September 20, 2023

By Donald Gilpin

New COVID-19 vaccines are now available for everyone ages 6 months and older, and they are strongly recommended by the federal Center for Disease Controls and Prevention (CDC), by the New Jersey Department of Health (NJDOH), and by local health authorities.

The new vaccine — a new formulation, not technically a booster —“will provide the most up-to-date protection against the virus and its variants as we move into the fall and winter holiday seasons,” according to a September 12 press release from the NJDOH.

CVS and Walgreens pharmacies are currently making appointments for Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccinations through the CDC’s vaccine website at vaccines.gov. The NJDOH states that vaccines will also be available from sites like primary care providers, other chain pharmacies, Federally Qualified Health Centers, and other health care institutions.

“With rising cases, COVID-19 continues to remain a significant public health priority,” said Acting Health Commissioner Kaitlan Baston. “The department will continue to work with providers across the state to make sure everyone who wants the added protection of the updated COVID-19 shot can easily access it, especially the state’s vulnerable populations and those who are under- or uninsured.”

Princeton Health Officer and Deputy Administrator for Health and Human Services Jeffrey Grosser noted that this new vaccine targets the variant called XBB.1.5 and will be the only COVID vaccine available this fall. He added that hospital admissions for COVID-19 and flu remain low at this point in Mercer County.  more

By Donald Gilpin

Catholic Charities will be the new behavioral health provider for the town of Princeton, starting in January 2024, in a move designed to improve and expand mental health and addiction services as well as save taxpayer dollars.

In a September 15 press release, the Municipality of Princeton announced that its decision, requiring the reorganization of some services previously shared with Corner House Behavioral Health, “was made through a careful evaluation of the paradigm shift in behavioral health treatment toward the Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics (CCBHC) standard; while also considering other factors, such as the expressed need from the public for expanded mental health services within the Municipality.”

The announcement notes that Catholic Charities, by directly connecting patients to the CCBHC network, can deliver “the same quality of care for a wider range of services to more Princeton residents than Corner House Behavioral Health.” Activities of the CCBHC network are mostly funded by federal and state grants and deliver low-to-no-cost services, with “a more comprehensive and coordinated spectrum of care, beyond substance use and mental health.”

In an August 2 letter in the Town Topics Mailbox, Princeton Councilman and Corner House Liaison Leighton Newlin commented on Corner House, stating, “Recent changes within the organization’s hierarchy have prompted the Municipality of Princeton to reevaluate the Corner House business model considering today’s highly populated and competitive mental health/substance abuse markets as well as current community needs.” Corner House’s executive director resigned early this year and has not been replaced. more

By Anne Levin

It took several attempts over nearly six decades, but Princeton Township and Princeton Borough were finally consolidated into the municipality of Princeton on January 1, 2013.

The 10th anniversary of this milestone is being celebrated on Thursday, September 28 from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. with a public party at the municipal complex. Everyone is invited to hear remarks from State Sen. Andrew Zwicker, Mayor Mark Freda, and Princeton Councilwoman Michelle Pirone Lambros, followed by live music and refreshments.

Many of the people who worked to make consolidation a reality will be on hand. Prominent among them is Liz Lempert, who was the first mayor of the newly consolidated municipality, and served in the post until 2021.

“Every step along the way was effortful and it required an enormous amount of work from elected officials, municipal staff, and citizen volunteers,” she said in an email this week. “Chad Goerner [former Princeton Township mayor] in particular deserves a huge amount of credit for moving the initiative forward in a thoughtful, open, and methodical way.” more

THE PIANO IS THE STAR: Cristina Altamura will inaugurate the Altamura Legacy Concerts, featuring the Steinway piano now installed at Princeton United Methodist Church, on September 24. (Photo by Maria Grazia Facciolá)

By Anne Levin

When concert pianist Cristina Altamura inherited a 1924 Steinway “B Grand” piano from her mentor, pianist Jody Wise, she knew that the beautifully crafted instrument was too special to keep to herself. Three years and a major restoration later, the piano is the centerpiece of a new concert series debuting Sunday, September 24 in the Sanford Davis Room of Princeton United Methodist Church (PUMC).

