December 11, 2024

YOUNG GUN: Princeton University men’s hockey player Miles Gunty skates into the crease in recent action. Last Friday, freshman forward Gunty contributed two assists as Princeton defeated Union 2-1. Gunty, who picked up another assist in a 6-2 win over RPI a day later, was later named the ECAC Hockey Rookie of the Week. Princeton, now 5-4-1 overall and 3-4-1 ECACH, is next in action when it plays at Army West Point on December 28. (Photo provided courtesy of Princeton Athletics)

By Bill Alden

Miles Gunty sensed a different vibe around the Princeton University men’s hockey team last week in the wake of its two-game sweep of No. 12 Ohio State.

“It was huge, this week at practice you could feel the energy every day,” said Gunty. “We are starting to believe a little bit more and last weekend was huge for that. Hopefully we are going to keep it rolling through the rest of the season.” more

WORKING OVERTIME: Princeton University women’s hockey player Sarah Paul controls the puck in a game last winter. On Saturday, junior forward Paul scored both goals for Princeton as it edged Quinnipiac 2-1 in overtime. The Tigers, who improved to 9-5 overall and 4-5 ECAC Hockey with the win, were slated to host LIU on December 10 before going on an exam/holiday break. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski)

By Bill Alden

With the Princeton University women’s hockey team trailing Quinnipiac 1-0 in the third period last Saturday at Hobey Baker Rink, Sarah Paul took matters into her hands.

Junior forward Paul tallied a power play goal with 13:33 left in the third period to knot the game at 1-1 and force overtime. Then at the 2:06 mark of the extra session, Paul slotted a feed from Jane Kuehl into the back of the net to give the Tigers a 2-1 win as they posted their fourth straight win and improved to 9-5 overall and 4-5 ECAC Hockey. more

SERVING UP A WINNER: Princeton High girls’ volleyball player Naomi Lygas blasts a serve in action this fall. Junior outside hitter Lygas starred as PHS went 28-1 and won its second straight New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA) Group 3 state title. Lygas tallied a team-high 318 kills, breaking the program record for career kills in the process. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski)

By Bill Alden

Naomi Lygas realized that the Princeton High girls’ volleyball team wasn’t going to sneak up on anyone this fall after rolling to the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA) Group 3 state title in 2023.

“Last year we were the underdogs, we were coming up putting Princeton on the map and this year we had a lot of pressure coming into it so that was a big thing,” said PHS junior outside hitter Lygas. “We were trying to prove ourselves. People have asked us if it is an option not to repeat and we said not really because of how hard we work.”

It didn’t take long for the Tigers to prove that they were going to be dominant once again as they brought a 19-1 record into the Burlington County Scholastic League (BCSL) tournament. PHS ended up rolling to its third BCSL title, defeating Princeton Day School 2-0 (25-6, 25-10) in the final.

In a win over fellow powerhouse Williamstown in mid-October, Lygas moved her career kills total to 736, breaking the previous program record of 724 set by Gillian Hauschild ’20. more

FREE AND CLEAR: Princeton High boys’ swimmer David Brophy competes in a freestyle race last winter. Senior star and Colgate University-bound Brophy has helped PHS get off to a 2-0 start this season. In upcoming action, the Tigers have meets at Hightstown on December 13 and at Robbinsville on December 16. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski)

By Bill Alden

In its first three seasons with the Princeton High boys’ swim team, the squad’s Class of 2025 has helped the program produce a dominant run.

The Tigers have gone 40-3 in dual meets over that span, winning three county titles, making one New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA) Group B state final and two North 2 Group B sectional finals. more

IN THE FAST LANE: Princeton High girls’ swimmer Sabine Ristad displays her freestyle form in a race last season. Senior Ristad will be playing a key role for PHS this winter as she looks to produce another stellar campaign. The Tigers, who have a new head coach in Patrick Remboski, started the season by defeating Lawrence High 94-61 last Thursday. PHS, which improved to 2-0 with a 93-64 win over Steinert last Monday, has meets at Hightstown on December 13 and at Robbinsville on December 16. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski)

By Bill Alden

Although Patrick Remboski has taken the helm of the Princeton High girls’ swim team, it should be business as usual for the squad.

