanna University publication featuring student writings, photography and art work.
Miss Carchman submitted a short story, "The Sixth Sense," and photographs. Miss Owen submitted an essay, "August."
Among the new officers of Mercer County Community College's chapter of Phi Theta Kappa, a national honor socie- ty, are several area residents.
They are, Jeffrey A. Yuhasz, of Belle Mead, first vice presi- dent; Darryl R. Bobletz. of Hopewell, second vice presi- dent; Sieglinde Heinzerling. of Princeton, treasurer; and Kathleen M. Martz, of Prince- ton, recording secretary.
Four area residents have entered Carleton College, Northfield, Minn.
They are, Joni Owen, daugh- ter of Carol Owen of Harrison Street and Stephen Owen of New York City, a graduate of Princeton High School and a National Merit Scholar; J. Mark Powell, son of the Rev John and Janet Powell, Snowden Lane, a graduate of Princeton High School, Catherine Suter. daughter of Lauren and Ann Suter, Cherry Valley Road, a graduate of Princeton Day School ; and Jen- nifer Horn, daughter of Henry and Elizabeth Horn, Stonyford Pretty Brook Broad, a gradu- ate of Hopewell Valley Central High School.
Eric A. Dahl. son of Dr and Mrs, R. Dahl of Princeton Junction, has graduated from Juniata College, Huntingdon, Pa., with a bachelor of science degree.
Navy Lt Patrick J. Keenan, son of Mr and Mrs Patrick J Keenan Sr . of 17 Random Road, recently completed the Engineering Duty Officer School. Mare Island, Vallejo. Calif
During the six-week course, he received instruction in the plans, programs, policies and procedures by which the Navy accomplishes the lifecycle en- gineering of Navy ships and systems.
A 1978 graduate of Princeton High School, Lt. Keenan joined the Navy after graduating from the University of Pennsylvania with a degree in chemistry in 1982.
Markus B. Heyder. son of Mr. and Mrs. Ekkehard Heyder, 439 Walnut Lane, and Chrstopher P. Duva, son of Mr and Mrs. George J Duva of Skillman, have been named college scholars, the highest recognition for academic achievement, for the spring term at Middlebury College.
Stephanie C. Cooper, daugh- ■ .ed on Ne<i Page
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People
( ConimuM hom P.eced-ng Page
ter of Mr and Mrs. John M Cooper, 182 Western Way, has attained dean's list status for the spring term at Middlebury, the second highest recognition for academic achievement at the school.
Shirley Bishop, of Princeton, has been named assistant director of the New Jersey
Council on Affordable Housing She had formerly been the council's chief housing special- ist.
Five Princeton residents will attend St. Lawrence Univer- sity, Canton, N.Y. They are, Joseph F. Gigliotti, 452 Stockton Stret, a graduate of Portsmouth Abbey School; Paul A. Greco, 10 AJta Vista Drive, a graduate of the Hun School ; Christopher E. Peter, 53 Battle Road, a graduate of Pomfret School; Julie L. Stef- Jens. 358 Wendover Drive, a graduate of Princeton High School; and Benjamin H. Travers, 1781 Stuart Road, a graduate of Avon Old Farms School.
Four Princeton residents have completed eight weeks of intensive training in the fine arts at the National Music Camp in Interlochen, Mich.
They are, Austin Frakt. son of Steven Frakt (trumpet); Esther Hamori, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andras Hamori (violin); Gabriel Ostriker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah Ostriker (choir); and Vanessa Vannier, daughter of Laura En- cinas (dance).
Al Leister, athletic director of Mercer County Community College, was honored by the National Junior College Athletic Association with a scholarship to the United States Olympic Academy seminar " held this summer at Perm State University. More than 300 athletic directors attended.
David Popenoe, 92 Moore Street, professor of sociology
and past chairman of the department at Rutgers Univer sity in New Brunswick, has been appointed associate dean for social and behavioral sciences in the Faculty of Arts and Science
Merrill Price, 464 Ewing
Street, has been named to the Consultant Court of Personal Sales at Mary Kay Cosmetics' national seminar. Ms. Price, who joined the company in 1985, received the award for her outstanding achievements in the 150.000-member sales force
Carol Katz, of Princeton and Manhattan, has been named a vice president of the Financial Services Corporation of New York City. She joined the cor- poration in February as assist- ant to the commissioner, a title she will retain.
Lynetta Murphy of Prince- ton, an independent sales direc- tor for Mary Kay Cosmetics, Inc participated in a three-day business management seminar in Dallas.
Bruce Adams, 271 Edgers- toune Road, has been awarded the Air Force Commendation medal for his work with the 69th Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron, a reserve unit with the 514th Military Airlift Wing at McGuire Air Force Base
Master Sergeant Adams is an aeromedical evacuation techni- cian and has been with the unit since 1977.
Joseph M. Hughes, of Prince- ton Junction, formerly vice president -facilities at Applied Data Research, has formed Commercial Office Planning, Inc., a network of facilities planning consultants in office planning The new firm is located in Monmouth Junction.
Marine Lt. Col. T.D. Seder,
son of Florence W. Seder, 176 Cedar Lane, has returned from a deployment to Marine Corps Air Station Yuma, Ariz., with 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing, Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort. S.C.
Christopher D. Galiardo. 56
Crooked Tree Lane, served as an intern on the legal staff of Gov. Michael Dukakis in Bos- ton this summer. Mr. Galiardo, a 1983 graduate of Princeton High School, graduated in 1987 from Colgate University. He is a second-year law student at Boston University Law School.
A 1966 graduate of Muhlenberg College, Allen- town, Pa., he joined the Marine Corps in August 1966.
Kith. -rine M. Wise, daughter of Donald and Helen Wise. 16 Fieldston Road, has entered Bates College as a freshman. A graduate of West Windsor- Plainsboro High School, she participated in the Reach-Out program and the Model United Nations.
A $1,000 college scholarship has been awarded to Evan M. Frisch of Princeton by the publisher of Who's Who Among American High School Students.
A student at Yale University, Mr. Frisch was an honor stu- dent at Princeton High School. He participated in chemistry team, math team, student council, and school paper, in addition to being a National Merit finalist.
Janet McKay, associate pro-
vost at Princeton University, was named 1988 Woman of the Year at the University of Mary- land where she was assistant to the chancellor until this sum- mer She was selected by the commission on women's affairs at the university and shares the honor with another awardee
Ms McKay is recognized for campus citizenship, scholar- ship and advocacy on behalf of women, minorities and other members of the university community.
Todd Caruso, of Trenton, a member of the American Boychoir, was soloist with the choir and the New York Philharmonic in the September 21 opening-night performance of Leonard Bernstein's Chichester Psalms-
Chosen by conductor Zubin Mehta, Todd, who is in his sixth and final year at the American Boychoir School, appeared with the Philharmonic at Avery Fisher Hall in Lincoln Center as part of the year-long tribute in honor of Maestro Bernstein's 70th birthday.
Ebony J. Fitch, daughter of Joyce Fitch. 238 John Street, has entered Hood College, Frederick, Md., for the fall se- mester. She is a graduate of Princeton High School, where she was a member of the basketball team
Cadet Ronald E. Phillips, son
of William and Deborah Phillips, 14 Phillip Drive, re- ceived practical work in military leadership at the U.S. Army ROTC advanced camp, Fort Bragg, N.C. He is a stu- dent at Brown University.
Cadet Arthur H. Agin, son of Norman and Adele Agin, 67 Crooked Tree Lane, received practical work in military leadership at the U.S. Army ROTC advanced camp. Fort Riley, Kan. He is a student at Georgia Institute of Technol- ogy, Atlanta.
Jinsun Park. 176 Von Neumann Drive, has graduat- ed from Ohio State University, Columbus.
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SAFE RIDES CAN SAVE LIVES
Princeton Safe Rides is a school-year program run by students, for students. It offers a free, safe and confidential ride home to young people who feel they are unable to drive themselves or who choose not to ride home with someone who is im- paired. Its goal is to prevent alcohol-related automobile accidents.
Drinking Is Not Condoned
Safe Rides should not be thought of as condon- ing teenage drinking. The program was developed as a response to the rising number of automobile accidents related to teenage drinking or drug use. Its main purpose is to prevent needless deaths.
Safe Rides is affiliated with the Boy Scouts of America. An all-volunteer program, it also depends on the contributions of area businesses and organizations.
: Merrill Lynch
Abmxl j[fcin.
194 Nassau Street Princeton, N.J.
Princeton University
-i *Cr~6~*&*4r-4?*& 4r-^- &- s7-"^*4*-4s-jrr*^*4r*4?v4r*4?»^
How It Works
Safe Rides is available to students on Friday and Saturday evenings between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. During these hours, a trained team of volunteers (usually one adult and six students) staff a con- fidential hotline which dispatches rides.
When a youngster calls, he must use his or her real name for insurance purposes. The caller will only be taken home; never to another party. If an individual is drunk to the point of incapacitation, he or she would not be taken home unless it were verified that a parent was there.
What Safe Rides Does:
• Develops an awareness among high school students of the danger to themselves and others of driving while under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
• Provides a safe trip home for teenage drivers under the influence of alcohol or drugs, and for those riding with them.
• Creates a service opportunity for high school students.
• Provides an opportunity for students at Princeton public and private schools to work together and to get to know each other.
Volunteers Needed
Student volunteers and adult volunteers are now being sought by Safe Rides.
Needed are volunteers to act as drivers, riders and dispatchers. Registration fee is $5.
Students or adults wishing to volunteer should call Aurora Bearse at 921-3155.
n
LIGHT
247 Nassau Street
URKEN.
BECAUSE TODAY'S HARDWARE STORE IS MORE THAN JUST NUTS & ROUS.
27 Witherspoon St. 924-3076
Route 1
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Lawrenceville, N.J.
609-520-0500
One Palmer Square Princeton, N.J. 08542
609-924-6088
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Route 206 & Cherry Valley Road '
— — &, .„,
godsons, David Hill of Rich mond, Va.. and Terrance Wooding of Princeton; and
Pi^niic r5K20'Parkseveral dear f™nds, Rosa Place, died September 21 at his Brown of Lawrenceville and
Rnrni„p , „ c Betty Brown. Clara Hinson an
»« a i , t0"' Ml S"ves Ru,h Jones' a" of Princeton
was a lifelong area resident He
was retired from the First Na- The service was held at
terian Church and the usher Institute for the Advanced Life, a non-denominational
board and the Women's Associ- Study of Religion at the Univer- organization that works with
ation of the church. sity of Chicago and guest pro- unchurched teenagers He left
Surviving are a goddaughter, fessor at McMaster University his position with Young Life in
Faith E Miller of Ewing; two in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada 1987 to complete his master's of
godsons, David Hill of Rich- Hivinilv rioorm, -t th« c — ;_
Bulletin Notes
The Hopewell United Meth-
divinity degree at the Semin ary He expects to graduate in June.
FULLER BRUSHES
BEN D. MARUCA
175 Redwood Ave
Tel 888-1254 Trenton N J 08610
JOHN WOOD PORSCHE/AUDI
34M RM. 1, N. of Quaker Brtdg* Mall (609) 452-9400
orown ot Lawrenceville and c "uin™™ unneo iviein-
Betty Brown. Clara Hinson and odisl church win h°ld 'San- Overcomers is a group which
Ruth Jones, all of Princeton nual fa» dinner Saturday from ™*** each Saturday morning
4 to7pm The public is invited a Mon'gomery Evan-
The menu will feature roast gel,cal Fr« ch"rch to talk,
was retired irom the First Na- The service was held at The menu will feature roast 8™"' "™ cnurcn 10 «"*. tional Bank of Princeton, where Witherspoon Street Presbyter- bee1*'"" gravy, ham, mashed pray- study the B'We and he had been an officer for many ian Church the Rev Adrian Potatoes, creamed corn and encourage each other toward
iniiuu Dannotr-nnceton, where Witherspoon Street Presbvter- "eel with gravy, ham, mashed 1"<"J- 'luu* lne B">'« and
he had been an officer for many ian Church the Rev Adrian Potatoes, creamed corn and encourage each other toward
years McFarlane.'pastor officiating &reen beans, applesauce, sal- victory oyer problems relating
Burial was in Princeton Ceme- ad- ">"• beverage and dessert toalcohol. food, drugs and oth
i„„ Admi««ir.n i* i». k I.... er addictive behaviors
Son of the late Henry and tery Mary Stives and husband of the late Alice E Stives, he is sur- _ „ „
vived by two half-brothers, <. Fran«s E. Kramer. 92. died George Stives of Trenton and September 14 at Greenwood
John Stives of Little Silver, and "T" '" EwT
Born in Austria, Mrs
Admission is free but a offering" is requested.
'love
For information call (2011 359-1061.
The Men's Day Committee of Mt. Pisgah A.M.E. Church will sponsor a communion
u Contemporary Christian ten- several nieces and nephews „Born ln A"stna. Mrs. sponsor a communion or singer and recording artist A private burial service was K"mer was a former resident breakfast from 7 a m t0 n Bobby Michaels will appear in held in St Paul's Cemetery Ar- °J thlBLonx',.N,Y ' and Miami am on Sunday. The speaker ™ncert at the High School on rangements were under the ?teaDh' Fla ' before movin8 to will be the Rev. John Hunter A Friday, October 28 at 7 30 pm direction of the Kimble Funeral oke u"",CeJ ton area a year ago donation of $5 is requested and Pr,esen,ed bv Princeton Home Memorial contributions She had ^*n a m,lliner for all are welcome to attend Alliance Church. The church
- may be made to the Princeton more than M years ^'"^ retir- !:ho!r wl" als0 s,ng selections.
First Aid and Rescue Squad. lng' both, alone and with Mr-
PO Box 529, Princeton 08542 „,., , ~ — T . „ , Sainl Matthew's Episcopal M^naeis
Wife of the late Samuel Church, Pennington will hold The 'amily-onented concert
Eisenberg and the late Irving its fall Rummage Sale Friday IS suitat,|e for adults and
Virginia J. I.ee. 69, of Rocky Kramer, she is survived by two October 7, from 9 to 3, and cn'ldren of all ages Tickets are
Hill, died September 20 at daughters. Harriet E. Bogdon- Saturday, October 8, from 9 to *5; cmldren 12 and under are
Princeton Medical Center olf of Princeton and Doris noon in the parish house at the free For more information call
Born in Kingston, Mrs Lee Silberstein of Forest Hills, corner of South Main Street and the church office. 799-9000 lived in Rocky Hill for 24 vears N.Y.; six grandchildren and West Curlis Avenue, Penning- five great-grandchildren ton.
The service was held at the Jewish Center, Rabbi Edward Feld of the Princeton Univer- sity Hillel officiating. Burial was in Beth Israel Cemetery, Woodbridge. Memorial con- tributions may be made to the Jewish Family Service or to Greenwood House, both located
qg a
The Lewis School of Princeton
39 Mognolio Looe. Princeton, N J (609) 924-8855
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY CHAPEL
Sunday Worship — 11 00 o.m. October 2
THE REV. SUE ANNE STEFFEY MORROW Acting Deon of the Chopel
Pff Topic: THE CHANGING NATURE ^OF RELATIONSHIPS
Comfort and Style
and was employed as an operator for American Cyanamid and Fifth Dimen- sion. She was a member of the Reformed Church of Rockv Hill.
Surviving ar her husband. Harold W. Lee. and a sister, Edna Ghazarian of Kingston.
The service was held at the Mather-Hodge Funeral Home, the Rev Ruth Fries of the Reformed Church of Rocky Hill officiating. Memorial contribu- tions may be made to the Reformed Church of Rocky Hill, PO Box L, Rocky Hill 08553.
■ .. ^. m..,™. iroure, uuui milieu —^ ^mi uoj ui ^uiiu r ranci.s on Walter Street, Trenton, of Assisi Saturday at 5:30 with the blessing of animals follow- ed by Holy Eucharist The ser- vice will be held on the circle lawn on Mercer Street. For fur- ther information, call the church at 924-2277.
The Center for Creative Liv- ing of the Religious Science Church has inaugurated a mon- thly speakers' series beginning October 16. Gene Kieffer. a writer and speaker on mythology and ancient Trinity Church will celebrate superstitions and an acknowl- the feast day of Saint Francis ed6ed expert on Eastern sys
fem« of u/ni-chin ,n!l ,fu„l. ,„
The sale will feature men's, women's and children's clothing, books, toys, games, gift items, jewelry and white el- ephant items.
RELIGION
terns of worship, will speak on the subject of "Joseph Camp- bell and His Own Evolution" at the regular 11 a.m. Sunday ser- vice on October 16 and then conduct a workshop in the afternoon on the subject of "Mythology, Superstitions and Enlightenment." According to the Rev. Gwen
Alpha Pregnancy Center will rtccoiuing to me nev. uwen
hold a benefit dinner Friday, Gillespie, director of the
Mary B. Marsh, 82. former- German Theologian Here October 7, at 7:30 at the Hyatt Princeton Center for Creative
ly of Leigh Avenue, died Sep- As Visiting Professor Regency. Dale Evans Rogers. Living, and pastor of the
tember 22 at Princeton Nursing n Mi^haoi w it author. Christian speaker and Church, the series will cover a
Home "„ ™cnael "e"<er. pro- movic personality, wm give a variety of subjects These will
Born ,n Infield. N.C., she liv- r/^l^l?™,6^60 T ° talk. ^ % include alternative healing
ed in Princeton more than 50 F^-nliv of the n t'C f The dinner is °Pen to the methods and a discussion of
years She was a member of the MnJ^ioJ ri . iLf Public, but reservations are re- where evolution is leading man,
First Baptist Church -™- SiT^f y' has been quired because seating is not the explosive topic of the
' Wife of the late Lewis Marsh, E^r 7 ST T limited. There is no admission origin of man
she is survived by a son-in-law, Th^irfov It v . ■ ™i VH i fee' but an offering will be tak- For information call 921-9323
James Green of Princeton; a i"!l Si,?' „ T™ tl" \^Z, en To obtain tickets call 896- Services and lectures are held
„„.J„„ . „ g'cal Seminary for the 1988-89 m, ln the Masonic Lodge on River
Road
James Green of Princeton; a 'ictTsen, mary for the ,9^ 89
grandson. James Green Jr. of f^eZc'y^ mi
TltirrJ .g..e " ;§randson' DrWelker holds the chair at „
JamesGreenlll.ofCranbury, Muenster once jed b "'"gston Presbyterian
and a great-granddaughter. Karl Barth. perhaps the 20th Church has hired Kevin Pound
Morgan L Green of Trentoa centuiys m0Fsl em7nem and a senior at Princeton Theolo-
I hp flinpra s:prvirp u;a*; hplri ... .... _ . airal ^i.m.non tn Kn tU
...organ L ureen oi irentoa centun,.s mosl e,Sinem and a senior at Princeton The The funeral service was held revolutionarv th^ogian. Prior «lcal Seminary, to be the i n a Trenton funeral home with tn nis xmxAtimm, t^thpi rw^j. Program assistant.
The Griggstown Reformed Church will hold its Fall Rum- inaTren;on7un"eraTnome"wn'h ^"^Sen.'S.^T ^^ama^tan^ "" "^ "rage Sale on Friday. October buna, ,„ Princeton Cemetery ^ S?"^^^^ J*-/™ I"™ rST "? "* a.X'oc^r 15P from 9 systemat.c theology at the Uni- f. » Columbus Oh... and mov- f ^ ay O ct obe « from 9 versity of Tuebingen. He has ed ,'° 'h,s( area four years ago aln6lTaJ\RlTcr^i been a research fellow at the w,th hls J3™1* t0 be the area at 1261 tanal Road^ Gr'ggs- director for mid-Jersev Vniino low"
Emma Wilson, 77, died Sep- tember 21 at Princeton Medical Center
. Born in Newark. Mrs. Wilson had lived in Princeton most of her life and was a retired prac- tical nurse She was a member of Witherspoon Street Presby-
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MONTGOMERY
TWIN THEATRE RT 206 and 518 (609) 924-7444
7:20. 9:30
Sat. & Sun.
5:10. 7:20. 9:30
A HANDFUL OF DUST
HONORED: It's hard to say which is more valuable — the parking space "in perpetuity" from the McCarter Theater staff, or the bronze plaque "in grateful recognition" of his seven-year leadership of the McCarter Theater board of trustees. Both were presented to Edward E. Matthews, right, who stands in front of the bronze plaque In the theater lobby holding the miniature parking cone symbolizing the parking space. With him are Nagle Jackson, McCarter artistic director, and Ruth Wilson, board president.
News of the
THEATRES
Four World Premieres At Crossroads Theatre
Crossroads Theatre Com- pany, a black theater organiza- tion in New Brunswick, has scheduled four world premieres for its 1988-89 sea- son.
Television star Denise Nicholas will open the theater's 10th anniversary season on Saturday with the premiere of To Gleam It Around, ToShow My Shine. The show is a new adaptation of the Zora Neale Hurston novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, with ear- ly 1900s folk humor and music that chronicles a black woman's journey of self discovery. It will run through October 30.
The opening production will be followed by five other presentations. They include The Mojo and the Sayso, No- vember 12 to December 4, n new comedy involving a minis- ter trying to persuade a family thai it should donate settlement money from the wrongful death of a child to the church; The Late Great Ladies of Blues and Jazz, December 1? to Jan- uary 22, with broadway star Sandra Reaves- Phi I lips in a musical celebrating Ethel
Waters, Dinah Washington, Mahalia Jackson and Ella Fitz- gerald,
Also, The Rabbit Foot, Feb- ruary 4 to March 4, a new com- edy which details the struggles of a black minstrel group; Playboy of the West Indies, March 18 to April 16, in which life in a Trinidad fishing village is disrupted by a stran- ger who claims he murdered his father; and Spooks, April 29 to May 28, a world premiere mystery comedy about a suc- cessful writer and his wife who buy the "big house" on the plantation where his ancestors were once slaves.
Spooks was written by Don Evans, author of several plays performed at Crossroads The- atre, including One Monkey Don't Stop No Show, The Trials and Tribulations of Booker T. Brown and A Lovesong for Miss Lydia.
Crossroads has won acclaim during the past years for several of its productions The theater's 1986 world premiere of The Colored Museum, cho- sen as b finalist in the CBS pluywriting competition, was lain- produced at the Public Theatre in New York by Joseph 1 '.ipp Another world premiere, A Lovesong for Miss Lydia, was televised nationally on the Public Broadcasting System.
For information about Beason .subscriptions and tickets to in- dividual shows call the box of ficc at (201 ) 249-5560. The box office is open every day but
(Randall Haqadorn. photo)
Monday from noon to 6. Each of the six shows will be preced ed by preview nights, dress rehearsals to which the theater will sell tickets.
Little Shop of Horrors At George St. Playhouse
George Street Playhouse, under the new leadership of producing director Gregory S. Hurst, will open its 15th an- niversary season with the mu- sical Little Shop of Horrors, on Friday, October 7.
Written by Howard Ashman and Alan Menken, the plot features a man-eating plant that brings fame and fortune to a skid-row florist for the price of blood.
Allen R. Belknap and Diana Baffa-Brill serve as director and choreographer, respective- ly, with Mark Goodman as mucial director. Little Shop of Horrors features Meghan Duf- fy in the role of Audrey. Bring- ing Audrey II, the man-eating plant, to life is William Szymanski as the puppet manipulator. Mr. Szymanski was the understudy for the original Off-Broadway produc- tion eventually taking over the part and later performing the same role for the national tour
The musical will run through November 6. Performance times are Tuesday, Wednes- day, Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings at 8, Sun- days at 2 and 7, and Thursday matinees at noon. Tickets range from $16 to $25.
©^V"
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604 River Road
Fair Haven, N.J. 07701
(201) 842-3550
tfor*
74 Witherspoon Street
Princeton, N.J. 08540
(609) 924-5544
Trade Inquiries Invited
7:10, 9:20
Sat & Sun.
5:00. 7:10, 9:20
Barbara Hers hey
A WORLD APART
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49 Slate Road (Rl 206)
(609) 683-0623 VIDEO RENTALS
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CLASSICAL VOCAL STUDY
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(609) 921-6799
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PRINCETON BALLET
via**
In performance at
McCarter Theatre
91 University Place Princeton, NJ
WEDNESDAY OCT. 19 at 8 P.M.
Tickets: $19., $16., $14. Reserved Seats
Box Office: 609-683-8000
Group discounts available
"Dance Company in residence
at McCarter Theatre. "
Photo by Martha Swope
OPENS THIS WEEK!
McCARTER
THEATRE
CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING \K rS
81 University Place ♦Princeton. New Jersey ♦ 1)8540
One of the longest running comedies in history!
Directed by Richard Risso
In an effort to fit into the 1940's Washington political scene, junk dealer turned self-made million- aire Harry Brock hires a young journalist to teach his dizzy girlfriend a thing or two. A quick learner, Billie Dawn gives her rack- eteer sugar daddy a civics lesson he'll never forget.
Sept. 27 - Oct. 16 Call Easy-Charge:
609-683-8000
Current Cinema
Shows and Times Subject to Change Without Notice GARDEN THEATRE. 104-0263: Eric I, Moon Over Parailor IPG13). Thurs. 7: 15. 9:20; Eric II. Betrayed I Rl. Thurs 7. 9:25; call theater lor weekend times and possible change in listing
MONTGOMERY THEATRE. 924-7444; Theater I. A 1 1 1 of
Dust. 7:20, 9:30, with early shows Sat. & Sun. at 5 10. Theater
II. A World Apart, daily 7: 10. 9:20; with early show Sat & Sun at 5.
AMC PRINCE THEATRE. 452-2278: Theater I, Dominick and Eugene (PG13I, Thurs. 8; Messenger of Death IR) Thurs 6. Crossing Delancev ( PGl Fri 5. 7. 9: 15. Sat 1. 3. 5. 7. 9:30. Sun 1. 3. 530. 8. Mon -Thurs. 530. 8; Theater II. Dead Ringer (R) Thurs 5:45,8:15, Fri 5:15, 7 30. 9:55; Sat. 12:45.3.5:15.7:30. 9:55; Sun 12:45.3.5:45, 8: 15; also. Bambi I G>, Sat 1:15. Theater
III. Kansas 1R1, Thurs. 5:45. 8, Fri. & Sat. 5. 7:15, 9:30, with matinee Sat. at 2:45. Sun. 2:45, 5:45. 8; Mon-Thurs. 5:45. 8. MERCER MALL THEATER. 452-2868: closed for renovations AMC OLAKERBRIDGE FOUR THEATERS. 799-9331 : Theater I. Who Framed Roger Rabbit (PGl. Thurs 6, 8:15. Fri 5, 7:30. 9:55; Sat 12:30, 2.45. 5, 7:30. 9:55; Sun. I. 4:15, 6. 9 15; Mon- Thurs 6. 8 15, Theater II. Nightmare on Elm Street Part IV i Rl Thurs. 6:15,8:30; Fri. 5:15, 7:45. 10: 15; Sat. 12:45.3,5:15,7:45, 10:15; Sun. 1:45, 4:45.7 15. 9:30; Mon-Thurs 6:15,8:30; Theater III. Moon Over Parador (PG131, Thurs 6. 8.15; Fri. 5, 7: 15. 9:45, Sat 12:30.2:45,5,7:15.9:45; Sun 1:30.4.7.9:15; Mon Thurs
6. 8:15; Theater IV. Heartbreak Hotel (PG13I. Fri. 5:15. 7:30, 9:55; Sat 12:45, 3. 5:15. 7:30, 9:55; Sun 1:45, 4:30. 7 15, 9 Hi Mon-Thurs. 6:15, 8:30
I SITED ARTISTS MARKETFAIR. 520-8700: Betrayed (Rl, dai- ly 1:30. 4:15, 7:10, 9:30, Sat & Sun. 7:10. 9:30 only. Brave Star (PG) Sat. & Sun 1:30. 4:15; Die Hard (Ri. daily 1:30. 4:15. 7. 9: 40. with midnight show Fri & Sat ; A Fish Called Wanda ( R I , daily 2:15. 4:45. 7:30, 10; sneak preview of Memories of Me ( PG13 1 at 8 Saturday in place of the 7 :30 p.m showing of A Fish Called Wanda ; Eight Men Out ( PG I. daily 1 : 30. 4: 15. 7, 9:20, Big ( PGl. daily 2: 15, 4:45. 7:30. 945. with midnight shows Fi &Sat . Patty Hearst (Rl, daily 1:45, 4:30. 7:15, 9:45, with midnight shows Fri. & Sat , Sweethearts Dance (R I, daily 2:15. 4:30, 7. 9:30, with midnight shows Fri & Sat.; Gorillas in the Mist (PG13I 1:30, 4: 10. 7.9:30, with midnight shows Fri & Sat ; Elvira: Mistress of the Dark (PG13I 1:45.4:30.7:15, 9:45, with midnight shows Fri. & Sat Running on Empty (PG13I 1:45. 4:30, 7:15. 9:50, with mid- night shows on Fri & Sat ; midnight shows Fri. & Sat of Heavy Metal ( R l and Rocky Horror Picture Show I R I LAWRENCEVILLE TWIN, 882-9494: Theater I, A Fish Called Wanda (R I. Thurs. 7:15, 9:25; Theater II, Die Hard (Rl, Thurs.
7, 9:25; call theater for weekend times and possible change in listings.
Performances will run weekends from October 14 through November 19. For in- formation call the Off-Broad- street Theatre box office at 5 South Greenwood Avenue in Hopewell, 466-2766. Ticket prices include dessert and show. Sunday matinees offer a senior citizen discount.
Neil Simon Comedy Set By Franklin Villagers
Brighton Beach Memoirs. Neil Simon's semi-auto- biographical comedy, is being presented by the Franklin Villagers Barn Theatre on weekends through October 8 The production will mark the opening of the Villagers' new- ly renovated theater behind the Franklin municipal complex at 475 DeMott Lane, Somerset.
Brighton Beach Memoirs is a nostalgic look at middle-class family life in the post- Depression, pre-World War II year of 1937 as seen through the eyes of 15-year-old Eugene Jerome.
Brighton Beach Memoirs | will run on Fridays and Satur- days at 8:30 and Sundays at] 7:30, except Sunday, Septem- ber 25 which is a 2 p.m. mati- nee only. Tickets are $9 Friday, $10 Saturdays, and $7.50 on Sun- days. Students and seniors re- ceive a $2 discount on Fridays and Sundays only.
A special 3 p.m. matinee has been added on Saturday to ac- commodate the anticipated en- thusiasm for this play in the new theatre. Further informa- tion and reservations may be obtained by calling the Frank- lin Villagers Barn Theatre at (201) 873-2710.
'COUPON «
fcv
Theatres
Continued Iron Preceding Page
The George Street Playhouse, a resident company of the New Brunswick Cultural ^Center, is located at 9 Liv- ingston Avenue, New Bruns- wick. Parking is available for $1 behind the DKM Properties at 303 George Street, just across from the Livingston Av- enue/George Street intersec- tion (entrance on New Street ) .
Subscriptions to George Street Playhouse's 1988-89 sea- son are still available. In addi- tion to Little Shop of Horrors, the season also includes Frank Gilroy's award-winning drama The Subject Was Roses, a world premiere musical, Tales of Tinseltown , by Michael Col- by and Paul Katz; Tom Cole's new comedy The Eighties, Charles Ludlam's The Mystery oflrma Vep; Arthur Miller's All My Sons; and a play still to be chosen.
For further information or ticket reservations call (201) 246-7469.
YOU CAN FIND whal you need in TOWN TOPICS.
Off-Broadstreet Theatre Presents 'Lies & Legends'
The musical stories of the late folk rock artist Harry Chapin will come to life at the Off-Broadstreet Theatre in Hopewell beginning October 14. Lies and Legends is a collec- tion of the slice-of-life vignettes that brought Harry Chapin to popularity in the 1970's. Mr. Chapin, who was killed in a car accident in 1981, is also remembered for his commit- ment to charity efforts, especi- ally his World Hunger Project
The folk rock performance will feature five singers. Laura Jackson returns to Off- Broadstreet where she ap- peared in Something's Afoot. She has also performed locally at the Mill Hill Playhouse Sharon Alexander of Law- renceville, an Off-Broadstreet regular, has appeared at many area theatres including Bucks County Playhouse, Peddlers Village and Stage One Produc- tions Robert Thick, the Thea- tre's co-producer, will round out the cast along with Off- Broadstreet newcomers Roger- John Leach of Helmetta and Harris Goodman of Dunellen
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Princeton Ballet to Dance In McCarter Performance
Princeton Ballet, now in its 11th touring season will per- form on Wednesday, October 19, at 8 at McCarter Theatre. Recently designated the dance company in residence at McCarter, the group received a "Major Impact Organization" designation for artistic ex- cellence from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts.
Tickets are $19, $16, and $14, reserved seating. Senior citi- zen, student and group rates are available. For performance information, call the McCarter box office at 683-8000.
"Wait Until Dark" Set At Mercer County College
The thriller Wait Until Dark will be presented by Mercer College Theater on Friday and Saturday, October 14 and 15, and 21 and 22, at 8 in Kelsey Theater on Mercer County Community College's West Windsor campus. Tickets are $8 for adults, $6 for students and senior citizens and $4 for children 12 and under.
Continued on Next Page
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Call for Reservations:
609-695-7444
94th Season Set to Begin i For University Concerts
; This fall marks the opening : of the 94th season of Princeton 1 University Concerts, one of the .>ntinuing series of mu j sical events in the United
States Founded in October. IBM by
the Ladies' Music Committee ■ i mostly faculty wives1, the Be
ries presented concerts by the
Stephen Hammer, November 14; cellist HeinnehSchiff. De- cember I; soprano Dawn I p shav accompanied by Maestro James Levine ol the Metropol itan Opera, March 29, and the and New York Baroque Ballet, May n.
Subscriptions to Series i (four concerts i are available for prices ranging from $55 to $35 Subscriptions to Series 2 i five concerts > are priced at $68 to $44. Subscribers receive a discount over single- ticket prices
In addition to the two series. Princeton University Concerts will present the guitar virtuoso Sharon Isbin in a special con-
Kredcrirk I'rrey
The Guarnen Quartet's Princeton program includes
; Kneisel Quartet exclusively for cert on April 3 Ms Isbin is well quartetsof Beethoven' Opus 18.
20 years In 1914. the scope was known to listeners of National No. 3». Mendelssohn (Opus 13).
expanded to include programs Public Radio She has ap- and the Second Quartet, In
by the most eminent artists of peared on the chamber music timate Letters, by the Czech
the time series .St Paul Sunday Morn- composer Leos Janacek.
mfi. as well as A Prairie Home Tickets, priced between $10
Companion. an(* $16. are available at the
The first concert of the cur- Richardson Auditorium boxof-
rent season will be held on "ce which is open weekdays be-
Thursdav, I tetODO 6, at 8 with ,wecn 4 and 6 P m Telephone
a performance bj theGuarneri reservations, 45MQ00, are ac-
String Quartet The program cePted Wl,n v,sa or Master-
i The organization was ituted in 1929 as the
| Princeton University I
i Committee The change ted a decision to include representatives from both "town and gown " Committee members serve on a voluntary basis to ensure the artistic and financial health of the series The current chairman is Anne Florey; John Wintcrbottom is chairman of the program sub committee
Beginning with the 19854)6 season, the concerts have been held in the renovated facilities of Richardson Auditorium. The 1988-89 season offers talented chamber musicians and redtallsta in two subscription series
Series 1 includes the New York Chamber Soloists with pianist Menahem Pressler, No vember 3; Lob Angeles Piano Quartet, January 19; tenor Jerry Hadley, March 18; and the Emerson String Quartet with clarinetist Charles Neidich. April 17
Card student tickets are $6.
Schubert Song Cycle To Be Sung by Tenor
Tenor Frederick Urrey will
Series 2 includes the ;,udiences BU1CC its first per Guarnen String Quartet. Oc- formanee here In 1965 TheOc lober 6; the Bach Ensemble, with director and harpsichord ist Joshua Kifkin. harpsichord- ist Ed Brewer, and oboist
will include works of Beethoven, Mendelssohn and
Leos Janacek The quartet has been a favorite with Princeton audiences since its first per formanee here in [965
Information concerning perform Schubert's Die
subscriptions may be obtained schoene Muellerin Saturday
by calling 452-4239 Single-event at 8 in Nicholas Music Center of
tickets are on sale al the the Rutgers Arts Center
Richardson Auditorium box of- George Street at Route 18 New
fice, 452-5000. The box office is Brunswick. The concert is part
open weekdays from 4 to 6. of Rutgers University's fall faculty scholarship series to
<.m;ii nri i String Quartet benefit music scholarship
Opens University Series sludt'nK
Tickets are $8 and are avail-
rhe 94th subscription season aD]e at the Rutgers Arts Cen-
ol Princeton University con- ter (201, 932-7511, There are
certs will begin Thursday, Oc- discounts for senior citizens.
lolM'Mi.w.lhajM-rloinumeehy firoupSi subscribers, faculty
Uief.uarnen String Quartet at and Rogers University
8 p.m. in Richardson Auditor- sIudents. The concert is spon-
lum. _ sored by the Mason Gross
The Guarnen Quartet has school of the Arts of Rutgers
been a favorite with Princeton University.
Theatres
Ccninuett 'fo^ PietxonQ Pao*
The play depicts a young blind woman's harrowing en- counter with murderous drug smugglers The cast includes Melissa Bentley as Susj Men drix, Kevin Spedding as Harrj Roal. Karen Oliver .is Gloria, Robert Scott as Sam Hendrix. Don Carter as Mike Talman, Leonard Moore and Bob Kohut as the policemen and David Sullivan as Sgt Carlino
For more information, or to order tickets by phone, call 586- 4695 MasterCard and Visa are accepted.
Ballet Jazz de Paris Due In War Memorial Concert
Ballet Jazz de Pans will ap- pear at the Trenton War Memo- rial Theater on Saturday. Oc- tober 15, at 8 p.m. completing the ballet's first American tour
The company will present Design for Four by France's most celebrated contemporary choreographer Roland Petit and Lost Luggage by Ameri- can dancer and choreographer Michael Kessler
presents
SIMON PRESTON
International Organ Virtuoso
10th Anniversary Organ Concert
Oct. 14, 7:30 p.m. Trinity Church, Princeton
Limited seating • Tickets $15.00 Available at H. Gross & Co. and Trinity Church
Following the Trenton per- formance, the company will re- turn to Europe for a two-month tour before relocating to a per- manent home in a new per- forming arts center in Paris
The Ballet Jazz de Paris per- formance is the second in a three-part series. Eyes on Trenton '88 and is presented by the Trenton Museum Society and Trenton Arts Commission, For ticket information call 599- 3937. Tickets are available at Ticketron at Quaker Bridge Mall. Langhorne. and Somer- ville. Proceeds benefit the Trenton Museum Acquisitions Endowment Fund.