The Altamura Legacy Concerts will launch with a performance at 4 p.m. featuring Altamura, tenor Fanyong Du, soprano Katie Lerner Lee, and pianist Binna Han in a program marking the 150th anniversary of the birth of Russian composer Sergei Rachmaninoff. Performances in different musical genres, most of which are focused on the historic piano, continue on four more Sundays through April 7, 2024.

“I had already been teaching in a space at the church, and was having recitals in the sanctuary,” said Altamura, who lives in Princeton with her husband, So Percussion’s Adam Sliwinski, and son Guillermo. “The piano they had was an old Yamaha. I saw that they had this beautiful living room area, with Tiffany stained glass windows. And I had this beautiful instrument that I didn’t want to just keep in my house. It all started to make sense.” more

By Donald Gilpin

Sustainability is in the spotlight in Princeton this weekend, with Sustainable Princeton’s Clean Commuting Festival and eCommuter Fest at the Princeton Shopping Center on Friday, September 22, from 4 to 7 p.m. and a Community Sustainability Celebration on Saturday, September 23, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) at 100 Stellarator Road.

The Sustainable Princeton electric vehicle (EV) ride and drive event promises live music, test drives of the latest eBikes and EVs, games, and “a community EV owner showcase”; while visitors to the PPPL on Saturday will encounter an assortment of local environment-focused organizations, find out how PPPL is forging the path to fusion energy, “the ultimate source of clean energy,” and learn what they can do here and now in their own backyards.

‘Our focus going forward is to make the ‘e’ in eCommuter Fest stand for more than just ‘electric,’” said Sustainable Princeton Executive Director Christine Symington as quoted in a Sustainable Princeton press release. “We’re expanding eCommuter Fest to showcase more ways of getting around that are sustainable, affordable, and accessible to everyone.”  more

By Donald Gilpin

Sustainability is in the spotlight in Princeton this weekend, with Sustainable Princeton’s Clean Commuting Festival and eCommuter Fest at the Princeton Shopping Center on Friday, September 22, from 4 to 7 p.m. and a Community Sustainability Celebration on Saturday, September 23, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) at 100 Stellarator Road.

The Sustainable Princeton electric vehicle (EV) ride and drive event promises live music, test drives of the latest eBikes and EVs, games, and “a community EV owner showcase”; while visitors to the PPPL on Saturday will encounter an assortment of local environment-focused organizations, find out how PPPL is forging the path to fusion energy, “the ultimate source of clean energy,” and learn what they can do here and now in their own backyards.

‘Our focus going forward is to make the ‘e’ in eCommuter Fest stand for more than just ‘electric,’” said Sustainable Princeton Executive Director Christine Symington as quoted in a Sustainable Princeton press release. “We’re expanding eCommuter Fest to showcase more ways of getting around that are sustainable, affordable, and accessible to everyone.”  more

By Anne Levin

The recent listing for sale of Jasna Polana, the 18-hole, 225-acre golf club on Route 206 and Province Line Road, has prompted some speculation that the municipality might be eyeing the property as a site for redevelopment.

Not so, according to a statement last week made by Mayor Mark Freda and Princeton Council President Mia Sacks.

“We are aware that the Jasna Polana golf course property is currently being marketed for sale, and that initial advertisements for a potential sale suggest the possibility of a ‘comprehensive redevelopment of the site consistent with Princeton’s Master Plan update.’ On behalf of the governing body, we wish to make explicitly clear that there are no current plans to investigate or consider designating the Jasna Polana golf course property as an area in need of redevelopment. Although the Master Plan update process is still ongoing, there have been no indications thus far that this property will be recommended as such.”

It continues, “Any implication in the marketing materials for Jasna Polana that a more dense project, or expansion of uses beyond what is allowed under the current zoning will be permitted, is unwarranted. No amendments to the current zoning ordinance for this site are contemplated by Princeton Council at this time.” more

By Stuart Mitchner

Music is only understood when one goes away singing it and only loved when one falls asleep with it in one’s head, and finds it still there on waking up the next morning.

—Arnold Schoenberg (1874-1951)

You know how it is at dusk when the day has ended but it hasn’t? The ambiance of that time of day was all through everything we played.

