July 5, 2023

CREATIVE CHOICES: “There is no other store in the mall like us. Our vibe is different from anything here, and we really fill a need. Customers will find a great eclectic selection — cards, candles, coloring books, candy, kids’ items, and much more. Our motto is ‘Everything you want … and didn’t know you need!’” Bailey Cookman, owner of twine., is shown in the store’s new location in the Quaker Bridge Mall. She is holding Scrabble coasters, made locally by Yardsale Press.

Colorful and cool, eclectic, entertaining and energetic! This is the new twine. shop, now open in the Quaker Bridge Mall.

Following in the footsteps of the flagship twine. in Hopewell, this new shop offers the signature aesthetic of the original, but with an added sensibility of color, activism, and popular culture. more

To the Editor:

Seventeen days of performing arts events flew by during June’s 2023 Princeton Festival. Many thanks to the thousands who turned out in droves to take in our opera, dance, musical theater, chamber, pops, and orchestral concerts at beautiful Morven Museum & Garden. more

To the Editor:

For over 50 years, Corner House, now known as Corner House Behavioral Health, has been a beacon of hope for adolescents, young people, and their families who struggle with substance use and substance abuse issues. Begun in 1972 by a group of Princeton residents who were increasingly concerned with rising drug and alcohol problems, Corner House has proven its worth as an established presence in the greater Princeton area. It has been a shining example of the best in treatment, prevention, leadership, and outreach. Corner House has always been open to community input, transparent about finances, inclusive of underserved community members, all-encompassing in treatment and use of best practices, and extremely successful in its programs and leadership opportunities. more

To the Editor:

All of us at Housing Initiatives of Princeton would like to thank everyone who showed up at the Ivy Inn last week to support our work. We’re especially grateful to East Coast Ambush for supplying the music, Andy Golden for pouring the drinks, and Richey Ryan and the team at the Ivy Inn for providing a terrific venue for the community to come together. All the money raised in tips that night will be going to support a family new to our transitional housing program.  more

June 28, 2023

BBQ BONUS: “The recipe is simple: freshly made food, local ingredients, and special homemade sauces. We are offering great BBQ, inspired by our chef, ‘Mama Sally,’ along with the well-known hospitality that characterizes Local Greek,” explains Tony Kanterakis, owner of Local Greek Restaurant Group and the new Local BBQ in Hopewell. Shown is chef and catering director “Mama Sally” Kornegay.

By Jean Stratton

Tony Kanterakis, owner of Local Greek Restaurant Group, knows what works.

“Food brings people together, and that has always been our target in the Local Greek Family. That is what we want to keep doing by adding Local BBQ.” more

To the Editor:

For the fourth time, the Board of Zoning Adjustment will consider a variance to allow a proposed coffee processing (roasting) facility at 300 Witherspoon.

The applicant wishes to roast and sell roasted bean coffee at multiple owned locations and wholesale to customers in the area. Current zoning prohibits food processing and/or manufacturing of any products for sale off-premise in the B1 “mixed residential/retail/office” zone and, in fact, all other sections of Princeton. more

To the Editor:

I understand why my neighbors in the Witherspoon-Jackson community are concerned about Sakrid Coffee’s proposed roasting operations at 300 Witherspoon Street, which will be discussed at the town Zoning Board meeting on Wednesday, June 28. Folks fear that local coffee roasting will negatively impact their families’ health and daily lives. more

To the Editor:

Tonight, Wednesday, June 28 at 7:30 p.m., the Zoom meeting of the Zoning Board will once again concern itself with Sakrid Coffee’s variance request to roast coffee on a retail-wholesale basis next to an elementary school in a high-density neighborhood.  more

June 21, 2023

To the Editor:

I write in recognition of a terrific effort put on by the Princeton Police Department through the inaugural Citizens Police Academy which concluded recently. I was one of 16 Princeton residents chosen for the eight-week series of two-hour classes. Kudos to Police Chief Jonathan Bucchere, who kicked off the series noting it has long been his desire to increase outreach to and collaboration with the community. The department succeeded in that goal. I extend additional recognition to Sergeant Dan Federico, who led the development and implementation of the series, and Lieutenant Matt Solovay, who hosted many of the sessions along with myriad other officers. The Academy was well-run, informative, and engaging.

