All posts by bfiggefox

New Hospital’s Top Ten

So — go! It’s your only chance to view the new operating rooms while you are standing vertical. Yes, there will be a mob at this Saturday’s open house for the new University Medical Center of Princeton. Yes, you will have to park on College Road and take a shuttle. From what I saw on a private tour for the Princeton chamber board a couple of weeks ago, it will be worth the effort.

The open house is Saturday, May 12, noon to 6. The hospital is just off Plainsboro Road on Route 1 North. Park at 600 College Road — east of Route 1 — and take the shuttle bus. Those who preregister (www.princetonhcs.org/openhouse) have a chance to win a flat screen TV.

I’m curious to know what you think of the grand, imposing entrance atrium (artist’s rendering shown). With ceilings several stories high, it’s on the scale of Philadelphia’s Penn Station. The entrance was empty when I visited, and maybe it will seem more welcoming with lots of people inside. In any case, the traffic planning works. Opposite the window wall is a line-up of portals — an entrance for cancer, an entrance for cardio vascular, an entrance to have tests done, etc. Once you find your portal, you don’t have to run around the hospital; everything you need is right there.

Another good feature: The research-based patient rooms, as at left. You’ll be hearing a lot about them, how they did mockups and studies and tweaks to make them more comfy, more healthy, and more efficient. For instance, virtually all the rooms are single and all are “same handed,” i.e. the plumbing fixtures don’t “back up” to each other. Such exactly alike rooms are supposed to promote accuracy. One wonders what it added to the cost.

So — here is my list of the Top Ten Things that the New Hospital Has Fixed

10. Restrooms in the Emergency Room. They’ve fixed a lot of things in ER, including replacing those flimsy curtains with floor to ceiling walls for privacy. Most important: the rest room inside the ER, versus me holding my gown closed as I snuck into the hallway hoping not to be seen. Better yet, the rooms for we old people (geriatric) have a toilet in each room.

9. Accurately targeted lights in the delivery rooms. The lights reflect against mirrors that the docs can adjust to shine a spotlight on just the right spot. It’ll be great for the videos – or for that difficult delivery.

8. Closets that open to the hall. No longer will laundry carts clog the hallway because sheets, towels etc. can be loaded into patient rooms at night. Staff can access these items from inside the patient room. Medications can be pre-loaded in a locked box. (You can see them in the patient room picture, just beyond the luxurious-looking elevated sink bowl.

7. Reading lights. When you are a family member attending a patient, you want to be able to read, but you don’t want the bright lights on. Now the family chair (there is also a pull-out sofa for overnights) has a reading light. These lights were so popular during the testing phase that the patients asked for them – and got them – as well.


6. A significantly beautiful chapel accessible to both visitors and staff. Before the chapel on the second floor was used mostly by staff. This one – donated by Blackrock’s Bob Doll and designed by Bob Hillier’s staff – evokes all religions but specifies none.

5. Designs to prevent blah fatigue. Each room has a large glass “picture” with some kind of abstract design. Easy to clean, easy to appreciate. The radiation machine has a lighted ceiling showing a design of cherry trees against the sky.

4. Uber efficient and clean operating rooms. The surgeon can take a biopsy and send it by pneumatic tube to the lab, then the pathologist can show the results to the surgeon on the big TV screen in case anything else needs to be done. Plus it’s super clean – air filtered twice and all but two items are off the floor or on wheels for easy cleaning.

3. Elevators only for visitors. No longer will you share an elevator with a gurney or a meal cart.

2. Ease of check in. No longer will you have to check in twice or three times and wait to be escorted to the next station. Enter the new building and you will see a giant curve with arcade entrances. Be greeted and get checked in at any one of the specialties – neuro, cancer, cardio, testing or whatever – and you will be taken care of right in that area.

1. Natural light everywhere. All the patient rooms have it. And when you are on a gurney, you aren’t looking up at fluorescent lights in the ceiling. Hallway lighting is vertical, as at left, emanating from slabs outside the patient rooms, so you can be comfortable when you are horizontal.

Don’t wait to check out the new hospital until the next emergency. See it standing up.

Taylor Tonight

Paul Taylor, one of my all-time favorite choreographers, brings his company to McCarter tonight. As Valerie Sudol writes, “He is entirely capable of building a whole new universe from steps and gestures, each wrested from his fertile imagination.”

As I write this, a former Princeton Ballet School student, Sean Mahoney, is giving a master class at the PBS studios. Tonight he will perform in the Taylor classic, Mercuric Tidings. Also on the program are two new works, The Uncommitted (music by Arvo Part), and Gossamer Gallants (music by Smetana). A few tickets remain


Tango dancing infuses the Mercer Dance Ensemble with some Argentine flavor in its concerts set for Saturday, May 12 at 8 p.m. and Sunday, May 13, at 2 p.m. 