—Richard Davis (1930-2023) on recording Astral Weeks

I’m driving Mr. Schoenberg around Princeton on his 149th birthday, it’s a fine September day, everything’s clear and bright, and we’re listening to Pierre lunaire, the atonal 21-song “melodrama” Mr. S. composed in 1912 and conducted in Berlin that October.

“Poor brave Albertine,” Mr. S. says, referring to the soprano Albertine Zehme, the vocalist/narrator at the Berlin premiere. “The real melodrama was in the audience. She had to contend with whistling, booing, laughter, and unaussprechlich insults, but the loudest voice in that crowd was the one shouting ‘Shoot him! Shoot him!’ Meaning me.”

To those who say there’s no way I could be conversing with an Austrian-American composer who died on Friday the 13th, July 1951, I’ll quote my passenger, who in 1909 announced his “complete liberation from form and symbols, cohesion and logic” because it’s “impossible to feel only one emotion. Man has many feelings, thousands at a time, each going its own way — this multicoloured, polymorphic, illogical nature of our feelings, and their associations, a rush of blood, reactions in our senses, in our nerves” is all “in my music… an expression of feeling, full of unconscious connections.” more

Nancy Swinski Deffeyes

Nancy Swinski Deffeyes, 86, of Princeton passed away on September 16, 2023, at Windsor Heathcare, Merwick in Plainsboro.

She was born in Holyoke, Massachusetts, in 1937. Nancy attended Holyoke High School, Class of 1955, and Smith College, Class of 1959. After college she moved to Houston, Texas, and worked at Shell Oil in the research library. At Shell Oil she met Kenneth Deffeyes, and they were married in 1962. Nancy and Kenneth lived briefly in St Paul, Minnesota, and Corvallis, Oregon, before settling in Princeton, New Jersey in 1967. Nancy worked as a Librarian at Westminster Choir College in Princeton until her retirement in 2018. In retirement she worked part-time at Orchard Farm Organics in Princeton.

Nancy loved the outdoors, gardening, mystery novels, fine art, and classical music.

Predeceased by her husband Kenneth Deffeyes, parents Walter and Lena (Dulkis) Swinski, and sister Kathryn Swinski.

Nancy is survived by a sister Joan (Swinski) Kaeble, son Stephen Deffeyes, daughter Sarah (Deffeyes) Domingo, nephew (godson) Christopher Kaeble, niece Gretchen (Kaeble) Hazlett, granddaughter Emma Domingo, and grandson Michael Domingo.

A gathering remembering Nancy will be held at Orchard Farm Organics at 1052 Cherry Hill Rd in Princeton, on Saturday October 14, at 2 p.m.

Nancy’s ashes are to be scattered in the Pardee Memorial Garden, Princeton Cemetery, and Glacier Point, Yosemite National Park.

Please consider making a donation in Nancy’s memory to Princeton Tigers Women’s Basketball.

———

Joseph J. Kohn

Joseph J. Kohn, professor emeritus of mathematics at Princeton University, passed away peacefully on September 13, 2023, in Princeton. Joe was born in Prague, in the former Czechoslovakia, on May 18, 1932, the only child to architect Otto Kohn and Ema (Schwarz) Kohn. From early childhood it was clear that there was something special about Joe. His mother worried that he was too cerebral and often tried to get him outside and away from his books and figures.

In 1939, after the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia, Joe and 20-odd members of his family left for Ecuador aboard the Orbita, leaving behind the world they knew. The family lived in Quito and then Cuenca. In Ecuador, as news from Europe darkened, Joe’s father, a successful architect in Prague, struggled to find the strength and means to rebuild his architectural practice. In 1945, Joe and his immediate family emigrated again, this time to New York City, where his father and mother set up a furniture design business and Joe attended Brooklyn Technical High School (’50). To encourage integration into American society, new immigrants at the time were encouraged to join the Boy Scouts. Joe joined up, and although never the sporting type, he managed to achieve the rank of Eagle Scout.   