SOMETHING old or new to sell9 Try a TOWN TOPICS classified ad Call 924 2200
tober 6 concert follows a season Philippine Choral Group
in which they performed more
than mmi concerts to critical ac-
To sun', at Richardson
The University of the Philip- pines Staff Chorale Society will perform Monday at 8 in Richardson Auditorium. The group is composed of ad- ministrative, research and pro- fessional staff of the university located in Diliman. Quezon Ci- ty, Philippines.
The concert is sponsored by the University of the Philip- pines Alumni Association, New Jersey Chapter, in cooperation with the Filipino Society of Princeton University. The theme of the concert is dalawtt, meaning a friendly visit with a bouquet of songs.
Tickets are $10 general ad- mission, $5 for students and $2 for Princeton University students. For ticket informa- tion call Odie Ferrer, 896-1651 , MayetteGopez, (201)873-2649; or Ludy Corrales, (201) 658- 4615.
PIANO LESSONS
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Princeton
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Concerts
Join us for... an evening with the
Guarneri
String
Quartet
Works by Beethoven, Mendelssohn, and Janacek
"Hard-working musicians who play like angels."
— Los Angeles Times
October 6, 1988 8:00 p.m.
Richardson Auditorium in Alexander Hall
For Reservations call (609) 452-5000.
Visa and MasterCard
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Tickets: $16, SI 4, $12; students: $6
CALENDAR
Of the Week
Wednesday. September 28
10 a.m. -2 p.m. .: Tours of historic Morven; 55 Stockton Street
12:30 pm.: Sewer Operating Committee; Valley Road Building.
4-7 p.m.: Become-a-Member Open House at Historical Socie- ty; 158 Nassau Street Each evening from 4 to 7 through' Saturday.
4:30 p.m.: Novelist and playwright Michael Stephens reading from his work; Film Theater, 185 Nassau Street.
7:30 pm.: Back-to-School Night; Princeton High School.
7:30 p.m.: Board of Engin- eers. Fire Department. Chestnut Street Firehouse.
8 p.m : Princeton Country Dancers. English Dance; Six Mile Run Reformed Church. Route 27. Franklin Park.
8 p.m.: Peview. Garson Kanin's "Born Yesterday," McCarter Theatre Company, McCarter Theatre. Preview performance also on Thursday
Thursday. September 29 8-9 p.m.: Joyce Carol Oates and Julie Agoos reading from their work, reception follow- ing: Arts Council Building.
8:30 p.m.: Comedian Carey Odes with Drake Sather, Catch a Rising Star; Hyatt Regency- Princeton.
Friday, September 30
8-11 am : French Market fall flower sale in mini-park op- posite TOWN TOPICS, corner of Mercer and Nassau Streets
6:30 p.m : YMCA. Singles' Sports. Softball, volleyball YM-YWCA.
7:30 p.m : Forum for Singles, discussion group, refresh- ments; Unitarian Church.
8-11 p.m : World Folkdance Cooperative, international folk dancing, mainly Balkan line dances, beginners welcome, in- struction; YM-YWCA.
8 pm.: Jules Feiffer's "Knock, Knock," Off-Broad- street Dessert Theatre; 5 South Greenwood Avenue. Hopewell. Doors open for dessert at 7. Performances also on Saturday at 8, and on Sunday at 2:30, with dessert at 1:30.
8 p.m. : Opening night, Gar- son Kanin's "Born Yesterday," McCarter Theatre Company: McCarter Theatre. Perform- ances also on Saturday at 8 and Sunday at 2.
8:30 p.m.: Open House at Peyton Hall Observatory: Ivy Lane Viewing through nine- inch telescope and talk. Mars almost as good as last week- Saturday. October 1
10 a.m.-l p.m.: Tours of historic Morven; 55 Stockton Street.
10 a.m. -5 p.m : Apple Day; Terhune Orchards Also Sunday
11 a.m-5 pm.: Decorative arts show and sale, "Design '88"; Prallsville Mills. Stockton. Through October 16 daily.
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11:30-2:00 p.m.. Monday-Friday
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Monday Night Dinner Buffets
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INTRODUCING Sunday Brunch Buffet
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BUFFET TODAY? SI!
►^
1 p.m.: Football, Brown vs Princeton; Palmer Stadium.
2 p.m. : Give and Take Jug- glers; Kelsey Theatre, Mercer County Community College, West Windsor. Also at 4.
7 p.m.: Free concert by Mercer County Community Band to celebrate Mercer County's 150th anniversary; Mercer County Park. Followed by fireworks.
8 p.m : Princeton Country Scottish Dancers, Murray- Dodge
Sunday. October 2
Noon to 6 p.m. : 15th Annual Oktoberfest ; Livingston Avenue and George Street; New Brunswick. Art, music, theater, dance, displays, road race, food and drink.
Monday, October ,1
8 p.m.: Township Commit- tee; Valley Road Building.
Tuesday. October 4
4 p.m.: Township Historic Preservation Committee; Valley Road Building.
7:30-10p.m.: Princeton Folk Dance Group; Riverside School. Instruction followed by request dancing.
7:30 p.m.: Back-to-School Night; Community Park School.
a p.m : "The Jersey Devil: The Strange Story of Mother Leed's 13th Child.:' William Leap, South Jersey historian; ■Public Library. Suggested for grades 7 and up.
7:30 p.m.: Regional Planning Board; Valley Road Building.
8-10 p.m.: "A Woman's Place," conversation on topic of work; Arts Council Building.
Wednesday. October 5
10 a.m. -2 p.m.: Tours of ar- cheological dig at historic Morven; 55 Stockton Street. Also on Saturday from 10 to 1.
7:30 p.m.: Borough Historic Preservation Review Commit- tee; Borough Hall.*
7:30 p.m.: Back-to-School Night; Riverside School.
8 p.m.: Princeton Country Dancers, beginners welcome; Six Mile Pun Reformed Church. Route 27. Franklin Park.
Thursday, October 6
8 p.m. ; Princeton University Concerts. Series II, Guarneri String Quartet; Richardson Auditorium.
8 p.m.: Garson Kanin's "Born Yesterday," McCarter Theatre Company, followed by seminar; McCarter Theatre Performances also on Friday at 8. Saturday at 4:30 and 9,
Sunday at 2. followed by seminar, and 7:30.
8 p.m.: Borough Council, Borough Hal).
Friday, October 7
8-11 a.m.: French Market fall flower sale; mini-park opposite TOWN TOPICS, corner of Mercer and Nassau Streets.
6:30 p.m.: YMCA Singles Sports. Softball, volleyball; YM-YWCA.
7:30pm.: Forum for Singles, discussion group, refresh- ments; Unitarian Church.
8-11 p.m.: International folk dancing, mainly Balkan line dances, beginners welcome, in- struction; YM-YWCA.
8 p.m.: Jules Feiffer's "Knock, Knock." Off- Broadstreet Dessert Theatre, 5 South Greenwood Avenue, Hopewell. Doors open for dessert at 7. Performances also on Saturday at 8, and on Sun- day at 2:30, with dessert at 1:30.
Saturday. October 8
11 a.m. -9 p.m.: Fall antiques show; National Guard Armory, Lawrenceville. Also Sunday from 11 to 5.
1 p.m. -dusk: Octoberfest; Princeton Meadows Shopping Center, food, drink, music, per- formances, children's ac- tivities, fireworks.
8 p.m.: Princeton Scottish Country Dancers; Murray- Dodge
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IT'S NEW To Us
i Latest In Fall Fashions
i Are at Maggie K. Petiles
Wo have .i smart, updated look at Maggie K Petitea We 1 tr\ to offer something that is ! not seen everywhere, some- thing that gives an individual look to our customers " Andrea Klosowski, manager and buyer of Maggie K Fettles, ihe new specialty shopat the Lawrence Shopping Center, is en thusixstic about the range of fashions available for petites this fall
"Petites are for all ages. she explains "The sizes are geared for the length, and our sizes are from 2 to 14 They are strictly for those 5'4" and under, and the clothes are cul in proportion
"We are geared to the career woman, and we have a lot of ac- tivewear, but we really have customers of all ages, from the mid-20's to the late 60's," she continues "It's interesting to see the mix of different age groups.that come in Also, we try to have a little bit of everything - sportswear, dresses, some outerwear and accessories, such as scarves and some jewelry
"Our number one best seller is related sportswear, including pants, skirts, jackets, blouses
and sweaters, ' she . m i r I 'hut
I've also done very well with dresses There has been a tremendous business with special-occasion dresses All ages are buying the dresses
Ms. Klosowski has been with Maggie K Petites since it open ed last March, and she had pre- vious experience as a junior sportswear buyer for
A STYLISH STATEMENT: "It's amazing how many people fall into the petite category," says Andrea Klosowski, manager and buyer of Maggie K. Petites In the Lawrence Shopping Center on Route 1. "There's really a great demand, and we have something for everyone. A petite size is for someone 5'4" and under."
Dunham's Department Store. Buying is an especially en- joyable part of the business for hei I have this vision of ex- actly how I want to run this store I want to pull things to- gethei '" lit the story we have In tell Also. I'm learning about my customers. What their tastes Bl G li lake-, a long time to put it all together
Kail is a fun time for shop pen, she adds All the new styles .He in, and people are ready (or a new look. "Coor- dinating is a big part of the trend today. There-, lots of mixing and matching. Some- times people can have trouble making decisions, so it can be helpful for them to see how the coordinates can be put togeth-
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Sophisticated Look. There is a nice variety of styles, colors and fabrics at Maggie K, Petites. From casual to career- to dressy, the look is attractive and sophisticated. "We carry Bill Hlass and J. G. Hook in coats and CJregge Sports for re- lated separates, as well as Adrienne Vittandini and Rafaella We also have Jen- nifer Keed handmade sweaters and Calvin Klein has been very popular with the younger group.
"The new fall color is new purple It's the new fashion col- or," she continues. "Also, the big thing for dresses is to have a large challis scarf draped over the shoulder. It's very pop- ular this year and is a real fash- ion look.
"Shoulder pads are continu- ing," she adds. "Some are now moderated, but they are very much on the scene. All of the skirts are below the knee It's 25 inches for petites. about an inch and a half below the knee. Certainly, the overall look is below the knee."
Sweaters seem to be every one's favorite, and Ms Klosowski says that Maggie K I 'et i tes has an especially large selection. Cotton sweaters con- tinue to be very popular, and "For the holidays, our fur blends - lambswool, angora and rabbit — will be very big. Theyflre in all styles, casual to dress y
"Also," she notes, "a very popular item has been the "Poodle" sweater-jacket It comes in black and in white and is 65% acrylic and 15% wool. The black has been especially in demand."
Suits are another big item this year, and the career woman will find a nice assort- ment at the shop. Ms. Klo- sowski also reports. "We will have very nice-looking, up- dated raincoats the end of Sep- tember A very smart looking selection." The Bill Blass and the J G Hook winter coats are also very special, and customers will find a variety of colors and styles.
Jewelry and Scarves.
Adrienne Vittadini scarves are available in many lovely pat- terns and designs and there is also an assortment of Carolee jewelry, which specializes in copies of the Duchess of Wind- sor's collection Pins, earrings, bracelets and necklaces are all on display A variety of very at- tractive fashion jewelry, in- cluding handcrafted earrings and necklaces, is also on hand Prices at Maggie K Petites range from $78 to $280 for dresses. $45 to $120 for sweaters. $90 to $200 for suits, $37 to $48 for scarves. $39.50 and
up for the Carolee jewelry and $li) and up for the fashion jewelry
Gift certificates and free gift wrapping are available, and the shop often has special sales in progress This week, coats are available at 25% off. and re- maimng summer items, in- cluding Blouses, pants and some shorts, are 50% off
Personal attention is an im portant service at Maggie K Petites. and Ms. Klosowski points out that the staff works hard to make customers feel at home in the store "I believe you can come into this shop and feel very comfortable We're not high-pressure sales people, but were here to help if. you need our help. We like to give people a little space They are more than welcome to browse.
••I really enjoy the customers," she adds. "I enjoy seeing them come in and talk- ing wiUi them. I'm interested in their fashion needs, and 1 like helping them put things togeth- er It's interesting to see that some people come in and know just what they.want. and others look for advice. They'll ask for an opinion, 'How does this look on me?'
"Also, if someone has a special request, we'll be glad to try to find things for her. and we also have a mailing list "
Maggie K. Petites is open Monday through Friday 10 to 9, Saturday 10 to 6and Sunday 1 1 to 5.
Continued on Next Page
MONTGOMERY
PHARMACY
& GIFTS
Montgomery Center
f/Vex? to Frrend'v s>
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924-7123
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Flower Shop
360 Nassau Street
924-9340
Mon Fri 9-5 30. Sal 9-5
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Weight Loss Counseling At Princeton Diet Center
"I love to see the success It's wonderful to see someone who's tried every other diet and have nothing work, now see the weight coming off."
Angela Horan, owner of the Diet Center of Princeton at 330 North Harrison Street, has a genuine understanding of the dieter's difficulties since she herself struggled to lose weight for many years. "I had a weight problem all my life," she recalls, "and then I was finally able to lose 52 pounds on the Diet Center program In the first six weeks, I lost 18 or 19 pounds
"Also," she adds, "everyone who works here has been on the Diet Center program. Counselors Carmen Sagebien, Daileen Silhary and Aloyse Holman and our receptionist Amy Pobiner all have a true understanding of what clients are going through. We know the things people do when they're dieting. We've been there, and we can sympathize."
A registered nurse who had been discouraged when the weight she managed to lose always returned, Ms. Horan sought a program that was both healthy and effective. "There are many ways to diet, and I was very anxious to find one that would keep the weight off I also wanted to exercise along with it. I liked the personal one- on-one approach; I didn't want to sit in a group This program had all the components I wanted and also concentrated on how to keep weight off."
The Diet Center of Princeton, although an independent establishment, is one of 2300 Diet Centers across the United States, as well as Canada and England. Founded 18 years ago in Reeburg, Idaho (which is ,still the headquarters), the company has a large research operation and provides the latest medical and nutritional information to the various fran- chises across the country. As Ms. Horan says, "It's impor- tant for people to know we have
HEALTHY HABITS: Conditioning, reducing, stabiliza tion, maintenance and Image I classes are the five stages of the weight loss program at the Diet Center of Princeton, located at 330 North Harrison Street. ' 'When they stick to the program, which also includes regular exercise, clients can have a whole new outlook on life," report Diet Center owner Angela Horan and counselor Carmen Sagebien.
■ j uiimiiiu. luaujuai.'ug'
important to keep coming into the center because doing it alone is too hard."
During the maintenance phase, nutritional eating habits are established for lifelong weight maintenance and in- dividually tailored to the per- son's food preferences and lifestyles Part of the program includes weekly consultations and weigh-ins for a year after maintenance has been reached and a life-time follow-up. A key part of the Diet Center's pro- gram is helping clients to learn how to change their approach to eating. "Behavior modifica- tion is very important." ex- plains Ms Horan "You will not keep the weight off unless you change yor habits We work on stress management, and we want our clients to know the 'why's of the situation Wewant them to be knowledgeable, educated consumers. They must not hesitate to read labels, for example.
"Our Image One classes are helpful in this regard. There is a series of 12 classes in nutri- tion and behavior modification, which includes sharing infor- mation, discussing problems, a relaxation exercise, a video
924-7950 64 Main St., Kingston M-S 10:30-5:30; Closed Sun
KXEL
CAMPING • CAHOflNG
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Princeton Forr«*t«l Village
(609) 92<-3001
All Shoes
$16.90paF
Our New Fall Shoes Are Arriving SPECIAL SELECTION SPRING & SUMMER $C
LEFTOVERS
pair
Step 'N' Out
Discount Shoe Store Montgomery Center ,Rt. 206, Rocky Hill • 924-4113
Jewels by Juliana
The finest In
gemstones and
Jewelry.
16 Wtkerapoon St
921-7233
UNGING
a wonderful weight loss pro- gram and also that there is a big company behind us."
Daily Counseling. For the
person contemplating a serious weight loss program, the Diet Center offers specific guide- lines and daily counseling. A prospective client may go in for a free consultation at which time the counselor discusses what the program offers, what is expected of the client and what kind of results can be an- ticipated.
Men, women and children, ages 10 through 80 plus, are clients of the Diet Center, and people come in with hopes of losing anywhere from 10 to 200 pounds. Often the most com- monly desired weight loss is in
1001 Elegant Gifts
Art & Office Supplies,
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Hojftpeat
EFFORTLESS EXERCISE SALON Let us reshape the way you feel about exercise
i Isolate & exercise each of your major muscle groups ■ Lose inches in weeks
• No sweating
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• Call or visit our salon today'
Princeton Arms 6hopplng Center
Old Trenton and Dorchester Rds.
West Windsor, N.J.
Mon.-Fri. 8-9
Sat. 8-6 (609)443-1166
the 17 to 25 pound range. Writ- ten permission from a physi- cian is necessary if a person wishes to lose 50 pounds or more, if there is a medical problem, and an examination by a doctor is obligatory after a loss of 40 pounds.
Once a client has committed himself or herself to the plan, a daily (six days a week) visit to the center, including a weigh-in and counseling, is re- quired "This is important, notes Ms. Horan. "Commit- ment on the part of the client is crucial. People must do this for themselves. Commitment gets them going, and our job is to keep them motivated. This is a big part of daily counseling.
"The Diet Center program consist of a well-balanced diet which emphasizes low fat, high fiber and no refined car- bohydrates or sugar. We try to keep the blood sugar stable. We really focus on this. This avoids the 'Blind Hungries' which can happen when the blood sugar drops, and then you're hungry again.
Exercise has increasingly been found to be a necessary accompaniment to a diet pro- gram, and Diet Center clients are advised to take part in reg- ular exercise at least three times a week. "This is a vital part of our program," explains Ms. Horan. "We help clients decide on an exercise they'll stay with. We believe in a low- impact aerobic exercise, and our clients seem to be walkers. We find that walking is good for the mental attitude, too. It can be very meditative. The Diet Center also has a low-impact aerobic workout and exercise video which is available at Palmer Video on Route 206 North, the Kingston Video in the Kingston Shopping Center, and at the Diet Center
In addition, we have a reciprocal agreement offering a 10% discount with the New U Figure Salon Their exercise machines, which emphasize toning and inch loss, can sup- plement walking and aerobics.
Stabilization Program. Once clients have reached their desired weight loss goal, they participate in a stabilization program (one to three weeks) where there is a gradual in crease in the choices of food. "This is important," notes Ms. Horan, "because the tendency when coming off a diet often is to go wild. Stabilization gives
FUNCTIONAL AND DECORATIVE CRAFTS UNIQUE JEWELRY
We offer a diverse selection of distinctive and affordable crafts, representing more than 100 craftspeople from across the United States. Come see our store full of:
JEWELRY • POTTERY • GLASS • WOOD WEAVING • HANGING SCULPTURE
Montgomery Shopping Center Route 206 Rocky Hill New Jersey 08553 f/^X^S) (609) 924-3355
P*0 ST0HE H0URS
Monday to Wednesday. Friday. 10-6 • Thursday, 10-8 • Saturday. 10-5 • Sunday. 12-5
VISA
Bringing the World's Finest to The Corner of Nassau & Witherspoon
The Hamilton Collection ... bringing together creations
from Tiffany & Co., pearls from Mikimoto. designs of Angela
Cummings. timepieces from Rolex. Kbel and Cartier. sterling
silver from Buccellati, crystal by Lolique and Baccarat
and much more.
You needn't travel the world over to find the worlds finest
Simply visit Hamilton Jewelers.
HAMILTON
IEWELERS SINCE 1912
Princeton, N.J., °2 Nassau Street, cO>-c*.M200
Lawrenceville, N.J., Alt. Rte 1 & lexas Ave., 609-771-9400
Palm Beach and I'alm Beach Gardens ! la
Engagements
and Weddings
fUH CLOTMtS *NO •CCISSOBISS IO»
EIEBCISE »>0
■nullum
A December wedding is plan- ned.
Zahn-Wheatley. Brenda Zahn. daughter of Gerald and Lois Zahn, 81 deHart Drive. Belle Mead, to Mark Wheatley, son of Elaine and Charles Wheatley of Grasonville, Md
Ms. Zahn, a graduate of the Hun School, is a senior at Cedar Crest College in Allentown, Pa
Mr Wheatley, a graduate of Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pa . is employed uilli the law firm of Wheatley and Kanquist in Annapolis, Md
The couple plan a summer wedding
PRINCETON CLOTHING CO.
Formal Wear
Rental & Sales
17 Witherspoon St
924-0704
and Mrs. Stephen M. Williams
Diane R, Busty
Engagements
Busby-ParmHr, Diane R
Busby, daughter of Mrs Gilbert P Kettles of Mamoroneck. NY, and the late Alan D. Busby, to Charles R. Parmele IV. son of Mr and Mrs Parmele m, Rolling Hill Road, Skillman
Miss Busby graduated from invent of the Sacred Heart m Greenwich. < tonn . uid from Mt. Vernon Colic Is wiili Sheareon, U'hman Hut- ton in New York City,
Mr. ParmeU- attended the
Staten Island Academy, The
nceville School, Rollins
< (illrj'C, llir I 'nivrrsil V ol
Louisville, end Unlet < College He is a partner oi Parmele, Taylor and Burbach, Insurance brokers ol New Vorh Citj and Pi inceton, of which his fathei is president
ASK ANGELA
Weddings
Williams-McLaughlin. Char- lotte T McLaughlin, daughter of Mr and Mrs George H. McLaughlin II of Princeton and Arlington, Vt , to Stephen M Williams, son of Mr and Mrs. H. Glenn Williams of Mont- gomery, Ala.; September 10 in Manchester, Vt.
Mrs Williams, a graduate of Princeton Day School, is a 19B4 gradual*' of Princeton Univer- sity and a graduate of New York University's School of Law A first-year associate with the law firm of Coudert Brothers, New York City, she will be working in Its i/mdonof- Fice
Her husband, a 1961 graduate ol i'i Inceton University, is a nice president "' Firrt Boston Corporation in London.
After a trip to Morocco, the couple will live al Bl i adogan Place London, England, SW l.
French-Price Diane M Price, daughter of Charles and Doris Csolak Jr oi Wesl Wind sor, to Martin J French, son of
John and Helena French of East Windsor, al Aldersgate United Methodist Church in Kast Brunswick, the Krv Champion Goldy officiating.
The bride, a graduate ol Steinert High School, received a master's degree in nursing rum Columbia University and an MBA. in management from Kairleigh Dickinson Uni-
versity She is a clinical spe- cialist al the Princeton Medical ( entei
Her husband, a graduate of Kast Brunswick High School and Kider College, is a sales representative with Eastman Kodak Co in Princeton.
After a wedding trip to Ber- muda, the couple will live in Holland. Pa
Nit.inil Hennesse\ Julie K
Barbra's Studio
Hair Design
Princeton Avenue, Hopewell, NJ 609-166-3966 Call for an appointment +
Barbra studied with Vidal Bassoon m his London salon and now she
brings to central New Jersey hair styles individually crafted for you
Tuesday through Saturday 8:30 am to 6:00 pm
Nastelin, II .Johnson Drive. Belle Mead; August 6 at the Princeton University Chapel, the Rev. Boyce Green, uncle of the bride, officiating.
Mrs Nastelin, a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is a third year stu- dent at Harvard Medical School.
Her husband received both undergraduate and graduate degrees from Rensselaer
Hennessey, daughter of Lind'a ^^^^T.^ £ ""
and Tom Hennessey. 66
electrical engineer at CNR.
Knickerbocker Drive. Belle Inc in Boston Mass
Mead, to Thomas Niland. son of Julia -hhI John Niland of Allan ta, Ga.; June 25 at Holy Trim ty Church. Washington D.C
Mrs Niland, ;i graduate «i Middlebury College, received a master's degree from the Flet- cher School of Law and Diplomacy, Medford, Mass She is employed bj vrsi in in temational marketing, stalion- ed hi Paris, Prance
Her husband graduated from Tufts University and received ;i master's degree from the Fletcher School. He is an econ- omics foreign service officer with the U.S. Department of State, posted in Paris,
After a honeymoon in Mar- tinique, the couple is living in Paris
Vistrlin-Green. Jennifer Green, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Lacey Green of North Brunswick, to John Nastelin, son of Mr and Mrs Harold
After a honeymoon in Canada, the couple is living in Brookline, Mass.
LeSportsac
26 Witherspoon St.
Princeton
(609) 924-6060
DECORATIVE SILKS
SILK FLOWERS AT DISCOUNT PRICES
Q We Specialize In §
■ CENTERPIECES I
HANGINGS ^J> I FLOWERS
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K
TREES
K *
o
CUSTOM MADE ARRANGEMENTS
At The Marketplace Rts. 27 & 518, Kendall Park
201-821-7454
Mon., lues.. Wed., Sat. 10-6; Thurs., Fri. 10-9; Sun. 12-5
How Fat is Too Fat?
Excess body fat can con- tribute to several health pro blems including high blood pressure, circulatory pro- blems, skeletal system pro- blems and adult onset diabetes Being even slight- ly overweight will affect you to some degree, and the more overweight you are, the more likely you are to encounter one or more "I these physical
manifestations.
Whether you have only a few pounds to lose or quite a few, the Diet Center can help. Our complete program provides you a balanced diet coupled with a reasonable exercise program to ensure that you lose weight and keep it off forever. Call Diet Center today for a free con- sultation. It's never too soon to think about your health
Diet«> Center'
mfvahmah
!M s Harrison St.
Office *■>, Suite A
Princeton. N.J.
6M-02tg333
TIFFANY Sterling Flask
59 Palmer Square Wesl • Princeton • 9242026
Famous for Lampshades — 20,000 shades —
Chandeliers, Lamps, Furniture
shxdy lAmp shop
Specialty Shop. In Panniyrvtnl*. Nat. Ywk. New Jefiay
BUCKS COUNTY PRINCETON aEMlNGTON
PEDDLERS VILLAGE FORRESTAL VILLAGE LIBERTY VILLAGE
Rout* 202 Rout* 1 Route* 202 C 31
Lenejko, Pennsylvania Now Jorwy New Jercey
215-794 7313 609-520 8755 201-766-5200
OPEN EVERY DAY • FREE PARKING
QCWfh
t *J fumiturt & accessories
ffa/>/rjfy_
HEKMAN
Inti nor Design Services Available
2152 Route 206. Belle Mead. N.J. . (201) 874-8383
Mon-Sat 10-5:30: Thurs 'til 9
Q\/(*i "Oil & skin
^^ » ^* carp cturiin
care studio II
manicures • pedlcurea europeon foctab
waxing body massage
sun tanning
Prtnct-lon Armi Shopping Ctntc* 448-W66
iivimopoi\ics.
PLANTS FOH TODAY'S, LIFESTYLES
• Soil-Free % V
• Allergy Free "Vv
• Water Once-A-Month
Specializing in Design
• Low Light Trees
• Brass, Crocks. Wicker
• Indoor European Gardens
Creative wkrtycfropon its
n
8 miles north ol Princeton Hi 206, Hillsborough, NJ (behind Dunkin Donuts)
201-359-7171
Mrs. Daniel 0. Cleaves
Weddings
Continued 'for" Preceding Page
Cleaves-Zawadsky. Janet M, Zawadsky, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Zawadsky, 161
-
DUTCH BULBS are here!
MUMS IN BLOOM plus...
Grub Control
Grass Seed
Fertilizers and
Weed Control
Fine Nursery Stock
OBAL
GARDEN MARKET
516 Alexander Rd. Princeton, NJ
"For the very best"
LANDSCAPE CONSULTANTS 452-2401
WHITE LOTUS FUTON
1 1 Chambers St. Princeton, NJ 08540 (609)497-1000
191 Hamilton St. New Druns., NJ 08901 (201)828-2111
Hodge Road, to Daniel O. Cleaves, son of Mr. and Mrs Eugene L. Cleaves Jr. of River- side, Conn.; August 27 at Princeton University Chapel, the Rev, Edward J. Dougherty officiating.
The bride graduated from Princeton Day School and re- ceived a B.A. from Middlebury College, Middlebury, Vt. She is a research assistant with Techni metrics in New York Ci- ty.
Her husband graduated from Greenwich High School, Green- wich, Conn,, and received a B.A. from Middlebury College. He is a government securities broker with Liberty Brokerage in New York City.
Sanes-Sculerati. Nancy Sculerati, daughter of Mrs. William Sculerati of Seaside Park, formerly of Princeton, and the late Mr. Sculerati, to Dan H. Sanes, son of Mr and Mrs. Irving A. Sanes of Buffalo. N. Y. ; September 9 in New York City, Justice Budd G. Goodman of the Supreme Court of the State of New York officiating.
Dr. Sculerati, a magna cum laude graduate of New York University, received an M.D. degree from New York Univer- sity School of Medicine. She served a residency in oto- laryngology at New York Uni- versity Medical Center, and completed a fellowship in pedi- atric otolaryngology at Children's Hospital, Pitts- burgh. She is director of pedi- atric otolaryngology at New York University Medical Cen- ter.
Dr. Sanes, a graduate of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, received a Ph.D. in biology from Princeton Univer- sity. He completed post- doctoral studies at the Univer- sity of Virginia at Charlottes- ville, and Yale University. He is director of research. Depart- ment of Otolaryngology. New York University School of Med-
It's New to Us
Continued horn Pag* 31
tape and literature to take home I teach the classes and we also have guest lecturers. These classes are also avail- able to the public at $3 a ses- sion."
Ms Horan, who has owned the Diet Center since October 1987 with her partner and hus- band. John Horan, also enjoys speaking to women's groups in the area She is pleased, too, to be on the advisory board of the Breast Cancer Research Cen- ter at the Princeton YWCA
In addition, she is very hap- py with the cooperation of such local restaurants as Princeton Charcuterie Cafe and the Wine Press, which have included or are soon to include Diet Center recipes and dishes on their menus. The Nassau Street Sea- food Company also offers Diet Center prepared entrees.
The Diet Center program fee is based on the amount of weight to be lost, and on an average comes to $40 a week or $285 for six weeks. Three methods of payment are avail- able — weekly, in advance or by installment, A discount is of- fered for those who pay in ad- vance or by installment.
Hours for the Diet Center are Monday through Friday 7 to 1:30, Monday, Wednesday, Thursday 5 to 8 p.m. and Satur- day 8 to 11,
Jean Stratton
OKoilr* M Gaydos AOL Interior Design
Complete Decorating Service
Residential • Commercial
Kf *pcx>f*ment I
9P
*Jhair
Xfmt
Since 1967, Princeton's
Most Popular Hairstudio
MAKES LOOKING GOOD
AFFORDABLE
HAIRSTYLING FOR MEN/ WOMEN
etomart <4
362 Nassau St. Princeton
(609(924-7733
Quality Fireplace Accessories
Enhance the beauty of your fireplace and home
Handcrafted Wood Mantels Tool Sets Glass Doors Custom Screens Custom Mailboxes
BOWDEN'S
Firesiue Shop
1731 Nottingham Way iRte 33) Hamil'on Tivp Exit 63 oft File 295
Designer Solariari
• The Armstrong Scianm no- wax surface keep* its Tke-nrw" look
tar longer thai a surface- And as so easy to eve lor'
• Inlaid Coka-" construc- tion pnmdes supervr damage resnunce and ooeaert wear protedicn.
PRINCETON & OLDEN AVES., TRENTON
Phone 392-2300
Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 9-6 Fri. 9-8; Sat. 9-4
EE Town Shop
1 OF PRINCETON. INC
1 .144 Nassau St.
L.
■ ■
cleaned >v- pol I
I . 1 1 airt Mcmogramming
609-924-3687
Open 9:30-5 Mon.-Sat.
Visa & Mastercard
accepted
It's Fall Shape-Up Time!
Summer is rough on your hair
Now's the time to give your
hair new life with a
perm, cut & re-condition.
Our professional
analysis shows which
perm to use for curl
or soft root perm. We'll
bring back body.
movement & shine and
give your hair a real
lift for fall!
PROFESSIONAL HAIR ARTISTRY FOR WOMEN AND MEN
Chelsea ^crimpers
For your appointment and consultation, call 924-1824
J
J
14 SPRING STREET PRINCETON, N.J.
(609) 924-1824
TUE & THUR 9-«: WEO & FRI 9^ SAT 9-4:30
■ar- For current REGISTER VERIFICATION CHECK THIS PAGE
- 0' 10 check business firms Registered Oul riot currently
ig on this page — CALL (609) 924-0737
MondayFn 10 a m 4 p.m
20
years of assistance to Princeton's CAREFUL BUYERS, in their deal- ings with local and near- by business people, qualifies Consumer Bureau to know very well
II Ml IK __
WHO'S
. • Advertising Outdoor:
>RC MAXWELL CO
2
V)
O
g • Air Conditioning;
£ GERARD M KUSTER HEATING & * COOLING SYSTEMS, INC
1 PRINCETON AIR CONDITIONING
Z e 799 3434
V PRINCETON FUEL OIL CO
O .MllOO
t- WILLIAM C PULLEN Selet/Serviee W ' cmmrcl Htstn 448029*
| • Alarm Systems:
a AOT SECURITY SYSTEMS Fife, Burglar
8- Hoio up Oosed Circuit TV cmmrcl ft rsdtl 12<* Lawrence Rd Trenton 695-1 144 =■ FEDERAL ALARM CO. Burglar Fire S Medical Auto Rsdll & Cmmrcl 24 Hrs H 7 days a wk Police hook up 585-3912
| • Antique Dlrs; Auctioneers:
O LESTER A ROBERT SLATOFF. If*
•~ Auctioneers Dealers A; ,
Antiques Households Estates Silver Jewelry China Glass. Bought ft Sold 777 West Slate Trenton 393 4648
• Antiques:
FIELD ANTIQUES. 18th & 19th Century
• Auto Rentals:
ECONO-CAH I raa local customer
V4 47QQ
• Auto Repairs & Service:
AAMCO TRANSMISSIONS Pre* lowing one day servce Open 7 a m lo 7 p m . m 5 pm 830 State Rd Prn 92' 0081
FOWLER'S GULF (formerly Princeton E* 0" & Oomeslic repairs VW NJ insp Ctr 271 Nassau Si Prn 921 9707
GENERATOR 4 STARTER EXCHANGE Specialising in auio rHectrcal service Mention thla ad for 10H off 36 W Taylor Av Trenion &88 1530
LARINI'S SERVICE CENTER 24 hr low mg 272 Alexander St Prn 924 8553
LA RUE BROS. SUNOCO Complete aulo ijor 4 minor Foreign 4 Domestic 24 hr towing Rl 206 4 Princeton Av Princeton ft
RftJ TURNEY MOTOR CO 348 Rt 1 Mon Jet 201297 1990
SPORTS A SPECIALIST CARS. INC Mercer County s only auth SAAB dealer 20 Arete Pkwy Trenton 989 7222
THE SUBURBAN WRENCH HONDA Automotive Specialist 240 W Delaware Av Pngtn 737 1235
• Cleaning; Dry:
CRAFT CLEANERS 225 Nassau Princeton 924-3242
Plaza Prn Junction 7990327 Windsor His Shop Ctr
:, jsor 443 8320
1840 Rl 1 Lawrence Twp 6953242 LUXE FRENCH DRV CLEANERS Dry ctng laundiy pc* up S
''921-0693
• Florists:
COUNTRY FLORIST .
COUNTRY FLORIST & GREENHOUSE
*ers. balloons try' t 315 Rt 33. Hlstn 448 0222
Food Markets:
' ' WAWA FOOD MARKET
PRINCETON DRY CLEANING 4 SHIRT co-a sandwiches panv plane's
LAUNOERERS ) Sameday 140 University PI Prn 921 3677
• 259 Nassau Prn (rear ot — ~^^^^^^^^^_
WAWA) 683-4218
• Handbags; Leathergoods:
SUSAN GREENE
handbaa .^ageft ai
ill ,3i low discount pne Marketplace Pnncelon Roules274518. 201 297 6249
• Hardware Stores;
LUCAR Paint hdwre tools plumbing 4 elec suppl houswrs Open eves Prn- Htstn Rd Prn Jncm (local call) 799-0599
• Kitchen Cabinet Refacing:
KITCHEN MAGIC, INC. Custom cafcnei relacmg. counter tops, carpeniiy wori- Free estimates 609 393 37 7Q
KORRIDOR KITCHENS by Gary E Wodeiman Custom Relacmg of Cabinets wood S fo'm.ca 587 7138
NEW LOOK KITCHENS Mchen Cabinet Relacmg Specialist free Estimates Shop. al Home Service 448-3461
• Cleaning; Home:
MAtDEASY SERVICES
KINGSTON ANTIQUES I 924 3
• Banks:
REN'S J
IS Specializing in silver Chma & glass lamps toys 4 banks 4 im portant collectors items Member Inl See ol Appraisers 14 S Stale St Newtown, Pa 215 968 5511 THE SILVER SHOP Antique & new Silver.
-.■■,■-.-..■. I I',!
Sq W.-.' Prmrt-tun 'V-l .'".'(■
• Art Galleries:
LEXINGTON GALLERY 2* V- r Av
Lawrenceville B63 '"'i''1
• Auto Body Repair Shops:
BODY SHOP By Harold Wllllama
Specializing in Fiberglass Corvette All
domestic & loreign cars Route 206,
Princeton 9218585 CHARLIE'S AUTO BODY |
American 4 Foreign Fast service 2349
Pngln Rd Pngtn 737 3267 DEALER'S AUTO BODY Collision E "pons 4 Domestic Glass installed
Woodside Rd Robbm&villo 259.6390 DYNAMARC AUTO BODY, INC.