Having served as an assistant coach for the PHS boys’ and girls’ programs for the last six seasons under head coach Carly Fackler, who is now just coaching the boys, Remboski has enjoyed a smooth transition in leading the squad. more

By Bill Alden

Having said goodbye to a stellar group of 10 seniors from last year’s squad, the Princeton Day School girls’ hockey team will be featuring new faces in new places on the ice this winter.

“There is a lot of opportunity available, we are just trying to feel it out,” said PDS head coach Jamie Davis, who guided PDS to a 12-6 record and a spot in the semifinal round of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA) state tournament last winter. “It is going to take a little bit of learning for everyone because we have some players who aren’t used to the ice time and have the opportunity to step up. We also have our players who have been contributors for us.”

With two of the Panthers’ top returning forwards, senior Eibhleann Knox (9 goals and 12 assists in 2023-24) and junior Brynn Dandy (4 goals, 5 assists), currently sidelined by injury, others will have opportunity to step up. more

A-GAME: Hun School boys’ basketball player AJ Mickens dribbles past a foe in a game last winter. Last Thursday, senior guard Mickens scored 23 points but it wasn’t enough as Hun lost 70-61 to the Haverford School (Pa.). Hun, which fell 86-83 to Northfield Mount Herman (Mass.) last Sunday to move to 3-2, plays at the George School (Pa.) on December 11 and then competes in the 2024 Scholar Roundball Classic at the College of Holy Cross from December 14-15. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski)

By Bill Alden

AJ Mickens went scoreless for the Hun School boys’ basketball team in the first half as it hosted Haverford School (Pa.) last Thursday evening.

With Hun down 35-22 at halftime, senior guard Mickens acknowledged that it was a tough 18 minutes for the Raiders collectively. more

DRIVE TIME: Hun School girls’ basketball player Gabby D’Agostino heads to the hoop in a game last winter. Last Wednesday, junior guard D’Agostino tallied 12 points to help Hun defeat the Academy of New Church (Pa.) 67-31. The Raiders, who defeated the Mercersburg Academy (Pa.) 75-58 last Sunday in the Hill School (Pa.) Girls’ Basketball Tournament to improve to 7-1, play at the Perkiomen School (Pa.) on December 11 before competing in the She Got Game Classic at The St. James in Springfield, Va., from December 13-15 and then hosting Tower Hill (Del.) on December 17. (Photo by Frank Wojciechowski)

By Bill Alden

Gabby D’Agostino carried the scoring load for the Hun School girls’ basketball team last winter as a sophomore.

The sharpshooting guard tallied 370 points in 15 games during her debut campaign with the program, more than the team’s next two top scorers combined. more

To the Editor:

Friends of Princeton Open Space (FOPOS) thanks members of the community who came to the Mountain Lakes House last weekend to see and celebrate our photography exhibition, which featured selected photos from our ninth annual photography contest. The contest, entitled “Perspectives on Preservation,” encouraged people to explore the Greater Mountain Lakes Recreation Area more deeply, and to linger a bit longer within its over 400 acres of preserved public open space and farmland.

The exhibition is a sampling of what photographers found on their wanderings including wildlife, a broad community of plants, diverse landscapes, and vestiges of the ways this land has seen human occupation and use. The photos are an homage to a place — accessible by close to nine miles of trails — where the community can relax and recharge in nature, and where native wildlife and plants can flourish.

We are deeply grateful to REI Princeton for their continuous support of our photo contest, to the participating photographers, and to our judges, Jody Erdman, Tasha O’Neill, and Frank Sauer. Frank’s annual co-exhibition of photos from the Billy Johnson Mountain Lakes Nature Preserve and its surroundings is always a visual delight.

Our conversations with visitors to the show made clear that the Princeton community places great value on open space, and that the youth of our community are passionate about doing what they can to mitigate the impacts of climate change by helping to maintain and restore healthy preserved lands.

Fran Mcmanus
Jess Atkins
FOPOS Trustees

Jackie Halaw
FOPOS Program Coordinator
Mountain Avenue

To the Editor:

Every person who has an electricity bill in Princeton has an opportunity to reduce their energy bill and contribute to improving the environment.