Princeton is fortunate to be served by such a high-caliber staff of officers. They genuinely sought candid feedback and discussion. The sincerity of their dedication to serving the public is palpable. more

To the Editor:

A few hours ago, I went to Walgreens to purchase three standard drug store items. Despite my concerns about over-development at the Princeton Shopping Center, I hoped that the new store would be an asset to our community. To my surprise, none of the items on my shopping list were available. When I asked the shift manager where they might be located, he responded that although he was expecting more stock to arrive during the next week, many products would no longer be available. He informed me that the new store is significantly smaller than the old store (12 aisles as opposed to 28 aisles). more

June 14, 2023

To the Editor:

The library and its community partners at McCarter Theatre Center, HiTOPS, YWCA Princeton, Arts Council of Princeton, Princeton Civil Rights Commission, and Princeton Human Services welcomed more than 2,000 people to the third annual Princeton Community Pride Picnic on Saturday, June 3 where we celebrated Princeton’s LGBTQ+ community with music, art, activities, food, and much more. more

To the Editor:

Congratulations to the PHS Class of 2023! I am extremely proud of you. Graduating from Princeton High School is no small feat. PHS is marvelous, but it is also competitive, and pressure-filled. While the challenges push people to excel, they also cause stress. Thankfully, the school is filled with resources for students and many opportunities for positive experiences. The faculty, staff, and building leaders are all gifted, skilled, and hard-working individuals, who care about you. I know that they wanted nothing more than for you to finish off your PHS experience on a good note, and I hope that you finished your year positively. more

To the Editor:

Ideas regarding the redevelopment of the Tennent-Roberts-Whiteley sites, including adaptive re-use and the designation of the site as affordable housing, have come from one side — the residents and taxpayers of Princeton. The residents’ concern is that the final project complements the scale and diversity of the area. Our request is “first do no harm.”  more

To the Editor:

I started off in the USA as an undocumented/uninsured immigrant child, gained citizenship by age 19, and later became a first-generation college graduate. This path has offered me deeper thoughts on role models during one’s development. There are plenty of female role models and mentors. But generally, there is a great deficit of male role models for children with backgrounds like mine. My first real-life experience with a good male role model was my college professor and mentor, Dr. Norman Spear.  more

To the Editor:

I was disappointed by the Princeton Health Department’s failure to provide us with updates on air quality here in town during the now ebbing (I’m writing this on Friday, June 9) intrusion of smoke-laden winds from north of the border.  more

To the Editor:

Congratulations to the outstanding class of 2023 at Princeton High School. These past four years have undoubtedly been filled with challenges, as you persevered through a global pandemic, remote learning, mask mandates, and the loss of your beloved principal, Frank Chmiel. more

June 7, 2023

MUSIC APPRECIATION: “At our Summer Festival, we try to broaden the participants’ minds by including various speakers and lecturers as well as pianists and piano pedagogues. All classes and events will be open to the public, and we hope everyone can visit us, see the metamorphosis of the young pianists, and experience beautiful music-making with us.” John Perry and Mina Hirobe-Perry, directors of the John Perry Academy of Music, are shown with Seiji, their 6-year-old son.

By Jean Stratton

“We are the music-makers, And we are the dreamers of dreams.”

—Arthur William Edgar O’Shaughnessy

Something special will be available in July for all those who love to make music and for those who may be dreaming of doing so someday.

The John Perry Academy of Music (JPA) is scheduling its International Summer Music Festival July 2 through July 14 at The College of New Jersey, located at 2000 Pennington Road, Ewing Township.

It is the first time the prestigious event will take place in New Jersey. After many years in Los Angeles, John Perry and Mina Hirobe-Perry, directors of the Academy, have relocated to Princeton.

“A festival of this type offers the opportunity for the talented music student to immerse himself/herself in an intense music performance program without the distractions of other subjects, other classes, and all other competing demands on their time,” explains John Perry. “There is no question that one walks away from this experience greatly enriched and knowledgeable about the art of music.” more

To the Editor:

One of the more puzzling aspects of the controversy over the decision to replace the principal of PHS has been the blasé response to the fact that a student opened a side door to admit a former student who, however briefly, roamed the halls of the school until identified, located, and escorted out. 

Despite the current spate of school shootings in a country awash with guns, the odds of such an event at any given school are very low, so low that chances are we could do away with safety drills altogether without negative consequences. Not ordering a lockdown as soon as the intrusion happened was the easy decision, the one that played the odds. The hard decision, the one that would have required real leadership, would be to order the lockdown knowing that almost certainly there would be no shots fired, and that the decision would surely be second-guessed.  more

To the Editor:

In the summer of 2022, after hearing a riveting Joint Effort lecture led by Jennifer Garcon, Princeton University’s Librarian for Modern and Contemporary Special Collections, on photography and legacy, the Rev. Gregory Smith contacted his “brother friends” Lance Liverman and Charles Phox to discuss the idea of creating a photography camp in honor of the celebrated local son and photographer, Romus Broadway. The committee grew to include Iona Harding, Jennifer Garcon, and Shirley Satterfield. Together, they forged a proposal to create a camp that would teach the fundamentals of photography combining the history of the Witherspoon-Jackson community. The camp was later endorsed by the Witherspoon-Jackson Historical and Cultural Society whose mission is to research, preserve, understand, appreciate, and celebrate the rich and proud history of African Americans in Princeton, New Jersey. more

To the Editor:

My family and I moved to Princeton in 2012. In 2019 our youngest graduated from Princeton High School. We were quite content, and happy to be living in Princeton. We figured we’d live in our house for a few more years, then maybe sell. But the recent happenings at Princeton Public Schools have us gravely concerned. Even though we are no longer inside the schools, we see and hear things from the outside that are cause for alarm.

