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Princeton University to name building in memory of local resident and longest-serving US poll worker Laura Wooten ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news % – Planet Princeton

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Laura Wooten’s long service as a volunteer at New Jersey election polls began in 1939 and continued for nearly eight decades. Photo courtesy of Laura Wooten’s family

Princeton University officials announced Monday that a building will be named for Laura Wooten, a former local resident and university employee who has been recognized as the longest-serving election poll worker in the United States.

Wooten, who lived in Princeton and Lawrence, worked at the university in campus dining for more than 27 years. She died in 2019 at the age of 98.

Marx Hall will be renamed Laura Wooten Hall effective July 1. The building, located along Washington Road in Princeton, houses the Princeton University Center for Human Values, academic offices, a department library, and teaching spaces. School officials said plans for a formal dedication will be announced at a later date.

The Princeton University Board of Trustees approved the renaming of the building based on the recommendation of the school’s Council of the Princeton University Community Committee on Naming, a committee of faculty, staff, students, and alumni representatives that gives advice to the board regarding the naming of programs, positions and spaces at the university.

The naming of Laura Wooten Hall is intended to honor Wooten’s contributions and emphasize the importance of civic engagement at all levels.

“I am grateful to the naming committee for this inspiring recommendation, and I am delighted that Princeton will honor Laura Wooten for her extraordinary contributions to our nation and the democratic process,” Princeton University President Christopher Eisgruber said in a written statement. “The addition of Laura Wooten’s name to the tapestry of our campus will recognize Princeton’s history, the breadth of our community, and the positive impact that one remarkable person can have through lifelong dedication to public service and civic values.”

Laura Wooten American Flag portrait
The late Laura Wooten volunteered at primary and general election polls in New Jersey for 79 years. Photo courtesy of Laura Wooten’s family.

Wooten volunteered as a local poll worker at primary and general election polls for 79 years. Last summer, Gov. Phil Murphy signed “Laura Wooten’s Law,” citing her as the longest-serving poll worker in the country. The law focuses on middle school curriculum guidelines to ensure that students study the values and principles underlying the American system of constitutional democracy, the function of government, and the role of a citizen in a democratic society.

“Laura Wooten’s life is a study in civics,” Murphy said at the July 2021 signing ceremony. “She set a tremendous legacy of service. Even more importantly, in her life, born in the segregated South, she persevered through sexism and racism, including right here in New Jersey. Her life stands as evidence that change in a democracy comes not from those who hold elective office, but through the work of ordinary citizens.”

Wooten was born in Goldsboro, North Carolina in 1920, the same year women’s right to vote was ratified in the U.S. She moved to Princeton as a young child at a time when the schools were segregated and began volunteering at election polls after graduating from high school in 1939.

“Her status as the longest continuously serving poll worker in the nation is a rare and exceptional achievement, one that offers a powerful example of how ordinary citizens can perform extraordinary service to the nation,” wrote Associate Professor of History Beth Lew-Williams, chair of the Council of the Princeton University Community Committee on Naming.

“Voting is your voice so if you don’t go out and vote for things, there will never be any changes. That’s the only way you’ll get changes, is to vote,” Wooten said in a 2018 university interview. “The privilege in a democracy of being able to vote means a lot to me.”

Wooten moved from Princeton to Lawrence Township later in life and spent her last election day in 2018 working at the polls from dawn to late evening. Her dedication was spotlighted by NBC Nightly News and recognized by Vice President Kamala Harris, who was a senator at the time. “Vote every time. Let nothing and no one stop you because your vote is your voice,” Wooten told NBC News.

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Laura Wooten was honored with a resolution by the State of New Jersey in 2016 for her dedication as an election poll worker. Photo courtesy of Laura Wooten’s family

She has been recognized for her service by the New Jersey State Senate, the municipality of Princeton, and a number of organizations including the League of Women Voters of New Jersey, the National Association of Secretaries of States, the New Jersey chapter of the NAACP, and the National Newspaper Publishers Association, a trade association of more than 200 African American–owned community newspapers in the United States.

University officials said Wooten was well-known among faculty, students and staff, engaging everyone in conversation as she checked meal cards at the entrance of Butler College dining hall. Two of her grandsons also work on campus: Caasi Love, assistant director of finance and planning for Princeton’s School of Engineering and Applied Science, and Isaac Love III, a custodian in Princeton University Building Services. They are among Wooten’s 16 grandchildren and 31 great-grandchildren.

