All posts by bfiggefox

Faith and Ethics in the Executive Suite: Staying Grounded while Flying High

faith and work

Staying Grounded While Flying High: Marc Allen — a press release

This Friday is the spring finale of the “Faith & Ethics in the Executive Suite” series, hosted by the Princeton University Faith & Work Initiative. The Princeton Faith & Work Initiative will host a conversation with Marc Allen ’95, Senior Vice President at The Boeing Company and President of Boeing International, on May 29, 2015 at 3:00 pm, in the Frist Campus Center, in the lower ground Multipurpose Room A. The event is scheduled as part of Princeton Reunions Weekend; it is free and open to the public.                                                       

Professor David W. Miller, director of the Princeton University Faith & Work Initiative, will interview Allen about his perspective on issues related to business ethics and leadership, particularly in today’s highly global and competitive marketplace. They will also explore what role his faith tradition plays in shaping and informing his leadership style, ethical foundation, and approach to business.                                                                                                        

Prior to joining Boeing, Allen graduated summa cum laude from Princeton University in 1995, earned a J.D. from the Yale Law School, practiced law at Washington, D.C.-based law firm Kellogg Huber, and clerked for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antony Kennedy.

The Privilege of Pedigrees

17WIVES-blog427.No surprise — social status can matter when it comes to getting fabulous jobs. Now a sociologist, Lauren A. Rivera, has ‘proved’ it, in a new book, PedigreeHere is an excerpt from the publisher, Princeton University Press: “Displaying the ‘right stuff’ that elite employers are looking for entails considerable amounts of economic, social, and cultural resources on the part of applicants and their parents.” 

Those of us who have benefited from a generous amount of privilege are still curious to imagine the lives of women at the very top of the heap. To read Susan (Susie) Wilson’s memoir, Still Running, is to take a crash course in the lifelong advantages of those born wealthy. Wilson candidly acknowledges the advantages she had. And — unlike the Kardashians of this world — she put her privilege to excellent use, to advocate for many good causes, including honest sexuality education in the public schools. Wilson launches the Phyllis Marchand lectures at the Princeton Public Library on Tuesday, May 26.

Today, anthropologist Wednesday Martin scorched the pages of the New York Times with Poor Little Rich Women, a formal study of the wealthy moms of the Upper West Side, a “glittering, moneyed backwater.”

I was a pretty intense mother myself, entering the full-time work force only in my ’40s. But Martin spares little sympathy as she describes the mostly 30-somethings with advanced degrees from prestigious universities and business schools. They were married to rich, powerful men. . . exhaustively enriching their children’s lives by virtually every measure, then advocating for them anxiously and sometimes ruthlessly in the linked high-stakes games of social jockeying and school admissions.

Though Martin claims to have informed these women that she was studying them, I hope she moves out of the neighborhood before her book, Primates of Park Avenue, gets published.

(New York Times illustration by Malika Favre)

Last Day and First Day for Ed Felten

P1030125Ed Felten and his wife Laura are moving to DC, where he is starting a new job: deputy chief technology officer in the White House.

We said farewell to the Feltens on their last Sunday at Princeton United Methodist Church, where Laura has taught Sunday School for forever. The children were asked, “How many of you have had Mrs. Felten for a teacher,” and virtually all raised their hands — as did Ed.

So what did he do for his first week on the job? Post a brain teaser. And invite us to follow his Twitter stream @edfelten44 for hints.

We’ll miss them.

Last day for the St, John’s Bible

itw0021s-th

A modern illuminated Bible — medieval illumination techniques with a 21st century aesthetic — has been displayed at the Princeton Theological Seminary, and the last day is Mother’s Day, May 10. It is at the Erdman Center, 1:30 to 9 p.m. if you are a mom, get your kids or spouse to take you to see the St. John’s Bible. 

Hint hint!

Seward Johnson: Thursday, 5/7 @11:30 am

I want my “people” to be unheroic, and in so being, become universal.  But I want their act that I am celebrating, the existential gesture, to be heroic in the lowest key. So says celebrated but controversial sculptor Seward Johnson, He speaks at the Princeton Chamber lunch on Thursday, May 7, at 11:30 a.m. He helped create one of New Jersey’s biggest tourist attractions, Grounds for Sculpture.

Stem Cell Scientists Beware: Ruja Benjamin Challenges Your Ethics

Biotech scientists take note: Ruja Benjamin challenges your ethics. You may have unconscious racial bias.