Trinette Singleton, the acclaimed Joffrey dancer, comes to the PBS studio at Princeton Shopping Center for the On Pointe series on Friday, May 11, at 5:15 p.m. She will discuss “Confetti” Gerard Arpino’s work, to be performed in New Brunswick on May 19 and 20. 

Also on that program, entitled ‘Celebration,” are excerpts from Douglas Martin’s Romeo and Juliet, Patrick Corbin’s Follia, and Mary Barton’s Straight Up with a Twist. Some tickets will be available at the door. 


PBS hosts an in-house studio concert on Saturday, June 2. According to Mary Pat Robertson, it will feature work by Princeton Ballet School/American Repertory Ballet faculty, dancers and staff, including work by Susan Tenney, Alexis Branagan, David Sadowsky, Janell Byrne and others.

Of course there is always New York, but after this, it’s a local dance diet until the Lustig Dance Theatre performs on June 9 as part of the Princeton Festival.

If you took my tip and saw Mark Morris add dancers to the countertenor concert at Richardson, I’ll bet you were glad you went. So don’t miss tonight! 








Button-ing a Portrait

I’ve already encouraged everyone to attend the New Jersey State Button Show in Titusville on Saturday, and a new button project has come to light. Helene Plank has fashioned a self portrait of herself with buttons and beads, all of which were hand-sewed to the stretched artist canvass, all with donated items. No new buttons or beads!

The piece won the top awards at Lawrence Library’s annual “Trashed Art 2012” show, which required artwork be made of at least of 75% recycled items. It is still on view, through June 2, at the library, but now it is part of the Lawrence Arts Council show. The library is located on Darrah Lane, off Route 1 (2751 Route 1, Lawrence 08648.)


Perhaps I’ll see you on Saturday in Titusville?  

Behind Every Successful Woman

Virtually every successful woman is, at some point in her life, going to be a caregiver. The eighth annual women’s caregiver retreat is Thursday, May 17 by the Family Support Center of New Jersey. To quote from the promotional material:

“Caring for the Caregiver: Put Your Oxygen Mask on First” Join us for a day of outstanding presentations, exhibits, health screenings, renewal services and much more. Seating is LIMITED. Please note a $20.00 non refundable fee for attendees is required at time of registration Click here to register today!

Bart Jackson (Bart’s Books) has released his latest business book, this one for the business woman: Behind Every Successful Woman is Herself. From the promotional material: 



From the dawn of civilization women have played a vital, necessary, and immensely powerful force in the realm of business.  Today, however, many business women, despite their increasing numbers and importance, envision themselves as newcomers into this world so long claimed as a a bastion of that strange other gender.  

This book provides businesswomen with a guide for finding success and satisfaction.  It shares the strategies proven effective by so many business leaders.  Some of the tactics are based on uniquely feminine advantages, others discuss overall techniques benefitting any owner…..


Looking ahead, the Princeton Chamber’s Women in Business group hosts branding expert Judy Lindenberger on Tuesday, May 22, at 5 p.m. at Springdale Golf Club.  From the promotional material: 

Do you know the importance of branding yourself, and getting your name out there everywhere you can? Judy Lindenberger will share the secrets to branding yourself, both the tried and true way as well as through the latest social media. The topic: “The Brand Called YOU.”

Buttons and Brews on the Delaware

Buttons of all kinds attract me — new or old, fancy or plain. Each one has a story. For instance — slogans like Can’t Bust ’em, Bread Winner, and I Crow over all — do they sound like posters or flags? 


They adorn work clothes buttons, says Brad Upp, a button collector who speaks at the New Jersey State Button Society spring show on Saturday, May 12, at 1:30 p.m. The show goes from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Union Fire Company fire hall, 1396 River Road (Route 29) in Titusville. Door fee is $2, and coffee and lunch items will be available. 


Buttons are not the only activity on the Delaware River that day. On the Pennsylvania side of the Delaware is the second annual brewfest staged by the Friends of Washington Crossing Park, to be held rain or shine with live bands and food. Location: behind the Thompson Neely House. No one under 21 will be admitted. 


Button expert Upp says that the two-piece metal buttons (such as the one above) were made for men’s work clothes during the early part of the 20th Century. Makers displayed pride in their product with their slogans, which include Iron King, Strong as a Lion, Boss Mechanic, and Can’t Ripum. 


