Category Archives: Uncategorized

For Birders, With Love


A new edition of the classic “The Birds of New Jersey” by William J. Boyle Jr. has just been published, and a copy arrived at my door, courtesy of Princeton University Press ($24.95, 308 pages, 200 color pages, and a good index).

I’m not a birder. I bow to my colleague, Carolyn Foote Edelmann, nature writer and blogger extraordinaire on all matters avian.

It won’t help me identify “my” cormorant who sometimes frequents Carnegie Lake at Harrison Street.

But once I know it’s a cormorant (long neck, tiny head) it can tell me that it’s probably the double-crested cormorant rather than the rarer kind, and it offers the fascinating fact that this breed was “heavily persecuted during the 18th and 19th centuries and were extirpated [now there’s a word] from New England, but th population began to recover in the early 20th century. Breeding was suspected [oh the language of birders!] in New Jersey in the 1970s and it was confirmed in 1987. An average of 200,000 double crested cormorants fly through Avalon in the fall….You get the idea.

This book is widely recognized as a comprehensive guide on the status and distribution of more than 450 species found in New Jersey. Each species gets its own map. Birders, this is for you!

Me, I’m lucky to spot the male cardinal.

Gluten Free Today — and other Princeton Deals


Princeton Deals is my go-to source of tips these days.

I was intrigued to learn about Girls Night Out at Palmer Square on Thursday, May 19.

To my delight, Princeton Deals featured the flea market at Nassau & Vandeventer on Saturday, May 21 (yep, that’s my church, Princeton United Methodist). You can be a shopper — or a seller!

And I just came back from the “Is Gluten Free the Way to Be?” demo and tasting at the Princeton Public Library, previewed by Princeton Deals last week. If you know someone with celiac sprue, this event continues until 6 p.m. today, with a panel at 4 p.m. and adjourns to Mediterra for a gluten free dinner at 6:30 p.m.

If you can’t make it to the library today, the frozen products are on sale at the library cafe. I have to say Angeleri’s gluten free focaccia was way better than the dross I’ve tasted elsewhere. It’s easy enough to make pizza and sweets be tasty, but just plain white bread — that’s hard to disguise.

My son has been on this diet for a couple of years and my husband was just diagnosed. In fact, we had a successful gluten-free experience at a Momo restaurant, Eno Terra, last week. (At least this allergy not my side of the family, and I can go on gorging on real bread.) But any gluten free recipes would be welcome!

Meanwhile (and full disclosure, I know the editor who writes it) look to Princeton Deals for — well, good deals!

BTW that’s Raoul Momo on the left with his friend, Angeleri, who says he has been working on perfecting his gluten-free recipes for 20 years. I asked Momo if he would have access to those recipes for Eno Terra and Mediterra. You guessed right, the answer was no. “We’re good friends, but we’re not such good friends that he’ll give me the recipes,” he smiled.

Welcome to Shelbyville

The Princeton Public Library sometimes serves food – but I don’t remember ever being invited to the library for a potluck supper. On Thursday, May 19, at 6 p.m. the library hosts a potluck to introduce Welcome to Shelbyville, a film about a potluck supper held in a small Tennessee town. The library’s Janie Hermann tells about this last-minute addition to the calendar as follows:

”The library was approached late last week by Anastasia (Stacy) Mann and the Princeton Human Services Commission to host a screening in mid-May of the new film Welcome to Shelbyville prior to its national release on PBS on May 24. We had precisely one date open on our calendar and after a quick flurry of exchanges between Friday and late today we were able to secure Kim Snyder, the maker of the film, to come to our event. This is very exciting!”

The event will start at 6 pm with a potluck sharing of appetizers and desserts, then screening of the film at 6:30 and be followed by a moderated discussion led by Kim Snyder and Stacy Mann. Co-sponsors include the Rutgers-Eagleton Program on Immigration and Democracy, the Princeton Borough Department of Human Services, and Not in Our Town Princeton, the interracial, interfaith social action group that is committed to speak truth about ‘everyday racism’ and other forms of prejudice and discrimination

Welcome to Shelbyville is billed as “a rare, inside look at America at a crossroads. In a small Tennessee town in the heart of the Bible Belt, a community grapples with rapidly changing demographics. Just a stone’s throw away from Pulaski, Tennessee (the birthplace of the Ku Klux Klan), Shelbyville’s longtime African American and white residents are challenged with how best to integrate with a burgeoning Latino population and the more recent arrival of hundreds of Somali refugees of Muslim faith. Set on the eve of the 2008 Presidential election, the film captures the interaction between Shelbyville’s old and new residents as they search for a way to live together during that tumultuous, history-changing year.”