Sustainable Princeton explains on their website how the Community Solar program works. Subscribers to the program receive a financial credit [dollars] on their PSE&G utility bill.

This works for anyone, especially if one’s home or apartment is shaded or otherwise unable to add solar energy panels. One such approved providing company offers a 31 percent discount on one’s energy bill just for enrolling.  more

To the Editor:

When asked why we love where we live, there’s been one consistent No. 1 answer: We love the Princeton Public Schools. As parents of three children in the system, we are eternally grateful for the world-class education they all receive, and as parents we continue to remain dedicated to our public school system. We love that our kids’ classrooms are filled with diverse points of view, students from all over the country and the world, and that it truly feels like a safe space of inclusion.

In order to properly welcome in additional students, as well are uphold the quality of education for our existing students, it’s imperative that we pass all three questions in the January referendum.

Mitch and Ashley Henderson
Princeton Kingston Road

The writers are parents of two Community Park students and one Princeton Middle School student.

To the Editor:
We are lucky to live in a community that values high quality public education. In the service of this value, I urge my fellow Princetonians to support the January 28, 2025 public schools referendum.

This special election presents voters with three tiered questions. Question 1 provides funding to replace the end-of-life HVAC system at Princeton High School (PHS) and to expand Community Park School. Question 2 expands our painfully crowded Princeton Middle School (PMS), and reconfigures parts of PHS to improve functionality. Question 3 will fund much-needed new classrooms and expanded common areas at Littlebrook School. Question 1 must pass in order for question 2 to pass, and both 1 and 2 must pass in order for question 3 to pass. more

To the Editor:

I wish to thank volunteers from the Princeton Police Department, who once again assisted and served meals at the Thanksgiving feast held at Harriet Bryan House on November 22. This well-loved tradition, attended by senior residents of Elm Court and Harriet Bryan House as well as staff from Princeton Community Housing (PCH) and its trustees, is made special by the participation of these essential community partners.

In addition to the delicious food catered by Parker, there were foot-tapping tunes provided by musician Carmen Marranco — and even some dancing! It was a joyous afternoon. We were reminded of how generous our community partners are, and why our gratitude for their service lasts all year long.

Margaret Griffin
Board of Trustees
Princeton Community Housing
Patton Avenue

Aaron Sam Blanchard
August 15, 1968 – December 2, 2024

Aaron Sam Blanchard, known to all as Sam, died peacefully on December 2 at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital, surrounded by his wife and daughters after complications from heart surgery. He was 56.

With loved ones spread across the country, Sam left a wide void in the lives of those he touched, from the young and old fencers he coached in Princeton and Lambertville, to countless friends in the fencing and comics communities.

Sam’s life, full of adventures, began in Oregon and took him to New Jersey.

Born in Salem, Oregon, he grew up in Independence, Oregon, enjoying a near-mythical Gen X childhood filled with freedom. He spent his days bicycling, racing in soapbox derbies, reading comics, and honing his artistic talents, which he inherited from his parents.

Sam first encountered fencing in 1987 while studying at the University of Oregon. Years later, as a young single father to his son, he earned a degree in mechanical engineering from the Oregon Institute of Technology.

After moving to Portland, Sam began fencing competitively at the Studio of American Fencing in 1995. He met his wife, Cate, a New Jersey native, in 1997, and they relocated with his son to the Garden State in 1998. On September 15, 2000, the family moved to Princeton, but three days later, Sam was diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma. He successfully overcame cancer through nine months of grueling treatment while continuing to commute to New York City daily.

Sam began fencing at the Princeton YMCA in 2004 under the guidance of coach and friend Charles Hurley. In 2012, he became the coach of the Princeton High School fencing team, a role he cherished. Coaching his daughter Ursula during her high school fencing career brought him special joy.

In 2018, Sam joined the Bucks County Academy of Fencing in Lambertville, New Jersey, as a coach after years of being a member. He also founded the Princeton Interscholastic Fencing Club that year to further share his love for the sport.

After leaving the corporate world in December 2019, Sam achieved his dream of coaching fencing full-time. When the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted his plans, he devoted himself to his other passion—art. Working under the pen name “Shlepzig,” inspired by a character in Gravity’s Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon, Sam gained recognition as an indie comics artist. After the world reopened, he became a regular at comic conventions and amassed fans worldwide.