Budgets created by the BOE that include monies for the superintendent to have her own PR firm and funds for unnecessary consultant after consultant, the increase to a $106M budget for the coming year, the politicized direction that education is taking, mismanagement of the elementary enrollment distribution which may result in redistricting, construction or more renovations, and of course, the removal of Principal Frank Chmiel from Princeton High School.  more

May 31, 2023

HELPING HANDS: “It’s very important to provide fresh seasonal food to families who need it. This is our mission. Our primary focus is for families with children in Princeton Public Schools.” Shown are the team members who guide and operate the Princeton Mobile Food Pantry. From left are Wendy Wilton, Debbie Bronfeld, Liliana Morenilla, Dafna Kendal, Shilpa Pai, Sharon Litvinsky, Mandy Arshan, Amy Lansky, and Jennifer Lea Cohan. Missing from the photo is Jackie Swain.

By Jean Stratton

“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, that’s the only thing that ever does.”

—Margaret Mead

How to translate that conviction into action? Some people see a need and don’t know what to do about it. Some are unaware of the need. Others see the need and find ways to address it.

The last statement is the story of the Princeton Mobile Food Pantry (PMFP) and the remarkable team that created it, and continues to make it happen.

In 2007, Princeton resident and volunteer Liliana Morenilla became aware of students who did not have enough to eat.

“I was volunteering at Johnson Park Elementary School translating for Spanish-speaking parents,” she explains. “There was constant mention of food insecurity in their homes. One day, I had to separate two little ones who were fighting for a granola bar. What started the fight was that the kids never had snacks from home, and were hungry.” more

To the Editor:

It is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore that Princeton is facing a full-blown crisis in its public school system (PPS), historically one of the top districts in the state. If its quality and reputation continue to drop and teachers/staff continue to leave, we will see declining property values and tax revenues, with fewer people and businesses wanting to come to or stay in Princeton. 

At the root of the crisis is a divisive superintendent, hired by the Board of Education (BOE) in July 2021. Unfortunately, the BOE seems to be taking the fall for their CEO’s ineffective leadership and expensive missteps. The few supporters of the superintendent and BOE who have spoken publicly have tried to minimize the voices of thousands of PPS parents and residents by calling them an insignificantly small group. In a May 24 letter, they even belittled them as “recent arrivals” — apparent anti-immigrant rhetoric we should not accept in Princeton.  more

To the Editor:

On Friday, May 26, I tried to take my wife to catch the train. There were barricades blocking the entrance to the Dinky station. I tried to enter the station parking lot but half of it was also barricaded, and the open half was packed with cars and trucks, many blocking in others. I suspect some were train customers and others Wawa customers. In the afternoon I went to pick up my wife — again the barricades and no space for the usual customers. What a mess.

The scene looked like there was an emergency safety event and the area had been cordoned off. Was it a sink hole, a bomb threat, an outbreak of Ebola? No, I discovered it was to reserve space for University alumni buses. At the times I visited, the cordoned-off area was empty, there were no buses.  more

To the Editor:

On May 24, the Town Topics published a letter from four Princeton residents where they openly ask the PPS superintendent and the Board of Education (BOE) members to “please accept our sincerest apologies on behalf of the Princeton community.”  This letter further stated that the community’s oppositions to recent PPS/BOE decisions were “the attacks, apparently led largely by non-residents and recent arrivals to Princeton.” This letter was indeed written very eloquently but was wrong, and insulting, in many ways.

First and foremost, why would taxpayers need to apologize to local elected officials and a particular public worker if they don’t agree with their decisions? By the same token, can I openly apologize, on behalf of Princeton community, to the mistreated public worker whose career and personal life were put on the line by the particular public worker, and blindly supported by the BOE?  more

To the Editor:

When they go low, we go high.

These past two months have been a blessing in disguise. Through the turmoil, I’ve met so many wonderful people and made amazing friends from all walks of life. I’ve decided to write this letter to address the feelings of those who feel offended by personal attacks, name calling, and the spread of misinformation. Unfortunately, people screaming the most about equity and inclusion are the ones that cast the sharpest stones and create exclusions far beyond what most of us have ever known. more