Joe went on to study at MIT (’53) and then at Princeton University, where, under the tutelage of Donald Spencer, he earned his PhD in 1956. Joe then was a professor at Brandeis University for close to a decade before returning to Princeton in 1968 as tenured professor at Princeton University. He remained in the Princeton math department, serving three terms as Chair, until his retirement in 2008. Over the course of a long and distinguished career, he also was a visiting professor at many other universities, including Harvard University, the University of Mexico, the University of Buenos Aires, the University of Florence, the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques in Paris, and the Charles University in Prague. In 1990 he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Bologna.

Joe was a major figure in modern mathematical analysis, whose groundbreaking work on the interaction between partial differential equations and functions of several complex variables has dominated that area of mathematical research for over a half century. Joe was a devoted mentor to 16 PhD students at Princeton and at Brandeis and countless other graduate students and junior scholars.

Joe won the Steele Prize of the American Mathematical Society in 1979 and the Balzano Medal from the Czechoslovak Mathematics and Physics Society in 1990, and the Stefan Bergman Prize in analysis from the American Mathematical Society in 2004. He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1966 and to the National Academy of Science in 1988. He served as editor of the Transactions of the American Mathematical Society and the Annals of Mathematics, and as a member of the Board of Trustees of the American Mathematical Society and the Board of the Mathematical Sciences of the National Academy of Science.

In 1966 Joe married Anna Rosa Di Capua, of Quito, Ecuador. The Di Capua and the Kohn families had lived on the same street in Quito during the war and Joe’s first cousins (many of whom remained in Quito) arranged for the two to meet on one of Joe’s frequent visits to Ecuador.  It was evident to whomever met them that Joe and Anna Rosa shared a fundamental openness, kindness and a love for language, stories, food, art, music, and history. 

Joe was a devoted husband, father, and father-in-law (Lisa Stevenson), and nothing gave him more pleasure than to descend from his mathematical reveries on the third floor of their house on Sturges Way to tease, teach, and, most of all simply, to be near his three children — Eduardo, Emma, and Alicia. Years later he would do the same things with his two grandchildren, Benjamin and Milo. Together, the Kohn family liked to play chess, do puzzles, tell Jewish jokes and riddles, paint and — until the very end — to play Bananagrams. It’s no wonder that for over 50 years Joe and Anna Rosa’s Princeton home was a gathering place for mathematicians, family, friends, and anyone who liked good conversation about history, politics, or literature. 

Donations in memory of Joseph J. Kohn can be made to HIAS, the National Museum of Mathematics, and the Princeton Jewish Center.

September 13, 2023

By Donald Gilpin

All 72 residents of Princeton Care Center (PCC) on Bunn Drive have been safely moved, at least for the time being, but shock waves from the sudden evacuation on Friday, September 1 will continue to resonate for the elderly residents, some now in nearby facilities and some more than 60 miles away, and dozens of Princeton emergency personnel and others who were on the scene assisting.

“Allowing this to happen is just unbelievable,” said Princeton Mayor Mark Freda. “The ball was dropped by both Princeton Care Center and the New Jersey Department of Health.”

The Department of Health (DOH) had been following the precarious financial situation at PCC for many months, said Freda, adding, “The Department of Health contacted us on August 4 to say ’By the way, we’ve been watching these guys. They’ve been having a lot of financial problems. We’re putting a Department of Health person in the building to make sure that proper care is being given. They’re having trouble making payroll, paying their bills, etc., and the landlord wants his money — all those things.’”

Freda said his office was informed repeatedly by the DOH that PCC, owned by mother and son Gail and Ezra Bogner, was in negotiations with other entities to take over the facility and its residents. “The week before Labor Day weekend we had been updated by the Department of Health, saying that discussions between some entity and Princeton Care Center were looking really good and that the sale would go through — not a problem — don’t worry about it,” said Freda.  more

By Donald Gilpin

The Witherspoon-Jackson Development Corporation (WJDC) was in the spotlight at a lively meeting of the Witherspoon-Jackson Neighborhood Association (WJNA) attended by more than 60 people on Saturday, September 9 at the Arts Council of Princeton on Paul Robeson Place.