Foreign & Domestic. FlbotglaBs repairs
I M-n cvlirniitt", I ■|"-rl rnfinr'.liuiij
17^3 Rt 1, MONMOUTH JUNCTION 201 297 0527 QUAKER BRIDGE BODY SHOP. Amer 4
Foreign Car, FREE ESTIMAT!', 4i:«i Quaker Br Rd I nwrunuville 799 3119 REILLY'S COLLISION 24 hf lowing Rl 1, So Brunswick 201297 9390
332 * CITY FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK
103 Carnegie Clr Sle 104 Prn 987-2626 FIRST FIDELITY BANK. PRINCETON
Grand Opening Promotions111
■ - M '■ '.."I" '(4527760
UNITED JERSEY BANK N A ' » o".c« m
UNITED SAVINGS ft LOAN ASSOC i M Franklin Corn* Rd i m
• Bathrooms:
NASSAU KITCHEN ft BATH CO.
Rl 206 al Mouniamview Plaza,
Belle Moad 201369 2026 QUAKER MAID KITCHENS by FLEET.
WOOD 32 years ojtponortco Custom
designs and installation 20 Rt 206 ■'22 0126
• Beauty Salons:
FRENCH CONNECTION
"■.in Rd, Prn Jcl 799-1991 Prn Forrostal Village, Rl < 987 8770 LA JOLIE COIFFURES. INC. Full service 69 Palmer Square West, Pnncelon 924 3983
PRINCETONIAN HAIRSTYLING FOR MEN AND WOMEN. 362 N,,v,iw Pnncelon 924 7733
• Auto Dealers:
ACURA Auth. Salea, Service, Leaalng
PRINCETON ACURA
3001 Rl 1 Uwrencovillo 895 0600 AUDI A PORSCHE Sales A Service.
Holberts Porsche Aud> Inc 1425 Easlon
Rd Warrington Pa 7 miles Irom New
Hope 215 343 2890 BAKER PONTIAC-BUICK
Rte 206 Prmcoton (opp airport)
Sales 921 2222 Service 921 2400 BUICK SALES, SERVICE. LEASING
FEDOR BUICK
Rts 66 al 206 Bordentown 298 4444 BUICK Salea, Service, Leaalng,
Rentals i I NNI ssi mm i- hi 202
206 North Somsrvtlla 201 r25-3020 CATHCART PONTIAC
1620 N Olden Av Tramon 102 51 1 1 CHEVROLET AUTH. SALES A SERVICE
JOHN WOOD CHEVMi iLfil
Rt 206. Prn (opp Airport) 924 3350 DICK GREENFIELD DODGE A TRUCK
CENTER. 2700 Brunswick Pike,
< "ville 882 1000 HAMILTON Chryalar-Plymouth i Ik Service Prymi
Impona) 1240 Roulo 33, Hamilton Square
586 201 1
JEEP S.iii
ANT1 JEEP, 2635 Soulh Broad
St Trenion 888 1800
MERCEOES-Bem Salea, Service A
Leaalng UARKHAM MOTORS
No Gaston A v Somrvl 201-685-0800 MERCEDES BENZ
Parts* Leasing PRINCETON MOTOR
SPORT INC JD Powers Assoc Rated #1
on "Own*
Rt I, Lawrvl 771 8040 RAM AUTOMOTIVE INC ■
2635 So Broad. Trenton 888 1600
SPORTS A SPECIALIST CARS, INC
20 Arctic Pkwy >■.
SUBARU SALES. SERVICE, PARTS, LEASING NITTI'S SUBARU
1883 Rt 33 Hamilton So 586 1331
VOLKSWAGEN-PEUGEOT, PRINCETON Routt 206. I
WHITEHOUSE IMPORTED CARS
■ JAGUAR • SAAB • PEUGEOT Rl 22 East Whitenouse St a ?Oi 534 2165
ZftW HONDA Sales & Service
Z&W MA20A Sales & Service
• Bedding:
WHITE LOTUS FUTON 1 1 Chambers Si, I'm,, i-ton (lower levrl) 601 4<i 7 IO00
• Boat Sales & Service:
LENTINE MARINE Hwy 31,
Flominglon 201-7822077
• Blueprinting;
S & A DUPLICATING INC. KODAK duplicating 6 OflSOl printing Spiral Binding & Therm a Binding on piosmises Blueprinimg 5 Independence Way. Rt t, Princeton 924 7136 and 987 0655
• Clock Repair:
ROY SJOGREN Antique 4 Modern Specializing m Grandlalhers HOUSE CALLS MADE 201 560 1921
• Closets:
CALIFORNIA CLOSET COMPANY For
the ultimate in space utilization Ad/uslable wood 1000 Rl 130 Cranbury (609) 655 1899 (Pa 215 736 1133) CLOSET DOCTOR. THE Custom closet design 4 instal Auth D'r CLOSET MAID Shelving 10 yr Imld warranty FREE Ofl the-spot estimales 443 8202 4 654 1 786
• Clothing Furniture:
10 000 sq ft ol clothing, furniture, bnc-a brae etc SALVATION ARMY THRIFT STORE I " ■■■ i ■■■..'
• Computer Rentals:
NATIONAL MICRORENTALS Inc. Renl 4 lease IBM Compaq 4 Macintosh Com- puters Printers 19" Monitors, LaserJets 4 other equipment Free maintenance 4 rprs. delivery to you' business 201 329-6500 (local call Irom Prn )
• Computer Sales & Service:
ENTRE COMPUTER
Specializing in computers for business IBM. COMPAQ, TANDON, TOSHIBA 47 Slate Road Princeton 683 4141
HUGH CARVER GROUP. INC. Portable
■ ■ Specialists Zenilh Sharp
Toshiba NEC By appl 201 274 3406
TAAA ENTERPRISES OF PRINCETON, INC. Compleie system design & mslalla lion Specializing m Networking Service 4 rpr 31 your location or ours 150 Wither- spoon Pm 683 9464
• Copying; Duplicating:
THE COPY CENTER 575 Ewing St. Princeton 921-2748 S & A DUPLICATING INC.
KODAK duplicating 4 ottset printing Spiral Binding 4 Therma Binding on premises Blueprinlmg 5 Independence Way Rl 1, Pnncelon 924-7136 and 987 0655
• Copying Machines:
COASTAL COPY SYSTEMS
RICOH new 4 reconditioned
n
RIGISIERED
STANDARDS OF
RESPONSIBLE CONSUMER SERVICE
Consumer Bureau's Panel of consumer volunteers expects that all Consumer Bureau Registered business people will:
5) When requested by any customer, explain to the best ol their ability the CAPABILITIES AND LIMITATIONS of whatever they are selling in rela- tion to the customer's stated needs,
1) In any business transaction, and to the best of their ability. KEEP ALL THEIR PROMISES TO THEIR CUSTOMERS — whether expressed or im- plied (Consumer Bureau considers that — except as otherwise provided in a factory warranty or other understanding at time of sale — every sale ol merchandise or services carries with it an im- plied promise that the merchandise or services will do the job or yield the satisfaction that an average consumer would reasonably expect under the cir- cumstances) or,
2) WHEN PROMISES CANNOT BE KEPT, MAKE PROMPT, ADEQUATE REFUNDS, AD- JUSTMENTS, REPAIRS OR REPLACEMENTS: and
3) Furnish all customers, on request, with FUL- LY ITEMIZED STATEMENTS of all charges, showing how determined or computed.
4) WIHEN PRICES ARE NOT QUOTED OR AGREED UPON IN ADVANCE, charge no more than others in the same business and locality are currently charging for the same or similar mer- chandise or services (Consumer Bureau sometimes, in such situations, conducts local price surveys to determine "going rates" for particular products or services, but never takes a position, one way or another, on a price which has been agreed upon IN ADVANCE between a consumer and a business firm)
6) ADVERTISE ONLY MERCHANDISE AND/OR SERVICES WHICH ARE ACTUALLY AVAILABLE at the prices and on the terms advertised
7) Except as otherwise agreed in advance, TAKE PROPER CARE OF CUSTOMERS' PRO- PERTY and make prompt repairs or reimburse- ment for property damaged or lost while in business firm's custody
Consumer Bureau
DOES NOT EXPECT BUSINESS PEOPLE:
8) Except under warranty or guarantee, to pro- vide free or infallible diagnosis of mechanical failures or other malfunctions.
9) To refund money, or exchange merchandise or cancel a contract merely because of a customer's change of mind — especially when material has been cut, special purchases made or expenses incurred, nor to make retunds or ad- justments without being given reasonable oppor- tunity to correct errors or defects in workmanship or merchandise
• Building Contractors:
HARDEN CONSTRUCTION New home
itmiiii'i'. Hi>[i,in', a improvement i
Ollicu Renovations Andrew J Brenor 201 ?97 1993 NICK MAURO ft SON, BUILDERS. INC
' uBtom immos additions, alterations, trie 924-283Q
• Building Materials & Lumber:
COLEMAN'S HAMILTON SUPPLY CO. Klooknarfid 41 SUM Mrcvl 587 4020 GROVER LUMBER CO I -•■■
HEATH LUMBER CO I Offlpji Building Conlor Danvwy Sorvice 1580N Oldun Av Tltnlon '■>■
• Carpet Cleaning:
CARPET MAGICIANS, INC. On location
-
M&P CARPET ft INTERIORS
"pel cleaning (201)
- Il
• Carpet Dealers:
G FRIED CARPET OF PRINCETON BlgelOtt & .Ml major brands
Won Shopping Center N Hi 683-9333
LOTH FLOORS ft CEILINGS Karaslan Bigolow. Lee others 206 Se<
1 1 M201 M&P CARPET & INTERIORS
' | 329-8462
• Auto Parts Dealers:
FIRST CLASS AUTO SALVAGE New Used 4 RfabLtifl Auio Pads
lenxMi Av Trenion 586-6222
OUAKERBRIDGE AUTO PARTS Mew S retuiH aulo parts tor American & Imports Open 7 days 101 Sloan Av Mrcv1890-1222
• Caterers:
ANGELONIS Catering B*rtqu« & party
■ l
Hon Sq 586^100 COX'S DELI ft MARKET Hot 4 CCJd bul
024-6269
PRINCETON CHARCUTEHIE 254 Naasau St. Fi..
• Children's Wear:
LOBEL'S I ins i. wropean Clothing ft Toys Suae Intent, Toddler Boys 4 Girls lo Sire 14 #11 Palmer Square East Princeton, 683 5607
• Chimney Clng. & Rprng.
CHIMNEV SWEEPS UNLIMITED, INC.
Guaranteed no mess11 Insured tree est chimney caps ma Pmln 921-0585
SCRIPTEX ENTERPRISES. LTD
Supplies & Service tor most copiers Serving Pnncelon area 609 275-1100
• Delicatessens:
COX'S DELI ft MARKET 180 Nassau Si Pnncelon 924 6269
• Draperies, Slipcovers, etc.:
ALTINA'S World ot Creative Faahlon. I abru uri i> ippi 924-0774
• Electrical Contractors:
CLOSSON ELECTRICAL CONTRAC- TORS. INC. Commsrcial industrial ha UC No 6900 Latvt 695 7655
• Employment Agencies:
STAFF BUILDERS TEMPORARY
EMPLOYMENT SERVICE Serving ihe
Route i Corridor, 211 College Rd E
il Ctr Princeton 452-0020
• Entertainment:
PRECISION DJ'S. Disco Rock, Big Band. Motown Video laping services &
lighting 924 7922
SOUND CHOICE
Professional Disc Jockeys
Pave Hoettel . ,
• Excavating Contractors:
ALL WORK CO. Backhoe. skid loader Belle Maad 201-359-3000
• Exterminators:
COOPER PEST CONTROL Graduale Enlomologist Rendering qu.i" since 1955 Local Call 799 1 300
NATIONWIDE EXTERMINATING SER- VICE i .-,! 4 operated smce I ii writing 452 1023
P M PEST MASTER . '.-4 all types Q> pe« conlroJ Ful . guaranteed reasonable rales 396 0266
• Fabrics:
OANNEMANN FABRICS Complete line ot araporv 4 dress labncs, crafts & notions
■
• Fencing:
SUBURBAN FENCE COMPANY 2nd 4 3rd generation family business 100s oi -\ . ''"nceton
•■ Trenton
• Floor Covering Contractors:
MAP CARPET ft INTERIORS Sales 4 Inst 485 Georges RJ Oa>ion(20li 329-8462
TILE DISCOUNT CTR. Vmyis Caramca Carpetmg Capitol Plaja Shop Ctr Tien (15 mm Irom Prn ) 392 2300
• Fuel Oil & Oil Burners:
LAWRENCEVILLE FUEL Fuel Oil. plmbg hlng air cond 4 energy audits 16 Gor- don Av, Lrncvl 896-0 U1
NASSAU OIL Sales 4 Service 800 Slate Rd , Prn 924 3530
PRINCETON FUEL OIL CO. 220 Alexander St Prn 924-1100
WILLIAM C. PULLEN Sales/Service rsdnll, cmmrcl Htstn 448-0294
• Fur Shops & Furriers:
PRINCETON FURS BY MARVIN. INC
New lurs including hi-style Minks restyling repairs, storage on premises 66 Wilher spoon Princeton 921-2660
• Furniture Dealers:
GASIOR'S FURNITURE ft AC- CESSORIES 2152 flte 206, Belle Mead 201 ■874-8383 (local call)
• Furniture; Discount:
RIDER FURNITURE New high quality large selection top lines. Discounts 75 Mam Si Kingston 924-0147
• Health Clubs:
SHADES OF FITNESS Full service health club, coed Plamsboro Town Cft 10 Schalks Crossing 799-0092
• Heating Contractors:
GERARD M. KUSTER HEATING &
COOLING SYSTEMS. INC.
Ewmg 882 1281 WM G LOWE HTG. ft AIR CON.
Hopewell 466-3705 NASSAU OIL Sales 4 Service
800 Slaie Rd Pm 924 3530 PRINCETON AIR CONDITIONING
Esl 1970 installation Service 799-3434 PRINCETON FUEL OIL CO.
220 Alexander Si. Prn 924-1100
• Furniture Dnpainted:
ERNEY'S UNFINISHED FURNITURE One
ot ihe largest selections ol unfinished fur- niture in New Jersey NEW LOCATION 2807 Rlel Alternate. Lawrncvl 530-0097
• Futons:
WHITE LOTUS FUTON. 1 1 Chambers St. Princeton (lower level) 609-497-1000
• Garage Doors & Openers Sales & Service:
MILLER. WILLIAM Repairs 4 new mslalla tioni Automatic door openers serviced 4 installed Princeton Junction, 799-2193
• Garbage & Trash Removal:
NATIONAL WASTE DISPOSAL. Inc.
• Garden Centers:
OBAL GARDEN MARKET INC.
, 'or the garden Alexander Road i iaJ, Pnncelon, 452-2401
• Gifts:
CREATIVE HANDS Jewelry pottery glass wood, weavings puppets etc Mont gomery Shop Ctr Rt 206 Rocky Hill 924-3355 y
THE CROSS ft SHAMROCK Religious ar ■ :-h imports Clover Mall 3100 >ge Rd Mrcvl 586 9696
THE TOWN SHOP Unique qijairty gifts Silver repairs Personated service 344 Nassau Princeton 924 3687
• Gourmet Shops & Foods:
FIDDLER S CREEK FARM : x.ntry smok rti*00?' Iurkeys & caO°nS Mail Order PRINCETON CHARCUTERIe" '
j -. Si Prmceion 6839057
• Greenhouses:
MA2UR NURSERY Blooming plants ft plant supplies 265 Bakers Basin Rd . Lwryt 587-9150
• Hobby Shops:
IRON HORSE HOBBIES Central Jersey's most complete Hobby Shop Flock 4 Quaker Bridge Rds Mrcvl 586-2282
• Home Improvements:
ALL WORK CO. Basements decks and more1 Belle Mead 201-359-3000
• Hospital Beds; Equipment
AMBEST
1674 Pennington Rd Ewtng, 882-3702 DELCREST MEDICAL PRODUCTS
Hospital equipment lor the home 2100 Nottingham Way, Hamlin Twp 586-1679
• Insurance:
ALLSTATE INSURANCE CO Lloyd Bezar, Agent 168 Montgomery Knoll, Rt 206 Rocky Hill. 921-6613
• Interior DecoratingfOesign:
ARTHUR'S INTERIORS
Residential/Commercial 2850 Route 1 . Lawrenceville 883-2056 KATE M. GAYDOS A.S.l.O. Residential & Commercial Interior Design 737-1010
• Jewelers:
GEM JEWELERS Gold, diamonds, wat- ches Rprs 4 engraving on premises Gift items: watch rprs Pennytown Shop Village. Rt 31, Pennington 466-9691
LE BIJOU FINE JEWELERS INC Pnncelon U ■ 3535 Route 1 So , Princeton 987-2422
PHIL PRATICO JR. JEWELERS Urges! selection in the country al the most alfordable prices 544 Rt 33 Mercervil'e 5867760
• Kennels:
SOUTH BRUNSWICK KENNELS Reg Oobermans. Ger Shepherds. Rottweilers Lnasas Dachshunds S.amese Training Hoarding. Groommg 201-329-2117
• Kitchen Cabinets:
COLEMAN'S HAMILTON SUPPLY CO
MILLNER LUMBER CO. D.sir HAAS kit- gj^^s. paneling 600 A r
NASSAU KITCHEN ft BATH CO Hi 206 at Mountamview Plaza Belle Meaa 201-359 2026 w5SdR "*'D K,TCHENS by FLEET- 322?" year" "W'ence Custom aes^ns and mstailalion 20 Rt 206 fantan 201 722-0126
• Landscaping Contractors:
OOEHLER LANDSCAPES. Landscape Designing Shade Trees, fences, patios 2281 Brunswick Pike, Lrncvl 896-3300
• Laundries:
WASH-O-MAT OF PRINCETON Compleie laundry service, bulk dry clng by Ihe pound Do-it-yoursell or leave tl' 259 Nassau. Prn (tear pi WAWA) 921 -9785
• Lawn, Garden & Farm Supplies & Equip;
P&W SALES ft SERVICE, INC.
Compleie service 4 repair ol all types o' lawn mowers 4 tractors Rl 518 (behind Elks Club) Blawenberg 466-0114 SIMPLICITY Lawn Garden 4 Snow Equip mentfrom3''i to20hp Complete service center JOSEPH J. NEMES - SONS, Rte 206 Prn 924-4177
• Lawn Maintenance:
LAWN DOCTOR of PRINCETON
Complete lawn services Free Estimates, call 737-8181 MERCER LAWN ft LANDSCAPING
Compleie lawn maintenance Free estimates, reasonable prices 883-8016
• Lighting Fixtures:
THE LIGHT GALLERY Indoor 4 Outdoor Futures Residential. Commercial and Industrial Prn Shop Ctr 924-6878
• Lightning Rods:
STONY BROOK SYSTEMS. INC.
Hopewell 466 3217 (local call Irom Pm I
• Limousine Service:
A-l LIMOUSINE. 22 yrs ot professional . service 24 hrs a day, door-to-door 924-0070
AVOLANTE Limousines N J s Premiere Private Livery " Mega Streich Limousine (30 rt ) Also, Super Slretch & Stretch Limousines & Sedans Princeton 683-9494
CAMEO LIMOUSINE SERVICE. When You Demand the Ultimate in Elegance ' Corporate Accounls welcome l C.C. Lie No 202324 Prn 9216116
CROWN LIMOUSINE SERVICE Serving the Pnncelon Area 448-2001
EMERALD LINE COACH <ury vehicles. 24-hr dooMo-door service Airports, AC Weddings Special Occasions 586-7772
GRAYTOP PRINCETON LIMOUSINE Cadillac Sedans 6 Limousines lor Cor- poraie'personal travel .921-1122
NASSAU CHAUFFEUR SERVICE. INC The Prolesstonal chauffeur B makes a dillerence 370 Wall. Prn 9248400
OLYMPIC LIMOUSINE SERVICE Over 200 vehicle Meet, mcl Rolls RoyceT 24 hr door lo-door 1-800-822 9797
PRINCETON LIMOUSINE SERVICE. Luxury Sedan Service All Airports - Maior Cities Casinos Check our rates flrsll 452-7744
WILLIAM'S CAR HIRE SERVICE Cadfflac Stretch limos 4 Rolls Royce iimos 800-822-9797
• Linens:
UPSTAIRS OOWN SHOP Specializing m Down comforters, pillows & linens Pnncelon Forreslal Village. Pm 620-0610
WHO
for the WISE CONSUMER:
^ The local business people advertising below are all Consumer Bureau Registered, which means they have not even one valid unsatisfied customer complaint in Consumer Bureau's files.
CONSUMER BUREAU
oo
I
News of
Clubs and Organizations
• Mortgages; loans:
CITICORP MORTGAGE. INC.
330 Alexander Si Princeton NJ 09540
921-9500
6 offices m New Jersey CITY FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK
103 Carnegie Ctr Ste 104 Pm 987 2626 GMAC MORTGAGE CORP Professional
Assistance & Consultation Prn Meadows
01c Park Plamsboro 1800 624 0114 UNITED JERSEY BANK, N.A. 18o(tiCes
in Mercer Middlese- & Union Counties
Mam Office 90 Nassau, Prn 987-3200 UNITED SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOC
134 Franklin Comer Rd . Lwfvl 896-8000
• Moving & Storage:
A SAVEWAY VAN LINES
AERO MAYFLOWER-O'CONNOR BROS
Corporate & Rsdi I Free Mayflower mov
mg M Princeton 921 3030 ANCHOR MOVING & STORAGE Agents
lor Mayllower Lei our family move your
tamily Route 206 Commerce
Columbus 298 7877
BOHREN'S Moving & Storage. Local &
long distance moving & slorage Uniled
Van Unes Aulh Agi Princeton 452-2200
• Mufflers:
MIGHTY MUFFLER CTR,
(Formerly Scotli Muttler Ctr ) Div ol J J Nemes&Sons Inc Mufflers lor Foreign & American cars 100 percent guarantee Rte 206. Prn 921-0031
• Musical Instruments:
CREATIVE MUSIC STUDIOS Electronic keyboards, organs, pianos, guitars & syn- thesizers 183 Scotch Rd . Ewmg Twp 882-6450
• Nursing Homes:
MERCERVILLE NURSING & CON- VALESCENT CTR. Skilled Nursing Home 2240 Whitehorse- Mercer ville Rd Mercervtlle 586-7500
• Pet Shops & Supplies:
FIN FUH & FEATHERS
Slore lor Pet Lovers 4 1 1 Rr 206 Hlsboro (behind Ounkm Donuls) 201 359 PETS Flemington Mall. Flmin 201 782-3737
• Pharmacies:
FORER PHARMACY
160 W'therspoon Pm 921 7287
• Photographers:
JAY PHOTOGRAPHY INC. Portrait & Commercial We solve photographic problems Cranbury 609-448 5623
• Photographic Equip/Supplies:
PRINCETON CAMERA CENTER. INC
Complete photo services tor amateurs & professionals 830 Rte 206 Prn 924-5147
• Photographic Services:
PRINTSTON PHOTO One-Hour
pholo processing Open 9-6 Mon thru Sal 6 So Tulane. Pnnceion 683-5118 S 4 A DUPLICATING 24-hr service 5 Independence Way. Rt 1 Princeton 924-7136 & 987 0655
Princeton s consumer information bank
SINCE 1967
• Piano Dealers:
CREATIVE MUSIC STUDIOS Roland Digital Pianos. Sales & Lessons 183 Scotch Rd Ewmg Twp 882-6450
NOLDES PIANOS & ORGANS, Inc.
Hunterdon Shop Ctr Rie 202. Flemington (30 mm Irom Pm) 201-782 54QQ
• Picture Framing:
LEXINGTON GALLERY 25 Texas Ave Lawrenceville 883-8660
• Pizzerias:
ALFONSO'S PIZZERIA 8. RESTAURANT
Homemade lasagna, steaks, mussels,
calzones. ptzza Princeton North Shopping
Center. Rt 206, 924-8351 PIZZA STAR Students rated us
as b°sl Pizza m Princeton1"
Princeion Shopping Ctr 921-7422
VESUVIO PIZZERIA & RESTAURANT
Pizza, calzone, zeppoti, subs WE
DELIVER, 258 Nassau, Prn 921-2477
• Office Fumrture&Equip. Dealers: • Plants:
CENTER STATIONERS Princeion Shopping Ctr N Harrison Si 924-5706
HINKSON'S Complete line ol office fur- niture & supplies 82 Nassau Princeion 924-0112
OFFICE FURNITURE BY BARRINGERS Always discounted 15% to 40% Free delivery 2811 Alt Rt 1 Lwrvl 882-0009
OFFICE SPECIALTIES, INC. Office & Computer furniture & supplies 2105 Nottingham Way Mrcrvl 587 5411
PENN-JERSEY OFFICE PRODUCTS & BUSINESS MACHINES. Low Low New York Prices Area s largest display" Immediate delivery 2 S Oelmorr Av Mornsville. Pa 215-295-1191
STATE SALES OFFICE EQUIPMENT New & Used office furniture bought & sold 694 S Broad. Tren 392-8066
• Opticians:
LAWRENCEVILLE OPTICIAN
For The Unique tn Eyewear 3100 Princeton Pike, Lwrvl 896-2521 MEADOWS OPTICIANS New Princeion Boutique af 457 N
Harrison St 683-7994. Also at Prn
Meadows & Concordia Shop Centers
• Organ Dealers:
NOLDES PIANOS & ORGANS. Inc.
Hunterdon Shop Or Rte 202. Remington (30 mm from Prn) 201-782-5400
• Paint & Wallcoverings; Retail:
WINDSOR PAINT A PAPER. Windsor Plaza. 64 Hightslown Rd Princeton Junction. 799-2227
• Painting:
CHARLIE- Residential Painting
Specialist. Fully insured, free est Serving
m Ihe Prn area 2158605097
B. RICH PAINTING & ROOFING Professional lor 17 yrs Nea! & clean in- tenor 4 exterior painting We charge only enough to do it right 882-7738
JULIUS H. GROSS INC. 25 years pidessional painting 924 1 474
QUEREC PAINTING Professionals in surface treatments Rocky Hill 9248718
• Painting & Paper Hanging:
DANNY'S PAINTING. E<1enorinterior Ful- ly insured Free estimates Water Pressure Washing 921-7835
GROSS. JULIUS H. Interior & Exterior painting, paper hanging Decorating 683 Rosedale Road. Princeton 924-1474
J4R PAINTING Paperhanging. Interior & Exterior Painting. Carpentry Free estimates Insured 466-9033
PERONE, B.R. Painting & Decorating 921-6468
MAZUR NURSERY
Blooming plants & plant supplies
265 Bakers Basm Rd . Lwrvl 587-9150
• Plumbing & Heating Contractors:
N.C JEFFERSON PLUMBING &
HEATING Rsdll cmmcl. mdstrt Serving the Prn area Lie #7084 924 3624 REDOING S PLUMBING ft HEATING Plumbing, htg & air cond License No 5300 234 Nassau Si Prn 924-0166
• Printers:
AAA REPROGRAPHICS Otlset printing, camera stais Fast service & competitive prices 262 Alexander Si Prn 924-8100
THE COPY CENTER 575 Ewmg St. Princeton 921-2748
KINKOS COPIES Fast quality copies Macintosh Laserwnler Open 7 days a week 33 Wilherspoon, Prn 921-2679
LDH PRINTING UNLIMITED Complete Printing Service 9244664 Off- set Printing — Fast Service — Color Prin- ting. Typesetting. Bond Copies, Rubber Stamps, Noiary Service 1101 State Rd (U S 206) Bldg. B. Prn
PIP PRINTING OF GREATER PRINCETON Full Service Printer 10 Schalks Crossing Rd, Plamsboro275-4544
PRINT-IT. INC.
Princeton 12 Wttherspoon 924-2013 Mercervilte 100 Youngs Rd 568-9600
S & A DUPLICATING INC. KODAK duplicating & offset printing Spiral Binding & Therms Binding on premises Blue- printing 5 Independence Way, Rt 1, Princeion 924-7136 & 987-0655
• Pumps & Well Drilling:
SAMUEL STOTHOFF CO. INC.
Rt 31. Flemington 201-7822116
• Records & Compact Discs & Cassettes:
PRINCETON RECORD EXCHANGE
Bought & sold New. Used, Oui ol Print Rod-. Classical. New Wave Jazz el c 20 Tulane Si Princeton 921-0881
• Restaurants:
A KITCHEN Szechuan. Hunan Mandarin DIM SUM BRUNCH, Sat & Sun 11 to 2 30 Banquet Facilities Available 3221 Rt 27, Franklin Pk 201297 2882 & 201 297 9879
THE ALCHEMIST & BARRISTER Lunch eons. Dinner. Cockiails Open 7 days 28 Witherspoon Prn 924-5555
THE ANNEX RESTAURANT Italian American cuisine Serving Princeton com muniiy since 1950 128Vj Nassau Si, Princeton 921-7555
CHARLEY'S BROTHER Lunch • Dinner • Cockiails fiouie 654. Hopewell (off Rt 31)466-0110
CHINA MOON In the Quaker Bridge Mall Szechuan, Hunan, Mandarin Open 7 days Rt 1, Lawrenceville 799-6799
COUNTY LINE INN Delicious cuisine Open 7 days fit 206, Skillman (1 mi No of Rt 518 intsec ) 201-359-6300
CRANBURY INN, THE Fine Dining Lunch, Dinner, Sunday Brunch Cocktails. 21 So Mam. Cranbury 655-5595
DIAMOND'S Fine Italian Restaurant & Cocktail Lounge Open 7 days till 12 mid- nite 132 Kent St Trntn 393-1000
GOOD TIME CHARLEY'S Lunch • Dinner • Cocktails 40 Mam St Kingston (2 mi north of Prnctn ) 924-7400
GREENSTREETS Lunch Mon thru Fn Dinner 7 days wk Private parties 3836 Quaker Bridge Rd. Mcrvl 890-1546
LITTLE SZECHUAN RESTAURANT Luncheon Dinner. Banquets. Take-Out 2025 Old Trenton Rd . W Wndsr 443-5023
MARITA'S CANTINA Fine Mexican food A drink Open 7 days for lunch, dinner & lale night menu Sunday Brunch Happy Hour Maior Credit Cards accepled 138 Nassau St, Princeion 924-7855
MEXICAN VILLAGE Lunch & Dinner 42 Leigh Av. Prn 924-5143 13-15 Kline's Ct, Lambertville 397 3260
NICOLA'S RISTORANTE Fine regional Italian cuisme - tresh seafood daily Clos- ed Mon Hidden Lake Towne Ctr , No Brunswick. 201-821-0076
SIMPLY RADISHING The Fresh Food Alremative Featuring homemade soups, quiche & desserts Fresh salads, sand- wiches S pastas Lawrence Shop Ctr Rt 1. Lawrencevilte 882-3760
• Roofing Contractors:
CHRISTENSEN ROOFING New shingle
roofs. Chimney 4 flashing repairs. 184 Carter Rd Prn 9211277 4 924-7737
COOPER 4 SHAFER, INC. Est 1930 New roots & repairs Fully insured 63 Moran Ave . Prn 924-2063
ECHO ROOFING Shingle rools. Rubber roots Guaranteed, fully insured Please call (or free estimate 609-921 3721
• Sewing Machine Dlrs; Rprs:
AMERICAN SEWING 4 VACUUM CTR
Prn Shop Ctr 921-2205
• Shoes:
STEP N' OUT Ladies shoes Low, low
price $16 90" Montgomery Shop Clr Rt 206. Skillman 924 41 13
• Storage:
STOW CO MINI STORAGE V
\r>i tent tiy 'fit? mon't"i Many 9
Cranbury 60S I
• Surgical Supply & Equip. Dealers:
AMBEST
1674 Pennington Rd Ewmg 682 3702 FORER PHARMACY 160 Wilherspoon, f
Singles Sports on Fridays m8 October For further infor - a. \/iv*r-* • n- . mation. call 921 4311 or m 12/7 At YMCA in Princeton
The YMCA Singles Sports n,,. princfu,n BoroptteM
Program consists of singles w,n celebrate its 35th anniver who are in their mid-20's to sary „n Tuesday .October if, at mid-30 s who meet on a regular tne Nassau clutj Husbands, basis to play ball, take day tnps fam,hes and M fnends „,
and socialize.
Soroptimism are invited
In the spring and summer, Former members who L the group meets every Friday p|aye(j a part ,n the groups ; 92W287 evening at 6:30 in Plainsboro fund-raising and community in- i Park to play Softball Starting volvement between 1953 and j • Swimming Pools & Supplies: October 7 and continuing 1988 are specially asked to ; all work co. Custom aesigns Beiip through the winter months, the come
BARNETT HENORicKs pon.s inc grouP Wll> meet every Friday Cocktails begin at 6, and din- BARNETT-HENORICKS pools, inc a, lhe YM-YWCA facility to ner wi„ „« a, 7^1 ls $20. and J
o»e. 30 ».s e.De.e-.ce 609 452 8896 Play volleyball and other indoor reservations must be made ' M.^^S^"'-20"5" activities In addi»°n 'o t^ before October 11 by calling !
sylvan pools ,r"g,„,M pods 4 ,up ™&"1" "e,ek'v Program- Sally Inda at 924-8319
pi« new location Montgomery Cir oinglehports takes hiking trips. <
ri 5te & 206, Rocky Hiii 92i-6i66 goes bowling and roller „ , „ . . '.
tnt pools, inc. we sery.ce *hai we skatinB and attends fonthali Sylvia Pender Johns, a . sell' Belle Meao 201 359 7665 SKaiing, ana attends toolDall freeman of the Titv of I.ondorL
games and holiday parties r reeman 01 me uiy oi Lxmaon, !
For information call Karen *'» s^. l° th,e P™"*ton Smith at 497-2139 brancn of "* English-Speaking
Union on Sunday at 3 p.m. in
_ , . Russell Hall at The Hun School
The Ladies Work Table: Her subject will be "Eng-
Domestic Needlework in 19th- |ish/American Connections."
Century America will be the Ms Johns was bom in Corn-
e Mead 201 359 7665
• Tailoring:
THE PERFECT FIT Ladies custom made clothing, alterations lor men 4 women Prn Shop Ctr Harrison St 683-0166
• Tire Dealers:
JOSEPH J, NEMES i SON. .
Goodrch-Dunlop-Pirelli -Michelin All sizes. Subject of a slide presentation u,,n c-no|anrf anH liuoH in
Ame. Sloreigncars R.ms available Rte bv Margaret Vincent at two p ,' ,,", J"
206 Prn 9244177 • ''""s"'" v intern ai two £as[ Africa for six years. She
phinceton amoco. Firestone wes tor meetln8sot the Embroiderers' js vice president of the
compact 4 Foreign c„s Guild of i America They will be women's Fellowship at the
.hoppmgc, 921-6682 he|d at Weichert Realtors, 352 American Church ii London
Towing: Nassau Street, on Wednesday, and chairman of MINA, the
American
Princeion Shopping C
REILLY'S TOWING 24-hr Towing
October 5, and at All Saints'
So Brunswick
women's branch of a profes-
2012979390 Church' Yuan Dyke Road, at 10 siona, institution a.m. on Thursday, October 6.
«pe.,ence ,.,Ms ' Vj"™"' ls cura'°r of tex- Naturalist Club
Our World ol Unigue Toys 4 Games tiles of the Allentown (Pa. I Art ' .f ^"^y>"^"wrtlalLUa>
a Pngm 7371440 Museum. She will discuss and'|«' Ewmg Township School
linens, quilts, rugs, clothing 'or Continuing Education wUl
and accessories created by Pres™' a c.° °r f„f' % °rt h,hto
19th-century American women 'he T°Z°(li ,°i i;"* ■the
as a means of self-expression Ewmg High School Auditonum and artistic pursuit. Persons attending the lee
• Toys:
• Transmissions:
COTTMAN TRANSMISSIONS
Free lowing Iree road tes! We only fix whal needs Immg1 2769 S Broad. Trenton 888 3600
• Travel Agencies:
AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVEL
Don't Leave Home Wilhoul Us 10 Nassau Street
tures are encouraged to bring pieces to be identified by Ms. 921-8600 Vincent. Guests are invited to deluxe travel BUREAU, inc. attend either program for a fee
. ed travel service r «n i-> f T. . ,
219 Nassau St Princeton 924 6270 of *2 For further information,
KULLER TRAVEL CO. Call 921-3516.
Complete travel arrangements
109 Nassau Street Princeton, 924 2550 Rnrn„Ph Mavor Rarhara Sio whale and shares a campsite
personal travel Get personal Borougn Mayor KarDara big- .„.■ Wftlf ^
lor more confident travel Ask about our mund and Donald Stokes, dean '"' , rtrLUl- wou-
Family Vantage Program 195 Nassau Si 0f the Woodrow Wilson School Tickets are $3 < $1.50 for
on Thursday, October 6, at 8 pm
Narrated in person by film maker John Wilson, the film takes viewers to within 400 miles of the North Pole in search of the narwhal, jaeger. and musk ox. Mr. Wilson observes the white beluga
WORLD TRAVEL OF PRINCETON. Full
statt ot women professionals spring & Princeton University, are the w,therspoon sts Pnnceion recipients of Princeton
below Haagen-Dazs 924-5210 _, , . , „ ...
— Toastmasters Prestigious • Upholstering: Speakers Award for 1988. The
altinas world of Creative FaaWon. award is given annually to in-
• Shoe Repair Shops:
JOHN'S SHOE SHOP Enpert repairs ol shoes mcl orthopedic & athletic shoes 18 Tulane, Prn 924-5596
• Siding Contractors:
LARRY THE SIDING MAN. Custom siding & windows 609-392-5722
• Sod:
CLARKSVILLE SOD FARMS
Kentucky Bluebrass Blends 4240 Quakerbr Rd Prn 896-0336&452 2186
• Spas; Hot Tubs:
Your labnd
I 077-
dividuals who exhibit ex-
tion, call Mrs L. Burns at (215) 295-5518.
Paul S Breines, president of Paul Stewart Associates, will speak on pre- and post-
• Real Estate:
CENTURY 21 CARNEGIE REALTY INC
Mary C Ostheim, Broker Princeton Circle at Route 1, 4522188
WM. H. FULPEfl, REALTORS Homes ot Distinction 19 S Mam. Yardley, Pa 215-493-4007
GLORIA NILSON REALTORS Corporale Relocahon Specialists Call lor comprehensive relocation broc? 1(6 230 Nassau, Princeton 921-2600
PRINCETON CROSSROADS REALTY INC, i n-ensed Reat Estate Broker 342 Nassau. Princeton 924-4677
SCHLOTT REALTORS Princeton 10 Nassau St 921-1411 Pm Jctn MPm-HtSlfl Rd 799.8181 Belle Mead 840 Rt 206 201-874-8421
STEWAROSON-DOUGHERTY Real Estate Associates. Inc Princeion 366 Nassau 921-7784
Lawrencevitle: 2431 Mam .. 896-8100
ALL WORK CO.