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Laura Wooten takes a stroll on the Princeton campus in 2018 with two of her grandsons who work at the University: Isaac Love III (l), a custodian in Building Services, and Caasi Love (r), assistant director of finance and planning in the School of Engineering and Applied Science. Photo by Mark Czajkowski courtesy of Princeton University’s Office of Communications.

While Wooten was beloved by the campus community, school officials said the honorific naming is intended to recognize her service to the nation and contributions to the democratic process rather than her service as a Princeton employee. “She never served as an elected official, worked in government, or even graduated from college, but she helped to safeguard one of the fundamental pillars of democracy: the right to vote,” Lew-Williams wrote on behalf of the committee.

“Laura Wooten was a Black woman who was educated in Princeton’s segregated public schools and worked at Princeton’s segregated hospital, but she never lost faith in the democratic system,” Lew-Williams wrote. “She believed that everyone’s vote mattered and made it her personal duty to ensure citizens’ voting rights at the polls. Her dedication to service in honor of the democratic process – without compensation or recognition – aligns with core university values.”

The Princeton University Board of Trustees referred Marx Hall to the committee. In October of 2019, university officials announced plans to name the building for Louis Marx of the class of 1953. The building was dedicated in 1993, but the donor’s circumstances changed, making him unable to fulfill his fundraising pledge.

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Marx Hall will be renamed Laura Wooten Hall, effective July 1. Photo by Mark Czajkowski courtesy of Princeton University’s Office of Communications.
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Plein Air Painting at Morven Museum & Garden ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news – Planet Princeton

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Inspired by the popular 19th century French tradition of painting in the open air (“en plein air”), this new class will feature the spring splendor of Morven’s beautiful gardens.  Participants will discover the quality of natural light (and how it changes during the session), explore how color can define forms, learn how to represent natural colors, and experiment with brush strokes and creating textures.  Instruction is geared toward beginning/intermediate skill levels but all levels welcome.

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Portion of Route 571 in West Windsor closed ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news % – Planet Princeton

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Princeton-Hightstown Road (Route 571) is closed between Lanwin and Southfield due to a large brush fire, police said. Fire rescue personnel are on the scene. Avoid the area and seek an alternate route.

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Princeton University Art Museum Outdoor Walking Tour ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news – Planet Princeton

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Join Princeton University Art Museum student tour guides for an outdoor walking tour of sculpture in the residential college neighborhood. Discover a variety of artworks by modern and contemporary sculptors, from Sol LeWitt to Maya Lin. Learn about materials and techniques and explore elements of design and balance. All tours are held outdoors, rain or shine, and are stair-free. April 2 and 3 at 2 p.m. at Ai Weiwei’s Circle of Animal/Zodiac Heads near the Dinky Bar and Kitchen.

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Kite Day ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news – Planet Princeton

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Kite Day is a perfect time to explore the farm during our spring festival – Saturday, April 30 & Sunday, May 1 – 10:00 am – 5:00 pm. Spring on the farm is one of the most beautiful and exciting seasons.  All is ready for the bountiful growing season.  Bring your own kite or choose a ready-made kite from the wide selection in the store.  Or better yet, make a “guaranteed to fly” kite.  Whichever you choose, test fly your kite in our wide-open 10-acre pasture with all the farm animals looking on.

The farm will ring with country music and entertainment all weekend.  The sheep will be shorn on Sunday and the children can take home a piece of real fleece.   On Saturday Princeton Morris Dancers will perform traditional May Day dances. Enjoy live music all weekend. On Saturday the tunes of Tookany Creek and on Sunday, listen to Chickens N Such. 

Take a pony ride. Join in the fun of old-fashioned games and children’s activities in the barnyard such as Hopscotch, hula hoop the horse – have a great time playing on the farm. Our special children play houses will be open, Junior Mechanic Shop and Little Tots Farm Store.  Don’t miss having have a hop in the Hippity Hop Corral or taking a duck for Duckie Race. 

For all those hungry kite fliers, we’ll have lots of good country food.  The whole family will enjoy Terhune Orchards’ famous apples, cider, donuts, pies, country chili, hot dogs, our own fresh and grilled asparagus, salads, soup and all kinds of cookies and goodies. 

Adults can enjoy a visit to our Wine Orchard where Terhune’s own 18 varieties of wine are available for tasting under the 100 year old apple trees.  Tasting flights, wine by the glass and wine slushie will be available to toast Spring.