Sam had many plans for the future, including creating more comics, teaching fencing classes and after-school fencing clubs, and embracing the adventures of grandparenthood.

Sam was preceded in death by his father, Melvin Blanchard, in May 2021, and his son, Bjorn Blanchard, in July 2024.

He is survived by his wife of 26 years, Cate; three daughters, Phoebe Blanchard, Ursula Blanchard (Riley) of Burnaby, British Columbia, and Jessica LeDuc (Michael) of Portland, Oregon; his mother, Merry Ann Blanchard of Lincoln City, Oregon; his sister, Andrea Whitaker (Ben) of Sherwood, Oregon; and two grandsons, Nikolai and Hawthorne of Portland, Oregon. He is also survived by several nieces, nephews, friends, students, former fencing students, and fans of his artwork.

A celebration of Sam’s life will be held in January at the Bucks County Academy of Fencing. The family asks that donations be made in his memory to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (givenow.lls.org) or the United States Fencing Foundation (usafencing.org/donate-foundation).

———

Eileen Gwynneth (Gwen) Southgate

Eileen Gwynneth (Gwen) Southgate passed away peacefully in her home on November 26, 2024, at the age of 95. Gwen lived in Amherst for the past six years, and previously in the Princeton, NJ, area for more than 50 years.

Gwen was born in London, England, in 1929. She earned a B.Sc. in Physics from University of London and an M.Ed. from Rutgers University. From 1950 to 1955, Gwen worked at Mullard Research Laboratories in the UK, where she met her husband, David. They were married in 1952.

Gwen came to the U.S. with her family in 1959 and lived in the Chicago area for seven years before settling in Princeton, NJ, in 1966. She taught science at Highland Park High School for over 20 years, until her retirement in 1992.

After retirement, Gwen spent many summers at the family cottage in Maine, enjoying reading, sailing, hiking, and local summer arts. She loved the use of words, and spent time playing Scrabble, creating cryptic crossword puzzles, and writing her memoir, Coin Street Chronicles. She also enjoyed gardening at their home in New Jersey and the wildflowers of Maine.

Gwen was active in many local and national organizations in the Princeton area. She was a founding member of the Princeton Evergreen Forum, a lifelong learning community; an active member of the League of Women Voters; and served on the board for the conservation organization Friends of Princeton Open Space. Gwen also recorded science textbooks for the national Recordings for the Blind, in honor of her mother who lost her vision with age.

Gwen was born into life with little means, other than her mother’s warm heart and a will to learn and succeed in life with educated discipline. As a child she survived the WWII London bombings and was evacuated to safe harbors with families away from the city of London air raids. She was reunited safely with her family after the war.

Gwen Southgate is predeceased by her husband of 66 years, David, and her brother Derek. She leaves behind her sister, Maureen, as well as her four children Diana, her husband Govind, Tim, his wife Deb, Jennie, her husband James, and Jill. She also leaves behind her 10 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.

In lieu of flowers, and in keeping with Gwen and David’s lifelong interests and concerns, the family suggests a donation to the Union of Concerned Scientists.

———

Robert Vichnevetsky

Robert Vichnevetsky, of Princeton, NJ, passed away on December 6, 2024 at Merwick Care Center in Plainsboro Township at the age of 94.

Robert was born in Brussels, Belgium. His education included Brussels Free University with a Master in Mechanical-Electrical Engineering and a Doctorate in Mathematics. He served in the 1950s for two years in the Belgian Air Force, at the time part of NATO. His early career was a member, later director of EAI’s European Computing and Research Center, newly established in Brussels to bring in new technologies to post-war recovering Europe, participating among others in the development of Europe’s nuclear electric power program. He moved in 1964, with his family, to the U.S. to join EAI’s Princeton Computing and Research Center, collaborating among others with the Apollo Space Program, and became an Associate Fellow of AIAA, the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. He joined Rutgers University in 1971, from which he retired in 2003 as Distinguished Professor of Computer Science and of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering — also retiring from Princeton University, where he had been a Visiting Research Scientist and Lecturer in the 1960s and Visiting Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering in the 1970s and ’80s.