Belle Mead 201-359-3000 NATIONAL SPAS & HOT TUBS Corner
Rt 206&514 Belle Mead 201 874 6666 TNT POOLS. INC. We service what we
sell1 Belle Mead 201-359-7665
• Sporting Goods:
THE FITNESS FORCE, INC. High-tech litness equipment & access lor home & ofc Prn Sh Ctr 683-0494
• Sprinkler Systems:
PRINCETON IRRIGATION SPECIALISTS
Graduate ol College of irrigation Knowledge Member N J irrigation Association Desigr installation. Service Pn
• Stationery; Cards:
CENTER STATIONERS Princeton Shopping Clr N Harrison St 924-5706
• Stone, Natural:
TRENTON STONE & MARBLE CO.
Marble, slate, granite, limestone, elc. Wilburtha Rd , W Trenton 882-2449
• Vacuum Cleaner Dealers: cellence and leadership in the retirement financial planning American sewing & vacuum ctr. field of public speaking, at the Thursday, October 6,
Dean Stokes will receive his meeting of 55 Plus. The
award at the club's October 6 meeting will begin at 10 a.m. at
meeting. Mayor Sigmund will the Jewish Center. Mr Breines'
receive hers at the November talk is scheduled for 10:45
3 meeting. Both will address All area men are invited to
the club on the topic, "Secrets attend,
of Successful Speaking,"
The public is invited. Both
The Amateur Astronomers Meetings are held the first and Association of Princeton third Thursdays of each month ' AAAP I is holding public view- at the United Methodist ing sessions on Friday evenings Church. at8:30throughOctober7.atthe AAAP observatory in Washing- Bill McCleery, playwright ton Crossing Park, near the and author, will speak at the Nature Center Scheduling of ,,„, r.nnl,u:n„,„„. October 9 meeting of National these events was planned to
• Water Conditioning. which will beein coincide with the long-awaited
CULLIGAN WATER CONDITIONING r* "™ <"»«■''• *["«! win uegin nnnnslhnn
inc Sales serv.ee, renais. sail Freeway at 10 a.m. at The Arts Council MaTs opposition
•>er*ngprn area 9218800 of Princeton. He will discuss This year marks the tenth an-
'Play Writing for Play Goers." niversary of the opening of the
Mr. McCleery, whose plays observatory. The organization, during the ten-year span, has acquired a six-inch refractor of sity and a drama critic. He is
• Windows: also the author of the children's
• Vacuum Clnrs; Built-in:
FEOERAL VACUUM SYSTEMS
Hi-povver vacuum systems 585 3912 STONY BROOK SYSTEMS, INC. Hopewell 466-3217 (local call Irom Prn)
• Vertical Blinds:
THE BLIND MAN INC. Custom window treatments 390 Rt 206. Hill 609 9244442 & 201-359-4141
•Videotaping Services:
VIDEO BY GARY & ASSOCIATES, INC.
Videotaping tor nfloo B2JOHE Insured Prn 609 799 7519 & 201-238-9174 VIOEOPRESENCE. Send a videotaped message ol yoursell lor any occasion Rl 16, Mid State Mall. E Brunswick 201 238-0303
• Waterproofing Contractors:
STA DRY BASEMENT WATERPROOF- ING co. '<•■- i umaii ■- ,- have appeared on Broadway, is guarantee FH> Reference! a lecturer at Princeton Univer-
gii/en Fully insured 609-392-6700
LARRY THE SIDING MAN. Custom siding book, Wolf Story.
OUR PROMISE TO PRINCETON CONSUMERS:
JOSEPHINE WEBB
Consumer Bureau Executive Director
V" IF YOU HAVE A COMPLAINT against any local business firm, just call 924-8223 and a Consumer Bureau representative will respond and investigate; then,
**^ IF CONSUMER BUREAUS ALL-CONSUMER VOLUNTEER PANEL AGREES WITH YOU, the business firm involved has only two choices either satisfy your complaint promptly or lose its Consumer Bureau Registration
^- DON"T STAY MAO at any business firm - until you firs! give Consumer Bureau a chance to help straighten matters out Call (609) 924-6223 any time of any day or oight to start the ball rolling1
♦" FOR UP-TO-DATE REGISTER INFORMATION about local firms not listed on this page, call (609) 924-0737 Mon -Fn 10-4
CONSUMER BUREAU
.OO
YOUR LOCAL CONSUMER
INFORMATION BANK
ESTABLISHED 1967
Z^"3 924-8223
• NOT a government agency
• NOT a Better Business Bureau
Artists, writers, musicians, crafts persons, or anyone work- ing creatively in business are welcome to join. A schedule of coming meetings will be avail- able. For more information call Doris Moffatt at 924-7709.
The Astrological Society will
meet Sunday at 2 :30 p.m. at the First National Bank of Central Jersey in Rocky Hill
Guest lecturer Mary Down- ing will speak on "Planets for Fun and Profit. ' ' The public is welcome
Astrology classes will be of- fered through the society dur-
historical significance More recently, a 125-inch reflector was purchased, which permits good deep-sky scanning.
Former AAAP director and assistant curator at the New Jersey Sate Planetarium, Richard Peery. will host a Mars show at the planetarium prior to each observing s at 7:30 p.m.
Amnesty Internationa) meets the second Thursday ot even month at 8 pm in the library Of the YW-YMCA New mew bers are welcome
For more information, call Marc Postman at 6SM781 evenings
: M :nvr#T:7T4.1
C uses
Trips
Lectures Exhibits
PRINCETON ART
ASSOCIATION
609-921-9173
GEOSTAT
MAPCENTER
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Rocky Hill, N J
609-924-2121
In Marlton 609-983-3600
1
TO DISCUSS GALLERIES: Painter and teacher Katharine Carter is shown with her work "The Last Supper," an acrylic on canvas. She will discuss the New York galleries on September 29 at 11:15 a.m. in the audio-visual building on Mercer County Community College's West Windsor Campus.
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43 Main St., Kingston, N.J.
924-0332
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73 Palmer Square West Princeton, NJ 08542
609-924-0740
Big Oak Shopping Center Morrisville, PA 215-295-4749
Lecture on N.V. Galleries At Mercer County College
Painter and teacher, Katharine T Carter will pre- sent a slide and lecture, "The New York Galleries," or Thursday at 11 :15a.m. at Mer cer County Community Col- lege's West Windsor Campus It will be held in Room 110 of the Audio Visual Building.
In the last three years, Ms. Carter has received five reviews in The New York Times, most notably a review by John Russell of her recent show at Hal Bromm Gallery. Her work has also been review ed by Arts Magazine. She has taught at Drew University and Rutgers University, and has lectured at more than 60 col- leges, art centers, and museums.
Watercolor Workshop Offered at Jewish Center
A "Wednesday Watercolor Workshop" will be offered at The Jewish Center, 435 Nassau Street. Eight sessions meeting from 10 until noon will begin on October 5
Instructor Amy Kassiola has structured the workshop as an opportunity for adults with some watercolor painting ex- perience to heighten their en- joyment of the medium both as painters and viewers. The focus is on individual expression and progress for students who understand watercolor basics and wish to experiment with a spontaneous and abstract ap- proach
Ms Kassiola is known for her watercolor paintings, shown locally in juried and one-person shows. Currently, her work is on exhibit at the Mercer Coun- ty Community College Faculty I Show and at The Port of History Museum, Penns Lan- ding, Philadelphia. In addition to Leaching drawing and paint- ing at The Jewish Center, Ms. Kassiola has taught at the Princeton and West Windsor Adult Schools, Mercer County Community College, and the Princeton Art Association. She holds an MA. degree in paint- ing from Hunter College
For more information, call the Center office at 921-0100.
Exhibits
The University League Gal- lery will begin its exhibition season with an opening recep- tion on Sunday from 4 to 6 for artist Sahoko Okabayashi.
Ms. Okabayashis works have been seen at juried shows at McCarter Theatre, Mercer County Community College, Princeton University, Stuart Country Day School, Trenton City Museum, and the Noyes Museum.
She presently teaches at the Princeton Junior School.
The exhibit will run through October 2B at the League Gal- lery at 171 Broadmead
"Interaction: Science and Art," a selection of paintings, photography, constructions and sculptures by 31 artists, will be on display at The Squibb Gal- lery from October 2 through November 13 The exhibition is part of the international phar- maceutical firm's celebration of the 50th anniversary of The Squibb Institute for Medical Research.
Biology, chemistry, physics, mathematics, geology, astron- omy, computer science, philos-
ophy — and several of their subclassifications — are repre- sented in the 62 art works in the exhibition. Although the point of the art is intellectual and serious, there is humor in the collection.
The Squibb Gallery is located in the world headquarters of Squibb Corporation on Route 206 three miles south of Prince- ton.
The Princeton Gallery of Fine Art, Chambers Street, will present "Sculpture in New Jer- sey" from September 29 to Oc- tober 29 The exhibition will focus on sculpture and works on paper by artists who live in and work in the State. Includ- ed will be George Segal, Robert Cooke, Gary Kuehn. Jane Tell- er, Mel Edwards, Patrick Strzelec, and the late Herk Van Tongeren
Works by Dorothy Wells Bissell, of Princeton, and Josie Campbell Dellenbaugh, of Pennington, will be included in a special exhibition at The Cor- yell Gallery in Lambertville. The exhibit will be held from October 2 through November 13. An opening reception to meet the artists will take place on Sunday from 3 to 7.
Dorothy Bissell, known for her watercolor landscapes, has exhibited in many juried shows and has won a number of awards. Her works are repre- sented in many public and private collections.
Josie Dellenbaugh. who will exhibit bronze, alabaster and hydracal sculpture, has won awards at the Salmagundi Club and the Knickerbocker Artists of America, in New York City, and the Phillips Mill annual shows in New Hope Her work is in various private and cor- porate collections.
Restoration of Paintings
Lily Hayeem 921-6477
BRICRSHAWS
VINTAGE JEWELRY
fiOH-452-WMM SALE IN PROGRESS
Dr. Stuart J. Burg
Dr. Leon C. Nurock
Dr. Angelo J. Aiello
Optometrists
84 Nassau St. Princeton
For an appointment call 924-0918
MUSEUM QUALITY
Picture Framing
FINE ART-PRINTS
POSTERS • POTTERY
STAINED GLASS
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Fine Handcrafted Pottery Nina Gelardi and John Shedd
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custom and museum quality framing services W Corporate accounts welcome.
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J?
Heartbreaking Loss to Holy Cross Shouldn t Stop Tige. From Beating Brown Saturday and Going 2-0 in Leagu
You think it was heartbreak ing to watch Holy Cross pull out a 30-26 victory last Saturday with that incredible kickoff re- turn in the final two seconds''
Yes, it was. There goes the chance to go 10-0 this year. If the Princeton football team finishes 9-1. this loss will stand as a monumental blunder on its part.
Other than that, forget about it. Let's consider the possibilities for some serious heartbreak that lie ahead, be- ginning with the Brown game this Saturday in Palmer Stadium, beginning at 1. The defeat by Holy Cross will pale in comparison.
PRINCETON
SHOPPING-CENTER
NORTH HARRISON STPEE1
l»
k
If the Tigers can not find a way to beat a very average Brown team for the first time
in five years, then it will be WIX FOR SIX: Wide receiver Dave Wix scored the first varsity touchdown of time to bring out the crying his career in the third period of Saturdays game to give Princeton a 20-17 lead towel. After a significant win over Holy Cross in a contest where the lead changed hands five times before over Cornell in Ithaca, the the bitter end.
chance to go 2-0 in the Ivy race for only the second time in the last 13 years is at hand. It shouldn't be wasted.
If that is accomplished. Princeton should head into the showdown with Harvard on Oc- tober 22 with a 3-0 league mark. It hasn't been 3-0 in the league since 1969, the last year it won the title.
The Crimson, a 45-28 loser to UMass Saturday, is good, but not great. A loss that day in Palmer Stadium by any score in any manner would be far more unfortunate The same
(Photo by Paul Huegel. Princeton Sports Inforr
given up 62 points in the proc- ess. Yale has lost its first-string quarterback for several games, and last Saturday lost 41-0 to Connecticut in the Bowl Would anybody have felt better if Princeton lost 41-0 to the Crusaders?
The last two seconds of Satin- day's game cannot take away the many fine things the Tigers did against a solid Holy Cross team. The Crusaders obvious- ly aren't as, powerful as they were a year ago, but Princeton will not face anyone anv bigger goes for the rest of the Ivy or better the /es{ of ^ ^
•" Bames a8amsl Eight games remain on the
schedule
Penn, Yale and Dartmouth.
schedule, and Princeton has the The scores coming in each abilit to win 0 ■
week from, around the league duding those inst „„„_, confirm that no team is any foesBucknell and Colgate. Bui. better than the Orange and more important, it has an ou.^ Black. Penn is 2-0, but has standing chance to capture the beaten only Dartmouth and , chaBmpionship. Bucknell, and its defense has
The real heartbreak will This year's squad isn't going
come if it blows the oppor- to knock anybody's socks off ei-
tunity. ther. It managed a 24-24 tie with
Yale at Providence, in the sea-
Another 'Brownout'? If Old son's opener, and last week lost Nassau suffers another to Rhode Island, 17-10. Holy 'brownout' against the visiting Cross, by the way, took care of Bruins this weekend for God's RI, 49-7 earlier in the month, sake don't blame it on the after Despite the loss of 16 starters, shocks of the Holy Cross game, fifth-year coach John Rosen- Over the last several years berg has refused to label 1988 a against Brown, it hasn't mat- rebuilding vear. However, the tered in the least what the final record may prove him Tigers had accomplished in wrong This is the worst start their first two games. for the.Bruins since 1981.
In 1981, they went to Pro- Junior Danny c,ark has in.
vidence0-2,justaweekaftera nerited tne quarterback job horrendous 61-8 loss to Dela-
, ..... , Continued on Nm! Pano
ware — and won. Victories also came the next two years when Princeton was 1-1 as it is now, but the Bruins have won every meeting since. Twice Princeton has sailed into the Brown game with all the positive feelings a 2-0 record can produce.
Cool Weather Needs
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Turtlenecks
• Sweat Clothes
Save Money. Shop Here First!
PRINCETON Army-Navy
14 1/2WitherspoonSt.
924-0994
OKKVW$M^?^^reHre:ire In 1984 Frank Navarro's last
§ team opened with victories C over Cornell and Bucknell, and fi fell flat on its face at home the C next weekend, losing 32-30. Just £ a year ago, the Tigers went to v Providence undefeated, and jg came home on the short end of 2 a 13-7 score. Ron Rogerson had
5 no luck either, losing twice y No other Ivy team has this l| kind of choke hold on Prince- ss ton, and certainly the Bruins % haven't done anything special « the past five years. Two teams $ finished with losing records,
6 two finished 5-4-1, and last 9? year's, the best of the five, was & 7-3.
Sports Fans!
I BET YOU DIDN'T KNOW
John
Bernard
STURHAHN
What's the record in major-college football for a team having the most winning seasons in a row? ... Three teams share the record — Alabama, Nebraska and Penn State... Each roll- ed up 26 consecutive win- ning seasons for the all-time record Alabama went from 1958 through 1983 with a win- ning season every year
Penn State had winn- ing seasons every year from 1939 through 1964 . . And Nebraska's streak is current ... They've won more games than they lost every year from 1962 through 1987.
Aetna's BRAND NEW nursing home policy covers
• Custodial Care
Jay
Bernard
DICKENSON & BERNARD
• Alzheimer's Disease
Did you know a foot- ball team can be penaliz- ed five yards if the referee discovers that two players on the same team have the same number on their uniforms? ... It says so, right in the rule book, but that's one penalty you could go a whole lifetime without ever seeing. • • •
Of all the men who've ever played in the Na- tional Football League, which one scored the most touchdowns in a career? ... Answer is Jim Brown who, in nine seasons from 1957 through 1965, scored 126 touchdowns in the NFL . No one else has ever matched lhat record.
Sturhahn, Dickenson k
& Bernard $
INSURANCE SPECIALISTS |
14 Nassau St. • 921-6880 i 5* •;«< >a« >;«< w >«k >«••' ~*R< '•-«•' "** ""* mKI ***
^
Saturday's Picks
Princeton* over Brown. There's no reason this even has to be close.
Dartmouth over David- son.* As long as Wildcats on are its schedule, Big Green can count on at least one win.
Lehigh* over Cornell Home field advantage should help Engineers beat Big Red
Holy Cross* over Har- vard. Crusaders' momen- tum should help carry them over Harvard at home,
Penn' over Columbia. Quakers will go 3-0 with relative ease, but tougher games begin next week.
Navy* over Yale. Elis hurting without quarter- back; Midshipmen win in a walk. •Home Team
Last Week 5-:i Record to Date: 8-3-1 (.708)
All men's and women's Nike Shoes
w
FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY ONLY Sept. 30 > Oct. 1 • Oct. 2
Open Thursday Evening 'Til 8
Hulit's Shoes
140 Nassau Street 924-1952
Mon.-Fri 9-5:30; Sat. 9-5; Sun. 12-4
I
Sports
* from Mark Donovan, and
w- reformed adequately in his
°* first two games, he has eom-
5 pleted 19 possess i n 53 attempts
I Q yards, no touchdowns
uj and tour interceptions
a. The main threat on the
£ ground is senior Lane Wood,
v- who has 148 yards in 28 carries
< m the first two games. The
to wide receivers are inexpenenc
^ ed Joe Madden and Jim
g Anderson give some strength
$ and stability to the offensive
: line.
^ The defense, which included
. three all-Ivy first-team players,
o was really gutted by gradua
£j tion. and lias new players ai ai
o most all positions Brown is
g also feeling the loss of all-Ivy
a. punter and placekicker Alex
« Kos, who was more responsible
y than anyone else for the victory
o over Princeton a year ago
1988 IVY LEAGUE STANDINGS
Ivy League L T
Penn
Princeton
Harvard
Brown
Yale
Cornell
Columbia
Dartmouth
w 1
Pet 1.000
t.coo
1000 000 .000 .000 000 .000
Overall L T
Pet
1000 500 500 000 000 .000 .000 .000
Last Week
Holy Cross 30 Princeton 26
Cornell 17 Colgate 14
Connecticut 41 Yale 0
Latayetle 49 Columbia 3
Lehigh 41 Dartmouth 16
UMass 45 Harvard 28
Penn 38 Bucknell 35
Rhode Island 17 Brown 10
Saturday's Games
Brown at Princeton
Columbia at Penn'
Cornell at Lehigh
Dartmouth at Davidson
Harvard at Holy Cross
Yale at Navy
■ESPN Game of the Week
j Family Day Saturday In the first of a series of promotions aimed a( bring- ing more people to watch football at Palmer Stadium this fall, the University is billing the Brown game this Saturday as "Family Day". Families of three or more people will be offered a pre- game day reduced general admission ticket price of $:i per member. Tickets bought at the gate the day of the game will be $5 apiece.
Tickets can be purchased at the Jadwin Gym ticket of- fice, weekdays between 9 and 4.
wmm mmm %wmm mss&
ping out of bounds, no forward three times by Tigers' secon- lateral. The play stood, and so dazy. Princeton defense has did Princeton fans in the forced nine turnovers, of- stands, staring at the field for fense has yet to give the ball several minutes, unable or un- up that way. Running game willing to head for the exit. It's managed 104 yards to 197 for the kind of play you might have Holy Cross, Lutz needs to expected to happen in the work on kickoffs; two went graveyard for Princeton foot- out of bounds; kickoff ball teams — Yale Bowl. coverage needed work even
Bad as it was, however, the before the final play. Ray ending should not obscure oth- Ryan will be out at least four er positive developments, weeks with a knee injury, Princeton started strongly back-up tight end Pete against the favored Crusaders, Masloski will also miss running up a 10-0 lead in the Brown game; Kevin Lynch first period The first three expected back for Columbia. points came on a 28-yard Chris
Lutz field goal, the rest on a PHS vs. Nottingham Here SeFdlce '"" ^ ^ After McCorristin Loss
Slim as it was in the good
A pair of touchdowns in the news department, Princeton second quarter gave the High football coach Kurt Voll- The Tigers shouldn't need visitors a 14-13 lead at halftime. herbst saw an improvement in any more motivation to beat Lutz was successful with a 37- his team; the bad news is that Brown, but perhaps, the loss to yard attempt in between for il wasn't enough to prevent a Holy Cross will give them more Princeton's three points. When 17-7 loss to McCorristin Friday than a victory could have. '' look (ne second-half kickoff night.
"There's a lot of bitterness on and marched 66 yards for a "We've got some people who our team right now." Coach field goal to take a 17-13 lead, can play football." insisted Steve Tosches said after the Holy Cross appeared ready to Vollherbst after the game. "We game "We've got to take that ^e control of the game. ask them to get better each
bitterness and use it in the next However, after recovering a week and they did, but it was eight weeks and make our op- Holy Cross fumble at midfield, not good enough to win 1 know ponents suffer. If we start to Princeton grabbed a 20-17 lead there was an improvement feel sorry for ourselves, attack wh™ Jason Garrett connected from Steinert to McCorristin; officials, whatever, we can't be wi!h w'de receiver Dave Wix on we just couldn't hold them out prepared for what we have to a pretty 15-yard scoring pass at the end I think we got a good donext." Another field goal by Lutz from effort out of everybody
34 yards out early in the fourth
quarter put Princeton up 23-17 Still, the Little Tigers are go- One Poor Play Spoils T™e was beginning to be a ing to have to improve some An Otherwise Good Game factor 'aler 'n tne '<>ur'b period more and in a hurry if they when Holv Cross worked its hope to remain in contention in For 59 minutes and 58 way down the field, going for the Valley Division of the Co- seconds, the Princeton football the touchdown it needed to take Ionia] Valley Conference where team played extremely well the lead. On a fourth-and-18 they are in the cellar with an 0-2 against a good Holy Cross from the Princeton 39, quarter- mark. The offense, which has f,"1 ,. back Jeff Wiley's pass was wav produced just one touchdown in
Yes they made some errors short of the first -down marker, two games, remains largely along he way, but as the 1,gers but Wietharn was called for one-dimensional, featuring the gose to kick off to Holy Cross pass interference on the lie re- running of Julian Craig, wih two seconds remaining ceiver, giving the visitors a new Against McCorristin, Craig holding a 26-24 lead, they had |„(, u„|, j :!7 remaining. Four carried 24 times for 91 yards, every reason to be proud. Per- plays late, the < Irusaders had but no other Little Tiger had haps, they were too proud to thelourhdowiKind a 24 2:1 lead more than 15 concentrate fully on the one re- only 1:13 remained on the Vollherbst said later he did maining P'ay.^ clock, when Jason Garrett and not feel that he had used Craig
the offense took over, but in a too much and he predicted his Supposed to be a squib kick style reminiscent of the Lehigh players » ould shake off the loss c.![Tnin°mPr?*aT: 10!° '? conk'sl last year, Garretl took and be reach lor Nottingham.
PHS will host the Northstars
lure Saturday morning at 11.
Nottingham, in its opening game Saturday under new coach Jeff Lowe, was blanked 16-0 by West Windsor.
Like PHS, the Northstar de- fense seems to be ahead of the
yards, the kickoff took a high the team downlield lo the Holv bounce into the hands of Darin Cross 111 will, passes lo broth Cromwell on the Holy Cross 30 er. Judd. and Wix. and a couple on the Princeton side of the of runs by Judd. Princeton took field. He had plenty of running iLs last time out to set up for the room from the start, and broke field goal immediately for the far sideline Jusl sevcn seconds remained toward the Holy Cross stands 0n the clock when Lutz who To make matters worse, too has made everyone forget
JH^Iif 7 rraf strai«h' '°r ab0«»R»b Goodwin, stepped up offense, as it held7he7avored
him, instead of staying in their to attempt his fourth field goal Pirates scoreless in V first
tones Cromwell had more open 0f the day. It was perfect from half and prompted WW coach
S hJ"^ w ,h he 35 yards 0Ut' but ,he P'a>' <°«k Tom Sluart lo remark. "I was
should have. Brian Wietharn just five seconds to complete, beginning to wonder "
did manage to corral him leaving two on the clock. Only four seniors were on the
around the Holy Cross 45 but Everyone now knows why in Nottingham team last year that
"1, m6 'fW" K ^S Ule Pros' ""* work "* <*** '"I'edTo win a game in going 0-
coach Mark Duffner had called down before calling time out so 8-1. Indeed, the Northstars
^°re.?e.iUCK°f,' Cromwe11 that time will expire on the field have yet to have a winning sea-
»T I dT n ° JUn,°r goal attemDt son in their school's history
tailback . T,m Donovan, who But Lowe, a former assistant at
f^,rZ * $7,", ^ Ca™ N°(es- •><"""■ h<«« ° Preschool, whocoachedthe
sideline for the winning touch- superb day passing mm Nottingham freshman team
pleting 23 ofU for 224 yards, last year before being forced to
_ . , Wide receivers Scott Gibbs take over the varsity reins this
Princeton coaches and „nd Dave Wix showed they summer when head coach
players desperately hoped that wm be a threat in the future Glenn Sliker sustained an In-
officials might haye detected catching /ive apiece /or 115 Jury and had to undergo
some infraction that would yards betwee/tnem' HCs surgery, feels Nottingham may
nullify the play but there was Jeff m was 15 o/27/or m be only a few games awav from
nothing - no whistle, no step- yards and was interJcepted ^^ „ ^ '
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LOOSE BALL BATTLE: Princeton High's Jenny Brassel! (right) battles West Windsor defender for loose ball during Friday's 1-0 loss to visiting Pirates. Looking on is PHS sophomore Nicole Miros (37).
move the opening kickoff, McCorristin drove 72 yards in 10 plays, Panacek, rolling right, hitting Midura from three yards out. Jeff Stovall stopped the attempted run for the two-point conversion and the Iron Mikes led, 6-0.
Field Hockey Shocker: West Windsor 1, PHS 0
Princeton High field hockey- coach Joyce Jones cut right through all the what-ifs and might-haves by saying, "Thev scored and we didn't. Nothing else matters."
The Little Tigers came as close to a total breakdown on offense as a team can have Thursday in losing 1-0 to visit- ing West Windsor.
Consider: PHS had 11 cor- ners in the first half to none for West Windsor By game's end, the margin was 17-0. The Pirates did not have a single shot on goal in the first half. In the second half, PHS goalie Gita Nanden had one save
"Something was not pres- ent," said Jones. "We didn't have the same kind of intensi- ty on offense that they had on defense. I was pleased with the way we knew how to set up our corner plays, the break down was in execution."
Continued on Nam Page
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Cpntmuod (torn Piecedmg Page
winning One immediate prob- lem: Nottingham, like Prince- ton, does not have a lot of numbers and a few players will have to play both ways.
Because PHS must contend with Ewing the following week, the opportunity for that first win will never be greater than it is this week
Quiet First Half Both PHS and McCorristin were looking for their first win under the lights at McCorristin Friday night but the way each played in the first half neither team seemed interested. PHS had a slight edge in the first period in which McCorristin had the ball for only two possessions and the host team had a slight edge in the second quarter. The one bang-bang play in the half ( played in 50 minutes ) was the coverage by Todd Marrow on a Mike Panacek pass to Mike Midura slanting in near the goal that denied the Iron Mikes a sure six points with 3: 14 left to Dlav
The second was a complete turnaround. After PHS failed to
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PHS got two breaks in the next couple of series. Back to punt, Amman Pope dropped the snap but managed to elude a host of Iron Mike tacklers and squirt ahead eight yards beyond the line of scrimmage for a first down. Two carries by Craig gained another to the McCorristin 47 but three plays later Pope was forced to punt again. On the next play, Rich McLeod fumbled and Andy VonMayrhauser recovered for PHS on the Iron Mike 44.
Seven plays later, PHS had scored its first TD of the sea- son. The payoff play was a beauty. Quarterback Rob Mor- ris handed off to Anthony Cuc- chi who then handed off to-Pope on a reverse.. Morris's block paved the way for Pope, The play, used for the first time in the game, covered nine yards. When Dave Kahn's extra point kick split the uprights, PHS led, again for the first time this fall, 7-6.
But the Iron Mikes, who had not defeated PHS since 1976, who had lost a 9-6 game in the final few minutes to PHS last year, were not to be denied this time. Two plays, a 30-yard scamper by sophomore Mark Colley, and a keeper by Panacek, who was forced to run, gained 52 yards and a first down on the PHS 23. "Suck it up, guys," shouted PHS defen- sive coach Doug Snyder from the sidelines.
On a fourth down, still ■needing four yards. 185-pound litjeman Chris Locane booted a 38-yard field goal to give the home team a 9-7 lead. Then in the closing minutes. McCor- ristin sealed the outcome with a 68-yard drive, Jeff Soboski go- ing over the middle from four yards out with 2 : 34 left to play.
If PHS seemed to sag a bit at the end for the second time, Vollherbst said, "We have a lot of people going both ways,"
One Little Tiger who goes not only two ways but three is quarterback Morris, The 5-10, 160-pound Morris, in addition to directing the PHS attack and taking a lot of hits, plays de- fense and is a member of the Little Tieer kickoff team.
"Rob Morris is going to keep coming at you. He wants to* play football," agreed Voll- herbst. "He wants to be in on every team He is definitely a good football player."
Forced to scramble repeat- edly by the pursuing Iron Mike linemen, Morris completed five of 14 passes for 35 yards
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Sports
9 -
- The shocker was not that « PHS did not convert a single £ corner but that it failed to get u oil any shots 'I know that 5 every corner isn't going to be a £ goal but every one should end a. m a shot, said Jones For the to entire game. PHS managed on- >: ly three shots on goal, g The one positive side in the tf> loss, commented Jones, is that 2 "it presents a clearer picture to 2 the players of what we have to 5 work on It is crystal clear
r that the Little Tigers have to z work on their offense. "There
- is more to winning than penal- o tv shots.'' echoed Jones
t- '
iu
^ West Windsor scored the £ game's only goal early in the °- second period when Jen w> Nielsen lifted a shot over £ Nanden's head for its fifth O straight win and first place in ^ the CVC's Valley Division j Four of those wins have been l ■
SOCCER SCRAMBLE: While the ball bounces away
to the left, Princeton High's Marc Glogoff (2)
oo shutouts. ncludmg a wm over becomes entangled with fallen Hopewell Valley
te^ttta I Tha P,aver- Bulldogs whipped visiting Little Tigers, 6-1,
to remain undefeated.
was another shocker.
The bend-bul-ncver-break Pi rate defense that forced the Little Tigers to walk the gangplank was led by sweeper Kristen Appleget and Holly Luther, Shannon Moody, Kox and Aria landolo Said the victors' s<T<nitl yen- coach. Lori Jung. "Princeton
to he more consistent and cut . _. . .
down on mistakes I think the three-yard run They had one
plavcrs are pressing them- of the best passing teams we ve
selves too hard and the] tend to f?ce,d 7, thoy must have thrown
run out of energy " lne ba" more lnan 30 ,imes' a
Earlier, visiting Hun look a lot for high school ball -and if
2-0 lead but by the end of three *V™l.t^,°PP™ „!"!.!" periods, the Little Tigers had
Ihe first half," commented
tied the score at 3 on goals by
Long itwouldnt have been as
has a very good squad, we just v , 0rdonw penningroth nailbiting as it was.'
found another was to win ' ;l„t, <•„",," ,„,"" Ted ™c cut the lead to 12-7 just
Curwv a second goal for Hun More '"'', !»)' e"d„e,d ,wnen
wai Hi. Ij score in the final 'I'^rierbackMikcDeMainehit
period and ,,,,. game ,.,„„,., Justin Allen with a 22-yardTD
e Scotl Petrone had Pass
Hun then consumed virtual- Wehhei Scores (Jiial When l.v the entire third period in en- Sask.a Webber scored In th sec peering an 86-yard drive that ond period to give the PHS Cover caPPcd w,th a Plunse girl ., t-o halftone lead over from the one-yard stripe Hun, it broke a siring of four The ke-v ,0 lne outcome, in games for the Little Long's view came in the final Tigers Hits was Ihe only shot I*'no<l af,er DeMaineand Allen Are Elusive to find the nel however and had teamed up again, this time Hun won. 2-1, after Rhonda for a five-yard TI) completion Horner scored twice for the thal cul Huns lead ,0 six home team in the third period points. After the score and with "Yes, 1 had certainly hoped some sevcn minutes remain- In wm that game," said PHS lnB' Hun was able t0 6r,nd oul coach Becky Mackey. "but that H]ree,!i,rsl d5wns (il had more Horner is a nice player.'
host West Point Prep on Friday at 4 and Lakewood Prep on Monday at 3:30
Junior Tigers Win. 12-0 In County Football Loop
Calvin Wilson passed for two touchdowns Sunday, as the Princeton Tigers of the Mercer County Football League blank- ed Hamilton, 12-0. at the Princeton High School field The win evened the Tigers' rec- ord at 1-1 .
The Tiger defense was led by Bram Reynolds, Scott Schroder arid Markeise Bullock. It its third of eight scheduled outings, Princeton will oppose Ewing Sunday at I 30 at the Fisher School
The Tigers are coached by Terry Cunningham and Tom Parker The league is for boys 9 to 13
Win Streak Reaches Five For PDS Girls' Soccer
Tougher games are ahead that will test the mettle of the Princeton Day girls' soccer team, but at the moment the Panthers are riding high with a perfect 5-0 start to their sea- son.
The Panthers won two more last week, blasting winless Medford Vo-Tech.-6-O, on Fri- day and squeezing by Mont- clair-Kimberley, 2-1. the follow- ing afternoon. Lisa Lake and Sarah Foster were the big guns
Continued on rteit Page
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Princeton will not have much time id work on its offense [I will be al Hamilton Thursdaj and host Notre Damej Friday at Community Park In back-to-hack games and will entertain Highblown on Mon- day.
"I'm not underestimating anyone," said Jones "This year the league is wide open,"
Victories
For PHS Soccer Teams
After each registered wins in their opening games, both the Princeton High boys' and girls' soccer teams have failed, so far, to win again.
The boys fell, 6-1, to undefeated Hopewell Valley
To beef up the PHS offense,
aWl"«S MaeVe^^ebber and E in the wWffS £5SSI^^iSfL«!
game of the season.
the field at the same time and inserted jayvee Kim Griggs in
than 400 yards in total offense) before turning over the ball to the home team with a minute left "That was the key," said Long
Long cited the defensive play of senior end Scott Ferrette
The PHS eirls howeH 91 8<">l for the final three periods, of senior end Scott Ferrette ine PHS girls bowed 2-1, „w n d . T who had two sacks, two tackles
Friday to Hun and were blank- tuni,|(,s ^ P'< n > »' °PP°r behind the line 0, scnmmage
^SV",l'^H0,^llM^W'^^M«tad^ a"d Pr"— d DeMaine on
three occasions to unload the
Thursday
Currently 1-5, the boys have Znl"'"'^^"^0", " a difficult week ahead They ^0Unds'. s?'d M.ackev will be at Notre Dame this
one coming in on the f^^SSy^i.^y havet'tough'weekcoming up .
ball in a hurry
Wednesday, at Hightstown Fri day and host Trenton on Mon- day. The girls will face the
and we have to work hard every game
same three teams, hosting ,„„ * ™ld ^ ' W» ,he P"* Notre Dame and Hightstown "8"P'™nt -Ihe passing has and traveling to Trenton All '° mpI0Ve ~.5ut '"^e are so contests have a 3: 45 start with JHL2ER-.T5 mU.?.h: ,sald the exception of the boys' Hightstown match which will be played under the lights, starting at 7:30
junior fullback Cecil Boone for rushing for more than 50 yards and blocking well for Kertesz. "Those two were quite a hand- ful for Bryn Athyn." he said
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a frustrated Mackey. "We have no time to practice."
Against favored Hopewell, coach Ron Celestin's boys'
Hun Booters Bow Twice To Undefeated Teams
Two undefeated teams made the Hun School soccer team their victim last week to drop the Raiders below 500 with a 3- 4 record.
Saturday. Pennington School defeated Hun, 6-3, as the Red
Hun Defeats ANC, 20-11 Behind Cover and Kertesi
The Hun football team rolled
team scored first when senior to lis third Straight win Satur
Dylan Penmngroth scored day, as two familiar nanus
11:53 into the first period. But engineered a JO-14 victory over Raiders' Ken Brown scored
Hopewell tied it with 2:22 left in Academy of New Church four goals to raise his total to 11
the same period when Dave Freshman quarterback Todd in four games Midfielder Ted
Maly's screamer caught the Coyer threw for 180 yards, con Curvy, who transferred from
upper corner of the net After necting with end Jeff Mayer on Pennington to Hun this fall,
the Bulldogs scored again to seven aerials for 130 yards and scored Hun's first goal on a
takea 2-1 lead al halftime, the a two-polnl conversion, and penalty kick in the second
rest of the game was all (iold running back Steve Kertes period. Chris Kamnitsls scored
and Black, as HV oulscoreil rushed foi 139 yards and one andRaj Montenegro scored his
PHS. 4-0. touchdown it firsl goalol the season for Hun
"They had some fast for Hun will try to make it 4-0 on but it was not enough, as Perm- wards but I thought we played Saturday al the expense ol ington posted its fourth win in well. We just have to play with George School, winch visits the four tries a little more consistency, "said Hun campus for a 2 p.m con
Celestin For this one game, test. The Cougars have some Earlier, 4-0 Pingry scored in
PHS was without the services good running backs returning each of the last thre^ periods to
of starters Snider and Wagner from last year's team, accord- capture a 3-1 victory Hun
Marseille who did not dress ing to Hun coach Bill Long who averted a shutout when Curv) .
because of 'some apparent predicts a physical game. who leads Hun in scorine. with
school infraction. "If it had five goals, found the net on an
been for academic reasons, I Against Academy of New assist from captain Mike
would have been told," said Church in Bryn Athyn. Pa.. Romano in the final period.