Why a potluck? It is integral to the film’s message, as this clip reveals.

Set in 2008, when the economy is in crisis, the film aims to explore “the interplay between race, religion, and identity” and to portray “a community’s struggle to understand what it means to be American.” (Shown in photo: ESL students reciting the Pledge of Allegiance).

“In Shelbyville, the Tyson chicken plant is hiring hundreds of new Somali refugees, and when a local reporter initiates a series of articles about the newcomers, a flurry of controversy and debate erupts within the town.”

“Just as the Latino population grapples with their own immigrant identity, African American residents look back at their segregated past and balance perceived threats to their livelihood and security against the values that they learned through their own long struggle for civil rights. As the newcomers — mostly of Muslim faith — attempt to make new lives for themselves and their children, leaders in this deeply religious community attempt to guide their congregations through this period of unprecedented change.”

We here in Princeton might be tempted to think that Shelbyville is just a podunk town. It is indeed cheek by jowl with the home of the Ku Klux Klan, but it’s more than just a crossroads with a chicken factory and a WalMart, and this is not its only brush with fame. It is the home of the Tennessee Walking Horse festival and was the subject of the country song and video, “Famous in a Small Town.”

Perhaps we might just be able to learn something from the folks in Tennessee.

Running to Combat Riverblindness

One bite from a fly can lead to blindness, but one runner or walker can keep four people from losing their sight. The second annual May Day 5k to Combat Riverblindness will be Saturday, May 7 at 10 a.m.. The run/walk starts and ends at Princeton Theological Seminary at College Avenue. The $25 entry fee will benefit the United Front Against Riverblindness (UFAR). Register in advance at www.riverblindness.org or www.princetonumc.org. All participants will get a T-shirt.

Last year my husband and I walked the course — it’s a beautiful course, wending its way through the seminary and the Institute, with the dogwood trees in bloom — and managed to turn in a time of less than 60 minutes. We didn’t break into a trot, not even once. Shown here — David and Anthony Teng, crossing the finish line last year.

Race sponsors include Merck, Princeton Eye Group, Princeton United Methodist Church, and the Princeton Running Company. And the T-shirts are gorgeous.

UFAR is the African-inspired, Lawrenceville-based nonprofit charitable organization that aims – in partnership with other organizations — to eradicate onchocerciasis, a major public health problem in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

Though the medicine for riverblindness is provided free by Merck & Co., distributing it to remote villages costs 58 cents per person per year for 10 years. One-third of the 60 million people in that country are at risk for getting riverblindness, which starts with a rash and leads to sight loss, forcing children to leave school to care for parents.

Race sponsors include Merck, Princeton Eye Group, Princeton United Methodist Church, and the Princeton Running Company.

Brandraising for NonProfits

This is a press release, provided by the Princeton Area Community Foundation and Borden Perlman. They invite you to a morning seminar for Executive Directors, Trustees and Development Directors

Brandraising: Speaking with One Voice

Presented by
Sarah Durham, Principal & Founder
Big Duck

Wednesday, May 25, 2011
8:00 am to 10:30 am

Registration and Breakfast at 8:00 am

RSVP 609.219.1800 or mpadro@pacf.org
by Friday, May 13

Free Registration – RSVP Required

Greenacres Country Club
2170 Lawrence Road
Lawrenceville, NJ 08648

The Session
Are you expanding the tools you use to communicate online, or considering it? Based on Sarah Durham’s book Brandraising: How to Raise Money and Increase Visibility through Smart Communications, (Jossey-Bass, 2010) this session will introduce nonprofits to the concepts of Brandraising that can help you improve your fundraising, outreach, and relationship-building communications.

You’ll learn
1. How online communications connect to other channels (on air, in print, in person, mobile)
2. How to use positioning and personality to help keep all your work on track
3. How to speak with a unified organizational voice across all channels, in all tools

The Speaker
Sarah Durham grew up in the advertising, design, and marketing worlds. In 1994, it was time for her to put communications best practices to work for a better reason: to help nonprofits increase their visibility, raise money, and move the needle on their missions. So she made her escape and started Big Duck. Today, Big Duck is the leading communications firm that works exclusively with nonprofits. Clients include local, regional, national, and international organizations.