There is nothing like spring on the farm. Join us this spring weekend to enjoy our freshly planted fields, fruit trees and flowers blooming, the fresh air and beauty of all the season has to offer outdoors.

Admission $12 Online/$16 At Gate (age 3 and up). Winery & Farm Store: for weekend entry, admission tickets must be purchased.  

Purchase online https://terhuneorchards.ticketspice.com/kite-day-2022

Call 609-924-2310 or visit  www.terhuneorchards.com/kite-day for more information.

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Princeton Council considering ban on plastic dog waste pick-up bags ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news % – Planet Princeton

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Plastic bags of dog poop left on a sidewalk. Photo: Brian Yurasits via Unsplash

by Renard V. Fuchs

According to a press advisory issued on Thursday evening, the Princeton Council will hold a mid-April work session to consider a ban on the use of plastic dog waste pick-up bags and a program that would allow DNA testing of abandoned dog waste for enforcement purposes.

For the DNA program, dog owners would have to submit dog saliva samples when they renew their dog licenses. The ban on plastic waste bags is described as a “sustainability measure to complement the upcoming ban on single-use carryout plastic bags,” according to the press release. The DNA measure is billed as a measure to deter dog poop scofflaws. Both initiatives were recommended to the council by Sustainable Princeton, a non-governmental advocacy group, and are supported by the Princeton Health Commission (PHC), the Princeton Environmental Commission (PEC), and the Animal Control Advisory Commission.

Council Member Mia Sacks is listed as council liaison to Sustainable Princeton. Sacks explained by phone that the proposed plastic waste ban is a “logical follow-up to the ban on single-use plastic bags.” As soon as single-use plastic is not available, she said, “people will be picking up dog waste with Town Topics and New York Times bags as well as with cheaper pick-up bags and all these will all go into the massive stream of plastic pollution we are trying to cut back on with the single-use ban.” Sacks said that under the plan, dog owners would receive light-weight high-tech poop scoopers when they register their dogs but at a discount. Sustainable Princeton has offered the town a challenge grant using state money matched by a private donor that will subsidize the cost. Sacks said she did not know who the donor was. Asked where dog owners would put the waste if receptacles are not nearby, Sacks said she is working on that detail and has been in conversation with a group called AAPAWS (Association of Pet Animal Waste Specialists) for guidance.

Eve Niedergang, council liaison to the Princeton Environmental Commission, said she supports the measures because “the proliferation of plastic, whether or not it contains groceries or dog waste threatens our quality of life and our environment.” She views the plastic waste bag ban as a “net positive” for the town and the environment. The “dog waste scoops can be used over and over again,” she said, and “the company we are consulting with assures us that dog owners will enjoy them.” Asked where dog owners would deposit the waste if they were not near a trash receptacle, Niedergang said she assumed that question was being handled by Princeton Sewer Committee.

The town website does not list the membership of the Princeton Sewer Committee.

Letitia Fraga, Council President and liaison to the Princeton Board of Health (BOH) said “uncollected dog waste is a problem that has grown in Princeton over the pandemic” and “threatens pubic health.” “Pet waste contains bacteria and parasites and should not be left on the ground.” Fraga, a dog owner, said she loves dogs, but “too many people don’t pick up after their dogs if no one is looking.” She said responsible dog owners should welcome a DNA program which “has been tried in Italy and works well there.” “When law-abiding owners see abandoned dog waste they can collect a sample, turn it in, and if the dog’s DNA is in our database the owner will be notified and warned that there will be a fine if it happens again.” Fraga said she assumed the Public Works Department would work out the details of where owners would deposit waste from the new poop scoops.

Council Member Michelle Lambros, responding to a text, said: “I did not know about this until a few minutes ago. I do not know the private donor who is helping fund the challenge grant. I do believe that all of Princeton, including our merchants, will be pleased that the town is taking a leadership role in strategies to keep our sidewalks and parks free of pet waste.”

Leighton Newlin, who joined council this year, said “I am deferring to my new colleagues on this. I still have a lot to learn about our priorities.”

Council Member David Cohen said he was “out of the loop on dog poop and poop scoops” and intended to stay there as long possible. Reached at PFARS, Mayor Freda stressed that Princeton operates under a Borough form of government and that Council members were spearheading the proposals. He said he was looking forward to hearing more at the work session and promised to make sure that the town website is updated to list the members of the Princeton Sewer Committee.

This is the annual April Fool’s spoof article, submitted by a reader. The spoof April Fool’s day story is back by popular demand after a two-year break due to the pandemic. Apologies to those readers who don’t find the posting of such articles funny or appropriate.