Celestin Hun scored the game's first two Matt Radtke had 12 saves for
Taking note of the busy week TDs on a 45-yard strike from Hun. Jason Shields, two
ahead, Celestin said, "We have Coyer to Mayer and Kertesz's ln games this week. Hun will
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OVERMAN GAINS GROUND: PDS running back Chris Overman scored Princeton 'Day's only touchdown last Saturday against Montclair-Kimberley as the Pan- thers Josttlieir^eccr^idJooUjjinga^ 13-7.
Sports
Conl<nued Irom Preceding Page
in the Medford contest, each scoring three goals.
PDS put the game away ear- ly, as Lake tallied twice, and Foster, once in the first period Alicia Collins, Julie Howard and Jenny Myers had two assists apiece.
MKA put up a better fight, but PDS scored twice to take a 2-0 lead, and then hung on for a 2-1 triumph. Lake scored in the first period, converting a pass from Collins.
In the third, Laura Perhach had a superb solo effort, drib- bling the ball from about mid- field past a couple of MKA defenders, and then scoring. Beth Kahora, who made a nice save in the third, scrambling on iier stomach to recover the ball, and Edith Roberts split the time in goal as they have all season.
The Panthers will meet Mt. St. Dominick's this Wednesday at home, and George School away on Friday. On Monday there will be a showdown with Peddie in Hightstown At this writing, the Falcons are also unbeaten.
PDS Football Loses 13-7 To MKA, Pennington Next
Missing a good chance to even its record at l-l, the Princeton Day football team may well find itself at 0-3 after this Saturday's game.
The Panthers dropped a 13-7 decision to Montclair- Kimberley last Saturday, "a team we should have beaten," according to coach Jim Walker. A couple of key turn- overs and more injuries played a part in the loss.
This Saturday at 1:30, the Blue and White will find a vic- tory much more difficult to achieve against its old nemesis, Pennington School. PDS has not beaten the Red Raiders since 1980 or 81.
Pennington opened its season with a 32-0 loss to Admiral Far- ragut, but got well last Satur- day against Wardlaw-Hart- ridge, It will be the favorite in this encounter with the Pan- thers.
Last week, PDS had trouble with injuries at end; this time a pair of running backs were knocked out. A sprained ankle sidelined starting fullback Zach Gursky; a knee injury put freshman Harvey Bradley out of action. He will miss the next couple of weeks at least, may- be more, while Gursky should be able to play this weekend.
Walker inserted Ara Baro- nian, a sophomore, into the lineup as fullback, and al- though he had virtually no ex- perience, he did a great job fill- ing in.
But Princeton Day could not make-up for the turnovers. A botched handoff on the third play of the game gave the home team a chance to start from the PDS 25-yard line It took eight plays but MKA finally scored on a short run, and kicked the extra point to lead, 7-0.
Chris Overman was in- strumental in bringing PDS in- to a 7-7 tie in the second period. He returned a Montclair punt 25 yards to the Cougars' 25, and shortly thereafter took the ball into the end zone on a fine 11- yard run.
In the third quarter PDS mounted a 60-yard drive, tak- ing the ball from its own 20 to the MKA 20, but a pass by Carlos Sagebien intended for Matt Henderson was inter- cepted and run back to the MKA 38. From there the win- ners drove downfield and scored the go-ahead touchdown on a 30-yard run two plays into the fourth quarter.
The Panthers got the ball back on the kick-off, and managed another sustained drive from their 35 to the MKA 17, but had to give the ball up on downs. MKA outrushed Princeton Day 158 to 114; Sage-
(W L Bill Allen Jr photo)
bien completed three of nine passes for 43 yards.
On defense, Walker praised the play of Henderson who switched to inside linebacker, and led the team with 10 tackles, five of them solo ef- forts. Jon Trend also played well at outside linebacker.
PHS Booters End Losses; Cordoba Sparks 6-4 Win
In Monday sports, the Princeton High boys' soccer team ended a five-game losing streak with a 6-4 triumph over Hamilton, the girls' team lost, the tennis team won and the two cross country teams had a good day.
By far, the most exciting event for the boys' soccer team and coach Ron Celestin has to be the dramatic debut of Diego Cordoba. A native of Spain, Cordoba became eligible for the Hornet game and scored four goals, matching the four goals PHS had scored in losing its previous five.
Cordoba netted two goals in the first period against the vis- iting Hornets and then con- nected for his third in the sec-
Continued on Nexl Page
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Route 206. Princeton, NJ (Opposite the Princeton Airport) tAit: 201-707-6060
Open: Mon.. Tue.. Thur. 9AM-8PM • Wed. b Frl. 9AM-6PM • Sot. 9AM-5PM
THE JOHN WOOD FAMILY OF DEALERSHIPS • JOHN WOOD PORSCHE & 'JOHN WOOD AUDI. 0466 U.S. RTE. 1 NORTH. PRINCETON. NJ 609/452-9400 • JOHN WOOD DMW 6 JOHN WOOD NISSAN. 951 RTE. 33. HAMILTON SQUARE. TRENTON. NJ 609/586-1900.
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residential • commercial fully insured
s Sports
a anna hom fJ^«.-*i>'M ^w I
* ond to give the Little rigere b w- -i .' lead, after Wagner |j ^ Marseille had headed in a shot | 5 tor Princeton's third score 2^ Then, after Hamilton had uj tied the soort at four by conver £ in\C a corner kick and a penal- ly t\ kick with under II minutes ^ to play, the Little Tigers struck < for two more scores in a 27- ° second span Marc Glogoff got ^ the game-winner and Cordoba o lifted a booming kick over goal* j ie Scott Exner to seal it
^ Jubilant? You bet Celestin
. lauded Cordoba for his speed
£ and foot skills "Unsurpassed,"
£ he said Celestin added that it
o had been frustrating having a
— player of Cordoba's ski IN Fore
a ed "to sit in the bench until he
(A became eligible, while the Lit-
y tie Tigers were losing
o Cordoba had lived in this
*~ country for five years eight
? years ago before returning to
O Spain He came back to the
*~ U1!tef SKta'eS th'S yoar' aflCr SAVING A GOAL AND THE GAME: An unidentified Princeton Day soccer player where hither works for ,eaPs over the Montclair-Kimberley goalkeeper last Saturday aterji^mlssjiig Princeton Universit) His ap
pearance adds a new dimen-
n« 41 The girls stopped Hopewell doubles. Volweider, a senior September in Brisbane,
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a chance to score what would have been the winning goal. The game ended In a t-1 tie. tw^. b<h mi™ Jr photo)
said Celestin Victor Ordonez and Snider
Valley, 17-39, and Hightstown.
14*32, The meet was run on Marseille each had two assists F>rmceton's 3, 1 mile course, and fioahe Scott Petrone played ,(,)((| Neftg ,m(j ,{|an B je a role in the triumph w.th 20 fimsh(.fn 2 for PHS with limes
saves
Rattle of Goalies. Monday's matchup between the PHS girls' soccer team and Hamil- ton pitted two of the area's finest goalies
transfer from Belgium where she had been living, became el- igible to play in the Hamilton match.
On Friday, < Irusey and Caslellano won and Litt and
of 16:37 and 16:58. Doug
Bolender was sixth with a
clocking of 18:08, Hopewell's Baum captured the first
Evan Trubee finished third in doubles, taking the deciding
17 :i2 third set, 6-4, as the Little
The Little Tiger girls claim- Tigers edged Hightstown, 3-2.
Princeton's Saskia Webber <>fi tnrct' of ,he first four Tne previous day, Crusey and
was named to the All-Mercer
finishes Karin Swartz was first Caslellano, who have been con-
year while aeross the line in 19:47, follow- sistent winners for the Blue and
Hamilton's Chris' Foley had V(i bv Julie Neslon '" 21:45 White, triumphed again at first
been named to the second pnnc'eton's Katy Willard was and second singles against
team Webber won the battle of fourth in 22:44, behind Denise West Windsor, but Amy Smith
thenetswith 20 saves to Foley's Homer of Hightstown who was lost the third singles and PHS front of the Italian and USA Ex
* I I , i r . I . , , ' > ' I 1/ .'■-.,..■....! I ., .1 I , . I. ., .1 . F. .. . . . . I , . I ., .. L.ILX4J At m? _-_
Australia as part of that coun- try's World Exposition to cele- brate its 200th anniversary*' Princeton was one of eight crews involved, including Ox- ford and Cambridge from Great Britain — where crew had its start — two from host Australia, two from Japan and one from New Zealand. After surviving a second-chance heat, Princeton squared off against Cambridge. Oxford and New Zealand in the 3.5-mile final.
At the finish line, directly in
six but the home team Hornets won the field war, outshooting the Little Tigers on goal, 23-8, in posting a 4-0 shoutout — their first win in five games. Hamilton led, 1-0, athalftime
third in 21:48
dropped both doubles matches. At first doubles Litt and and Baum lost the first set, 6-7, won the second, 6-3, but lost the third set to the Pirates' Kris- ty Hirschman and Tracy Mer-
hibitions. the Tigers were sec- ond, 6'2 to seven seconds behind winning Cambridge, a margin of 1'2 boat lengths. "After 3!2 miles, that's not much," said Princeton's Gary Kilpa trick, who took over coaching the heavyweights this fall after 18 years with the
Tennis Team. 2-1. The PHS
girls' tennis team blanked
Hamilton, 5-0, Monday, and
earlier, in back-to-back
buVbroke"thelameopenin'tne matches, it split a pair of 3-2 rill, 3-6
third when Diane Wherley decisions. Currently the team is
scored three goals. The loss 5"2- "It was close. We could have
dropped PHS to 1-5-1. Against Hamilton, Kim won that match," said PHS lightweight program. Doing
Crusey, Karen Castellano and coach Bill Humes. "But then well in Australia in his new role
X-Country Teams Sweep. J'" Litt all won easily in singles we came right back to beat was, for him, "an extra plus. The Little Tigers remained P'fly. eacn losing only one set Hightstown, 3-2. so these things unbeated this season in cross ^'z Medina a°d Johanna Baum tend to even out." country as the boys defeated won frfl* **• at first doubles and Ahead for the Little Tigers is Hightstown, 21-35, Hopewell Natalie Volweider and Alison the annual, four-day Mercer Valley. 22-34, and Hamilton. 18- Abramswon, 6-1,6-4. al second County Tournament starting
this weekend where Lawrence- ville School is the defending champion Before that, PHS
Continued on Ne*t Page
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274 AlcundOf Rd 924-01 34
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will oppose Notre Dame in a match this Wednesday at the Irish courts.
PDS Boys' Soccer Ties Montclair-Kimberley l-l
The Princeton Day boys' soc- cer team hasn't been losing games lately, but it hasn't been winning them either. The Pan- thers, in something of a rut at the moment, played their sec- ond 1-1 tie in five days last week.
A week ago Monday, Prince- ton Day played Morristown- Beard to a 11 deadlock, and last Saturday its contest with Montclair-Kimberley ended the same way Two overtime ses- sions were no help in breaking the impasse.
MKA tallied first with 12:17 left in the second period. Dave Ragsdale converted a penalty kick with 17:37 left in the third to bring PDS even The home team outshot the Panthers 20 to 15 ; John Belanger of PDS made nine saves.
PDS, now 1-1-2, was schedul- ed to meet Hun at Zimmer Field this past Tuesday, and will face Lawrenceville away this Friday.
Tiger Crew Is Second In World Boat Race
What's up with the Princeton University crew?
How about a second place in the World Boat Race held in
DAILY RENTALS
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Route 206 • Princeton, N.J.
Jh m
I SCORE ONE FOR BERKMAN: Lindsay Berkman tallied Princeton Day's first goal Saturday in the Pan- thers' 3-0 field hockey victory over Montclair- Kimberley.
Sports
Continued liom Preceding Page
"We not only did well, we had a good time," said Kilpatrick, who views the Tigers' perform- ance as sort of a pre-season bonhon for Princetonians "The townspeople have always been behind crew and we appreciate the support of the community." he said.
While the crowds lining Carnegie Lake have been good, admitted Kilpatrick, "We'd like to see even more." The fall season with its three-mile races, he said, starts around the first of October ; on October 30 collegiate crews from all over will be in Princeton to compete against each other.
Next year the World Boat Race will be held in Tokyo and Princeton will again be invited to participate. Yes, he hopes the University will be able to schedule the Tigers in, but Kilpatrick conceded it is not an easy trip. He described the 33'2-hour flying time to Australia as more of an en- durance test than a vacation.
Although other crews from the United States had been in- vited to Australia, Princeton was the only one from this country to go. "We didn't know what to expect," recalled Kilpatrick. "We had great re- spect for Oxford and Cam- bridge and we prepared for it.
We approached it planning to do the best we could but some of the kids in the boat thought 'We may be in over our heads. ' As it turned out, it was a great experience "
The Tiger crew left New Jer- sey August 28. Once in Australia, to loosen the crews up, there was a series of bump races of 1.000 to 1.200 meters where the boats would line up in a staggered start and at- tempt to overtake or "bump" the crew in front. Over three days, no crew was able to bump the Tigers and Princeton emerged as the unofficial bump champion.
The path to the finals pitted four crews to a heat. Princeton was aligned with Oxford, the University of Queensland from Australia and Keio University from Japan. Oxford won but Princeton kept alive by winning its "second-opportunity" race to advance to the four-crew finals.
The Tiger crew was compris- ed of members from last year's varsity, junior varsity and freshman crews. The coxswain was Steve Yankure and senior John Parker was stroke Others were Russell Cone, sev- enth man; John Green, sixth man; Chris Wiseman, fifth man; Tom Wright, fourth man; co-captain Paul Caminiti, third man; co-captain David Hun- tington, second man and Rodd
Langenhagen. bowman Extras were Joe Morrisey and Jo*- Caminiti "We rotated in and out so everyone got a chance to race,' said Kilpatrick.
The Tigers, who returned to Princeton September 15, are ready. Kilpatrick's invitation to the townspeople still stands: come down to the lake and watch us perform. "We ap- preciate your support."
PDS Field Hockey Wins First, 3-0 against MKA
After two consecutive ties to open the season, the Princeton Day field hockey team gave new coach Jill Thomas her first loss and her first win of the campaign. Both were positive developments.
The loss came last Thursday night to Hopewell Valley under the lights at Mercer County Park. However, PDS played exceptionally well against the always strong Bulldogs, losing just 2-1. A year ago PDS was embarrassed in a 5-0 defeat by Hopewell.
This time HV needed a goal by Ann O'Hara with just four minutes to play to break a l-l tie. The winners went ahead in the first half on a score by Rox- anne Tena. However Jackie Reiss brought PDS even later in the half, assisted by Jane Felton.
On Saturday, PDS continued
MKA I. •
i led by Liz B gave PDA ;■ i Olead and : 5 Sheldon assisted by M *
CahilJ, made it 2-0 befori first half i
Jenny Thompson tallied an unassisted marker in the sec- ond half Goalie Lylah Alphonse stopped four shots for the first shutout
The Panthers, now : meet Dwight Englewood this Wednesday at home in their on- ly contest of the week Another home contest against Hun follows next Wednesday.
PDS Tennis Wins Third, Beating Lawrence 5-0
The PDS girls' tennis team had only one match last week, but it made the best of it, beating Lawrence 5-0 An away match with Montclair- Kimberley was postponed when the home team suddenly discovered it had another com- mitment.
The PDS girls all won in straight sets. In singles play. Jenny Thurman won 6-1, 6-0, Becky Dengler, 6-3. 6-3. and Kate Leone, 6-1, 6-1 Heather Roberts and Susan Lebovitz captured a 6-3, 6-1 decision and Claire Brown and Laurie Stuart won 6-0, 6-2.
Selling Out ALL 1988 Models At Low Prices
3 Escorts
3 Taurus
g*jgj^
4 Thunderbirds
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2 Bronco Ms
3 Rangers
4 Pickups
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NASSAU - CONOVER
MOTOR CO.
Route 206 & Cherry Valley Road • Princeton, NJ • (609) 921-6400
609393-4848 215/736-8989
LESTER and ROBERT
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QUALITY AUCTION of ANTIQUES, MODERN
FURNISHINGS & RELATED ITEMS. On SAT.,
OCT. 22nd nt 9:00 A.M. At BROWN BROS.
GALLERY, 2455 Rl 413, Buckingham, P».
Our only location. PREVIEW: FRI.. OCT. 21st, 5 to 6 P.M.
& one hour prior to auction.
FURNITURE VICTORIAN: Eaatlaka bird's-eye maple bamboo mirrored wardrobe, ROCOCO: aofaa, chairs & gilt pier mirror; 6 m.t. tablet, etagere, Renaissance bedrm. pes. & sew. table, m.t. bureau & washstand.
GOLDEN OAK: S-X-S desks, Wllllmantlc clerk desk, bow- ed front china closets, kitchen cabinet, dbt. dr. bookcase, sect, file & book cases, quartered din. table, aet press-back chairs, mirrored sideboards.
OTHER ANTIQUES: Upright Vlctrola, fine maple cheval mir- ror, wicker pram & other pea., mah. dbl. sect, bookcase, 1920s carved tables, brass & cut glaaa floor lamp, Eng. burled desk A oak tall clock, Emp. cherry secretary & mah. games-table, pine treatle table, schoolmaster's desk, Jel- ly cupboards, dryslnk, yarn winder. MODERN FURN Klttlnger: Chlpp. highboy, sofa & wing chairs; needlept. Q.A. armchair, Stlckley comb-back Wind- sor, pr Classic Leather armchairs, Meredith Classic showcase, 2 orn. Iron trundle beds, cherry & mah. tea tables. Fed. sideboard, Regency sofa, cherry harvest table & Penna. House hutch, oak S-curve desk, wlrework & wicker patio pes., pr. mah. barrel comer cupboards, LOUIS XV: gilt wood vltrlne, canapes, banquet table. CARPETS & SETS: Karastan Klrman 8"8"H2 , Chinese & other rugs, carved Chlpp. mah. din. set, 9-pc. Art Nouveau wal. bed set, Penna. House din. set, Q.A. cherry table & chairs, etc.
OBJETS DART
SMALL ITEMS: Royal Doulton character Jugs & figurines, Hummels, Lenox-Boehm wildlife plates, Wedgwood "Gold Florentine" service, Waterford stemware, Stangl birds, Nippon vases, Staffordshire, stoneware, copper & brass ware, art pottery, cut glass, pi. silver, doorstops, quilts, composition dolls, mech. display bear, Bucks Cent. Atlas, Waterbury wall clock, keroaene lamps Include Vict, ruby hanging, W. Harding decoys.
PLUS: Karl Hofner violin, vertical steam engine working model, Wheeler Bros., 1914 circus broadside, Am. Indian blankets, pr. repro. knife urns, Vict, pharmacist's water globe, prim, oil ptgs . Vict. wal. A gilt frames & chromolithographs, death picture, Franklin Mint Wh. Hse. pres. medals, 18K pocketwatches, at. silver hollow ware. CHILDREN'S: Express wagon, wal. d.l. table & rest. Emp. bureau by Mark Franklin, pram, rockers, toys, etc. TERMS: Cash or Prior Approved Check.
BROWN BROS., Auctioneers
No. AU-104-L Buckingham. Pa. 18912 215-794-7630 OUR 73RD YEAR
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
PRINCETON BOROUGH 1 1 CHAMBERS ST.. Frank M Shapiro Sold to Kirk D and Lisa Huckel
$700,000 204 EWINO ST., Clifford W and Jane MaryCota Sold to Gregory H Skover
$210,000 56 HUMBERT ST.. POF Assoc Sold to Edward and Sandra Peltegrew
$334,500 44-C PALMER SO. W.. Palmer Square Lid Partnership Sold 10 Rebecca Fields $102,647
44-C PALMER SO. W.. Palmer Square Lid Partnership Sold lo Rebecca Fields $82,544
118 SNOWDEN LANE. Charles C Foster jr Sold to James L and Laurie A Peck $210,000
106 WILSON RD., Robert C Dunham Sold to Robert C Dunham $119,000
PRINCETON TOWNSHIP 193 MOORE ST., Frederick S Coffman Est Sold to Donald A and Jean E Winkelmann $247,000
964 PRINCETON-KINGSTON RD Martin and Eileen Summerfield Sold to Jerome Baron $530,000
59 RIDGEVIEW RD.. W and Sally Mar tmdale Sold lo Alberto and Irene Rosenberg $260,000
279 WESTERN WAY, Thomas M and Ellen Pelron Sold to Susan Wardle Simpson $415,000
PENNINGTON
131 VOORHEES AVE.. First Jersey National Bank Sold to Times of Tren- ton Publishing. $185,000
HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP
5 BENJAMIN TRAIL, Roblyn Oev Corp Sold to Enrico and Jo Ann Caizzo $399,500 37 MORGAN AVE.. Edward B and Belsie L Poinsett Sold to Gregory James McGrath $26,800 79 VAN DYKE RD.. James D and Lin- da Marotta Sold to Robert A Stevens
$214,000 3 WESTEHN PINE ST., Corey Lee and Elizabeth Sherman Sold to Malcolm G and Susan C. Franklin $536,900 548 WILFRED AVE.. James D and Nancy B Lake Sold to William C and Jane G Morris $159,000
LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP 17 BEARFORT WAY. Jane Colby Sold to Howard J and Janet Cohen $165,000
6 BENEDEK RD., Rosedale West Assoc LP Sold to Hopewell Valley Builders $258,000
731 CAMBRIDGE AVE.. Joseph B Jusiewicz Sold to Russell M and Caryn M Smith $163,000
101 CARTER RD.. Hildegard M Hellel- son Sold to Cherry Grove Farm Ltd Ptnshp $270,000
6 GARRY CT., Gary F and Rose A Donnelly Sold to Kenneth D and Cyn- thia S Blank $218,000 11 PADDOCK DR., Douglas P and GayteA Buth Sold to Philip J Maneiia $307,900 10-F SHIRLEY LANE. Joseph M and Cynthia Spiegel Sold to Steven M Friedman $135,000 30 WINDWOOD RD., Anthony and An- tonette Salerno Sold to Joseph I and Carol B Tracy $154,000
WEST WINDSOR TOWNSHIP 580 ALEXANDER RD., James M and Catherine S Kopley Sold to Township of West Windsor $12,000
2 BEARDSLEY CT., Parmmc Polekotf Sold to Siddharth C and Smita S Shah $351,300 121 COMMONWEALTH CT.. Canal Pomte Assoc Inc Sold to John J and Mane T O'Dnscoll $146,990 10 EVANS DR.. Prmcelon Oaks inc Sold to William H and Eileen H Beam
$332,990 16 HANOVER CT., Princeton G'eens Assoc Sold to Wayne and Laun King Jr $255,000
101 LASSEN CT., Carnegie Park Assoc Inc Sold lo Joseph M Jacobs
$126,990
5 LEPARC CT.. Leparc Inc Sold to Tyrone A Williams $356,000
3 NORFOLK OR.. Windsor Develop- ment Corp Sold to James M and Louise C Hall $434,345 109 WRANGEL CT.. Carnegie Park Assoc Inc Sold to David R and Judith Ann Hams $152,790 ZELOAF DR., Edward F and Marcia H Farrell. Sold to Richard E and Cynthia C Morrison $385,000
MONTGOMERY TOWNSHIP 31-0 CHICOPEE DR., Montgomery Woods Assoc Sold lo Kawaljit and Ravmeet Bhluwaha. $169,990
2 RICHMOND DR.. RCT Developers Inc Sold to Dale J and Leslie Florio $379,500 30 TAMARACK CIRCLE, John R and Frank Rin Sold to B&M Realty and J Kuns $206,000
SOUTH BRUNSWICK TOWNSHIP
6 BELLFLOWER CT.. Eastern Homes Sold to Michael A and Deborah Camuso $290,000
F A R M
A DYNAMIC NEW PRINCETON COMMUNITY OF 280 UNITS INCLUDING
140 low and moderate income units for RENT OR SALE
Townhouse* and Apartments at 700 State Road, Princeton Township, NJ
Approximate current ■ maximum law
income limns are $10,500 to $18,400,
depending on famili size
(Rental ranjic: $212 to $370)
Approximate current* maximum moderate
income limits .ire $16,100 to $30,700,
depending on t'amiK si/c
(Rmtalranqt $343io$M6<
iSala Pnta mnjv fnmt $32,800 a $63,800)
Mncnmt hmit-i arr iithftit to . riinm
Selection will be by lottery.
Prclimuun ipplicaboni ma* tx .*-tiinc\l Jt IV»n«mn Puhln. ljhrjr, PtincrtWl rowiuhip .ind Bon High Hlllv PruKCtnn
( bmmunit] Village, *n>.i K.M Ijght Real Estate, 24" Nassau Strect, Pnn-.cti>n
All prcluTuiurv ippbuboro mmi tx wnt to
P.O. Bo» J379, Prinoton, NJ 08S43 and mutt bt
prMtnuriud no later than October 2?, 1988.
Pst pWJWN '■! '"• i •i rum buklvqi n«n
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Professional Interior & Exterior Painting & Paperhanging
A Princeton Business for Over 25 Years
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1931 Model A Ford - '68 Impala • 79 Subaru Plus Complete Garage Contents
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TUES., OCT. 4 - 9 A.M.
(Rain Date Next Day)
Good large metal lathe; recent 6 HP Riding mower; Gas Furnace; large sander; paint sprayer; 3 tool chests with contents; 54-drawer metal & tool cabinets; good drill press; shop vacuum; 5 electric hand tools plus lots hand tools; clamps; Etc! - Floor Jacks; 8 tier revolving gondola; wrench & socket sets; vise; grinder; dolly; c. 1890 small oak 12-drawer file; 20 ft. metal ladder; hoist; Etc! Stereo records; fishing equip; 100's other tools; Etc! Wonderful Opportunity!
Lester & Robert Slatoff
AUCTIONEERS
609-393-4848 Trenton, NJ 215-736-8989
CATALOG AUCTION ol FINE ANTIQUES. On k !;
WED.. OCT. 19th. at 9:00 A.M. At BROWN BROS. BROWN, GALLERY, 2455 Rt. 413, Buckingham. Pa. Our l^^l only location. INSPECT TUES., OCT. 18th, 4 to 8 i -™ \i P.M. Absentee bids accepted at preview. Catalog S7.00 by mall or tree Brochure.
PERIOD FURNITURE: Delaware Valley wal. Queen Anne highboy. CHIPPENDALE: Phlla. cherry tall chest & Pem- broke table, wal. slant-lid desk, mah. side chair & retailer labeled fretwork mirror; Lebanon Co. decor, blanket chest, wal. blind door & Emp. cherry-man corner cupboards, hutch table, Moon Windsor, Moravian cherry sugar chest, FEDERAL: maple slant-lid desk, bird's-eye bureau, set of 13 fancy chairs, mah. candle stands, sideboard, brass eagle engraved andirons; Regency 2-part banquet table, Am. & Eng. worktables, CLASSICAL: mah. sofa & card table, tiger maple rope bed, brass andirons. ARTWORK: Fine Bucks Co. folk an painting by Jonathan K. Trego - "My Homestead, 1850", oils by Ferdinand Richardt, Geo. Sonar, Thomas B. Craig, Pearl A. Van Sclver, Ludwlg Bemelmans, F. Steiler miniatures, Robt. Riggs litho . 10 Louis lean engravings, VICTORIAN: por- traits, lithographs, walnut & gilt frames. ORIENTAL RUGS: Heriz & Kashan carpets, other rugs. DOLLS: Excellent selection of 35 bisque head German, ma- jor makers represented, height range from 9" to 42". CLOCKS: Bradley i Hubbard iron front shelf clock, FRENCH: Napoleon figural mantel, crystal regulator, Mor- bier, cartel, carriage; brass ship's. ORIENTALIA: Chinese porcelain bottles. Export. Satsuma, Imarl, cloisonne, bound portfolio rice paintings, teak, marble stands.
EPHEMERA: Early 18th-19th century Bucks Co. Quaker documents: deeds, genealogies, surveys, journals, etc.; Bucks Centennial Atlas. Civil War autographs, 18th-19th cent, deeds: Upper Dublin, Whitemarsh & Gwynedd Townships; postcard albums.
FOLK ART: Fine small green blanket chest, papier-mache baby bonnet stand, carved decoys, redware, treenware. baskets, quilts, coverlets, sampler, blue decor, stoneware, stick sponge charger, Majolica, Stahl pottery, spice chop- per, brass ladle & spoon molds, gameboard. TOYS: 1860s velocipede, collection of Steitf animals, cast Iron hook & ladder, tin mechanical, Tammany cast Iron bank.
PLUS: Daum Nancy cameo vase, Swiss cylinder & disc music boxes, Symphonia hand organ, brass girandoles, brass candlesticks, kerosene lamps, chamber sets, doorstops. Tiffany Inkstand, wheel barometer, tea caddy. Flow Blue Includes pitcher-bowl set, Limoges china ser-, vice, Mettlach stein, signed cut glass, Helsey * Staff, figurines, st. & pi. silver hollow ware, Sevres & Rockwood vases. Royal Doulton figures. TERMS: NO BUYER'S PREMIUM. Cash or Prior Approved Check.
BROWN BROS., Auctioneers
No. AU-104-L
Buckingham, Pa. 18912
215-794-7630
OUR 73RD YEAR
Real Estate Transactions
Continued l<om Preceding Page
7 CUMMINGS RD.. Roben Seltzer Sold lo Jung Teak and Soon Mm Kim
S21 5.000 g DEERBERRY LANE, John and Teresa Ross Sold lo Zena Horvath
1124,000 1 OREXEL HILL DR., Timber Ponds Sold to Thomas and Jannette Lee
$297,065 66 JEFFREY CIRCLE. Salvatore Mastropole Sold to Anna Foley
$177,000 42 KENDALL RD., Ralph and Eileen Canto Sold to Bnan and Audrey Masto
$150,000
FRANKLIN TOWNSHIP 310 BENNETTS LANE. Donald R and Beverly Gibson Sold to Mark DiGiovanm $225,000
52 BOXGROVE PLACE, Paul and Christine Valenti Sold lo Al G and Flora Palattao $147,000
190 OLD GEORGETOWN ROAD. Richard J and Linda Gyarmati Sold lo Marion Medical $125,000
51 STERLING RO., Edwin and Kathleen Collings Sold lo Mark and Janet Pasteka $177,000
27 TAYLOR DR.. Sze Ymg Lu Sold to Anf and Tabassum Halimi $122,500
FOR SALE: Man s bicycle, brand new. Hully 10 speed $100 Call (609) 924 1799
1973 MGB: E.cellent eondil<on Michelms, stereo Asking $2500 Call
924-1916
PRINCETON JUNIOR SCHOOL has
openings in K Ihiough 3rd grades Call 924 4974 or 921 2108 We do nol discrimmale against any race, color or ethnic origin
CAR FOR SALE: 1987 Trooper II LS 4 door. AC, slereo cassette Like new 11.000 mites $11,000 Call (609) 799 3619 after 6 p.m
SEEKING HOUSMATE: Friendly 5
bedroom house in Kingston Studenlor prolessionai preferred Nonsmoking Washer/dryer Close to busline $273 plus utilities 1-609-924-6938 evenings Available October 1
1987 BUICK GRAND NATIONAL: 216
miles Must sell because am buying home Call anytime at 359-4496
QUEEN SIZE SOFA BED: Fabric lorn. $30 Call 921-1457
3-SPEED ENGLISH MENS and ladies'
bikes. $75 each 9x12 braided wool and brown nylon rugs, $40 each Green reclmer. chest ol drawers, upright vacuum cleaner, office swivel chair. $35 each Antique child's rocker colfee fable floor lamp. $20 each Table lamp, children's furniture $10 each 924- 5948
STOP PAYING RENT START BUILDING EQUITY
Buy 2 modern apartment-. detached Princeton house Occupy on© and renl Ihe other for Iruly economical ?6.500
also
Unusual COndoopfJortijnrly ' Borough Separale building with sunny immaculate, 3V>-foom apartment over 4 bone-dry garages Only $129,500
924-4710
PRINCETON: 2 bedroom apartmeni Avairable immediately $750 per month plus utilities 924-4238, 737-6737
ELOERLY PRINCETON COUPLE seeks kind and patient live-m help, some nursmg al leas' Monday through Friday Nonsmoking, must drive Reler ences required Call collect after 6 pm (614)291 1498
HOUSESITTING SITUATION
WANTED: Professional male, Prince Ion homeowner 10 years References
av-iabte 683-0370
THREE
GENERATIONS OF OUALITV CRAFTMANSHIP
**>/*:
CONSTRUCTION
CARPENTERS • CONTRACTORS
Quality Work Requires Planning Call Now For Free Estimate!
ADDITIONS • ALTERATIONS • RESTORATION m}-^ • CUSTOM REMODELING *~ - MASONRY • STONEWORK • DESIGN SERVICES FULLY INSURED • LI. #08668
281-6662
Onlui^
CARNEGIE REALTY, Inc.
Each Office is Independently Owned and Operated
PRINCETON CIRCLE AT RT. 1 452-2188 452-2118
PENNS NECK — Meticulously maintained 3 bedroom ranch w/full basement, 1 car garage, beautiful back yard Walking distance to train.
$189,000
ROCKY HILL — Within walking of library and shop- ping, our 4/5 bedroom colonial in lovely setting on 1 .9 acres of land - estate property with mature trees - set back 100 feet from road In-ground pool Must see' $279,000
PLAINSBORO — Lovely 1 bedroom condo in Aspen complex Seller will pay $2,000 toward pur- chaser's closing costs. $99,000
PENNS NECK - Princeton Mailing Address — corner Rt. 1 & Varsity Avenue - 6 Unit Apartment Building - Fully rented - Never a vacancy $535,000 PLAINSBORO - "Forrestal Village" - Unique 2 bedroom townhouse with enclosed atrium, full basement, deck, intercom, microwave & all ap- pliances- "Princeton Mailing Address. "$199,900
PENNS NECK — Charming, beautifully maintain- ed 3 bedroom ranch, fireplace and garage. Walk to tram easy access to shopping and Route 1
$196,000
LIVE FREE TO 89!
YOU CAN'T TOP THIS...
No Points Mortgage
No Mortgage Payments
No Condominium Fee
No Taxes
FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY!
You can live free at The Station at Pennington townhouses
under a special plan offered to qualified buyers by The Princeton Bank and Design Interface, builders of this charming new townhouse community designed by The Hillier Group. Visit The Station today for details.
DON'T WAIT!
Ji )H\ I
CHENDER§ON
INl
REALTORS
Princeton ,fiftq. _„„ _,,„,. Pennington
33 Witherspoon St. (bua' '*>' iW* Rt. 31 & Delaware Ave
(609) 921-9300 Tuesday through Sunday 10-5 p.m. (609) 737_3980
Luxurious Rental
!T*Uin iin
Enjoy estate living in this gracious 6 bedroom, 5V2 bath Colonial on 16 beautiful acres with tennis court Available now. $3000 a month
N.T. Callaway
Real Estate
609-921-1646
EXCEPTIONAL VALUE IN LAMBERTVILLE, NJ 41 Elm St.
Just 30 minutes of country driving to Princeton.
I
IN-TOWN VICTORIAN. Very comfortable and very clean semi on a quiet street in a family neighborhood 2-3 bedrooms. 1 5 baths. LR w/woodstove, DR w/bay window, family room w/built-ln bookcases. Colorful private yard w/large covered porch. Come to see what Lambertville and this home have to offer. Call for private showing; 609-397-4567 3% commission paid to a licensed selling agent
$155,000
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday 1-5 P.M. 206 Moore Street, Princeton
4 Bedroom, 2 Bath Dutch Colonial on quiet tree- lined street. Private yard, walk to town and schools. The best of Princeton convenience at an affordable price. Reduced to $269,500
Call Owner: 683-1721
OFFERED BY OWNER IN PRINCETON
Prestigious location on privately owned street. Easily walk to town or Princeton University. Two bedrooms, 1% baths, fireplace, built in bookshelves, new kitchen, new furnace, new roof. Truly in Move-In Condition.
Brokers Protected
924-6525
PRINCETON SMALL ANIMAL RESCUE LEAGUE
SAVE WEEKDAYS TO CL AIM OR AOOPT A PET CALL Mrs Graves 6AM 3PM SATURDAY 8 11AM FOR AN AP POINTMENT N-ghi*, ana weekends re port tost or found o' "weo animals lo the ponce
Report lost and found pets within a twenty-four hour period
ir Eskimo Spite 8 monlhs Old With papers
Young male purebred Maiamute friendly blue eyes mce disposrtion
Purebred German Shepherd female spayed good disposition
Female toy Fo* Terrier 6 months old, ■
Male Black Lab lype. 4 V? months old. housebr. . Male young Maltese, nee disposition Male 8-week old Black M i dog. short hair
Female, spayed Beagi' months old. housebroken
Altered male Collie type gold color medm"
.payed Collie Shepherd i
KxxJ with children tared mali semi-long hair 4 years otd good with Iti
house i' ■
; .'ebred Afghan, good with housebroken Male Black Lab type, i year old. nice disposition
■ ■lection of kittens
'■•male grey tiger, or lercolored ■ uurebred Siamese (nice pet) any other cals
921-6122
4502C ROXBURV AT ROSSMOOR: A greal buy' Adull community Conve- 'fjet location 2 bed rooms, 2 baths Sunny large living room Carport Must seel $169,900 Richard C Fischer Real Eslate 609 921-6200
HAMILTON SQUARE-A BEST BUVI Owner must sell Three bedrooms, IVs balhs, in-ground pool Fenced yad Covered paho Finished basement Oversized garage Walk lo Velerans Park Public and parochial schools Greal shopping $154,900 Richard C Fischer Realtors (609)921 6200, even ings (609) 921-2311
GARAGE SALE: October 1, 6 30 lo
1 30 Curtains, fixtures, feather pillows, spreads, chairs, clothes, dishes and miscellaneous too numerous to men- tion 349 Walnul Lane, Princeton
Molisana Ital.
DELI
Now - Barbecued
Chicken & Wings
Every Day ol the Week
Hoi and Cold Sandwichva
Soup and Spadal of the Day
Atsortcd Cold Cut*
and Khcaronl
Fresh Cheese and Ricotta All The Time
Paattiea ■ Collr* ■ let Cream Cigar til* a • Neap ape r*
266 Wllherspoon St.
924-9555
Mon-Fri 7:30 to 7 pm Sal 8-3. Closed Sunday.