“The basic overall community opinion was that they want Witherspoon-Jackson Development Corporation to be more transparent,” said former Princeton Councilman and community leader Lance Liverman. He went on to mention the need for an improved website for finding information, adding, “We want them to do more reporting back to the community — what they’re doing, what they’re funding.”

Princeton Councilman Leighton Newlin, who co-chaired the meeting, applauded the “great information exchanged” on Saturday, but noted, “There was definitely a call for greater transparency and accountability.” He added, “We’re at a crossroads and this is a critical time for homeowners in Princeton.” more

WANING NEMESIS: The spotted lanternfly, in its full-grown adult state as it prepares to mate and lay eggs in September and October, is declining in numbers in Princeton, according to Municipal Arborist Taylor Sapudar. Residents are advised to keep on stomping and removing ailanthus trees.

By Donald Gilpin

In late August the New Jersey Department of Agriculture (NJDA) informed New Jersey residents that they no longer need to report sightings of the spotted lanternfly. The invasive insect is now present in all 21 counties of the state, but in Princeton the numbers are diminishing, according to Princeton Municipal Arborist Taylor Sapudar.

“I have not seen high populations in Princeton at all this year,” Sapudar said. “It’s much better than last year. I might have seen one or two adult lanternflies this year, but in years past I saw them everywhere.”

Sapudar noted that when the spotted lanternfly first appeared in New Jersey in 2018 it was only present in a few counties bordering Pennsylvania. The NJDA wanted to have people report it so it could help control and prevent the spread and coordinate treatment resources. more

HISTORIC RESTORATION: This home on Whittier Avenue in Trenton has its own Instagram account to show its renovations in progress. The 1923 brick Colonial Revival is one of 11 homes on the Cadwalader Heights Historic House and Garden Tour on September 23 from 12 to 5 p.m.

By Wendy Greenberg

Just northwest of Trenton’s downtown sits a neighborhood laid out by the eminent designer of Central Park in New York, the Biltmore Estate grounds in Asheville, S.C. , and the National Mall in Washington, D.C.: Frederick Law Olmsted.

For years, landscape and history enthusiasts have enjoyed a tour of Cadwalader Heights — the only neighborhood in New Jersey designed by the celebrated landscape architect — but the biennial tradition was disrupted by the pandemic.

Now, with the tagline “Welcome Back to the Neighborhood,” the first Cadwalader Heights Historic House and Garden Tour since 2019 is planned for Saturday, September 23 from 12 to 5 p.m. Proceeds will support HomeWorks Trenton, a nonprofit which operates a free afterschool residential program for marginalized high school girls. The program supplements public school with a goal of developing community leaders.  more

By Wendy Greenberg

A Princeton University event will examine the issues in the ongoing strikes by the Writers Guild and the Screen Actors Guild/American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA).

The September 20 program, called Tigers on Strike, will be held at the James Stewart Film Theater, 185 Nassau Street, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Presented as part of the Arts at Work series sponsored by the Lewis Center for the Arts and Center for Career Development, the event is free and open to the public; no reservations are required.

A panel of Princeton University alumni, faculty, and others whose lives have been impacted by the ongoing strikes will talk about some of the key issues such as salary equity, streaming, and generative artificial intelligence in the film and television industries.

The Writers Guild Strike began May 2 over lack of agreement on a new contract with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers. The SAG-AFTRA strike has been in progress since July 14. more

By Grace Roberts

Jonathan Taplin

Focusing on four specific schemes — the metaverse, cryptocurrency, space travel, and trans-humanism — Jonathan Taplin has written an exposé on the tactics he says four modern billionaires use to pull focus from more prevalent issues in our current economic, political, and moral climate.

Princeton professor Nigel Smith will join writer, film producer, and scholar Taplin to discuss Taplin’s new book The End of Reality: How Four Billionaires Are Selling a Fantasy Future, on Monday, September 25 in the Princeton Public Library Community Room. The 7 p.m. event is co-presented by Labyrinth Books with support from the Princeton University’s Humanities Council. more

September 6, 2023

By Donald Gilpin

Cecilia X. Birge

Cecilia X. Birge is starting the 2023-24 school year as the new Princeton High School (PHS) principal, following her official appointment on Thursday, August 31 by the Princeton Board of Education (BOE) in approving the recommendation of Princeton Public Schools (PPS) Superintendent Carol Kelley.

