
One size does not fit all, when it comes to leadership styles, says Nan Keohane (photo at left). The former president of Wellesley College, and the first woman president of Duke University, Keohane is teaching at Princeton University now, and her latest book, Thinking About Leadership, published by Princeton University Press is an inspiring and anecdote-filled trip through past and current history. She gives a talk at Princeton Public Library on Monday, January 31, at 7:30 p.m. As a Duke alumna who has heard her on several occasions, I can testify she’s an excellent speaker, not to be missed.
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Not in Their Bordentown
Sizzling Sausage: Hot Tips for Employers
What to do with the 20-something in your company? Jo Leonard offers a host of ideas at a Princeton chamber breakfast on Wednesday, January 19, at the Nassau Club on “Why Generation Ys are Good for Your Business.”
Among her tips – get them networking. They’re the ones to do your Twitter and Facebook pages. Let them update your legacy software. Give them a second title that recognizes their perceived value, like “productivity guru.” And more.
If you don’t get to go to the breakfast (sorry about the late notice), email Leonard for her tip sheet.
If you’re reading this and thinking about going, remember that the Nassau Club has terrific hot breakfasts. The networking is at 7:30, the munching starts at 8, and you’re done at 9:15.
Honoring Dr. King
“The good neighbor looks beyond the external accidents and discerns those inner qualities that make all men human and, therefore, brothers.” So said Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, the focus of attention over these next few days. Do any of these opportunities to focus on Dr. King’s ideals speak to you?
Guest Post: on Community Works
Princeton’s Community Works is always a “must do” in January. As a guest post, here is a letter that CW volunteer Krystal Knapp wrote to remind her friends to register. Thanks, Krystal!
Dear Friends and Colleagues,Do you know a nonprofit or civic group leader, staff member or volunteer who could benefit from a night of networking and training? If so, please forward this information to them along with the attached flyer.On the evening of Jan. 24 we will hold the 14th annual Community Works conference at the Frist Center at Princeton University. Our keynote speaker will be Dr. Anthony Branker, director of the program in jazz studies at Princeton.Workshops range from topics like Raising Money in Difficult Times and The Grantwriter’s Toolbox to Recruiting and Cultivating Board Members and Attracting and Retaining Volunteers. There are 20 workshops to choose from, with several new workshops this year, including a session on how to leverage your volunteer experience to find a paying job.The $29 fee for the conference includes a networking session, keynote, two workshops, a boxed dinner, coffee and snacks. We expect to have more than 400 attendees. People interested in registering should do so ASAP to get their first choice of workshops.More information about the conference can be found at PrincetonCommunityWorks.org.Thanks for helping us spread the word. If you have already registered we look forward to seeing you on the 24th.Best wishes for a happy and healthy 2011,Krystal Knapp
I’d like to add that more than 200 organizations have been represented over the past 13 years. Check out this list. I bet your group is on it.
Entrepreneurs in a Material World

T-Shirts Build New Jersey Pride



Waiters Holiday: At the Witherspoon Grill

You know that Princeton has come up in the world, as a dining destination, when a French waiter from a very French Upper East Side restaurant (left) chooses a Princeton restaurant (above) for his night on the town.
We figured there would plenty of places to eat around there, in the neighborhood of Hunter College. Wrong. We began to think we would have to settle for pizza when we stumbled into what looked like a hotel but was actually an elegant French restaurant on Park Avenue at 65th. (When I first wrote this I didn’t include the actual name of the restaurant, but now I can — it’s Daniel’s.. Turns out it has three Michelin *** and four New York Times stars and is arguably the best French restaurant in Manhattan.)
Princeton’s Beautiful People
All those beautiful people. All those tantalizing dates. They’re in this year’s U.S. 1 Newspaper’s calendar and datebook, and if you go to the Princeton Regional Chamber’s lunch on Thursday, January 6, you’ll be able to get your own free copy.
Power Plays for January
For the past several years, the Princeton Regional Chamber has started off the New Year with a luncheon speaker who prognosticated about the economy. For instance, last year’s January speaker for the chamber was David Sandahl, who predicted gloomy results for job creation. But for this year, enough about the economy, we need something more cheerful.
Jeff Vanderbeek, the speaker for Thursday, January 6, 11:30 a.m. at the Princeton Marriott, has finance forecasting chops, because he used to be at Lehman Brothers. But now he is chairman of the New Jersey Devils hockey team, and he will talk about how he aims for a payout from the largest private investment in New Jersey. Walk-ins pay more, so pre-register.
And sure enough, this January lots of people are still looking for jobs. At the Princeton Public Library on Wednesday, January 5, at 7 p.m., outplacement consultant Jean Baur offers some consolation and advice, in part from her book, “Eliminated? Now What?” Co-sponsored by NJ Unemployed, the group begun by Katie Devito aimed at making the unemployed a collective voice, the event is free.
More meetings of value in the next week:
At the library, on Monday, January 10, at 6:45 p.m., Brinda Wiita will speak about how small businesses can use social media. A neuroendocrinologist and pharmacologist, she manages a website for submission of patented and patent-pending opportunities that may be commercialized by Johnson & Johnson Consumer companies.
New Jersey Technology Council offers its latest CEO Forum, “Managing a Board of Directors,” on Wednesday, January 12, at 8:30 a.m. at the offices of the Edison Venture Fund, 1009 Lenox Drive. Cost: $25. Visit www.njtc.org.
Also on January 12, a nationwide group teams with New Jersey’s Solid Waste Resource Group will present “Creating Ways to Keep Organics Out of the Landfill, a day-long interactive workshop, aimed at creating a vision for organics recycling. Cost $20 including lunch, call 609-651-1544 or vastola@aesop.rutgers.edu.
Donna Liu teaches a free course on how to use the Internet to spread your message. It’s on Thursday, January 13, 9 a.m., at Princeton Community Television, 369 Witherspoon Street, and. like the library workshops, it’s free.
For more social media advice, check out these excerpts from U.S. 1’s Survival Guide.) And check the calendar of U.S. 1 Newspaper for other business meetings that can give you a “shot on goal.”