APARTMENT TO SHARE ill central Princeton S280 month plus titiBtieG and
deposit Nonsmot Sorry no pets or k<ds 609 92' -0417
DINOSAUR YARO SALE: Saturday October 1 9 2 236 Hendnckson Drive Princeton Juncton Oft 571 across trom WWPHS Toys baby things books household Ra,n oa'e
;:tobe' 8
CANAL POINTE TOWNHOUSE: Car rouse* mode* 3 bedrooms 2' i baths :e - Si 74.900 Call JRW at Henderson investment Properties Inc 921-9111
GARAGE SALE: Saturday October t 93 ram or shme Toys, games clothes, household items doors some furniture 51 Clover Lane Princeton
LAWRENCEVILLE - DELIGHTFUL! Colonial Lakes. Hopatcong 0nve New ly decorated Includes new roof, new copper wiring, brand new eat m kit chen, newly timshed floors and carpeting 4 bedrooms. \Vi balhs 2 car garage Gas heal Central air Ready to be inspected Don't wait1 $169,900 Richard C Fischer Real Estate 609-921-6200
ERNEY'S
Unfinished Furniture
1000 Pieces of Wood Furniture'
280? Hi t Bullae**
lawrtnet • $30 0097
rfiddlestichs-|
Toys To Remember
Princeton Forrestal
Village
520-0052
GET OUT FROM UNDER!
CALL 609-799-NOVA CENOVA BUSINESS SERVICES INC.
604 village RoM we si, West Windsor
ANDERSEN DOUBLE CASEMENT
window. 34W x 30H. 550 8 HP ''Sting I tractor £95 Call 924-8475
GARAGE SALE: October 4. 10-5 Be- tween Kendall Park & Rocky Hill Rt 518 3-fam.ly Sale
EXOTIC OUTFITS and furnishings Irom India Sale starting 25 of Sept . 1 week only a1 195 Nassau Street (behind Per- sonal Travel) Mon -Sat ,10am - 6 pm Any guestionscall (609) 921-7631.
WALKER TURNER iomter /planer $250 Unused Apple 300/1200 modem, $200 Ice cream maker $8 Ffigidare dryer $25 8issel carpet sweeper $10 Double window including combination 924 7361
HOUSE FOR RENT: Charming, quiet. 2-bedroom ranch in Lawrenceville Village Walk to bus $700/month plus
utilities Call 883-1129
1979 CHEVY CAPRICE: 2-door.
automatic, air, AM/FM radio, power steering and brakes New tires and brakes Sale, reliable and beautiful 54.000 original miles $2,600 201-782- 1533
NEW PRICE! NEW PRICE! NEW PRICE! HOPEWELL BOROUGH
Take time lo smell the roses, lavender and lilies in the garden of this exquisite
Greenwood Avenue Victorian. 4 large bedrooms, 3 1/2 Baths, Living Room with fireplace, large Dining Room with bay. Library with custom cabinetry, eat-in Kitchen. Pantry, enclosed Back Porch, wrap-around Front Porch, full attic and basement, picket fenced yard with herb and vegetcble gardens. Perennial gardens abound PLUS heated outbuilding including cO by 50 studio with hardwood floors, skylights, 2 rooms and garage. ALL In mint condition. Priced to sell. $315,000
Call 466-2252 New Price
PRINCETON APARTMENT
Spacious 3 4 bedroom In mini conditom Just renovated. Living room, dining room, kjichen, ito bath', available im-
medialely $1400 per mo
PRINCETON HOUSE
Spacious ? Bedroom Duplex in Princeton Borough Walking distance to University Living room, dining room. new kitchen 2 lull baths Large closets ■ 'ear ol house Available im- . $800 per month
CONDO
i Woods, Monmouth Juncnon
■ i ot Unturmshed, elegant 2nd-
lloor condo Living room, dining toom,
2 bediooi- place, deck
(view of tonnis and pool) $800 per
month
Call Firestone Real Estate
169 Nassau Street
Princeton. N.J.
(609) 924-2222
HOUSECLEANING WORK wanted by experienced womai
uansportaifbn Call 394 6535 9 28 4t
aummumimujuj.^^
STEWARDSON-DOUGHERTY [
See ■ l<nn,« HP/use/, SPtineUon, Jl'eus fcltetp 08540 e09-92/-778i
m HP m '-^
"BY THE BROOK"
Near Princeton
A Special Place for Special People
"By the Brook" offers three estate sized parcels of land - twenty-five to thirty-five acres - so that three exceptional buyers can build excep- tional estate type propert.es according to their own plans and dreams. Located equidistant from New York and Philadelphia and just a lew minutes from New York commutation, major highways and Princeton yet the parcels provide endless natural beauty and privacy Partially wood- ed and partially open, there are marvelous southern exposures and long frontages on historic Stony Brook, Prices Parcel A 25 acres $800 000. Parcel B 35 acres $900,000; Parcel C 25 acres $700,000. Limited to one residence per parcel. All sales subject to final subdivis.on approvals For further information call or mite tor a brochure. Brokers protected Phone 609-921-7784
*>iTiTiTm'1^^ ' ■' ■-■ ivi viviv.r.v.-mri
RETURN TO THE VILLAGE FEELING
Hopewell Borough ... Quiet streets, historic buildings, small shops, beautiful older homes ... a town like Princeton used to be.
\
\ \
RETURN TO A BYGONE ERA...
...when craftsmanship was the norm. This well maintained 3-bedroom home has chestnut woodwork, hardwood floors, pocket doors and many other wonderful features. $229,000
■&i^ **?££ 1£ |
|
. |
Bf*'"' "' ** ' 1 |
ft* % |
A GREAT FAMILY HOME
This spacious 3-bedroom home with 2V2 baths, extra large kit- chen and 2-car garage has been well maintained and complete- ly updated. Walk to school and shops. $243,000
A FINE HOME - A SUPER BUY
The solid construction of an older home; the reassuring presence of a new roof and new furnace; the luxury of a large kitchen and 2 full baths. Excellent condition. $16t<,000
METICULOUS RESTORATION
These beautiful 2-bedroom Victorian condos have new kitchens and appliances, updated heating systems and great charm. Left side is $157,500, right side $123,500, together $275,000.
THE PAINTED LADY
This 3-bedroom, 2-bath Victorian treasure, painted in the San Francisco style, has an all-new kitchen with skylights, stained glass, antique mantel, 1890's house photo and more. $243,000
*P
,V*>
r r P
THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY
One of the area's most unique residences, this historic brick building was lovingly converted to 3 apartments, each with its own art studio and Soho loft atmosphere. $750,000
Steve Schaeffer and Sandy Brown, husband and wife real estate agents, own a home in the borough and work in the borough, a place that manages to maintain its small town flavor despite being next door to Princeton. The properties described on this page are some of the ones currently marketed by the two of them. If you are thinking of buying or selling your home, please give them a call.
CHENDERgON B
RF A I TORS
37 W. Broad St., Hopewell, N.J. 08525
609-466-1600
PEARLS RE-STRINGING
Bni>$ yon 1.h>s* toads nijim in.) inm^ft] and irv-,'i E«p*n »\>ik dofM »n th«" pnrmisfs
\<^si „ih«-i irurl'V rrpatrs' H*v* ,-oo torn thinking About ji >jyoil d*-s,*in lot thr oW srtTtng' \*>c Ju!i.,i>., tm spooal catr and
Jewels by Juliana
16 Wlther»poon SlfMl Princtlon • 921-7233
FLOOR SANDtNG. STAINING A flEFINISHING
BEST FLOOR CO
924 489? It
PRINCETON STRING OUARTET Serenades a" rovous evenls Classical
■ I'Data Sue While 609-520-0388 ot 683-5566
PRINCETON MEDICAL GROUP, P.A STEVEN KAZENOFF, M.D.
Dermatology, Dermatologic Surgery Skin Cancer, Cosmetic Surgery
Including Hair Transplants
Dermabrasions Leg Vein Injections
Board Certified
Collagen Injections Chemical Peels
Medical Arts Building • Suite B 253 Withers poon St Princeton, NJ 08540 1609)924-9300
Medical Arts Building
Perrinevllle & Prospect Plains Rd
Cranbury, NJ 08512
(609) 655-8800
ES TAT L
KM
LIGHT
Realtors
247 Nassau St.
(609)924-3322
PROFESSIONAL APPRAISALS
For an authorative market value appraisal of your real estate properties —
• for a realistic approach to marketing
• for investment purposes
• or for estate purposes
K.M. LIGHT provides a complete written analysis of any type of real estate, together with a list oUcomparable proper- ties sold or for sale. Call us about our appraisal services today.
K.M. Light, Senior Appraise*
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF CERTIFIED APPRAISERS
UNFURNISHED
Princeton: Queenston Common con domm-urn ready 'or October occupan cy FresMy panted rel'msned doors
■ _.vmg room with d-nrng area eat m kitchen study ana hall bath Upstairs three bedrooms 2 iu» baihs Laundry area Large, high ceiling base
storage One car detached ga rage Use of pool and tennis court $1600 pet month plus utiHies
Princeton: Ri rerpde home with 3 bed rooms lamdy room dmmg room kit Chen ,2 baths terrace one basemenl Avaiiat1' per mori' .
Princeton; Lovelv m-fown apatlmenl Living room, ominq room - I bedrooms and 2 balhs Underground parking SecuMy $1250 per month plus $250 maintenance per month plus I ■ i
Kingston: Lovely quiei neighborhood 5
.'i lo N Y bus
4 bedrooms Nvmg room, dming room kitchen, 2"; balhs family room 2car garage Available immediately $1350 per mom1
Princeton: Princeton Landing Model
,'.i :■ vmg room
i room, kitchen 2Vj
bedrooms, two-car garage.
■
November 1 $1400 per monih plus
Monmouth Junction: Nearly new 5 bedroom. 3"; bath Colonial i well landscaped and maintained. Alarm . , 'oom with
master bedroom ,•. II
'■'■'v $1775 per monlh plus utilities and gai
Princeton: Large 5 bedroom 4 balhs
room, eal-m kilchen
family room and sludy, 2-car garage
screened porch and in-ground pool
"mediately $2300 per month plus utilities
Princeton; Lovely weslern section one bedroom apartment, walking distance to ', and tram Large living room/dining room combination Kitchen and bath Wall-to-wall carpeting Parking for one car on premises Available im mediately. $825 per month plus gas and eleclnc, heal included
FURNISHED LONG TERM
Princeton: Charming apartment on Ireei Completely lurmshed Liv- ■■. in fireplace and picture win- dow Two bedrooms, kitchen and bath ; irking No pets $825 per ties included Ava il li
Stewardson-Dougherty
Real Estate Associates, Inc.
366 Nassau Street, Princeton, NJ
609-921-7784
RENDALL-COOK
& COMPANY
REALTORS
350 ALEXANDER STREET PRINCETON 609-924-0322
CAMPBELTON CIRCLE
Gracious Colonial Home — Five bedrooms, three and one
half baths — On a quiet street in the Western Borough.
$595,000
EDWARD BUCCI BUILDERS
presents
■
PRINCETON TOWNSHIP'S FINEST
Experience the peace and tranquility this new Custom Colonial has to offer, with its 3.78 wooded acres on a private cul-de-sac. William Thompson design, this home offers 7,000 sq. ft. living space / ample bedrooms / baths with versatile wing; master bedroom suite, custom kit- chen / solid cherry cabinets, library, solarium, garden room, 5 fireplaces, 2 decks / expansive finished walk- out basement, that opens to a blue stone patio.$l, 400,000
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL (609) 924-0908 Brokers Protected
Just ten minutes from Princeton, this spectacular brick house is in the prestigious Colfax area of Montgomery Township near the Bedens Brook Golf Club. With five bedrooms and 5% baths, this house is ideally suited for the family requiring a maid's quarters or separate room for an in-law. The living area is most spacious and includes 4 fireplaces and spectacular views.
^HENDERSON
REALTORS^-*
37 West Broad Street. Hopewell, N.J. (609) 466-11
INC
•
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4
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J.l.i.l.t.l.i.1.i.r.i.».i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.m.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.t.i.i.i,i,i,i.i.i.i.i.i.i.).i
Punceton, JV.g. 085*0 609-921-7784
<£<U»teneeviMe fiffie* 23 &>AUtyu .yUe.
STEWARDSON-DOUGHERTY JK^*™«^ ■"■#■ oaets
9UU$U<U* ^>-W^, .V«^V eO9.S96.84O0
A CENTER OF TOWN CAPE COD
In a super convenient location is a four bedroom plus den, two bathroom Cape Cod Screened porch overlooking the mature landscaped yard with several boxwoods and large shade trees. Two car garage and basement complete this desirable property offered at $295,000
VINTAGE STONE COLONIAL
Built originally about 1 760 and since enlarged with an attractive guest or rental wing. The present owner has brought the property up to mint condition while keeping the ambience and patina of much earlier times. Eight fireplaces, wide pine floors, original woodwork and mantels all lend their charms Overall there are fourteen rooms including a long center hall; formal living room, dining room, and library; up-to-date kitchen w/new cabinets, pantry and powder room Upstairs, a study, three bedrooms, and two baths on second floor and two more bedrooms and bath on third. The guest wing has its own spacious living room, dining "L", complete kitchen, bedroom, dressing room and bath. Outside there are almost two and a half acres w/banks of flowering shrubs, huge mature shade trees, fruit trees, lovely flagstone terrace w/wrap around porch, a stone spring house, 2 story carriage house and free-form Sylvan pool. All located con- veniently between Princeton and Lawrenceville Offered at $1,300,000
PINE KNOLL
Formerly a nursery, Pine Knoll with its beautiful trees and proximity to schools and Greenacres open space is one of the finest family neighborhoods in Lawrence Township. This attractive Colonial has been thoroughly updated for today's living style including new furnace and air conditioning, new kitchen with top-of-the-line appliance package, fresh interior painting and a new screen porch. Entry hall, separate living and dining rooms, family room 15x24 w/fireplace, and ample dining area in the new kitchen Upstairs, a master suite with its own bath plus 3 other bedrooms and bath Large basement, two car garage. Lovely grounds
of shade trees, rhododendrons and azaleas. PRINCETON OFFICE Ann Brower Betsy Stewardson Ford Cathy Johnson
Claire Burns Anne Gallagher Mary McHale
Sharon Davidson Georgia Graham Valerie Young
Julie Douglas Lee Relmann Emma Wlrtz
PRINCETON BOROUGH
Construction is starting soon on this exceptionally handsome brick Georgian Manor house to be located on a lot in the Western Borough within walking distance of town and university. The 5,000 sq. ft. floor plan has thirteen rooms including five bedrooms, four and a half baths, four fireplaces and three car garage. As to special features, the architect-builder has spared nothing. A sampling includes a two-story foyer w/marble floor, a 20x24 foot living room w/French doors to a 43 foot terrace, library w/cherry paneling and wide cherrywood floor, a sunken family room, a super island kitchen, marble bathroom floors and vanities. 10 and 12 foot ceilings, solid mahogany doors and much more. Call us for a visit to the site and look at the plans. S1 ,600,000
$245,000
Robert E. Dougherty, Broker REALTORS
William E. Stewardson (1935-1972)
LAWRENCEVILLE OFFICE
Dorothy Field, Manager Betty McClelland
Barbara Broad Jane Mllner
Eileen Coleman Lois Richard
Jan Dalzell Anne Rogers
Marge Dwyer Ruth Sayer
Josephine McCarthy Jeanne Weber
u
I
•-
PRINCETON BOROUGH
In the Patton-Prospect Avenue neighborhood within walking distance of the Riverside School, University and Town, an easy-to-care-for story-and- a-half house w/two bedrooms and bath on first floor and a master bedroom and bath on second. Plus a panelled living room w/fireplace. dining area w/sliding doors to a private patio and a family room. Beautiful shade trees and fenced back garden. Now $350,000
?«
PRINCETON
Beautifully redesigned and skillfully rebuilt, this contemporary ranch of- fers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living, gourmet kitchen, dining and family room. A 60' brick terrace allows you to enjoy the gardens, brook and one of the prettiest % of an acre in Princeton. This stylish and immaculate house is fairly priced at $345,000
r
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~J Pnnceton: 2 ivdroom. 2balh apart
Plainsboro: .' ttriroom 2 bath apart menlai^.!
J Princeton: Gracious 6-bedroom. AV? bath Ccii ■ King Tenms
Court $3000
Princeton: 3 bedroom house on Murray Place $1200 Available now
Lawrencevllle: ■'. i »".>" t ■■ i" ■
colonial Available now $1500
Montgomery; 4 bedroom. 2Vi-balh Colonial on Cairns Place, $1500
NT CALLAWAV
Real Eetate
4 Nassau Street
609-921-1646
Anytime
BABY GRAND PIANO 1<< ..le $1 000 Call 924 245?
DIRECT MAIL r
. si-id editing
■
/'.Ml ,i' .'.
921 386? 928 6t
FOR SALE owe* Used
■ pushed lawn mower Ouiel worlung, 1 609} 924 2660
41 •' W « 33" M FIREPLACE enclosure brass with 4 ]empetfc, glass doors, us ewj $125 1850 s anlrque wardrobe 88 . 44 * 18 old i inal condi
don $1900 (Appraised by Sothebv & Doyle GdAei
134 %47h
PRINCETON • NEAR UNIVERSITY. One block tfom NaSMi i S WUrterspopn rig room Dying room, eaiin large kill
, . ,. .
Fischer lie 609 9216200
TWO CURtO CABINETS: bedroom. sels, dressers, silver tea/coltee service furniture clothes, household articles
'day. October 1at9a Washmgion Road (Rte 518), Rocky Hill 609924-0373
19B1 BMW 7331: Excellent condition Low mileage, loaded with options, new tires Call Mark al 609 395 7406 or 609 2755574
RENAULT ALLIANCE: 1985, gray, standard shift. AM/FM stereo tape deck AC, 48,000 miles, new tires brakes, clulch $4,000 (609)924 1631
NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED:
I mum. I,v ni] il'Mini] iH-ilriMirn Qual.
ty contemporary lurnilure Moving, must sell Call 497 1580 any time
CURRENT RENTALS SHORT-TERM FURNISHED
Weetern Section: Attfactrvi
, equipped 3 bedrooms. 2"?
II n walking d'Siance oi Palm
er Square Grounds cared lor by owner
red October
to June 1 , 1 989 $ ' 400 per month plus
iegotiab>e)
UNFURNISHED RENTALS
Princeton: Convenient to Unrve ground floor, 1 bedroom living room study kite hen back porch $750 plui
2 Windsor Mills Condos: A mediately (1)1 bedroom, 1 baih l<v- mg room dmingel, kitchen — $650 plus
2 bedrooms. ' room, dining i $775 d\>>^
ible] Pool and tennis ■ basemenls. shuttle service to Princeton Junction Iran I I
FURNISHED RENTAL
Western Section: Small colonial, 2 story, sublease. October-May Living room, dining room, kilehen, 2 bedrooms, " Short walk to lown - gar dener included $1000 per month
STOCKTON REAL ESTATE
32 Chambers Street
Princeton, N.J. 08540
924-1416
AUNT SALLIE'S BARN has oak hoosier, cupboards, dressers, blanket chests, (arm lables, commodes, sideboards, chairs, desks, more 43 Mam Street, Kingston, N J (609) 924- 9502, open Tuesday ihrough Saturday, 10 10 5, Sunday 12 to 4 9 28 3t
03 HILTON ©
REALTY CO. OF PRINCETON, INC.
Tssf
IN HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP - 10 minutes from Princeton - Secluded 8 room custom built 2 story 4 bedroom, 2V2 bath on ful- ly wooded 1 .38 acres. Front to back living room, dining room, eat- in-kitchen, beamed ceiling in family room with fireplace and wood- burning insert. $325,000
EXCELLENT RETAIL BUSINESS OR OFFICE LOCATION ON ROUTE 1. For Sale or Lease. $283,300
30 ACRES OF SCENIC LAND ON HILLTOP - Rolling hills and valleys in West Amwell Township, overlooking the beautiful Har- bourlon Hill area. Zoned for 2 acre residential lots. 3 miles east of Lambertville. $700,000
1.4 ACRE BUILDING LOT IN PRINCETON TOWNSHIP. Fully approved with all permits obtained, includes plans lor house con- struciion if desired. «,-,„„..
$170,000
9,000 SQUARE FEET OF PRIME FIRST FLOOR OFFICE SPACE. Excellent strategic location within minutes of Princeton's Route 1 corridor. Ideal for professional office suites — with more than ample parking. Available immediately. Owners will subdivide.
RETAIL STORE SPACE AVAILABLE
locations.
RENTALS: HOUSES AND APARTMENTS. Mercer County MLS
Princeton Real Estate Group 921-6060
Affiliated Independent Broker 194 Nassau Street
(Nationwide Referral Service) Hilton Bldg.. 2nd floor
EVENINGS & WEEKENDS CALL: William Schuessler - 921-8963 Emma King - 799-1694
Harvey Rude - 201-359-5327 Danielle Alford - 448-8794
Asa Mowery - 395-1671
Many Central Jersey
sssag
nmm
|rnniL»nimmia
Princdofi Shopping C*nler »N I
I609I 683 0060
KMB^ 395800I
^ •?' V',.- n Miplewooi
uj ,' /"■:. Q **""•'
63 N. Main Street Cranbury • 655-2020/
OFFICE SPACE
Heart of Princeton - Twenty Nassau Street
Across from the university campus, a luxury elevator building .elegant to onca landmark offering single double and triple office suites from 200 to 2 000 sqH Elegantly equipped & carpeted, reasonably priced. All utili- ses and dally cleaning services included. Secretarial, word processing and copying services on the premises. Reserved garage parking available.
iBroker cooperation
Call 924-7027I
Gloria Nilson mm Realtors
"Any size house & garden under the sun"
Jean Martin. Manager
Grace Baugher Betsey Thurman Patricia Philcox Anne Elliott
Martin Chell Diane t'rbanek Sharon Ponte Donna Kearney
Scott Downey Jeanne Wallsten Helen Schubert Sylvia Maglione
PRINCETON TOWNSHIP
Escape from life's noise and frenzy with this unique contem- porary tucked away on a wooded half-acre lot near Herrontown Woods. Charming blend of rustic and modern features. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, plus loft/studio. $364,000
MONTGOMERY TOWNSHIP
Located just outside of Rocky Hill, this home has the advantages of being close to shopping while having the privacy offered by a neighborhood with large lots and mature trees. Many unique features can be found in this superior quality colonial: sunken oversized living room with fieldstone fireplace, family room with indoor barbeque, huge bluestone screened-in porch, New Orleans style balcony. $369,000
a.
SOUTH BRUNSWICK
This Juniper II condo at WHISPERING WOODS is a dream!
Karastan carpet, marble foyer and fireplace, custom verticals
and more. 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, great location. $127,900
Call 609-921-2600
Gloria Nilson Realtors . 230 Nassau Street
Princeton, N.J. 08542
NX. JEFFERSON
Plumbing & Heating • Commercial • Residential
• Free Estimates 149 Cherry Valley Road 924-3624
State License Number 7084
• FABRICS . DRAPERIES • SLIPCOVERS
• FURNITURE REPAIRS
DEWEY'S
Upholstery Shop
33 Station Drive • Princeton Junction
799-1778
SCHWINN
BICYCLES
&b.
SALES c SERVICE
where quality comes lirst!
KOPP'S CYCLE
Est 1891
43 Witherspoon St. Princeton, N.J.
924-1052
(nexl lo the library)
1986 12-FOOT UTILITY TRAILER:
Ramp gate 700 *. 14 tires Like new $859 Call (609) 924 8366 9-21-21
ANTIQUES: Unusual hanging pie sate with blue paint and punched tin door Scandinavian dish rack Baker's rack Oak library table, 32x?2. with Iwo drawers four maple ladderback chairs with rush seals Single brass sided wa- ter bed Metal Mmg cabinet with 2 drawers and additional side storage Call 921-7902 evenings 9-21-21
'83 HONDA ACCORD: Original Owner, blue. 4-door, air-condilioned, cruise, am'fm stereo cassette, radials, excellent condition 53.000 miles $5000 Call 921-3454
TWO- AND THREE-ROOM office spaces Air conditioning, heat, water furnished $750/month plus electric Leases 42 Witherspoon Street Call 609 924-4875 9.911
WORD PROCESSING/ELECTRONIC PUBLISHING: IBM XT's and Macin- tosh with WordPerfect, Word, laser typesetting, editing. Lotus and Harvard graphics, telecommunications Many scripts, correspondence., books, toreign language and statistical typing, resumes, transcription. Near Princeton University Call 609921-1621 1021-tl
FURNISHED APT. FOR RENT: Freshly pamted. new bathroom-, Irving room, kit- chen, one bedroom, off-street parking, $525 month Heat and electric includ- ed Professional woman or gentleman preferred 799-0951
PRINCETON: Charming Bank Street house, excellent condition Two bed- rooms, IV2 baths, large living room, large dmmg room, large kitchen, back porch, tmy yard No pets One-year lease, security $1025 month plus some utilities Call 924-4970 or leave message. 924-0570.
HANDYMAN: Carpentry, clean-up at- tics, shampoo rugs, panting, masonry, light plumbing No job too big or small Call Don the all-around man (609) 394- 1398 928 2t
PIANO LESSONS from former Moscow Conservatory professor All levels Give all my love, knowledge and spirit of mu- sical art to students with individual at- tention First lesson free 5 minutes from Nassau Street 466 2587 after 7 ;, m or weekends- 9-14-31
FALL YARD & LEAF CLEANUPS
We'll help with autumns added demands Seasonal or one-shot rates $60* minimum References available Full Orcle Landscaping 201 297 1907 9-14-31
ONE BLOCK TO HOSPITAL: 3 blocks University Three-bedroom. 2-bath homeonLytle Parking yard $975 per month Available October t 1988 683 7890 9-14-31
FULL CIRCLE LANDSCAPING:
Specializing m design, maintenance and care of smaller yards and outdoor living, spaces References available 201-297 1907 9-14-3)
HOUSESITTER AVAILABLE: Mature
professional female, nonsmoker. will care for plants pets, etc Walking distance to center of Princeton pre- ferred References available Call M J 201-354-6311 9.11.3,
VITTORIO PIRONE LANDSCAPING CONTRACTOR
Gardening
Lawn Maintenance
Complete Lawn Service
Free Estimates Call 609-924-6489
SINGERS WANTED to audition for mix- ed vocal jazz group Please call 466- 3523 9 28 2t
HOUSE FOR RENT: 2 bedroom, cen- tral Princeton. Walk to campus Near bus. Low rent Newly decorated 924- 2040 9-28 5t
WANTED: GUNS. SWORDS, military items Licensed dealer will make house calls and pay more Call Bert (201)821- 4949 4-,0-tf
MARTHA'S VINEYARD: Guest cottage in tranquil setting on the Tisbury Great Pond Living room, dining area, fully ap- plianced kitchen, 2 bedrooms, each with own bathroom, separate utility room with washer/dryer Outboard motor boat gives direct access to private beach Available first two weeks of August and all of September through Up-lsland Realty, 617-645-9245 7-13-tf
EFFICIENCY STUDIO Apartment:
Private entrance, bath and kitchen Low rent Newly decorated Quiet street. 924-2040 9-28 5t
mm *- 1 *
Haw
REAL ESTATE
4 NASSAU STREET • PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY 08542 • (609) 921-1050
Jacob's Creek Road
• New Listing
High on a hill and secluded by luxuriant trees, this unique Con- temporary of natural cedar will appeal to those who love light bright rooms created by the generous use of glass in waHs, windows and skylights. A red. door opens to a stunning vista of white from floors to vaulted ceilings. The step-down living room has a fireplace, the dining room opens to a deck. The sparkling white kitchen adjoins the family room and opens to a deck overlooking the in-ground pool. The master suite includes a study and there is a powder room. On second floor — two bedrooms and a bath. On third — a loft/studio with skylight. A charming retreat or year' round home.$395,000
""?'?*""" »»mmhm r*rnr*rnr**r,*n»nr*nin<fmr.i>pmrm ••••••*
STEWARDSON- DOUGHERTY
'Real Estate Associates, Incorporated
366 Nassau Street, 'Princeton, C^ew Jersey 08540
^Phone: 609-93 1 -7784
GRIGGSTOWN
Charming country ranch, move-in condition. Exceptionally well maintained in a great neighborhood. Large living room w/fireplace 21 '10 x 1 1 '8, new kitchen w/skylights, formal din- ing room., two bedrooms and bath. Finished basement. Separate workshop. Recently painted inside and out. Lovely deck overlooking beautiful double lot. $199,900
■■iTTT-mTrwTTTrivivivrvivr.-r-i'r;T?T^^VTVivivivivivivir,TrT»r
LOOKING FOR THE PERFECT FAMILY HOME?
This Classic five-bedroom Salzman Colonial is the answer to your needs ... In one of Princeton Township's best neighborhoods with a lovely one and a half plus acre cor- ner lot boasting mature trees and plantings. Four and a half baths, family room/library, screened porch and recreation room with bath which could easily be maid's suite, all af- ford this floor plan tremendous flexibility and comfort. Call Angie Clancy at ( 609) 921-9300 for an appointment to see this
before it's gone...
$765,000
JOHN I
^HENDERSON m
RF.AITORS^^ —
33 Witherspoon St., Princeton, N.J. • 921-9300
5
\tutA£&(Stt>WL
DEL VAL PHARMACY
PENNINGTON
SHOPPING CENTER
II ROUTE 31
Pennington. N J 08534
Leo S Brummel. R P .
Daily 9-9 Sal. 9-5:30
Sunday 9-1 737-0900
FRAME IT NOW
EVE FOR ART
SAME DAY
SHIRT
SERVICE
Princeton
Dry Cleaning &
Shirt Launderers
259 Nassau St.
Behind WaWa Market
921-9785
MARTIN BLACKMAN LANDSCAPING
. :.
683-4013 (Princeton)
IF YOU WISH - 0 advertise your business 169 edition o< The Princeton ■ , Phone Bock call now (609) 2750128 leave message
IF YOU WISH to advertise your business n ihe 1989 edition or The Princeton Community Phone Book call now (609) 275 0128 leave message 9 7 4t
HOUSECRAFTERS
ADDITIONS HEMODI HOME B
REPAIRS
NO JOB TOO BIG
OR TOO SMALL
Call Rich
921-3176
GOVERNMENT HOMES
■ Repossess ons Call 805 68? 8000 Ext GH 1436 'Of current fepo
SUMMIT TREE & LAWN CARE
■ ■
i 609 888 83181
SEWING: Furnishings and lashions Slipcovers curiams. cush <■■
■ Short. 921 1908
CARPENTRY, CABINETS. ANO RE- PAIR WORK done r. ii experienced ■ (609) 924-1474 4 - 1 6-rf
LEON VIELANO PIANO TUNING
. ■ 924-91 70
BUILDING LOT FOR SALE: Pf nceton
Borough, 50(1 x 100 ft Principals on
i ■ 921-9162 9-28-51
HOUSE TO SHARE Ftvi Pnnceton $550 plus utilities. Must love animals1 Call 497-0320 day or evening 9-14-51
DAN L. NOVACOVICI iraclor Complete residential, commer- cial/industrial wiring service New ser vice New outlets Remodeling, kitchen. elc Bonded- Insured License No !fi09) 924-2684
COZY HOUSE FOR RENT: Available lies flexible 2 bedrooms, new- ly decorated, quiet street $1 ,500 plus utilities 921-8766 9-21-21
GUTTERTALK
roof and chimney Standard one-story. $45, 2 story, $50 Repairs extra.. 921- 1135 If
(Jl\IGGS
FARM
A DYNAMIC NEW PRINCETON COMMUNITY
140 TOWNHOUSES STARTING AT APPROX. $142,500
GRIGGS FARM FEATURES:
■ Charming exteriors ami comfortable interiors
■ Energy-efficient construction
■ Quality brand name appliances
■ ( lable ready
■ ( llubhouse, play areas ami tennis courts. Scheduled comple- tion spring 1990, --
■ Condominium ownership and participation in Clnggs Farm Condominium Association, Inc.
2-bedroom townhouses start at approx. $142,500* 3-bedroom townhouses start at approx. $154,500* Plus affordable sales and rental units
■PnccjiubJKttochingt [Tierc i> a condo
Located in Princeton township and Chcrrv Vallcv Road.
in 26 5 .lues bordering Route 206
Selection will be by lottery. For information and applications, call
609924-3822 ^s>
or stop in at K.M. Light Real Estate LEj 247 Nassau Street, Princeton, N.J. 08540
All preliminary ipplicariom must be *m t„ P.O. Bo. 2993, Prlnctton, NJ 08543 and mual Ix postmarked no later ihjr, October 27, \i»H
■ I '- I-.,,.,., ol ,hi» adn'mnre ,„ ,, „,„ i„„ , „„, „ A „ „,, ,wn„
'""'; '•'•""' '"■';/- " >v" wcratanv. ,ih,m, ,*,, \ ,, ,
""V1' """""""""" '""•""• I «"»! taw ..o„ii „,.,„„„,».„ Jk|
1 ",. rllamm «1 rru I liny rvwnarjnn
PRINCETON OFFICE SPACE
31000 SQ. FT HERRONTOWN 1000 NORTH
ROUTE 206
3 miles north ol Nassau Street
October Occupancy
For information
Deborah Wyall
609-921-6651
Williamson
CONSTRUCTION
Call 921-1184
ADDITIONS and RENOVATIONS i
£
~r <=> ^ k; -t o kj
TEAL ESTATE
32 CHAMBERS STREET
r.C. BOX 266
PRINCETON, r-' J. 08540
609-924-1416
Rosemary Blair Philip Clippinger Christopher Dollard Thornton S. Field
Anne S. Stockton
Licensed Broker
Cornelia W. Reeder Martha Stockton Clolilde S. Treves Polly Woodbridge
SALES LISTINGS
PRINCETON BOROUGH - 47 North Tulane, RB district, 3 stories, 3 apartments. $650,000
PRINCETON TOWNSHIP - California ranch, 4 bedrooms,. 2 baths and very private backyard.
ON THE CANAL — PRINCETON ADDRESS - Historically noted 2 story house situated in "park" on 2 wooded lots. Liv- ing room, dining room, kitchen, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, plus studio with bath above 2 car garage. The view is unbelievable.
$298,000 BROKERS OPEN HOUSE: September 28, 10:30-12:30.
Move right in to beautiful, private CONSTITUTION HILL con- dominium — master suite with bath & dressing room, 2 other bedrooms and baths — sky lights, large living/dining room with fireplace — lovely plantings around secluded terrace.
$550,000 VILLAGE OF KINGSTON - Mam Street, Commercial Zon- ing Available yet comfortably residential. 5 bedroom, 2 bath Victorian, living room, dining room, kitchen. Full basement, 1 car detached garage. Perfect for a BED and BREAKFAST.
$399,500 SECLUDED COUNTRY MINI ESTATE on 30 acres in near- by Hopewell Township — beautiful 200 year old house renovated A-1 condition. 4-5 bedrooms, 3 baths, charming octagonal dining room addition, swim in the pretty pool, perfect retreat. Call to see.
CAN YOU BELIEVE - 2 cottages on 2 acres, surrounded by farmland, greenacres open space, and golf course for only $550,000 - in prime area of Lawrenceville, convenient to town and busline. Easy to condominiumize for 2 owners - or live in one and rent the other. Immediate occupancy
$550,000 See^iKcurrent Rental List in classified section.
Ion ii Slum
' ( if PRINCE rON. INC
:til Nassau St
' It's the perfect last-minute gift! Chocolate Luce
from The Town Shop
609-924-3687
Open 9:.10-r> Mon.-Sat. Visa & Mastercard
accepted \
CALL NOW to ,i i
II i ■ 18 i i ■■■ i...
; | -
275-0128. leave message 9 7 4t
CALL NOW to adverse /oui
' ■ ■ I89 edition of The Pnnceion Community Phone Book Call (609) 275-0128. leave message 9-7-ai
HOUSECLEANING JOBS WANTEO
by woman with good references and own transportation Call 393-8684
9-21 21
TWO SMALL OFFICES at 125 and
250 Individual or combined rental for compatible tenants Call 924 8363
921 21
KREN TSr
SALES • SERVICE RENTALS
New & Used IBM and OL YMPIA Ribbons lor all makes
(609) 924-81 63
172 Alexander • Princeton
=f
ALLEN'S
Painting & Restorations
"Give us a try and you will find our service & quality second to none."
-J Owner operated / Free prompt estimates Local references / Insured
! -i A Kirk Allen • (609) 771-4189
CRICKETS
with Sam deTuro
Woodwinds Associates
The common black field cricket and the gray European house cricket are harmful household pests in New Jersey. Both species of crickets will eat holes in woolens and linens as well as in starched articles The incessant chirping of male crickets at night are a nuisance. We all should try to prevent the entry of crickets in- lo our homes.
Cellar doors and windows should be kept closed and cracks and crevices around windows should be sealed Insecticides such as Diazinon or Malathion can be sprayed around foundation walls, cellar windows and around door sills and under porches. The indoor treatment is limited to base- ment areas and around baseboards in closets. Should you have any questions on landscaping, tree pruning, spraying or feeding, please contact us at 609-924-3500
HAULINCCLEAN-UP
Construction debris, household items, junk, garage/basement clean-up, demolition work
LEWIS BARBER CONSTRUCTION
921-2658 9-28-lf
APARTMENT FOR RENT: in country house, 2 rooms, kitchen and bath Fur- nished Private entrance Parking 15 minutes from Princeton on US 1 cor- ridor Professional or businessman on- ly Write to Box 564. R01 , Princeton, NJ 08540 9-28-2t
BILL'S HOUSE PAINTING: Clean, Quality work Free estimates Fully in- sured Interior and exterior References available Call 443-8959 3-23-tl
JOHN HEIN Studio Furmturemaker
Designer and builder of one-ol--a-kind craft-based solid hardwood furniture us- ing traditional |omery and wooden pegs. 609-B83-4573 6-15-tf
OFFICE SPACE, CENTRAL NASSAU STREET recently decorated, low rent, available now, telephone and recep- tionist service 924-6300 tf
PIPER CHIEFTAIN Available for Lease Eight to Ten Seats
Currently used on weekend charters
about half ol the year
Rainbow Air, Inc.: 921-3867
FILING CABINETS: Come and see our metal cabinets lor office or home Grey, tan, olive, 2 or 4 drawer. Also typing tables Hmkson's, 82 Nassau. 1-12-tf
Now Previewing In Princeton
The Yedlin Company, Princeton builders inspired by the Shingle Style houses designed for almost 30 years, -is pleased to announce by McKim, Mead and White in the late the start of construction of homes on Foulet 19th century. Priced from $675,000. For infor- Drive. This second phase of our Andrews mation call Rosemarie Nicholas, Director of Foulet community off Cherry Hill Road in Sales and Marketing 609-921-1928. Princeton Township is architecturally
HOUSEKEEPING JOBS WANTED: Or
companionship lor Ihe elderly Excellent references Live in or out Reply to Town Topics Box A-95- 9-21-51
■ :-w<<<«<<^>w-»,>».«-ts-:«^>».v»:^,
NOW RENTING PRINCETON ARMS
Luxury Apartments 1 and 2 Bedrooms
From $560 Per Month
Features:
Wall-to-wall carpeting over
concrete in 2nd floor apts.