An assistant principal at PHS since 2020 and a teacher of mathematics and special education before that, Birge, who lives on Leigh Avenue in Princeton, brings to the job a diverse background and a wide range of experiences in finance, business, and municipal government, as well as education.

“During the selection process, Ms. Birge showcased her exceptional leadership qualities, along with her deep commitment to the success of all students, her passion for education, and her respect for the entire Princeton High School community,” said Kelley. “For these reasons I know she will be successful as the next principal of Princeton High School.” more

By Anne Levin

South Brunswick Police and the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) are asking residents and businesses if they have any recorded video footage related to the fatal helicopter crash last Thursday that took the life of a 44-year-old man.

Pilot Josef Yitzhak, an Israeli, had taken off from Princeton Airport in a single-engine Robinson R22 in the late afternoon when he crashed into the woods and landed in a stream off of Lakeview Avenue, on the border of Princeton and South Brunswick Township.  more

By Donald Gilpin

Princeton University President Christopher L. Eisgruber addressed the members of Princeton’s Class of 2027 at the University’s Opening Exercises on Sunday, September 3, urging them to look forward to “transformation” as an important part of their education over the next four years.

In the annual ceremony that culminates a week of orientation activities and marks the start of the academic year, Eisgruber noted that “transformative” is the word he hears most often when talking to Princeton alumni about their education. more

FROM SHAKESPEARE TO MORRISON: The sign for the famed Paris bookshop Shakespeare and Company, left, and the original cover art for F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel “The Great Gatsby” are among the rare items on display in a new exhibit at the Milberg Gallery of Princeton University Library.

By Anne Levin

Seven years after William Shakespeare died in 1616, his friends gathered the scattered texts of 36 of his plays into a folio edition. Among them: Macbeth, The Tempest, Twelfth Night, Julius Caesar, and The Winter’s Tale — classics that would have been lost to posterity if not for the friends’ efforts.

Three copies of that “First Folio of 1623” are among the literary treasures on view at “In the Company of Good Books: From Shakespeare to Morrison,” at Princeton University Library’s Milberg Gallery through December 10. Along with the plays of Shakespeare, the exhibition includes representations of works by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Virginia Woolf, James Baldwin, Maya Angelou, Sylvia Beach, Chinua Achebe, and several others, up until the time of Toni Morrison. more

KITTY RESCUE: Saving kittens in the wild, or sometimes even pursuing them into a dumpster, is just one of many different jobs that Princeton Animal Control Officer Jim Ferry performs in a day’s work of caring for Princeton’s residents and its domestic and wild animals. (Photo courtesy of Jim Ferry)

By Donald Gilpin

Jim Ferry, Princeton animal control officer (PAC) since 2018, has been training for this job since he was a young boy growing up with his family in the Ozark Mountains in north central Arkansas, where he interacted closely with nature and wildlife almost every day.

His family lived in a wooded area at the end of a three-quarter-mile-long driveway. “Growing up in the Ozarks, I believed in being one with nature,” he said. “There is no animal control out in Arkansas, so if you had an issue with an animal on your property or nearby, you had to handle it by yourself.” more

By Anne Levin

Becky Libourel Diamond

Becky Libourel Diamond was already at work on The Gilded Age Cookbook when the HBO series The Gilded Age debuted in January 2022. With season two of the show set to air October 29, the release of Diamond’s book, about which she will speak Thursday, September 7 at 7 p.m. in Princeton Public Library’s Community Room, couldn’t be timelier.

“I’m so excited they renewed the show. It’s a coincidence, but the timing turns out to be perfect,” said Diamond, who is the author of two other books related to two of her passions: food and history. “I’ve always been into food. And there is so much we can learn about history from food,” she said. “What did people eat back then, and why?”

Diamond’s mother, grandmother, and all of her aunts went to school for home economics, so her interest in food-related subjects isn’t surprising. A native of Burlington County, she majored in journalism at Rider University and earned a master’s degree in library science from Rutgers. more

August 31, 2023

Cecilia Birge, Princeton High School (PHS) assistant principal since 2020, will be recommended by Princeton Public Schools Superintendent Carol L. Kelley to be the next PHS principal.