Important in those years was the new discipline of computer simulation, made possible by the appearance of new technologies including powerful electronic computers. The mathematics of science and engineering used in industry had to be updated, leading to a new scientific community organized first as local, then national societies, then an international association named IMACS, the International Association for Mathematics and Computer Simulation. Vichnevetsky played an important role in this process, and in 1973 was elected President of IMACS, bringing him, in the 1970s and ’80s, to serve with UNESCO-Paris as a member of FIAAC — the Five International Associations Coordinating Committee aimed at giving human advice for the introduction of advanced technologies to the developing world, also establishing principles of non-interference of politics with the growing international science community. It is the case that scientists are rated by their accomplishments, not any national or political affiliation, this resulting, in those Cold War years, in difficulties between two worlds that had to be resolved with common understanding and diplomacy more than politics.

Other than for articles and books that he published, he was the founding editor of three international scientific journals, two of them with Elsevier-Amsterdam and one with World Scientific – Singapore, all three published to this day. He was in 2005 elected to HOFEST – the Hall of Fame in Engineering, Science and Technology and presented with the Rockwell Medal. Locally, he has been President de ULB AA, the Alumni Association of his Brussels Alma Mater in the US, was member of the Old Guard, the Nassau Club, the Community Without Walls, and was a member of Le Cercle Francais de Princeton serving as President from 1992 to 2000.

His wife Rolande predeceased him in 1992.

He is survived by his beloved children, grandchildren, and great-grandchild.

Visitation will be on Wednesday, December 11, 2024 from 9 to 11 a.m. at Kimble Funeral Home, 1 Hamilton Avenue, Princeton, NJ, followed by services beginning at 11 a.m.

Burial will take place at Princeton Cemetery, Princeton, NJ.

Extend condolences and share memories at TheKimbleFuneralHome.com.

———

John Winfrid Ager

John Winfrid Ager, 98, of Princeton, NJ, died peacefully at home 22 November 2024, 61 years to the day that he moved in, his family by his side. He was born 2 November 1926 in Birmingham, Alabama, to John Winfrid Ager and Leila Lanier Lamar. In the midst of the Great Depression, the family moved to Black Mountain, North Carolina, where he graduated from Asheville School in 1944. He served honorably in the U.S. Navy until 1946, crossed the Equator, and witnessed the Bikini Atoll atomic tests.

After his service, he attended Harvard, graduating in 1949, having been captain of the fencing team and playing on the winning Harvard-Yale Prentice Cup tennis team in 1948. He then received a Fulbright Scholarship to attend the University of Amsterdam and Balliol College of Oxford, where he played for the Oxford-Cambridge Prentice Cup team in 1954. He also played tennis throughout Europe and made two appearances at Wimbledon in 1954 and 1955.

While at Oxford, he met his wife, Sheila Margaret Wilcox, who predeceased him in 2015. They initially lived in upstate NY, where he was a research chemist with Olin. They moved to Princeton in 1960 and he began his career with FMC, where he was awarded 10 patents for agricultural compounds.

He was predeceased by his brothers, John Curtis Ager and Law Lamar Ager, and his sisters Alice Isbell Ager and Frances Gary Ager. He is survived by his loving children, Catherine (Kit) Ager Chandler and John Winfrid Ager III, and five grandchildren — Sarah, William, Elizabeth, Georgiana, and Belle. A brilliant chemist and gifted tennis player, he adored his family, and lived life on his own terms. He will be remembered with love and appreciation, always.

Mr. Ager’s family will be celebrating his life in a private ceremony.

December 4, 2024

The Annual Palmer Square Tree Lighting festivities on Friday evening included musical entertainment on the patio of the Nassau Inn. Attendees share what they are looking forward to this holiday season in this week’s Town Talk on page 6. (Photo by Thomas Hedges)

By Anne Levin

A resolution to pay for a study of the Princeton Fire Department’s headquarters at 363 Witherspoon Street was approved by Princeton Council at its meeting on November 25. Baltimore-based architectural firm Manns Woodward Studios Inc. (MW), a specialist in firehouses, will receive up to $58,800 to come up with a conceptual design for renovating and possibly enlarging the building.

Among the items on the list are future space needs; environmental issues; HVAC and ADA-compliance issues; and accommodations for staff, vehicles, and memorabilia.