All utilities except electric
Individually controlled heat
Two air conditioners
Private entrance
Walk-in closets
Individual balconies
Storage rooms within apt.
Laundry rooms
Superintendent on site
Open Mon.-Fri.
9 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Sat.-Sun. 10-4
609-448-4801
Directions From Princeton: Princeton-Hlghtstown Rd., turn right on Old Tren- ton Rd,, vj mile turn lelt'and follow signs
^^^>^^:^-;>:^-;-:^*:*:-:— ^-:*--:------;-*:-:---;-;*:~>;~;'
Andrews* Foulet Princeton
Peyton
EXTRAORDINARY NEW LISTING. We're very excited and you will be too when you tour this magnificent new house near Princeton in Lawrence Township. On over 4 acres, this French Manor house has been built with the utmost in quality construc- tion and an eye-to luxurious detail. The living room, with its marble fireplace and mahogany mantel, has crown moldings, chair rail and French doors to the terrace. The dining room also has doors to the terrace. A smashing kitchen with a greenhouse, family room with brick fireplace wall, wet bar and bookshelves, den with bookshelves, master bedroom with luxurious master bath (marble floor), four other bedrooms and three and a half baths, make this house the ultimate place for the person with discriminating taste. Call us to see for yourself. $1,300,00
Peyton Associates
Princeton Realtors Pennington
343 Nassau Street 134 South Main Street
609-921-1550 609-737-9550
Sweet %ase
sLp
'•'vl Accessories
it Stationery UndSKm 41 WuurspomSl
Tnncttsn
683 9
j »v«n M> Ctf I ■■ iNJPd
lOi ■ fiours 928 3t
TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT Pi , Mon
ffOOdS 2beo NEW YAMAHA VOICE BANK PSS
■ ■ ■. Oo 270 SJereo sound 99 voce categories
'6108 9282t io adjustable rhythm modes and more
Can 924 6779 9 28 31
APARTMENT FOR RENT: Charming
or»e bed'oc ■ . i FOR RENT: Two- bear oom Bcoogh
room breakfast room kitchen and condo iivmg room, dining room k<l 1 : air lull basemen) i
patio $1,000 >.'.'' :■■ 9 28 21 month pli sutiW
tj oerx>sit and reference 4523718
USED PAPERBACK TEXTBOOKS ■ )'-*'> - rigs) 9283t
sale Princeton Univei ;
DATSUN210 'jion wagon, 1979 to' 7907 9-28-?r root rack.'
original owner Needs engine work
PROFESSIONAL WOMEN: Come S5O0 Of bes! offer 924 2375 Of 799 home to ; i. (: | ?9'0 9 28 31
prepare your recipes Of mine including
RENT V, HOUSE: Peiham Street 2
week Reasonable rales Excellent re bedrooms includes parking heal wa
. -I67-9030 ler Security and references No pels
9 28 2i .Available November i J800 per
- 'monlh Call (20 1) 782 960 1 9 28 3t
RUBBER STAMPS |
PIRONE |
LANDSCAPING SERVICE |
|
School or college add/a - |
|
Hdme, business /ip code |
mal landscaping & lawn sen/ice |
Rubber stamps ol all kinds and |
Customized commercial |
<■■■ made to your order at |
Resideniiai service |
Hlnkson's |
Free consultations |
82 Nassau |
Call evenings |
f (609)683-0774 |
Fine French Impofl Ouilet
Route 29
Lambertvllle, NJ
(609^397-0149
Country Workshop
SOLID
maple* oak walnut
BEAUTIFUL, CUSTOM-MADE dra
penes, shades and blmdc. pa
dow treatments ot all types Slipcovers
.1' -I I. 'ii- ii' .jplir.Mi",. ',."-.< nrj .ill /i.uf
mienor deagn needs with in-home or d( lice consultation Estimates cheerfully given Call Sherry TheCreal n (609)397 2120 II
BED AND BREAKFAST ol Princeton 'lurtable and economical ac- commodations m local private homes lor your visiting friends, relatives, wed ding guests and business associates B&B, PO Box 571. PnncelOl N I 08540. 924 3189 6 A If
WHERE ELSE CAN YOU FIND
A nice asBortmenl
ol u til lablei desks
and coiii iiblei
DRIVER AVAILABLE for medical dental /late, shopping, errands, etc Your car or mine Call 921 7339 9 14-41
PIANO, ORGAN, CLARINET: Private
lions Experienced teacher All
ages welcome Call Eileen Nesbiti, 201
2975164 9 14 41
GUTTER CLEANING: Reliable, effi cient, neat Call Robert, 201297 1659 of 609 895 1 158, leave message
g M n
JANITORIAL SERVICES FOR SMALL BUSINESSES
Clean once a month, twice a week, weekends You pick ihe lime Bonded ,ii" i insured! references. Free est
(609) 261-4413
OWEN'S BARN
77 Main SI., Kingston, N,J. D.L.N. BUILDER: New constructions,
Open on Sunday remodeling & repairs (bathroom kitctv
921-7164 Bn, etc) ^ecks, patios, porches addi
10-21 -tl ''ons Past service Work guaranteed
(609) 924 2684
FOR RENT: Furnished room lor non- smoking graduate student, near Umver Bilylibrarj Nocookinp, Call 921 2650, 9-5 p,m 9 7 51
JACKIE MASON: Two tickets tor Salur day, October 1st, 8 pm perlormance m New York $35 each or best oftef Call 4669121 9-21-21
HANDYPERSON: Available Princeton — '
area Light carpentry, masonty. yard DECKS AND PORCHES designed and word p. miting. moving, gutters, ladder buill Repairs and interior renovalions i '"enced. reliable, conscien- Reasonable rates, reliable service Call Uoui SSOmlnlmum Robert, 297-1659, 924-8142. 9-21-21 leave saga 9 14 4i
OFFICE SPACE RESEARCH PARK
Wall Street, Princeton, N.J.
Starting at $7.00 per square foot net, net
Areas up to 10,000 square feet
427,000 square feet in Park Occupied by approximately 50 tenants
Princeton Mailing Address Princeton Phone Number
Call: Research Park
609-924-6551
Howe
INSURANCE
COMMERCIAL REALTORS
Since 1885
1000 Herrontown Road
Princeton
(609) 924-0095
Remington • Little Silver
Uo You Have Your
Back To School
Hairstyle?
WE HAVE THE ONE FOR YOU!
Student Discount Mon. & Tues.
LAIOLIE COIFFURE
IDCOnrORlTEO
69 Palmer Sq West « Princeton » 609-924-3983
PROVINCE HILL UNIQUE CONTEMPORARY
No photo could show all of the unusual features of this contem- porary 2 bedroom, 2'2 bath home built on a beautifully land- scaped wooded lot. Cathedral ceiling living room/dining room with a 16 foot high marble faced fireplace complemented by par- quet flooring which flows into a wood paneled den with wet bar. European style kitchen cabinetry with a greenhouse breakfast room. Two level exterior deck from living room/dining room and kitchen for outside enjoyment and entertainment. Call for an ap- pointment to be lead through the security gate of Province Hill's beautifully landscaped entrance and past the 2 community ten- nis courts. A Princeton mailing address is only part of the story for this $550,000 beautiful contemporary home.
DICKSON REALTY INC.
609-799-1808
Broker Cooperation Welcome
RENDALL-COOK
& COMPANY
REALTORS
350 ALEXANDER STREET PRINCETON 609-924-0322 RENTALS
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS & CONDOMINIUMS PLAINSBORO — ASPEN — Two bedroom, two bath first floor condominium: Includes washer and dryer, pool and ten- nis. Available immediately. $725/mo. plus util.
PRINCETON — Nassau St. — Large one bedroom apartment with eat-in kitchen. Available immediately. $785/mo. incl. heat
LAWRENCE SQUARE II— Lovely two bedroom, two and one half bath townhouse. End unit with many upgrades. Fireplace, washer & dryer, pool & tennis. Available October 1 $795/mo. plus util.
PRINCETON — Nassau St. — Lovely penthouse apartment with two bedrooms and one bath. Excellent location. Available immediately. $860/mo. incl. heat
PRINCETON — Jefferson Road — Large two bedroom apart- ment with a shared entrance. Convenient location. Available immediately $900/mo. incl. heat
PLAINSBORO - BRITTANY - Three bedroom, two and one half bath townhouse with finished loft (Coventry Model).. Freshly painted, new carpeting. Available immediately. In- cludes pool and tennis. $1000/mo. plus util.
HOUSES .— UNFURNISHED PRINCETON - Leigh Avenue - Two bedroom, one bath bungalow with fireplace in the living room. Available im- mediate|y ■ $800/mo. plus util.
PRINCETON - Princeton Ave. - Lovely center hall Dutch Colonial, just off Nassau Street. Four bedrooms, one and one half baths with full basement and garage. Available November
$1150/mo. plus util.
HOUSES - PARTIALLY FURNISHED PRINCETON - Western Borough - Large colonial home with five bedrooms, 3Vz baths, fireplaces in the family room and den. Beautiful garden. Possible short term.
■■ $1850/mo. plus util.
5j\
* t<}7<\ ' 25 LANGUAGES Native teachers and trans- lators Instruction (or children and adults All levels Intensive courses for travelers and busi- ness people Tutoring. Translation
Call (609) 924-2252
IMi HHM JKKIflK (Limited) ,n e. FURNISHEO SMALL STUDY cellentcondrtion 3S0OOm.les 2door i,ng bedroom, pnvatebath Ul.M.ei and
b akT, Su^' **£?$£aZ" Pa'king includet1 Ava"ab,e ^' *«* -M radio S2.900 Call 15 Nonsrnok.ng female Call 9244672 alter 5pm
683 1 457
Professional
'PAPERHANGING'
and PAINTING
INTERIOR & EXTERIOR
Residential • Commercial
Professional
Local References
799-4160 —
%>M*HHY SANTOS •«
BRYN MAWR BOOK SHOP
Bargains in Used Books
Arts Council Building
102 Witherspoon Street
Princeton, NJ 08540
(diagonally across from the Princeton Public Library — use Green Street entrance)
Economical travel books
Wednesday-Saturday
11:30-3:30
Sunday 1:00-5:00
921-7479
3-FAMILY YARD SALE: Saturday Or
tober 1 km No early birds' 41 Tee Ar Place. Princeton, one block Irom Harrison and Franklin Oak dining room sel. computer TV air conditioner, icod processor, children's clothing, books, records, lots ot household items Ram date. Sunday. October 2
FOR SALE: Dining table $60, small sleep sola $60, child's crib (originally $300) $60, rowing machine $50, braid rug $25. big chair $10. refrigerator $25 Ireezef $30 921-0739
MOORE'S CONSTRUCTION and
Home Repairs Inc Home renovations, new construction Commercial & resi- dential Call 924-6777 Princeton
TAG SALE BY TRIO: Saturday, Oc- tober 1, 12-3pm 71 Concord Avenue. Mercerville, NJ Large and small - every nook and cranny filled small Cylinder roll top desk, lifetime collection cut glass, china (Lenox, Nontake and more), pottery, costume jewelry, patch- work quilts and other wonderful me- morabilia Nice old furniture, 1962 Chevy, genuinely restorabfe Loaded attic A wonderful discovery sale Direc- tions In Hamilton Township. Route 33 (Nottingham Way) turn at light onto
■ Concord Avenue (Carella's Shoes) (609) 530-0937. (215) 493-5332 No checks.
TOYOTA CELICA: 1974, 85,000 miles. One owner Good condition $550 737-1468
WASHING MACHINE: Fully automatic, apartment size. "Hitachi" As new $150 683-5340
GARAGE SALE: Huge sale Lots of fur- niture and antiques. Rugs, books, clothes, pictures, oriental rug, household items, baby items, dressing table and lots more Saturday, October 1 10-4 Ramdate Sunday. October 2 36 Princeton Avenue, Princeton (off Nassau Street)
9 i 4 3|
WATCH THE LEAVES TURN colors from a pilot's seat Fall is a great lime to learn tolly Try a Discovery Flight' - only $25 Call Princeton Airport 609 9213100 9-14-31
STUDIO APARTMENT on Palmer Square, Princeton, with fireplace and Pullman kitchen $695 includes heat and water Available October 8, 1988 Telephone (609) 924-9009 9-14-3t
PRINCETON: Full of sunshine contem- porary brick 8, glass corner townhouse two blocks from University in garden setting Three bedrooms, large country kitchen with outdoor dining balcony 2V; baths, dining room, two story h igh living room with huge sliding windows. study, garden room on garden door (possible private consulting office), laun dry room. 2-car garage with automatic opener, wall to wall carpet, drapes, cen tral AC Long term lease available $1,900 month (609) 921-6387 9-14-3t
CARPENTER: Experienced in renova- tion and new construction Quality work Local references Free estimates Call 924-8142, leave message 9-14-31
CARPENTRY - MASONRY Indoors - Outdoors
You name it I can do most creative, decorative work or repair work
Call Steve Huber, 683-8816
Mattress Factory Outlet
Innerspnng. foam and lalex 30x74 - 48x74 — 60x80 33x74 - 53x74 - 78x80
Sofabed mattresses Odd sizes available
Free delivery — Old bedding removed
Sealy Posturepedic Spnngwall Chiropractic Simmons Beauty Rest
Foam cut to any size Shredded foam
Phone: 298-0910
Morv, Weds, Fn, 9-5 30
Tues, Thurs., 9-8
Saturday, 9-5
CAPITAL BEDDING COMPANY
U.S. Highway 130 Bet. Yardvllle and Bordentown
7& N.t Callaway"
4 NASSAU STREET • PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY 08542 .(609)921-1050
A/eiv Listing
Brookstone — bordered by Stoney Brook, winding shaded roads, sweeping lawns and luxuriant landscaping have created one of western Princeton's finest residential areas. On 2+ beautiful acres, this Bucci built Colonial has been ex- panded by a spectacular addition. The two story foyer is enhanced by the graceful stairway. The front to back living room opens to an enclosed porch. The spacious dining room has a glass paneled wall overlooking the sparkling pool. The modern kitchen opens to a semi-circular breakfast room with a glass paneled wall. The family room has a second fireplace. Two bedrooms and V/2 baths complete the first floor. Five bedrooms, 4 baths and a study on second floor. Partially finish- ed basement. $895,000
Gpmr <T 517/1
REALTORS8 JACK BURKE REAL ESTATE, IN
ROCKY HILL
Two story Colonial in heart of desirable Rocky Hill. Walk to P.O. & stores. Three BR/1.5 BA features large LR, eat-in kitchen, formal DR & more! $191,500
PRINCETON
Quiet tree-lined streets and well- kept homes, including this 5 BR, 2]h Bath Colonial are typical of this neighborhood. Call for details! $395,000
LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP PRINCETON ADDRESS
CALIFORNIA CONTEMPORARY IN "Province Hill": a private 34-home enclave situated around wooded acreage, sequestered behind a security gate. $497,500
N
LAWRENCEVILLE
(rive your family the best A colonial in Lawrenceville w/4 BRs, 2.5 baths. Full brick wall F/P in FR, kitchen wrrots of workspace and cabinets 2 car garage, full basement, upgrad- ed carpeting, professional landscap- ing. Convenient to shopping, schools and Rt. 95. $269,900
C~
LAWRENCEVILLE
Just Listed! Older home in historical . area of Lawrenceville. Get the best of both worlds. Neutral color in- terior. 4 BR/2 full BA, eat-in kitchen. $299,000
PRINCETON
609-924-1600
LAWRENCEVILLE
Oxford Provincial on a treed lot. pro- fessionally landscaped in Lawrenceville Greene. Formal LR & DR. Large eat-in kitchen, FR w/stone FP. Master BR w/sitting room. Huge custom deck, security system. $319,000
u !
I :
LAWRENCEVILLE
In the heart of the village of Lawrenceville. Secluded, mature landscaped lot w/trees. Excellent area. Older home can be most com- fortable for a large family. Four BR/2 BA, family kitchen. LR. for mal DR, FR w/FP (can be operable). Spacious attic w/windows. full base- ment w/rec. room, detached 3 car garage. $189,900
PRINCETON JCT
609-799-2022
PENNINGTON
609-737-9600
HAMILTON SQ. 609-890-3300
WASHINGTON TWP.
Robbinsville - Great buy - 3 BR. 3 BA brick ranch with in-law set-up. One year homeowner warranty and owner financing to qualified buyer. $235,000
EAST BRUNSWICK
201-254-1600
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Firestone Weal Estate
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY A HOME IN THE PRINCETON AREA
This falls market will be the best for buyers for years to come. An abundance of housing,
realistic prices, and lower interest rates mean now is the time.
Firestone is the place to come. We are prepared to show you, the buyer,
the value of what you buy — before you buy.
3 3 3 3
EARLY AMERIC \N ( OLON1 \l. FARM MOUSE, NEAR PRINCETON ON S3 LOVELY ROLLING ACRES. Sil up as a perfect gentleman's farm with many Christmas trees and holly bushes The house is early Federal style with a huge central hall like Morven & Mansgrove. The floors are random width Dine and the rooms are spacious. Have your own estate in the Princeton countryside ( Franklin Township ) for the same price as a big Princeton Western Section home
HISTORIC HOPEWELL CLAPBOARD COLONIAL SKT HACK FROM ROAD ( IVERLOOK1NG BEAUTIFUL PASTORAL VIEW. Has entry porch, dining room w/buill-in cupboard, living room w/fireplace, built-in bookcases, family room w/trophy room, country kitchen w/fireplace, powder room, side porch-laundry, hall bedroom, master bedroom w/bath/built-ins, expansion bedroom. Bedroom with a view Complete with Tennis Court and separate all-purpose building
1379.000
3
"* PI* IN
PRINCETON Itoimt i .1 1 DUPLEX IN THE TREE STREET AREA. Each side
has a living room, dining room and spacious kitchen with pantry Upstairs, on each side are three bedrooms including a good-size oa rents bedroom and a full bath. Walk to town, the University and the New York bus. Call today, $249,000
A LOVELY LHERRYUOOD TOWNHOUSE WITH A PRINCETON ADDRESS
in nearby Montgomery Woods There are skylights, an open loft and special plan- tings. A two bedroom unit in all, the living room has a fireplace and the master suite has a spacious bath. Call today ana see how convenient it is on this side of Route One to visit downtown Princeton New Price $154,000
IN PRINCETON S RIVERSIDE A FOUR BEDROOM COLONIAL IN A PRIVATE SETTING with so much to offer. Front to back living room, dining room with picture window, farmly room, spacious eat-in kitchen and screened- m porch Witt, skylights. Close to the school, private, and beautifully wooded, ye. so close to town.
Bl'ILT FOR THE BUILDER HIMSELF, A LOVELY TWO STORY COLONIAL, WITH A PRINCETON ADDRESS. IN KINGSTON. Featuring a flagstone entry foyer, a spacious living room, a family room with cathedral ceiling and stone fireplace wall, a beamed dining room with fireplace, a study, and a very ample modern kitchen leading to an enormous deck overlooking the woods. Upstairs is a master suite and three other family bedrooms. All on 1.26 acres and ready to move into $329,000
BRITTANY TOWNHOUSE - Plainsboro - Brighton Model. 4 bedrooms, 2"-4 baths, finished loft, fireplace Backing up to woods, best location in the Brittany.
$192,500
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nfLpErG„^T 2ND/i'00R CONDO IN WHISPERING WOODS, 10 minutes north of Princeton in S Brunswick. This superbly maintained condo offers a view of he tennis courts and a swimming pool This two bedroom, two bath is most af- fordable, $131,000
Princeton Real Estate Group
Mercer County Multiple Listing
Somerset Multiple Listing
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ALL AREA LISTINGS
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National Roster of Realtors
Referral Member American Relocation Council
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Firestone Weal Estate
169 Nassau Street, Princeton
Anne Adriance Elizabeth Bonasera Anne Brown Pat Cullen Gail W. Firestone
James W. Firestone. Broker Joan Frank Joan Galiardo Carolyn Hovler
(609) 'Xii-T'Tl Ginger Lennon Robln Smith
Ann McClesry E||en Souter
Joyce Murphy Patty jappan
Nancy Woelk
A BETTER THAN NEW COLONIAL ON A CUL-DE-SAC IN MONTGOMERY.
Do you want to see a really pretty home on a quiet cul-de-sac just north of Princeton? Inside you'll find a spacious entry hall, a living room with bay win- dow and French doors to a screened porch, a family room with cathedral ceil- ing, skylights, and a brick raised hearth fireplace, a large eat-in-kitchen with hardwood floors, oak cabinets & sliding glass doors to deck. Upstairs there is a master suite with an office ( or fifth bedroom > and three family bedrooms. Other special features include a second staircase, a paved driveway, a security alarm, underground utilities, professional landscaping and more. Get the picture? Call today Offered for $479,000
SITED ON A HILLSIDE OVERLOOKING A" QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD IN PRINCETON'S RIVERSIDE AREA, this lovely home with an especially livable floor plan, offers many special features. There is a cathedral ceiling in the liv- ing room with fireplace and bow window, a sizeable formal dining room, a con- venient kitchen with breakfast area, and a spacious family room with built-in cabinets and wet bar overlooking the in-ground Sylvan pool. Upstairs there are four bedrooms in all including a spacious master suite. A stylish and interesting house fairly priced at $429,000
IN PRINCETON, A LOVELY TRADITIONAL CENTER HALL COLONIAL nestl- ed in a park-like setting in a wonderful family neighborhood. This special house features an entry foyer, a large living room with fireplace, dining room, modern kitchen, family room, laundry room, large master bedroom with walk-in closet and bath, 3 other bedrooms and 2' 2 baths, a screened-in porch, a full basement, and an attached two-car garage All freshly painted inside and out. $379,000
TWO STORY COLONIAL IN PRINCETON TOWNSHIP ON A NICE LOT Jl ST ONE MILE FROM DOWNTOWN. Inside is a foyer with coat closet, a light liv- ing room with fireplace and built-in bookcases, a screened-in porch, a dining room with 2 corner cupboards, and an efficient kitchen Upstairs are 3 family bedrooms and a full bath There's a full basement and a two car garage All this in Princeton
for only
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IN A LOVELY WOODED AREA OK PRINCETON a three bedroom Contem- porary Ranch with a very spacious living room with Bruce hardwood floors, for- mal dining room, newly remodeled kitchen with light oak mist cabinets and a large family room with picture window. The baths have skvliehts and there is new beige carpeting in most rooms. Special, private, and with two California Red- wood trees in the front yard. $429,000
IN A PRETTY GLEN IN PRINCETON SURROUNDED BY NATURE with a stream nearby is a very comfortable ranch with lots of ambience. The living room overlooks the Sylvan pool as does the family room with fireplace. There are three bedrooms in all including a master suite with its own bath, and there's a full base- ment for a good recreation area. A beautiful site and a lot of potential for only
$295,000
A COMFORTABLE HOME ON THE VERY EDGE OF PRINCETON with a non- Princeton price. All the amenities of living in town yet in a rural wooded area The home features a good-size living room with dining area, Florida room, an updated Euro-style kitchen and 3-4 bedrooms (depending on using one for a den) and 2 baths. Just the place many Princetonians would want to live in at half the price of living in Princeton. $259,000
(II \UMING COUNTRY RANCH IN LAWRENCE TWP. WITH A PRINCETON
ADDRESS. Beamed cathedral ceiling in family room, eat-in-kitchen and dining room area, living room with fireplace, panelled den w/sliding glass doors to patio four bedrooms and two full baths. $249,000
IN NEARBY KINGSTON A 4-5 BEDROOM HOME PROFESSIONALLY I \M>-
SCAPED with all the amenities of in-town living Versatile in its layout, it's perfect
for someone who wants a separate floor for guests, or also for lots of space for
""•"00 a family Call today l»MM
National Roster of Realtors
ALL AREA LISTINGS ■—•■ ■-*»
ia.
Princeton Real Estate Group
Mercer County Multiple Listing
Somerset Multiple Listing
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American Relocation Council
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FRED'S HOME IMPROVEMENTS
(609) 758-3516 or 758-3303
CARPENTRY - MASONRY
General Contractor All Types Interior • Exterior New and Renovation Work
09045
EXPERT LANDSCAPE DESIGN COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL
■
. Sr>ow '■
i i Call Larrv G. Scanned* 896-3193
FINANCIAL SERVICES CONSULTANT FOR WOMEN
Call Barbara Russo 895-7047
WORK WANTED - v ■
1 65 0*989
0130 •>•
TOP DOLLAR PAID CD's too
M Tuiane ??1 0881 9 11 ■«
AIRPORT SERVICE
. Pnnceton/Lawrehcevitle
. CM mgh|. (609) 921 3643
ARTISTIC HAIRDRESSERS
Full Service
ca.ii 924-4875
becked call
the assistance group ot pnncet«i
call (609) 924 -7651
f THE Store tor
O tine used clothing
t~ since 1944
O 234 NASSAU ST
g MON 12-5
< TUES-SAT 10-5
z OUTGROWN SHOP J
C.J. Skillman Co.
Furniture Repairing Upholstery
924-0221 38 Spung St'ee!
CROSSROADS I
N C E T O N
EXCITING HOMES BUILT & DESIGNED FOR YOU! Lawrence w/Princelon address FROM S875.000
SPARKLING & BRIGHT TWO-STORY CONTEMORARY IN SUPER CONVENIENT PRINCETON LOCATION. Have it all in a house only 4 years old $299,000
GREAT HOUSE FOR COMMUTERS - Princeton Twp Colonial w/4 bedrooms $249,000
LITTLEBROOK SCHOOL is a short walk from this attractive 4 bedroom, 2'/2 bath Princeton contemporary. $315,000
Linda Carnevale Anluta Blanc Lois Fee Hazel Stlx Beth Carnevale Anne Hottmann Roslynn Greenberg Carolyn Hills Vonnle Hueston Rena White Aurora Seeley Laura Procacclno Elaine Schuman Barbara Goldberg Bobette Lister Pat Alspach Laraine Bender Helen Brener Smith
MARVELOUS RANCH, Pru
Enormous trees.
eton's Western Section
S450.000
OUTSTANDING VALUE IN PRINCETON. This cape is more than meets the eye. Main door has living room w/fireplace. dining room- kitchen. 2 bedrooms & lull bath Lower level 3 finished rooms, one lull bath, entry to outside, 2nd floor features study, bedroom, one full bath & kitchen. Call us to explore the possibilities of this terrific investment. $174,500
CHARMING BRICK RANCH IN PRINCETON TWP. on one of the
most picturesque wooded properties in town. $249,900
HOME WITH CHARACTER. No expense spared to renovate Princeton Borough. $195,000
BUILDERS CUSTOM COLONIAL ON A TREED, landscaped % acre lot in Lawrenceville. 4 bedrooms. 2V2 baths. $249,900
A CONDO WITH A DIFFERENCE. No view of the parking lot 2 bedroom, 2 bath in Plainsboro ASKING $119,000
LUXURIOUS LIVING IN PRINCETON BOROUGH. Upgraded townhouse. On-site pool & tennis $315,000
A RARE COMMODITY IN PRINCETON BOROUGH, light and cheerful 2 bedroom condo. 11 ft ceilings $298,000
CALL US ABOUT OUR OTHER PROPERTIES PRICED FROM $110,900 TO $1,500,000 SERVING MERCER, SOMERSET AND MIDDLESEX COUNTIES
Princeton Crossroads Realty, Inc.
342 Nassau Street (Corner Harrison) • Princeton • Park in our lot CALL ANYTIME 609-924-4677 • OPEN 7 DAYS
HAMILTON TOWNSHIP $149,500
Outside freshly painted with 2 year old root Large open rooms and tull finished basement Lovely back yard with private brick patio 034-1313
SOUTH BRUNSWICK $169,000
Birchwood model end unit with ex- panded garden room with custom window treatments, ceiling fans and all appliances. 034-1241.
PLAINSBORO- $172,900
Carefree living awaits in this 3 bedroom, 2Va bath Brittany townhome Features finished loft. .skylight and fireplace. Enjoy swim- ming and tennis. Minutes to NY tram 034-1300
PLAINSBORO -$156,900
Hampshire Townhome with 3 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, finished loft and fireplace Ashley model prime end unit offers seller assisted financing. 034-1335.
WEST WINDSOR $389,900
Executive 9 room home in mint condition features 2 fireplaces, 7 skylights. Jacuzzi, 2 decks and a 3 car garage. 034-1364
LAWRENCEVILLE $104,900
Ail appliances stay in this model 5400 Lawrence Square Village condo Immediate occupancy at a new low price! Hurry! This will not last' 034-1189
EWING TOWNSHIP $237,900
Lovely Mountain View ranch nestl- ed m the trees with walnut floors and pella windows. Jacuzzi and deck 034-1295
MONTGOMERY $173,500
Private wooded setting with im- mediate occupancy Townhome owner transferred Custom win- dow treatments and upgrades 034-1323.
PRINCETON- $219,900
University area charming and well kept 3 bedroom home with 3 car garage and an enclosed sun porch. Truly a special piece of pro- perty 034-1292.
PLAINSBORO -$199,500
immaculate 4 bedroom, 2V2 bath colonial in Princeton Collection Pine schools and close to transpor- tation 034-1265
Paying 30% less per month
to buy a home can be as simple as reading the signs.
With Weichert's Affordability Plus the home in your future can be yours today.
Our exclusive Affordability Plus Program helps more people buy more home than they ever thought possible — and at monthly payments that can be hundreds less than usual! □ Let us show you how you can afford a home with 30% less income than would ordinarily qualify you to buy that property. □ Call us today and get the team working on your dream.
Note: While mortgage funds last. Available to qualified buyers on select properties only. Payments for first year only, based on 20% down, excluding property taxes and insurance. Home pictured for illustrative purposes only.
For Sale
Weichert,
Realtors
Photo by Ci'nrKv Pierce
Weichert's Affordability Plus now available on select properties among those listed below. Call immediately for further information.
PLAINSBORO - $239,900
Dramatic "Nassau" townhome features vaulted dining room, fireplace, and two master sized bedrooms with tull bath 034-1201
WEST WINDSOR $349,000
Fabulous 5 bedroom, 3'/2 bath col- onial in Princeton Ivy East with fireplace and finished basement 034-1341
SOUTH BRUNSWICK $129,900
Lovely second floor Elm model at Wynwood 2 bedroom. 2 bath, loft with skylight. Fireplace in the liv- ing room and a wooded location 034-1249
EWING - $183,900
Swim all year in this 29x13 in- ground pool Custom home in one of Ewing's loveliest areas 034-1343
MONROE - $225,900
Live the good life in this over 43 Haverhill (ownhome af Wit- tingham! 2 bedrooms, 2Va baths and garage 034-1345.
MONTGOMERY TWP. $298,000
Totally renovated 3/4 bedroom lome boasts cathedral ceilings in dining and living room. Private set- ting on 1 acre Many special features 034-1229.
LAWRENCEVILLE $137,500
Townhome living with neutral decor All appliances included and 3 bedrooms with 2 full baths Private tiered patio Easy com- mute. 034-1349
LAWRENCEVILLE
$238,750
Spacious 4 bedroom, 2'/z bath home with family room, fireplace, central air, screened porch and in- ground pool Home is perfect for executive 034-1282.
WEST WINDSOR $224,900
This 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch is on a quiet street Dining room with french doors overlooks parklike backyard. 034-1311.
LAWRENCEVILLE $360,000
Stone home in Longacres has two fireplaces, cathedral ceilings, sunken living room, 5 bedrooms and 3Vj baths on 1 acre 034-1281
LAWRENCEVILLE
$335,000
Contemporary colonial with greenhouse addition surrounded by trees Family room with stone fireplace and finished basement 034-1217.
PENNINGTON - $385,000
ln-town 3 year old colonial with 4 bedrooms, 2V4 baths and 2 fireplaces French doors in kitchen access a private patio 034-1270
Weichert
£}
EWING TOWNSHIP $174,900
Bnarcrest 3 bedroom. 17? bam with family room and 2 car garage Walk to grade school 034-1294
MONTGOMERY $359,900
Custom built on 1 acre. Maintenance free colonial wrth sunken living room, large gourmet kitchen, master bedroom suite plus 2 bedrooms 034-1312
WASHINGTON TWP. $347,000
3 acres and only 8 miles to the tram, this 4 bedroom colonial has a master suite with jacuzzi and skylights 034-1302
EWING TOWNSHIP $198,800
Center hall colonial just minutes from Washington Crossing State Park Spacious formal living room with stone fireplace 034-1280
WEST WINDSOR $269,900
Charter club "A" model in choice location with finished basement, central air and in move-in condi- tion. Great for crmmuters. 034-1307
SOUTH BRUNSWICK $255,000
I Lovely 4 bedroom home pnced to
| sell quickly1 Princeton address
:h new carpeting, hardwood
' floors and backing common area
Also for rent. 034-1220
350 Nassau Street Princeton, NJ 08540
Tlve American Dream Ikam
SOUTH BRUNSWICK $135,900
Woods on 2 sides ol this "Willow" model end unit with 2 decks, fireplace and many upgrades 034-1322
PLAINSBORO -$129,900
A spacious Longmont model with 2 bedrooms. 2 baths and loft Largest unit in the Aspen 034-1338
PLAINSBORO- $184,800
Magnificent 2000 sq ft. Bnttany loaded with upgrades Marble en- trance, 3 bedrooms, 2'i baths, fireplace, intercom, deck and loft. 034-1250
MONTGOMERY TWP. $174,900
Birchwood model in Montgomery Woods. 2 bedrooms plus loft and 2Vj baths. Ceramic tiled kitchen floor Many upgrades, immaculate unit 034-1268
Phone: 609-921-1900
SUSAN GREENE
• prices
Mirketplice Mall
Rte. 27 • Princeton • 297-6249
CARKHUFF'S GARDEN CENTER
Complete Patio
& Garden Center
Nursery Supplies • Patio
Furniture • fl fl Ties Route 1 South Brunswick
(201)297-2626
We deliver to the Princeton A rea
HILLSBOROUGH CLOCK GALLERY
201/359-4554 • 609/921-9240
Difeci Importer Factory Outlet Prices on. ot van Oommaicn Domestic & Foreign Clocks
Marketing Corporate Premiums & Employee Gifts
Mall Order Brochure Available Repairs of Clocks and Watches
254 At 206, Hillsborough • North ot K-Mart
HOUSE TO SHARE: Five m-nutes to FOR RENT Available now 4 room
Princeton $550 plus utiles Must <ove Lawrence Townsh.n apartment
i J97 0320 day or evening Non^oners n0 oets $475 pet month
q 14.51 plus unities (609) 883-6021 or (703)
264 3989
MENDING ANO ALTERATIONS:
Ate 1980 PLYMOUTH HORIZON
shonenow pandde- *(*»•
rracl new tires 63.000 miles
Call (609) 3943295 even.ngs and $1500 or best offer Call 921 7361 after
ip! phone ring 9-21-41 5 p m or weekends 9 2i 2t
PLAZA LIGHTING
Resioral'Ti
brass and bronze Custom lamp shades
hand made and laminated
Open 10 30 5 Mor> Sat
104 Mercer St.. Hlghtstown
609-443-0499
CALORIC GAS RANGE: one year old, excellent condition Sac- 2858 Free
n eton 921 41
NOW HEAR THIS
EVENT Craft Show Flea Market
PLACE Elm Court 300 Elm Road.
Princeton
DATE Saturday October 8th
ATTRACTIONS O I
baked goods, BBO, bargains' RAINDATE October 9th
92821
PIANO TUNER-TECHNICIAN Relocated from Hunterdon County to Princeton Recommended by teachers, churches. NJ Symphony members Prompt, courteous service Paul Lentlnl (609) 924-6919
Baumley Nursery,
Garden Center
and
Landscaping
580 Rte. 27
Princeton
(201)821-6819
^
The <rp. Country $( Mouse
cards • candles gifts
164 Nassau St'
MILLER
Garage Poors
Sales. Service and Installation
of Overhead Garage Doors
and Automatic Openers
(609)799-2193
Princeton Junction
AUDREY SHORT!
163 Nassau Street Princeton NJ 08542
609-921-9222
PLEASE JOIN US FOR THESE
OPEN HOUSES
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2
119 PLAINSBORO RD., CRANBURY - 1-4 PM
Mint condition Ranch with lormal dining room, Florida room $225,000 DIRECTIONS: Main SI , Cranbury lo 119 Plalnsboro
7 DREWES CT„ LAWRENCE — 2-5 PM
Better than new Townhouse, end unit
$144,500
DIRECTIONS: Rl. 1 lo Quaker Bridge Rd. lo right on Lawrence Square Blvd. lo left on Drewea.
r*
CHARMING RANCH
Exceptional custom built 4 bedroom Ranch in Grovers Mill area of West Windsor, Beautiful lot and mature landscaping. $299,900
BEST BUY IN TOWN
Princeton Ranch. Walk all over town — to shopping, schools & transpor-
$232,500
ADORABLE — AFFORDABLE
And is walking distance to the train, schools & shopping. This 2-3 bedroom West Windsor Cape has spacious rooms, fireplace, new family bathroom & borders a park Only $189,900
-
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
Three bedroom Colonial on small lot in Princeton Borough. Be the first to see it. Call today $215,000
ROCKY HILL COMMUNITY
Superbly maintained home on approximately % acres located on a quiet Rocky Hill street. This four bedroom colonial split offers the family both charm and convenience. $250 000
REALTY WORLD,
Call toll tree 1 800 367 4627(pause)920
163 Nassau Street Princeton NJ 08542 6099219222
522 Highway 18
East Brunswick NJ 08816
201 3901600
Member: Mercer Co. MLS. Princeton Real Estate Group. Somerset Co MLS. Middlesex Co MLS. Monmouth Co MLS
Real Istate Leaders of America
Dolores Allaire Doris Barnes Joyce Bergen Ervy Boothe Margie Boorer Doris Brinster
Victor Cascio Cynthia Chu Anne Cochrane Victoria DeGoma Clifford Eberle Erank Estrada
Frieda Gilvarg Ray Pettus
An|a Hammersmith Linda Santos Ronnie Harendza
Mary Ann Brungart Susan Ferry
Eocn office indepenoermvowneo 000 operated U9 ^fin Camper
Marie Hoffman Mary Hoffman Oliver Houghton Tracy Huang
Meg Schenk Audrey Short Emil Stephan Marjory White Jack Ziegler
I u
Judy McCaughan Willa Stackpole Linda Hoff Barbara Hare Shirley Kinsley Sarah Almgren Mary Grasso Judy Hammer RuthAnn Willard Loralee Strauss Barbara Blackwell Vietor Davis Margot Velissaropoulos
N.tCallawav"
REAL ESTATE J
4 NASSAU STREET PRINCETON. NEW JERSEY 08542 921 1050
Century old 3 bedroom brick lined studio w/separate studio. $295,000
$215,000
Quaint Victorian in historic Hopewell.