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Pennington Day 2022 ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news – Planet Princeton

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This lively street fair featuring local businesses, artisans, activities, music, food and non-profits, has become one of the most anticipated events in Pennington Borough and Hopewell Valley.

We are still accepting vendor registrations!

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Princeton Symphony Orchestra: Brahms & Scriabin ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news – Planet Princeton

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Saturday, March 26 at 8pm and Sunday, March 27 at 4:00pm – Rising pianist Mackenzie Melemed makes his Princeton Symphony Orchestra (PSO) debut performing Alexander Scriabin’s Piano Concerto. The program is balanced by Johannes Brahms’ pastoral Symphony No. 2. Rossen Milanov conducts. Richardson Auditorium, Alexander Hall, Princeton University Campus, Princeton, NJ. Tickets: start at $20 (children 5-17 who are accompanied by an adult receive a 50% discount); Accommodations or services can be arranged with two weeks’ notice, contact Kitanya at kkhateri@princetonsymphony.org; For tickets: princetonsymphony.org or 609-497-0020.

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Gallery 14 Presents ‘An Environmental Experience’ ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news – Planet Princeton

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Two Gallery 14 artists share their ways of experiencing the world around them. in “The Warp of Time” Philip “Dutch” Bagley explores his view of a world always in motion. John Stritzinger takes a closer look at the world he enjoys exploring in “Tree Talk.” This shared exhibit will be at Gallery 14 Fine Art Photography Gallery in Hopewell, NJ starting April 2 to May 1. Note: Gallery 14 is closed on April 16 and 17, 2022.

Dutch see his Universe as being made up of moving parts that always are interacting with each other, colliding, overlapping, moving in parallel, encompassing everything on the planet. For him “Motion is Life!” He wonders if “the camera can really freeze that moment of time?” In his work, he finds inspiration in many forms of architecture, constructions and living organisms focusing on the structure of those lines, shapes, and angles and how they communicate and interact with each other. As he works, he wonders “what if…or how would they move, if they were set free.” Objects are shot from multiple angles and positions, with each shot leading him to the next image. He becomes one with his camera, “creating a new life for images that can stand on their own.” His images are real, they are abstracts and they come from within. See his wonderful images on his website: www.johnstritzingerphotos.com/

John Stritzinger takes a more meditative or transcendental approach to his images in “Tree Talk.”  He has become smitten by trees, and their conversations with each other. As he wanders through the trees, he not only sees the shapes and textures, but he takes a moment, perhaps closing his eyes in a bit of meditation, to hear the sounds they make as the wind rushes through, or the branches touch in a special symphony. Then choosing to engage with the trees in visual stories of his conversations with the trees. Images that go beyond just taking a picture, rather capturing the natural dance and shapes of the moment.

John is a mostly self-taught photographer living in Elkins Park, PA and is an active participant in the area’s photography community.  His work has won awards while being shown in more than 60 group shows and being published in books and magazines.

“Dutch” also lives in Elkins Park, PA and has been actively involved in photography for years and works with many organizations around the area, including the Princeton Photography Club and Phillips Mill Photo Exhibition. Enjoy his images at: www.photographsbydutch.net

Gallery 14 is located at 14 Mercer Street in Hopewell, NJ and is open from 12 to 5 pm on Saturday and Sunday. The exhibit can also be viewed at the gallery by making an appointment at galleryfourteen@yahoo.com. Visit their website at www.gallery14.org  to learn more about the Gallery and its members.

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Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day at Terhune Orchards ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news – Planet Princeton

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weekend music series

Toast the St. Patrick’s Day at Terhune with Irish tunes of Bill O’Neal and Andy Knootz. They will be sure to get your toes tapping .

Gather with friends and family to sláinte – cheers!  With 16 varieties of wine made with Terhune’s own grapes as well as three wines from our apple cider, tasting flights are a great way to sample the wide offerings. All ages can have fun with s’mores and hot cocoa kits. Light fare of cheese plates and chips & salsa baskets. Perfect to enjoy with a glass of wine! Seasonal hot mulled wine is a seasonal favorite.

Our fire pits will be going and plenty of seating is available around fires. Limited indoor seating. We encourage dressing warmly for our outdoor seating.

Come and enjoy fresh air on the farm. Stop in the farm store for fresh produce, baked goods and local gourmet items. Live music is 1pm-4pm. Winery open 12-5pm