To get an idea about what the NJSBS show involves, see Sharon Schlegel’s Times of Trenton column from last year — but ignore the photo added to the online version, it’s of the pin-on political button. The buttons in this show are sew-on clothing buttons, such as the modern Czech glass (shown at left), or the antique enamel buttton, shown at right. Both are on the sale website of Annie Frazier of South Jersey. 


Frazier and more than a dozen other dealers will have sale tables for antique and modern buttons at the show. The show is held twice a year for New Jersey and tri-state button enthusiasts who enjoy the artwork and history of buttons, including their manufacture and design.Throughout the day there will be a variety of activities, including the judging of button trays entered into competition, and a button raffle. 


The show’s traditional location is the Union Fire Company, located at the intersection of Route 29 and Park Lake Avenue in Titusville, opposite the Delaware River and D and R Canal State Park (within easy access to the canal park), a half mile north of Washington Crossing State Park in Hopewell Township, and some five miles south of Lambertville and New Hope, PA. 

Why Not “Oriental?”

Someone who attends Not in Our Town events wrote me to ask why the use of the term Oriental is considered a racial slur.
   I was reading in the Trenton Times recently that it is no longer accepted to say that someone is Oriental or call someone Oriental.  I don’t understand. If they appear to be from eastern Asia, what’s the problem?


 Who has an opinion? 


Persusing what is known as The Racial Slur Database does not help, as the term Oriental is not listed there. 
An online encyclopedia, About.com, compares the use of Oriental to the term Negro and says it is outdated. 


A listserv dealing with Asian concerns provides no conclusive evidence, other than to say that other Asians use the term for anyone who looks Chinese. Could it be that the term is too inclusive — used by whites who don’t know how to discern nationalities by their appearances? 


Yes, says May  M. Ngai, author of Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America, who suggests that it’s not a slur but it implies ‘outsider.” “It’s a Eurocentric name for us, which is why it’s wrong. You should call people by what (they) call themselves, not how they are situated in relation to yourself.”

Bottom line: don’t say “Oriental.” If you know the ethnic background (Chinese American, Korean, etc.) say that, otherwise say “Asian” or “Asian American.” People are not carpets. 
 

April 27: All Against Racism

Were you planning to observe Stand Against Racism Day, Friday, April 27? Join the Princeton Human Services Commission and the Cranbury Station Gallery at Palmer Square anytime from 8:15 to 9 a.m. (photo at left takenfrom a previous “Stand.” 

Here are other opportunities, some obvious, like the first one, some not so obvious, taken from the event files of Princetoninfo.com.



Stand Against RacismYWCA Princeton, Bramwell House Living Room, 59 Paul Robeson Place, 609-497-2100, The event that began in Mercer County in 2008 is now a national event to unite all individuals as one community, regardless of racial and ethnic background. Screening of ‘The Princeton Plan: 50 Years Later’ followed by guest speakers, Shirley Satterfield and Henry Pannell, who were part of the first class to integrate in the Princeton School system. Both second grade students in 1948, they talk about the transition from segregation to integration. For ages 10 and up. Free.,www.ywcaprinceton.org9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.


Melissa Harris-PerryPlanned Parenthood, Hyatt, Carnegie Center, West Windsor, 609-964-7955, Harris-Perry, a professor of political science at Tulane University, writes ‘Sister Citizen,’ a monthly column for ‘The Nation.’ Her new book, ‘Sister Citizen: Shame, Stereotypes, and Black Women in America,’ focuses on persistent harmful stereotypes familiar to black women. Register.,www.plannedparenthood.orgNoon. 


Girl Scouts’ 100th BirthdayWest Windsor and Plainsboro Girl Scouts, High School North, 90 Grovers Mill Road, Plainsboro, 609-371-2119, A birthday celebration with balloons, games, crafts, cupcakes, and more for girls interested in scouting. E-mail girlscoutswwp@verizon.net for information. $5., 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.

The Planned Parenthood lunch with Melissa Harris-Perry will surely have some talk about combating racism. And — the 100th birthday of the Girl Scouts of America — what better way to celebrate the fourth Girl Scout law “A Girl Scout is a friend to all and a sister to every other Girl Scout.” 

Here’s one for NEXT FRIDAY: Catherine Williams pictured at left.


(05/04/2012 – Faith), United May Friendship Day Service and LuncheonPrinceton Church Women United, 16 All Saints Road, Princeton Noon., ‘Sights and Sounds of Harmony’ theme with Catherine Williams, pastoral care assistant at Princeton United Methodist Church as the featured speaker. Buffet lunch. E-mail postberg1@aol.com for information. 