“A couple of things have happened since that firehouse was built in 1992,” said Mayor Mark Freda, after Councilman David Cohen noted that the list was extensive. “One thing is that the roof continues to leak, no matter what we’ve done to it. We’re hoping to find someone that can actually solve that problem.” more

By Anne Levin

Princeton has received $818,256 from the State of New Jersey for pedestrian safety between Nassau Street and Franklin Avenue, part of the North Harrison Street Improvements Project.

On November 14, Gov. Phil Murphy announced $150 million in fiscal year 2025 Municipal Aid grants. Princeton is one of 540 cities and towns across the state to be granted funds for advancing road, bridge, safety, and quality-of-life improvements.

Though the grants are competitive, every municipality that applied for funding received one, according to Murphy’s office. A total of 595 applications requested $375 million in aid. more

FESTIVE AND FABULOUS: Miss Cissy Walken is the host of the Holiday Drag Show on Saturday, December 7 at the Bayard Rustin Center for Social Justice, where holiday events continue throughout the month. (Photo courtesy of BRCSJ)

By Donald Gilpin

In the face of widespread anxiety over increasing anti-LGBTQIA+ rhetoric and action following the November election, the Bayard Rustin Center for Social Justice (BRCSJ) will be hosting major holiday events on upcoming weekends: a Holiday Drag Show featuring Cissy Walken, Miss Stonewall Inn, on Saturday, December 7 at 7 p.m. and “Handmade for the Holidays Crafternoon” with Kyle the Craftivist on December 14 at 1 p.m.

Also, on Friday, December 6, there will be a Welcoming the Community Breakfast from 8-10 a.m. and in the evening at 7 p.m. a post-Thanksgiving folk concert featuring David Brahinsky and friends — all at the BRCSJ headquarters, 12 Stockton Street.

The BRCSJ, a dedicated queer safe space, offers many programs and events in person and online throughout the year, serving more than 10,000 area residents according to a recent BRCSJ email. On Christmas Day it will also be open from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. or later, welcoming anybody who “needs or wants a safe space to hang with friends and chosen fam.” more

“DEER BIND WEED”: This photo, taken by Sydney Vine in the Mountain Lakes Preserve, is one of the contest photos that will be on display at the Friday, December 6 opening reception and December 7 and 8 Holiday Open Houses for the annual “Perspectives on Preservation Photography Exhibition” sponsored by Friends of Princeton Open Space.

By Donald Gilpin

A “Perspectives on Preservation Photography Exhibition,” featuring photos of the Mountain Lakes area selected from the annual Friends of Princeton Open Space (FOPOS) Photo Contest, as well as a collection of photographs titled “Geese and Goslings” by Frank Sauer, will be on display this weekend at the Mountain Lakes House, 57 Mountain Avenue.

The opening reception for the exhibition on Friday, December 6 from 6 to 8 p.m., where the contest winners will be announced, is booked up with a waiting list available, but visitors can also see the exhibition at a Holiday Open House on Saturday and Sunday, December 7 and 8, from 12 to 4 p.m. In addition, FOPOS is hosting a December Nature Walk, starting at the Billy Johnson Mountain Lakes Nature Preserve, from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. on December 7. more

By Anne Levin

The Center for Modern Aging Princeton (CMAP) has announced the receipt of two grants from the Princeton Area Community Foundation. The grants go toward supporting the organization’s mission to foster a more inclusive, age-friendly community, and strengthen its organizational capacity to deliver impactful programs and services.

A $38,200 Community Impact Grant goes toward the organization’s Community Outreach: Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging (DEIB) initiatives, and combatting ageism through intergenerational programming. This funding will enable CMAP to expand its outreach to underserved populations, including racial and ethnic minority seniors, LGBTQ+ seniors, and those facing social and economic barriers.

The grant is designed to expand on CMAP’s programs that bridge gaps between generations, and to enhance public education to challenge stereotypes about aging. The goal is to celebrate contributions of older adults to society. more

By Donald Gilpin

Princeton University has recently undertaken a number of initiatives to expand its influence in the field of Native American and Indigenous studies, with J. Kehaulani Kauanui coming on board as the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Professor of Indigenous Studies to help lead the effort.