Benjamin, author of “People’s Science: Bodies and Rights on the Stem Cell Frontier,” will speak on “What Kind of Future Are We Designing?” at noon on Tuesday, May 12, at the Princeton Public Library. ruja benjaminOn the faculty of Princeton University in the Center for African American Studies, she is a faculty associate in the Program on the History of Science, the Center for Health and Wellbeing, and the Program in Global Health and Health Policy.

Here is her TED talk about why scientists and clinical trial directors must actively seek the input of those who might be harmed by new biotechnology.

Her sharp wit gets, perhaps, too close to the truth for comfort.

(this post originated at Not in Our Town Princeton).

Bakelite at the Button Show 5/9

c01-Bak-Cookiel-B button country

Hundreds of thousands of clothing buttons, plain and fancy, will be for sale and on display at the New Jersey State Button Society Show and Competition on Saturday, May 9, 9 to 4 p.m.  one of the first plastics made from synthetic components. Competition trays will be on view from noon to 3 p.m., and Jennifer Lackovick will give a talk at 1:30 p.m. on Bakelite, one of the first plastics made from synthetic components. At left, a button made of Bakelite,

I’m a member of the New Jersey State Button Society and the National Button Society. We share an interest in studying, collecting, and preserving clothing buttons, both old and new. If  you have any interest in antique, vintage, or modern buttons, try to join us on Saturday. A dozen dealers will be there (as shown below). You can poke through assortments of inexpensive buttons for crafts or find that one fancy button you need for an outfit — or compare the precious buttons in your grandma’s jar with those on display.

DSCF8115The Union Fire Company & Rescue Squad building is located at 1396 River Road (Route 29), Titusville, NJ 08560, at the intersection of Route 29 and Park Lake Avenue, opposite the Delaware River and D&R Canal State Park (with 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. Free parking. For questions, email Sara Mulford (pictured on right) at slmulford@verizon.net or 856-275-6945

Here’s another Bakbakelite buttonelite button to whet your appetite!

Dear White America: People of color cannot turn away.

bfiggefox's avatarNot In Our Town Princeton

j2Î빕atë2o´cãÕîº÷pÖ·ÜN›œî6±Œý%¶~Ž¿zfKà•oF«ºèüÃÍ­ÖzssúnN.ÿIn the Baltimore Sun, Julia Blount has an article that will be discussed on Monday, May 4, at 7 p.m. at the monthly forum, Continuing Conversations on Race and White Privilege at the Princeton Public Library, third floor. She writes:

I am not asking you to condone or agree with violence. I just need you to listen.

You don’t have to say anything if you don’t want to, but instead of forming an opinion or drawing a conclusion, please let me tell you what I hear:

I hear hopelessness
I hear oppression
I hear pain
I hear internalized oppression
I hear despair
I hear anger
I hear poverty

If you are not listening, not exposing yourself to unfamiliar perspectives, not watching videos, not engaging in conversation, then you are perpetuating white privilege and white supremacy. It is exactly your ability to not hear, to ignore the situation, that is…

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Guest Post: Karen L. Johnson

This Saturday, April 25th 12-4  Princeton Public Library. REVIVE is the theme of  

TEDxCarnegieLake

Come to be inspired by local successes, perspectives, and visions with impact beyond our corner of the globe

REVIVE Volunteerism
REVIVE Time
REVIVE Science Education
REVIVE Oneself
REVIVE Local Businesses
REVIVE Homeland
REVIVE Global Climate
REVIVE Brilliance
REVIVE Athletes
REVIVE Advocacy
REVIVE with Performances

What questions are we not asking, or what questions could we ask differently

to trigger a different response and to make a change to issues in the world?

Come this Saturday, April 25th – noon to 4 – at Princeton Public Library.

Here’s the link  www.tedxcarnegielake.com to reserve your spot and join in

exploration and inspiration.

Hope to see you there!

Karen L. Johnson

Today and Every Day

sar poster 2015

Have you noticed these posters in storefronts around town? Merchants who support the Stand Against Racism campaign, by putting the signs in the window, are featured in a two-page color spread in Town Topics this week. The ad was sponsored by an anonymous donor to Not in Our Town, an interfaith, interracial group committed to speaking truth about every day racism.

Special thanks to Joy Chen — vice president of the Princeton Merchants Association and proprietor of JoyCards — who designed the poster. And to Lori Rabon of the Nassau Inn, which sponsored the legislative breakfast on Friday.

You can join the Stand Against Racism effort by signing the YWCA’s National Pledge Against Racism 

By contacting Congressional delegates to ask them to pass the End Racial Profiling Act (HR2851)

And by following the Not in Our Town Princeton blog, with its calendar of pertinent events.