Harmony? This program “encourages us to love each other in our differences as we serve in a spirit of oneness.” 

    Raging Bull, Now Raging Capital

    Bill Martin is the wunderkind who founded Raging Bull in the late ’90s while still an undergrad at UVA. He raised over $20 million in venture capital before selling the company. His current enterprises — which include Raging Capital, Princeton Ventures, and Insider Score — are here in Princeton on Witherspoon Street. 

    Martin will speak at the Princeton Regional Chamber on Thursday, May 3, 11:30 to 1:30 p.m.at the Princeton Marriott at Forrestal. His topic: Investing Like an Entrepreneur: Startups, investing, and the economy through the eyes of an entrepreneur.  



    Dance: Hot Tickets in April – May

    Tonight (Tuesday, April 24) is the last session of the Bill T. Jones lectures (Toni Morrison series). Here’s an account of the second lecture/performance and soon they will be available on line Also tonight at McCarter you are out of luck if you wanted to see members of the NYCB, unless you can get standing room.

    Hot tickets: Mark Morris has an unusual and tempting concert on Thursday, May 3, at Richardson. It should sell out. So should Paul Taylor on Tuesday, May 8, at McCarter. On that day, May 8, American Repertory Ballet alum (now Taylor dancer) Sean Mahoney will teach an open-to-the-public-to-watch master class from noon to 1:30 at the Princeton Ballet School studio.

    Once again, I will be out of town for the always interesting “choreographers over 40” concert. otherwise known as “I’ll Have What She’s Having,” (left, pictured, Linda Mannheim).. I am willing to look at — but am not guaranteeing to post — guest reviews.

    The press release for it:  The “I’ll Have What She’s Having…Dance Project” scheduled for May 4, 5, and 6 will feature new, innovative and risk taking works of dance. The representation of dance portrayed is on the cutting edge of modern dance in New Jersey, bringing forth a new perspective of dance and uniquely using the human body to finding metaphor, meaning and content through the art of dance. The performances will be held at the YWCA Princeton, 59 Paul Robeson Place. Tickets are $15 for seniors/students and $20 general admission and will be available at the door.


    Coming up on the professional dance calendar – American Repertory Ballet in New Brunswick on May 19 and 20. (Photo left, credit George Jones) From the company: American Repertory Ballet’s 2011-2012 Season will close the curtain on a fantastic 2011-2012 season with Celebration! – a performance of repertory favorites at the Victoria J. Mastrobuono Theatre at the Mason Gross School of the Arts, New Brunswick, NJ. Performances will be on Saturday, May 19 at 8:00PM and Sunday, May 20 at 2:00PM. Following the Sunday matinée, audience members may stay in the theater to attend “Post-Performance Insights: Romeo and Juliet”.  At this ARB Access and Enrichment program, Douglas Martin and guest lecturer Jo Carney, Professor of English at The College of New Jersey, will speak about Shakespeare’s play alongside Douglas Martin’s new ballet.


    In addition, student performances abound. DanceVisions’s Secret Garden is Friday and Saturday, April 27 and 28 and Princeton Ballet School’s Don Quixote is Sunday, May 5. 


    If you know of additional performances — or want to comment on these — please put those comments in the comments section — or, if you are ‘Net challenged, email them to me. 



    Stand Against Racism: Friday, April 27, 2012

    To participate in Stand Against Racism Day: Gather at Palmer Square on Friday, April 27, from 8:15 to 8:45 a.m. After the demonstration participants are encouraged to the Princeton YWCA for a showing of an important film, “The Princeton Plan: 50 Years Later” featuring guest speakers Shirley Satterfield and Henry Pannell.

    This Palmer Square “Stand” is sponsored by the Princeton Human Services Commission and Cranbury Station Galleries. The YWCA Princeton hosts the film screening and discussion from 9 to 10 a.m. at Bramwell House, 59 Paul Robeson Place, Princeton. Light refreshments will be served.

    Not in Our Town, to which many Princeton-based faith congregations belong, supports Stand Against Racism Day, which began right here in Princeton. Last year Not in Our Town encouraged merchants to post signs in the windows to support this movement, and many are still on display. This year Not in Our Town encourages viewing of significant films.

    For more information on Not in Our Town in Princeton see the annual report and its mission statement: “NOT IN OUR TOWN is an interracial, interfaith social action group in Princeton committed to speak truth about ‘everyday racism’ and other forms of prejudice and discrimination. We seek reconciliation, mutual respect and open and honest truth telling among our diverse communities. We support and promote social justice, economic justice and educational equity for all. Our hope is that Princeton will become a town in which the ideals of friendship, community and pride in diversity will prevail.”