In a November 14 press release, the University reported that it had expanded academic centers, programs, and scholarly resources to strengthen institutional relationships with Native American and Indigenous communities, as well as seeking to enhance research and scholarship in the field and to recognize and support Native and Indigenous students and scholars. more

By Stuart Mitchner

While England endeavors to cure the potato-rot, will not any[one] endeavor to cure the brain-rot, which prevails so much more widely and fatally?

—Henry David Thoreau,
from Walden (1854)

The epigraph comes by way of the first Arts page in Monday’s New York Times. At least once or twice every year, the Newspaper of Record throws out a line that hooks me. Picture a Dr. Seuss-style fisherman, perhaps the Cat in the Hat, dandling a brain-rot lure as a Dr. Seuss fish leaps out of the water, grinning idiotically while I’m thinking “This is not how I meant to begin a December 4 column on Franz Kafka; no, this is not what I meant to do, not at all, not at all.”

Probably Kafka would love it. As would Frank Zappa, who died on December 4, 1993, having accomplished among many more notable wonders a track called “The Chrome Plated Megaphone of Destiny” on the Mothers of Invention’s third album, We’re Only In It for the Money (a travesty of Sgt. Pepper that memorably pictured four grossly alluring “Mothers” instead of John, Paul, George, and Ringo). In his liner notes, Zappa claims that “The Chrome Plated Megaphone of Destiny,” with its electronic crackling and screeching, is intended to give “a musical approximation” of Kafka’s “In The Penal Colony.” more

LAST OF A TRILOGY: Brittany Fauzer as Georgiana Darcy and Liz Minder as Kitty Bennet in “Georgiana and Kitty: Christmas at Pemberley,” on stage in Morrisville, Pa., December 6-22.

ActorsNET is visiting the famous Pemberley estate for the third time with Lauren Gunderson and Margot Melcon’s Georgiana and Kitty: Christmas at Pemberley, the final play in the Pemberley trilogy. Jane Austen’s characters take the Heritage Center stage once again from December 6-22.

Director Erin Leder returns to put a finishing touch on her extensive work with Gunderson and Melcon’s holiday pieces. She has taken on the first of Christmas at Pemberley plays back in 2022 and has since directed Miss Bennet, then The Wickhams in 2023, and now Georgiana and Kitty.  more

Danielle Sinclair

The Westminster Community Orchestra, conducted by Ruth Ochs, will present their annual family holiday concert “Holiday Favorites and Sing-along” on Wednesday, December 11, at 7:30 p.m. in Hillman Hall, at the Cullen Center, on the Westminster Choir College campus, Walnut Lane.

While the performance is free, the orchestra will continue its long-standing tradition of accepting freewill cash donations at the door to benefit and be distributed to area food pantries and service organizations. Audience members requiring seating assistance should arrive at 7:15 p.m.

The performance will feature Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Dance of the Tumblers” from The Snow Maiden, Frederick Delius’s “Sleigh Ride,” Samuel Coleridge Taylor’s Christmas Overture, “Festive Sounds of Hanukkah” (arranged by Bill Holcombe), and How the Grinch Stole Christmas. Westminster Conservatory faculty member Danielle Sinclair will join the orchestra for two traditional carols, “Or vous Tremoussez Pasteurs de Judee” (Make Merry, Shepherds of Judea) and “El Noi de la Mare” (The Child of the Mother), with former Westminster Honors Program student Julianna Wong, mezzo-soprano. The concert will also include other Christmas favorites, and the audience is invited to lend their voices in John Finnegan’s popular Christmas Sing-along. more

State Theatre New Jersey and NJPAC Productions present “An Evening with Chevy Chase & National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation” on Thursday, December 5 at 7:30 p.m. This show celebrates the classic film National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, with a special 35th Anniversary screening of the film followed by a live conversation and Q&A with Chase and his wife Jayni.

A limited number of VIP tickets are available, including a personal post-show photo opportunity with Chase.

Chevy and Jayni Chase will share their behind-the-scenes stories and personal anecdotes about the making of this movie that has become a Christmas tradition. During the conversation, audience members can ask questions and hear firsthand from Chevy about his career including Saturday Night Live, Caddyshack, and more. more