Kelley announced the selection in an August 30 email to the PHS community. Birge, whose appointment is expected to be approved by the PPS Board of Education at a special virtual meeting today, August 31 at 6 p.m., will succeed Frank Chmiel, who was dismissed in March of this year. Kathie Foster has served as PHS interim principal since April.

“After careful consideration of community input from surveys, listening to our staff, and a rigorous interview committee process, I am pleased to share that I will be recommending Cecilia Birge as the next principal of Princeton High School,” Kelley wrote in her announcement.

She continued, “During this selection process, Ms. Birge showcased her exceptional leadership qualities, along with her deep commitment to the success of all students, her passion for education, and her respect for the entire Princeton High School community. For these reasons, I know she will be successful as the next principal of Princeton High School.”

Community members are invited to attend the BOE special virtual meeting on August 31 at 6 p.m. through the Zoom link on the PPS website at princetonk12.org.

August 30, 2023

THE SHOW GOES ON: When a bomb threat forced evacuation of the Bayard Rustin Center for Social Justice on Saturday morning, the Drag Queen Story Hour moved down Mercer Street to a nearby stoop, where Carrie Dragshaw (in foreground on steps at right) carried on her reading as children and families listened. The Princeton Police Department scoured the BRCSJ headquarters and surrounding area. No explosives were found. (Photo by Robert Zurfluh)

By Donald Gilpin

A bomb threat on Saturday morning, August 26, at the Bayard Rustin Center for Social Justice (BRCSJ) on Stockton Street forced about 50 participants at the Drag Queen Story Hour gathering to evacuate the building.

Police searched the building as event headliner Carrie Dragshaw (Dan Clay) moved down the street to a nearby stoop, and the performance and dialogue took place in shortened form with children and adults sitting and standing on the sidewalk and grass alongside Mercer Street. 

The Princeton Police Department (PPD) reported, “A canine sweep of the building and surrounding area was completed, and no explosive devices were found.” The Detective Bureau is conducting a follow-up investigation into the case.

A PPD press release noted that at 10:49 a.m. on Saturday they received an email communication from an unknown author containing “derogatory remarks aimed at LGBTQIA members and those affiliated with the Bayard Rustin Center for Social Justice.” The email also stated that numerous explosive devices had been placed in and around the BRCSJ headquarters. more

By Anne Levin

Two dedicated vegans intent on promoting the benefits of a plant-based diet have chosen Princeton as the inaugural location for a competition that involves local chefs and local diners.

The Vegan Chef Challenge starts Saturday, September 1 and runs through the end of the month. During that time, chefs from more than 17 restaurants — including Mediterra, Nomad Pizza, Planted Plate, Tipple + Rose Tea Parlor, and Jammin’ Crepes — will vie for diners’ votes on favorite plant-based menu options created for the competition. The winners will be announced in October.

In the process, organizers Steve Fenster and Cherise Daly hope, local diners might decide that veganism is the way to go.

“We find a lot of college towns that have restaurants offering vegan, but Princeton is severely lacking,” said Daly, who lives in the Asbury Park area. “Some restaurants do offer vegan options, but Princeton only got the first [all-vegan] one a year or so ago — Planted Plate.” more

By Donald Gilpin

In the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court ruling two months ago that prohibited colleges from considering race, ethnicity, and national origin when considering candidates for admission, Princeton University has announced changes in its admissions procedure and has established an ad hoc committee to examine its admissions policies.

The committee’s recommendations are expected by the end of the 2023-24 academic year, according to a University press release. In effect for the current 2023-24 admissions cycle will be new essay prompts in the undergraduate application and new procedures to make the race, ethnicity, and national origin of the applicants unavailable to University personnel.

“The University will be in full compliance with the Supreme Court ruling for the 2023-24 admissions cycle,” said Princeton University President Christopher L. Eisgruber. “But this ruling also comes after a global pandemic and amid a significant expansion of the undergraduate student body. It is a good time to take a broader look and ensure our admissions policies in general are optimally serving the University’s mission.” more