$250,000
An added spacious room w/bath & separate entrance enhance this Boro home $285,000
(rene Ostema
Mya Bannard
Touran Batmangltdj
Tom Leahy
Olive Westerveit
Anne Williams
Candy Walsh
Eleanor Hoismgton
Tim Foster
Dianne Bleacher. Prop Mgt
Mary Lou Remhardl. Prop Mgt
Scot K Ware. Comm D«v
Pete Callaway, Broker
Older Colonial in family-oriented Hopewell neighborhood $190,000
->i
* in in i- mi
Attractive 4 bedroom Colonial in Plainsboro. Also for rent. $299,000
"Woodhaven" ■ a picturesque rustic estate in Hopewell Twp.$1 ,300,000
The "Meet™ House" -a charmingly restored house near the Institute $595,000 Handsome Colonial with secluded grounds near the Lake. $395,000
_ . ' M Member
Princeton Area Representative Free Parking MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICES
Sotheby Parke Bernet Behind otfice Merc Hunterdon, Somerset Counties
International Realty Corporation
Schwtnn
N«n arm Used Bicycles Sales. Service
KOPP S CYCLE
43 Witherspoon Streei
924-1052
"The Jersey |
|
> |
Auctioneer" |
3 |
now owns |
Classic Auction Gallery |
|
in Rantan, N J |
|
-> |
l 609-466-0827 |
Q UJ |
201-526-6024 |
'■■,.'
SPECIALIZING IN CUSTOM WEDDING FLORAL DESIGN
■
I Sip you
■ ■"
THE GREENERY BY KAREN
Routes 206 & S18
Rocky Hill, N J
921-7013
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
■ ■
■ -93 8010 .-ton PO Box S3>-- "
01 Surrounding J"
ROOFING: Ml lyp«s of roots (new Of
Chimney
Hashing Fast service Work
ed Over 30 years m business
'■■ id Rooting Local call Irom
.'01 359 5992 4 18"
a |
|||
(/) o a. O *- z |
HPCCl PENNSYLVANIA a. 2 1 COMPUTER 33(lo I CENTER IN PRINCETON |
||
K |
SMA COM AVA COHP( |
J. BUSINESS 252 ALEXANDER PUTER APPLICATIONS PRINCETON LABLE (609) 921 -0< FULL SERVICE CENTER ON SITE >RATE ACCOUNTS WELCOME WEST CHESTER MaiNKcard add JH (i15) 6»2 75 |
ST. NJ 66 PA 00 |
WINDOWS & STORM WINDOWS
side A oul. $5 00 each Carpet
UNFURNISHEO '. i -Tiapart uphois,> 91 . i Bathroom
IbaHi Center ol town ground maid service comptele home cleaning
■■■ S6?5 month No | work guaranteed 393
2122 "
CHARMING 2-BEDROOM ' LAMPSHADES amp
entire second Moor Mam Street Law
Ment $550 pe' " < I 6 i tf aWeOclot-
MENS ALTERATIONS on clothing Dy
■ purchased here or
r< Princeton Clolhing Co. 17
■■■m St , Princeton 924-0704
II
FILING CABINETS: Come see our met abtndts tor office or home Olive, 2 or 4 drawer Alsotyp- Hinkson's, 82 Nassau Streei
HOUSE FOR RENT: Urge 3 bedroom II Quiel Princeton street Con venient Wall lo wall carpeting Pat- 10/deck Low rent Recertify decorated 9242040 9-7-41
OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1988 — 1-4 P.M.
74 Model Ave., Hopewell, N.J.
iiiiiniiniiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiii .
VINTAGE VICTORIAN — Turn ol llic century gem In Hopewell Bon. 3 Bedrooms. large bath, totally updated Kitrhen w/all amenities, door trim, doors & baseboards are all white pine. Deep lot w/separale garage and large barn with many possibilities. DIRECTIONS: Hie. SIS lo Model Ave. $274,900
IF YOU HAVE ARRIVED - BUT ARE STILL GOING PLACES. THIS IS THE HOME FOR YOUI Picture your family In this 1870 Colonial In historical Washington's Crossing. Enormous and exquisite rooms have craftsman's details that don't exist today The grounds — professional and stunning, overlook, the Delaware River - scene of Washington's successful coup - it could be yoursl Substantially reduced to
$399,000
DECORA I OKS LET LOOSE IN THEIR OWN HOMEI
What do decorators choose to do fo, themselves? You will find oul when you see the smash ng new enetgy efficient Greenhouse Room. Deck & Hot Tub |ust added .cross the enll e hack of thei, Ranch right In the Village of Lawrenccville You'll see loads of l.9h. from .he sece, skylight, celling fans & new blinds ,„ many ,„„„ d Jm°any many delec.lble extras in an easy living 3 B/R home. They're ready to ply „„„, k s
Asking $248,000
PAVING AND LANDSCAPING CONTRACTOR
COMMERCIAL AND RESi!.
New & Resurfacing Seal Coaling
Crushed Sione Tat & Chips Drainage Work SeDtic S . Patios Sod
FELIX V. PIRONE C«ll 609-924-1735
Free L' I "
PRINCETON TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE
24 hour'
answer your phone, or You can receive calls on ou' phone Mail service Office space-Beepers Answering telephones ove' .
924-2040 "
MOVING?
NEED A TRUCK?
CALL HUB TRUCK RENTAL
All Route No I LawrenceviHe N J Across Irom Keats Ford
signer Handbags... \
n ' ' ' ' ' " '«■
ANDBAGSl
] Mercer Mall • LawrenceviHe
Heather's Heartstrings
Across from Princeton Hospital
683-9358
PRINCETON COMMERCIAL SERVICES
( 'ompL U homt & office cU aning
Windows • Floors • Carpets
Daily • Weekly ■ Monthly
serving Princeton area IG years
(609) 588-5206
FOR RENT Borough houses 27 Lylfe or 31 Maclean Walk to town, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, parking $975 month plus utilities 924-9396 Leave message
PRINCETON PSYCHIATRIC CENTERS
BrynaGolin, M.S.W. "Relationship Problems"
A comprehensive mental health center
330 N. Harrison St., Princeton, N.J. 609-921-3555
* 3 »»»*<•» ■•"■■ii:. II
elsewhere - so make an offer - they will negotiate.
NEW LISTING — 4 B/R Ranch on '/j acre in small town of Roosevelt. Living Room, Separate Dining Room. Eat-in Kitchen, Bath, Central Air. New Room, and much, much more! $129,900
OUR SALESPERSON WILL BE HAPPY TO SHOW YOU. IF YOU WISH. OUR OTHER ROOSEVELT PROPERTIES: 3 B/R. 1 B Ranch at $1 15,000: 4 B/R. 1 B Ranch at $119,000: 3 B/R, IB. Ranch at $125 000: 4 B/R Ranch w/addition at $139,900.
A MUST SEE — 4 Bedroom, 2'/* Bath home on lA acre nicely landscaped lot in small town. Living room w/fireplace, D/R. Family Room. 2 car garage, back deck w/gas grill. Central air. Many upgrades — too numerous to list. $199,900
LAND
20 acres — wooded. Zoned residential - '/. acre. West Windsor $1,400,000
200 '/ACRES — Millstone Township $25.O00/acre
30 +/■ ACHES OF FIELDS & WOODSI SEWER. WATER & GAS AT SITE ' Minutes from commuter trains, top West Windsor schools & fabulous shopping. You can comb the Princeton area and you won't find a better site for onlyJI. 500.000
BUILDING LOT - Millstone Twp. Rolling & wooded, w/brook.
Just listed - $119,900
RENTALS
PRINCETON BORO - Apartment • 2 rooms & bath. 2nd floor. No pets. Available Sept. 1. Includes heal $45g per mo plus elec.
=., u..r, - ,ney win negotiate Asking $248 000
Adlerman, Click & Co.
For All Area Listings
Realtors* and Insurers
Joan Alo.n Elame H.loersl.o,
Oar, Faccin, 60r,a A,ons
M,Hon Saoovsicy Joseph LoPrinri
Ruin Saoovs«, Joa„ LoP„n„
Boge, Ciaij Alic. LilunrJ
(609) 586-1020
(609) 924-0401
■■ . .' 15 sPrin9 St.. Princeton, N.J.
V.
SCHLOTT
REALTORS9
Thd Extra-Effort People
10 Nassau Street, Princeton, N.J. • 609-921-1411
PRINCETON
SPACE & PRIVACY
Would you like to live among trees, along a brook, in complete privacy, yet be able to walk to town? Would you like a home with formal dining room, den, basement, garage, pool, tennis, yet maintenance free? If the answer is yes, this 2200 sq. ft. townhouse might be just right for you. $339,900 (PRN218).
GOLF COURSE VIEWS
Step outside this newly renovated ranch and you will be across from the popular Hopewell Valley Golf Course. An immaculate home with all new energy efficient upgrades in systems and design. $275,000 (PRN320).
v. ■
PRINCETON
TOWERING TREES
And mature landscaping surround this spacious 9-room, newly refurbished home. A banquet sized dining room, charming fireplaced living room and bnck patio make this a joy to entertain familv and friends. $270,000 (PRN329).
PRINCETON
VICTORIAN CHARM
A classic in a most convenient location. A gate from the rear yard leads to Har- rison St. Park. Enjoy the large shade trees and benches for quiet enjoyment as well as the childs play area. A well maintained home priced to sell at $395,000 (PRN330).
COMMUTERS Delight
Carefree living in charming Canal Point*. 2000 sq. ft. patip home with private walled garden. Countless extras. Amenities include swim & tennis club membership. Princeton address. 2 miles to train station. $299,500 (PRN340).
F*fe
PRINCETON
PRISTINE CAPE
An exceptional house on 2 wooded acres on Stuart Road. The center hall opens to a gracious HVing room with fireplace, formal dining room and large master suite. Sliding glass doors lead to a porch overlooking the patio & beautiful garden. $825,000 (PRN298). '
FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY
P R O G R AM
Copyright 1967 ScMCtt In
ZERO POINTS-HOMES PRICED TO SELL
SCHLOTT REALTORS ANNOUNCES OUR EXCLUSIVE
-POWER HOUSE PROGRAM- designed TO GIVE YOU MORE BUYING POWF-R ON SELECTED HOMES.
SCHLOTT
HCMOJT>
More than 170 offices in New Jersey. New York. Connecticut. Pennsylvania and Florida.
Thompson Land
195 Na»H Stftd Princtton \ 1 («091 921-76SS
Call
$AV€-Y0l/n~TU8
For Resurfacing (609) 448-3339
MICHAEL 1 ROSENTHA1 . M.S.W., ED.D.
Personal Problem, Career and Kducational Counseling Individuals and Small Groups
3 Valerie Lene (609) 896-4446
Lawrenceville. New Jersey By Appointment
u
HARDEN
RD #4, Box 484 Princeton, N.J.
° CONSTRUCTION
New Home Builders • Repairs &
Improvements • Office Renovations
Builders Registration rt39038
"a 201 297-1993
PRINCETON BOROUGH short term
bedrooms lovely garden deck eiegamu I G overlook
ing wooded park available 2 3 months . /ember i (609) 9244332
921 2t
PRINCETON AREA: Spaoous im- maculate 2 bedroom condo Pool ten ■;.noop,ng Other extras Below market at $110 000 Call 683 4019
1978 OODGE ASPEN: 86000 miles. new carburetor new transmission, new
iiatety $950
llei Call Mike. 497-1911
LAND FOR SALE: 46 acres zoned even, located on US 95
Pa Can B'H Smith. 215-547
lypewntef Tier s 10 speed b'^e toys clothes Saturday October i. 9 i 77 Westerly Road. Princeton
CONTEMPORARY DESK: 2 drawers with chair $150 Electee typewriter Royal Coronet, $50 Call days (609) 530 3390 evenmgs 924 2643
ALLEN'S
Princeton's Largest
Children s Department Store
134 Nassau St.
924-3413
Monday -Saturday 9.5 3Q
CLEOPATRICK: our gentle Lynx-poml Siamese needs caring person 10 live with 7 days while we're away No out doors, no cage no other animals Does not claw furniture loves laps Call Reichard. 924-0761
1984 BUICK SKYHAWK: Power steer
ing, power brakes £C AM/FM 5
2 door (609) 497 0073
BUILDING REPAIRS: R
Shmgle. Slate. Tar), ChimnK,
■ .ishing Walls Walks, Patios.
Porches. Steps Driveways
■ try Paint.
irig. Caulking. Glazing, Stucco- Masonry. Pointing, Patching. Inspec lions, Violations Guaranteed and in- sured Call 921 1135 II
WEDDING INVITATIONS addressed lor you m calligraphy Call 297 3915 evenings and weekends tl
FRENCH LESSONS: Fan term AH levels Grammar - Conversation Readmg Native teacher 609*921 0492 9 2131
FOR SALE: Townhouse Camefback Poconos Walk to ski slope Tennis indoor -outdoor indoor pool weight room, whirlpool, sauna and goll $110,000 Reply lo Box A 96 c/o Town Topics 9-2131
ADULT CHILDREN ot Alcoholics group | will meet ten consecutive Wednesday • evenings starting October 5th at 7 30- 9pm Areas to explore include over responsibility, intimacy. com- pulsiveness. under and over achieve | men! perfectionism and the drive to 1 control, also techniques lor nurture and . growth Professional guidance Irom Mane Womack Pitt aod Malcolm Dia- * mond For lurther information phone I MalQQlm Diamond 924-2451 9-21-31 I
Lie. No. PM00379 PRINCETON MOVING
All Types Furniture
Local or Long Distance
"Reasonable Rates"
No Job Too Small
Business
(609) 883-2699
If No Answer:
(609) 771-4169
306 Berwyn Avenue. Trenton
SKILLMAN FURNITURE
Used furniture, chests, dressers, unfinished bookcases, etc.
SPECIAL OF THE WEEK: MODERN OAK . TABLE with six chairs and a china1" cabinet. Decorated pine bench.
212 Alexander St., Princeton
Mon-Frl9-5. Sat 9-1 924" 1881
■■%
Williamson ROOFING
Call 921-1184
Free Estimates NEW ROOFS • REPAIRS • ALL TYPES
REAL ESTATE
KM
LIGHT
Karl Light • Broker
Realtors 247 Nassau St. 609-924-3822
PROFESSIONAL APPRAISAL SERVICE
■ SALES ASSOCIATES:
Constance Brauer Zoran Kovclc
Pat Byrne jonn Lamb '
John Cooper Mark Landauer
Marcy Crimmlns Derry Light
Samantha Crimmlns Edward Moshey
Marian K. Green James Schwartz Jack Habig
LB
REALTOR
Multiple Listing Service
Princeton Real Estate Group
THE LIVING IS EASY —
in this carefree condominium in a nearby retire- ment community
• community pool, golf course, tennis courts and club house included in maintenance Now $149,000
PRINCETON TOWNSHIP OPPORTUNITY 5.5 Acres on Herrontown Road
Perfectly set up for family plus or subdivision with water & sewer available.
Call For Details
FIVE BEDROOMS IN BOROUGH
Living room with fireplace with Dutch tiles, formal dining room, den with wet bar, powder room with antique marble bowl
1 Three second floor bedrooms, bath; two bedrooms on third floor
■ 2 zone heat with 2 furnaces; private garden.
$367,000
EASY WALK TO DOWNTOWN PRINCETON
• Dramatic living room with cathedral ceiling, fireplace, bookshelves, panelled dining room, eat-in kitchen,
• 3 bedrooms, 1VS baths
• Separate two room and bath in law suite with its own entrance
• Offered at a new low price of $230,000
ALMOST HIDDEN
On Cherry Hill Road with 11/2 wooded acres. This "Cape Cod" has all the pluses: large liv- ing room with fireplace, generous dining room, family kitchen, 2 bedrooms, 1 Vi baths with a connection to a comfortable suite with living room, kitchen and a second floor bedroom, bath and storage. Outdoor decks for both and privacy for $650,000
EXTRAORDINARY LOT
On a clear day you can see almost forever from south-facing hillside lot in Hopewell Township
• Over three acres of high land
• A marvelous site for a home
285 WESTERN WAY
A favorite neighborhood for many young University families
• Pretty 4 bedroom, 2Vz bath cojonial
• Living room with fireplace, separate dining room, both a family room with bookshelves and a cozy redwood panelled study
This house has it all - $325,000
WOOD MILL ESTATES
Two bedroom, 2 bath end unit condo
• Living room-dining room with cathedral ceiling and tiled fireplace, balcony
• Kitchen with breakfast nook, utility room with new washer
NEW PRICE $117,500
CALL ABOUT OUR RENTALS
Peyton
V-P The Penltnr
The Realtor
QUEENSTON COMMON ... luxurious living in a carefree style can be yours in this beautiful convenient townhouse, 3 bedrooms, 2'/2 baths, 1-car garage $295,000
PEYTON ASSOCIATES
Realtors Princeton 609-921-1550 • Pennington 609-737-9550
THE BEST OF TOWN AND COUNTRY LIVING in this gracious older colonial, 5 bedrooms, 3Vs baths, 5 fireplaces, veranda. Priced to sell.
$575,000
SPACIOUS AND LIGHT CONTEMPORARY 3/4 bedrooms, 3 baths in Princeton, $580,000
DRAMATIC STONE AND CEDAR CONTEMPORARY m lawrenceville 5 bedrooms, maid's quarters and more. $569,000
1 at **^jl. " mi iutt wmmmmcmmmusm
EXTRAORDINARY is this Hopewell Township contemporary on a lake. Princeton address. $575,000
ADORABLE RANCH in Princeton Township, beautiful gardens, modern kitchen. $260,000
BETTER THAN NEW colonial in West Windsor, 4 bedrooms $329,000
COMPLETELY RENOVATED in Princeton Borough
$172,000
NEW LISTING - DESIRABLE NEIGHBORHOOD OF PRINCETON TOWNSHIP. Watch for ad next week $599,000
Pat Cahill F. M. Comizzoli Mary Elise Cook Lynne Durkee
Sheila Graham Cathy Hegedus Maggie Hill Judy Holton
343 Nassau Street, Princeton, N J 08S40 (609)921-1550
Marjorie Jaeger Ellen Kerney Lincoln Kerney Berit Marshall
OVERLOOKING A GOLF COURSE in Lawrenceville, 4 bedrooms, 2'/ baths and much more $260,000
Meg Michael Drucilla Mihan Cathy Nemeth Angela Romano'
TOD PEYTON - BROKER
Jane Schoch Judy Stier Carol Stewart Bob Tyler
Robin Wallack Joy Ward Virginia Weliky Beverly Willever
134 South Main Street, Pennington. N J 08534 (609) 737-9550
Employment Opportunities in the Princeton Area
t~ CLERICAL >
9
lu - • oxtt Room 240 20 Nassau Streel
g PnncotOfi NJ D8540OfCaH92l
uj 9 1 -a 31
S
: ARCHITECT/INTERN: The successful
V cendkteie w# have c
. experience in oes'O" dnd commercial
Z archfledura aid strong grapr
^ Construction dorumer>l Bxpene
Ul piu< We offer a salary commensurate
j wtfi *>vr>p"ence growih opportunity
£ ano a comprehensive benefit package
o» For an interview, please contact
8- Caswe» Cooke aia or Vickie Coleman
_ at 609 4S2 8818 or send resume to
O. Feitows Read Organisation 300 Ale*
O ander Par* Princeton N j 08540. at
tenlion Caswell Cook. AIA (Pi. ■.
j 'ei to ad m TT) Fellows Read Organiza
q tion Equal Opponunity Employe'
P 9 2i 2t
EASY WORK! E -cellent pay" Assemble I al home Call lor information 312 741 8400, Ext A-870
GOVERNMENT JOBS: $28037 lo S69 405 Immediate hiring1 Your aros Can (refundable}, i 518459 361 1, Ext F5365 for federal list 24 hi
SPORTING GOODS STORE u< m <i -
Princeton For restal Village looking tor a lew responsible individual* lor tull time sales positions No experience neces- sary Competitive salary plus commut
ind excellent rned«,i bfl (609) 520 8518
COOKS: Several positions exist lor
duals to work in fun.
lasipaced environment Experience
1 Ul 'ml noi i" \iirv ifVr will tr.tin ■
■ Shopping Center Skillman 609921 0840
9-21-111
OOKKEEPER: Pari lima, small lecoratmg firm in Princeton needs ex- ■ taxes, and relatod reports
I'll' , i ■ . ;
.'lylime
NURSE: needed by 33-yr Bi
■
1 I'.eachevo
li
REAL ESTATE SALESPEOPLE
wanleo Expei red bul no!
Please contact Joan Wrtson al
Wetde) Realtors in Mopeweti 466 '224
■
ASSISTANT BOOKKEEPER: Perm.,
, issau Streel
I .bie hours 924 2040 3-2-51
SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR: Part/full time Days evenmgs or niqhts Nassau Street office 924 2040
FLORAL DELIVERY PERSON wanted Monday through Saturday part lime Call 921 7013 9-21-21
ASSISTANT: loi National Tennis pro- gram Position requires excellent typ ing, word processing and oral and writ lencomrnunitdt'onskill^ Vaneddut'es include administrative assistance tor program network and special events
. . . ■ lerences lo US Tennis Association, Personnel Depl . 707 Alexander Road. Princeton, N J 08540 9-21-3T
ASSISTANT APPRAISER ible Will gam knowledge of antiques Typing skills necessary Wages well above minimum Call (609) 924 4322 9-21-21
WAITERS/WAITRESSES: Excellent earnings up to $i0/hour or more wilh base wage plus lip potential Ex e npj required Flexible hours Full benefits package available Apply today! Friendly Restaurs I ' ' gomery Shopping Center, Skillman 609 921 0840 9 21 1 1t
SALES: Pan time Likes people, loves
clothes Flexible hours Weekends In
quire al Merrick s 6 Moore Slreel,
'C 1-0338 9 2i-2i
RETAIL SALES • PLANTS and flowers Part time afternoon and weekend posi- tions available al unique plant and flower shop, Princeton Shopping Cen i< Call Peggy at the Greener House, 924-7718
EXPERIENCED SUBSTITUTE
Teachers needed m grades \ n i
■
resume to Dr Arthur Aaron;,' I- P] ton Day School, Lower School, Middle School, or Upper School, P0 Box 75. TheGrem A u 08542.
jurat WiWH
FOOD MARKETS
PLAINSBORO
J II'" t.i'i. ■.! ..in.'.-, mil ',ii|ii«ni,-irkct rtunn in Ihn Delaware
""'"I .Ir'dln loimnqnur winninq lenrn tvo have
OpportiiN I
"uon wages & benefits, Incentive bomr. profli im quollly of work lite environment, Invaluable training and e» perience, opportunity lo merit people while enjoying /out |0& Applicatitin-i rii'iv lining occoplod nt Plninsbom Supfl f rosh (Plninsboro R Sch.ilkt Rdi )
JOIN OUR TEAM AS A
SALES
ASSOCIATE
You've decorated your home. You've decorated your Mend's homes. Now Dannemann has a position lor you You'll help customers with labric selections, window treatments, slip- covers, upholstery, bedspreads and accessories II you have the enthusiasm lo bring customer's dreams to lite and can devote lull or part time flexible hours, the Dannemann team needs you.
Call (201) 297-6090 Dannemann
The Savings Store lor Fabrics. Decorating and Crafts
A
a con
TLANTIC
PRECAST
CONCRETE CORP.
LABORERS WANTED WE OFFER:
• Company paid health and life insurance
• Company paid pension plan
• Paid holidays and vacation
• Starting rate of $5 65 per hour
• Attendance incentive pay of 505 per hour
APPLY AT
ATLANTIC PRECAST CONCRETE
8900 OLD ROUTE 13
TULLYTOWN, PA* 19007
HOUSEKEEPER and •■
'OS) 3 tuti days per
■ v Princeton and o\ ■ esto PO Box 3245 Trenton NJ 08619
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
f."jsness/nan Fig) I ■ ample bookkeeping occaso
■ :•■ : . '■■ P ■
Princeton 08542 or call (609) 921 0767 or 921 9191
FLOWER SHOP ASS T WANTED ■ RECEPTIONIST: Look.nq lor H.endly or part time Apply m person a! Perna s person lo answer phones and help with
sl school ton Road (Penns Neck) West Winds e dance
921-21 classes Call 921 7758
S10 PER HOUR: US 1 the newspaper seeks conscientious hardworking neo pie with cars to help deliver the news paper every other Wednesday to offices in the greater Princeton business com muniiy Preference will be given to tree lance writers graphc artist graphers and aspiring |OumaIista who may be available 'or additional assignments at U S 1 . Princeton •= bu^ ness and entertainment |Ournal For in- formation contact Pamela Weisenberq at (609) 452 0038 9-21-31
HOST/HOSTESS NEEDED: Monday Wednesday Thursday and Friday day shift Apply in person. PJ's Pancake House 154 Nassau Street Princeton 9 14 31
ACCOUNTANT: Small firm in Princeton seeks pari time accountant with ex- perience m bank reconciliation, state and Federal tax returns (both sole pro pnetorship and corporate). P&L statements Send resume to Box A 94. CJo Town Topics 9-14-31
PLAYGROUND/CAFETERIA ASSISTANTS
Do you love working with children? Princeton Regional Schools needs playground/cafeteria assistants to work approximately 2 hours per day Duties include monitoring children during lunch and recess Minimum $6 10 per hour. Minimum $6 10 per hour Submit applications by Oct. 10, to
PRINCETON
REGIONAL SCHOOLS
Personnel Office
25 Valley Road
Princeton. NJ 08540
Equal OpprA(tirma1iv« AcctiOn Employer
HITRAN CORP.
HITRAN CORP is a manufac- turer ol quality electronic power systems Hitran provides a clean, sale work atmosphere, competitive benefits, schedul- ed performance reviewing, a challenging career, and oppor- tunity lor advancement within the company If you are quali- ty conscious, prefer working days, want to feel as if you do make a diflerence than you should check us out- For infor- mation on positions available, call or stop in for an interview
362 HIGHWAY 31
FLEMINGTON, NJ 08822
201-782-5525
Switchboard Operator
Part Time
Excellenl opportunity lor experienced person al 450-bed leaching community hospital, Musi be flexible and able to relieve regular operators for vacation, holidays and sick time Hours include 7AM- Noon. Noon-5PM, or 5PM-11PM
We otter excellenl salary (S730-$8 75/Hr)and pleasant working environment
For consideration, please apply in person to Personnel Oepl Dept. BCN, The Medical Center at Princeton, 253 Witherepoon St.. Princeton, N.J. 08540. Equal opportunity employer M/F
T1IE MEDICAL CENTER VT
PRINCETON
ELECTION BOARD WOHKERS: Needed (or Princeton Township No- vember 8, to sign in voters 6.30 am lo 8 p m . plus one class Must be reg isfered voler m Mercer County S7S Democrats can Pam Enslm 924-1459 Republicans call Harry Cooke 924- 4884 9-2121
TRAIN
TO BE A
' PROFESSIONAL^
• SECRETARY
• SEC /RECEPTIONIST1
f • EXECUTIVE SECRETARYl
I Start locally Full time/part time I team worfl processing and related | J secretarial skills Home Study a rxJ Resident Training Natl head- quarters, Pompano Beach. Fla
• FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE [ •KWPUCt'MENT ASSIST ANC£ J
1-800-327-7728 k
LTHE HART SCHOOL
Train to be a
TRAVEL AGENT TOUH GUIDE
AIRLINE RESERVATIONIST
[Start locally, full time/part time "Train on live airline computers ■Home study and resident train- ling Financial aid available Job ■placement assistance National jHdqtrs Pompano Beach, Fla _A^^TRAVEL SCHOOL IEiA'S^it-iV. Accredited Member N H
PERSON FRIDAY NEEDED: 3 to 6 pm most weekdays lor clerical work, child C3re and light housework Call 921 2366 evenings 9-21-21
PART TIME RESEARCHER for local publication Worka!home10-l2hours per week Call 683-5151
CHILD CARE: Nonsmoker to care lor in lant m my Princeton home, from No- vember 15 to January 15 Monday through Friday. 9 am id pm Ex- perience and references required Call 683 1810 92821
s
PART TIME EVENINGS & WEEKENDS HOURS FLEXIBLE
for High School seniors and college students, retired persons and moonlighters Need extra money? Review in 3 months plus incentives Schedule your own hours; patd every week No selling involved We will tram We have training sessions 3 times a week Most of our work appears in well known publications You can be a part of public reaction to national, state and local issues. Call:
609-443-4717 THE GALLUP ORGANIZATION
We're located on Route 571 & Pnnceton-Hightstown Road
PRINCETON REGIONAL SCHOOLS
is accepting applications for a CUSTODIAN/ BUS DRIVER
Must have valid NJ drivers license and possess or be eligible for School Bus Drivers license Duties include daily bus route, daily mail runs, delivery of documents as necessary plus some custodial duties Position available im- mediately Submit applications by Oct 10, to
PRINCETON
REGIONAL SCHOOLS
Personnel Oflice
25 Valley Road
Princeton, NJ 08540
Equal Oop/Atfirmatrve Action Employer
TELLERS
Personable individuals with good math aptitude, previous teller experience preferred, cash handling experience required Full and pari time positions available in the following offices
• ROSSMOOR • CRANBURY
• PLAINSBORO • DAYTON
• JAMESBURG * MILLSTONE
CUSTOMER SERVICE ASSISTANT
Excellent typing and communication skills required New ac- counts or previous banking experience helpful Part time posi- tions available in Monroe Hours are Monday thru Friday, 10 00 am to 2 00 pm, alternate Saturdays
PROOF OPERATOR Experience on NCR 775 desired Ability to operate 10 key ad- ding machine required Full and part time positions available in our Cranbury office Please call:
201-776-5021 MIDLANTIC
Equal Opportunity Employer
>'[-
«
PRINCETON
AS YOU LIKE IT!
A spacious and bright family home in superb condition. Flexi- ble floor plan offers choice of first or second floor master bedroom and bath. Additional study and den on first floor are ideal for a home office. Fantastic storage and built-ins. This 5/6 bedroom, 4 bath home has it all. Walk to everything from this^ convenient location. $479,000
Call Weidel Princeton (609) 921-2700.
RICHARD A
A
j
\
CORPORATION
REALTORS
Since 1915
164 Nassau Street
Princeton, New Jersey 08542
609-921-2700
J
A
I Employment Opportunities
PART-TIME CLEANING JOBS ai
■
EOE
PART-TIME COMPANION needed one
. tedy Or
necess-t', iytime 92t
3800 even.ngs 924 4389 9 28 31
PART TIME
OPPORTUNITIES
AVAILABLE
Join 3 Winning Team'
: ""ihoufs available lor
•-'Oe'ience necessary Onthe
job training provided We oMer regular ■ ■ -«ible schedules, tree ■niiorms and opportunity lot advance- ment For immediate openings, apply L .■ i<me at the Princeton Junction Wine on Route S 7 1 . Saturday. October ; m 5 pm
ACME MARKETS, INC. Equal Opportunity Employer
SALES. REAL ESTATE
''01 consider working m a relaxed.
nrjent atmosphere with high ear-
Mential, ampte lloortime available.
a education, ana inendiy leiiow
We are looking lor 2 interesting
ons to nil 2 positions that |ust
lue to retirement Come see
ild work lor an independent
'.lo works with you
PART TIME BOOKKEEPER/AC- COUNTANT: Ubran/, .v
Cho-f C< ■ iJ supplies
invoong. light clerical, cot |
■ schedule AA/EOE
r College e & Walnut Lane Ion, NJ'O8540
ARCHITECTURAL ADMINISTRA- TORS: 60 person architectural firm looking lor skilled and irtlt
■ responsible lor clei plant, ordei to accoun-
ting depl Administrative assist- .anwsecrelary ■ responsible lo a small group ol architects tor clerical and ad
■
ital oltice is a plus Ei/switchboard operator - responsible tor controlling all incoming packages Ability to organize a creative, chaotic environ- ment is a necessity Travel coordinator - responsible lor organizing all employ ee travel shipping, and various other administrative lasks Knowledge ol domestic and international travel helpM but not necessary Late afternoon receptionist/switchboard operator responsible lor controlling all incoming calls guests, and packages Irom 4.30 to 7 30 pm Ideal lor school leacher or student All positions to be tilled within the next few weeks Pay commensurate with experience goodbenelils We are an equal opportunity employer Please send resume and salary requirements to Allen W Prusis, Michael Graves. Ar- chitecl. 341 Nassau Street Princeton. NJ 08540 9-28-21
LOCAL ARTS ORGANIZATION: H W
tun raising money lor the arts II you are
■ : and love the
McCarter Theatre is looking lo« you
.' plus hour
Call 683-
9-28-21
GET PAID tor reading books' S100 per te PASE 03672 II . N Aurora IL 60542 928-41
SECRETARY: Small Princeton law of- fice seek? mal
. administrator with excellent typing skills Flexible hour:
■ oenence or steno required
n word processor Call (609)
924-6581 92821
SMALL ARCHITECTURAL FIRM
needs architect wilh experience Pan
lime or lull time 921-6776
CARE GIVER lor newborn 5 days a week lor Trenton couple working in New York Must be experienced, reliable, affectionate, nonsmoker. Eng lish capable Light housekeeping in- cluded Live-in opportunity Convenient transit References required Call 609- 394 1065 9-28-21
LIBRARY ASSISTANT WANTED: Full time job with excellent benefits This is an interesting position lor someone who likes to work with the public and is will- ing to learn new skills Must be able lo type The 35-hour week will include one evening, and a Saturday every third week Call 924-6822 between 9 and 5 weekdays 9-28-2t
i5ione at Firestone Real =) conlidential interview
Mole Hole. Unusual gifls
Ne to share nice things wilh
l.ie ol the areas tmesl grfl
J- time position available lor
,,ired individual in new For
ige Siore Schedule flexible
' ee tailored to your needs. Start
r hour Plus bonuses (609)
9 28 21
NOW HIRING
DOOR GREETER
CASHIERS
SANDWICH SHOP
APPAREL
Experience not necessary. Many employee benefits. Homemakers, students and retirees welcomed! Apply in person:
MERCER MALL, LAWRENCEVILLE, NJ
We are an Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
r*rf N.t Callaway'
*» — -► IATE J
■.■.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.n.i.i.i.i.n.i.^.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.i.ij.i.i.i.i.ij.r r^ STEWARDSON-DOL'GHERTY
J Ufa l Estate -Associates, Incorporated
366 ^(assau Street, Princeton, &(ew Jersey 08540 ^ tphone: 609-Q2 1 -J784
KINGSTON
■is hanasoif.f! Colonial is located on a quiet side street yet
ithin walking distance to Route 27 and buses to New York
,nd Princeton, etc. An entry hall leads to separate living and
iining rooms, a spacious kitchen w/ample counter space and
reakfast area and adjoining family room w/fireplace. Upstairs
master suite w/its own bath plus 3 other bedrooms and bath.
ie basement, two car garage, central air. Professionally
•caped w/beautiful azaleas and evergreens. All on a
35 lot w/more community owned open recreation space
1 $265,000
tC'T'lTi'TVl V I V I ■!• I Y I y 1 y 1 v i», .■ I V I V I V IV I W1V I VI v^l
rATE
4 NASSAl STREET • PRINC I TON NEW II KSM 08542 (609) 921 1050
OPEN HOUSE 34 Brearly Road
Saturday, October 1 — 1-4 P.M.
DIRECTIONS: 206 South to Russell Estates.
Brearly Road
This handsome new brick Colonial in Russell Estates has generous space for gracious living or elegant entertaining. Traditional in design, modern conveniences and artistic custom details have created a beautiful house. The center hall opens to the step-down living room with fireplace, formal din- ing room, superb kitchen with breakfast room, powder room and library with second fireplace. The master bedroom and bath are luxurious and the three additional bedrooms have 2 baths. Acres of Open Space and 2 tennis courts. $81 5,000
CHERRY HILL .COUNTRY CHARM
Totally renovated architect-designed romantic country home, half circle drive, offering carefree comfort and con- venience with over an acre of lawn and mature woods with privacy. Three minutes to downtown Princeton, formal cathedral ceilinged entry hall, octagonal dining room, glaz- ed garden room, custom cherry kitchen cabinets. Dramatic master suite overlooking treetops, two spacious bedrooms, separate baths. Unbelievable beauty in the township of Princeton. Please call Lois Tegarden at 921-9300. $625,000 JuH\ I
^HENDERSON D
33 Witherspoon St., Princeton, N.J. • 921-9300
FROM THE HENDERSON LANDMARK TRADITION...
2*r *±g%
TRULY A UNIQUE SETTING...
Can be found on 4.29 Princeton Township wooded acres in the Pretty Brook section. This magnificent six bedroom estate features everything imaginable for both comfortable family living and elegant entertaining.
For more information and an appointment to view this gracious home call Angelin Clancy at (609) 921-9300.
Offered at $1,500,000
Jl >H N I
^HENDERSON n
^^_ i held.
REALTORS ^^ — 33 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08542 (609) 921-9300