Sarah is a total nonprofit communications nerd (her words!). She was named a “Top Fundraiser under 40” by Fundraising Success Magazine in 2006, and one of the most influential women in technology by Fast Company magazine in 2010. She’s a regular speaker at Association of Fundraising Professionals and Nonprofit Technology Network conferences. Sarah teaches aspiring nonprofit communications nerds at NYU’s Wagner School and at the Athena Center for Women’s Leadership at Barnard College, and regularly gives workshops and webinars to anyone who’ll listen. Join her in conversation on Twitter @BigDuckSarah.

The Twenty-Something Workforce

Here is a press release on an intriguing-sounding May 12 workshop re “The Risk of Ignoring Millennials,” as below:

Terri Klass Consulting, a New Jersey based leadership skills training organization, and The Lindenberger Group, a local human resources consulting company, conducted interviews with professionally employed Millennials and their managers around the world. They will share the results of their research at a breakfast workshop on May 12 in Princeton. “The twenty-something’s, 75 million strong in size, are joining organizations with a zest to lead and perform, but sometimes bring with them different ideas of work/life balance,” says Terri Klass. “Integrating this generation into the workplace provides managers with a fresh set of challenges, but also a new set of opportunities,” adds Judy Lindenberger.

Who: Human resource professionals, managers, business owners

What: Breakfast seminar on The Risk of Ignoring Millennials

When: Thursday, May 12, 2011 from 8:00 am to 10:00 am

Where: Main Street Euro-American Bistro, 301 North Harrison Street, Princeton

Cost: $75 per person (group discounts available)

Register: By May 7th by calling (609) 730-1049 or emailing info@lindenbergergroup.com

In addition to a delicious breakfast and networking with other professionals, Klass and Lindenberger will describe fictional situations and ask participants to provide advice to the protagonists. Through discussion and fun activities, participants will learn strategies to manage a multi-generational workplace.

Leschley: Unquestionable Confidence


When Jan Leschley spoke at Emory 10 years ago, the reporter noted that he “had unquestionable confidence.” As a youth he made his living on the tennis court. A job at Squibb brought his family (a wife and four sons) from Denmark to Princeton in the summer of 1981 — the same summer my family moved to Princeton from Pittsburgh. The four blonde teenage tennis players from Denmark cut quite a swathe.

Leschley got the job of president and CEO of Squibb Corporation and the same job at SmithKlineBeecham. Now he is CEO of the life sciences venture capital firm, Care Capital, which focuses on late stage pharmaceutical companies. He speaks to the Princeton Chamber on Thursday, May 5, at 11:30 a.m. at the Princeton Forrestal Marriott on “Financing Innovation in Life Sciences – Next Steps in the Pharmaceutical Industry.”

The Leschleys are a tennis oriented family who have made a success at being a family. According to the Emory speech, Leschley’s secret for success in that area is to stay married to your high school sweetheart (Lotte) and stay home with your kids on Friday and Saturday nights.

Noted the reporter: “His unquestionable confidence was underscored by a humorous approach to modesty. But then, he appears to have little to be modest about.”

Payne: Spiritually Intentional Leaders

Are qualities like mutual respect, integrity, and cooperation sufficiently valued where you work? Or does the team concept break down into games, selfish behaviors, and questionable ethics?

Stephen G. Payne will try to answer those questions when he speaks on “Workplace Challenges for Christian Leaders” at a breakfast at Princeton United Methodist Church on Sunday, May 7, at 8 a.m. in the Social Hall. Reservations ($5 contribution for the breakfast) are requested at 609-924-2613 or office@princetonumc.org. Free parking is available in the Park Avenue lot.

Payne will tell about what Christians can and should you do in the fast-paced competitive organization where you work.

Dr. Payne is an executive leadership coach, speaker, MBA teacher, author, and founder of A New Equilibrium, a community of leaders committed to leveraging their spiritual resources for professional effectiveness and personal fulfillment. Combining his faith, his experience as a CEO, and his fifteen years of leadership consulting, he challenges professionals to stay accountable to God throughout their entire career. His books and CDs include First Rule of Leadership, Total Leadership, and Driving Growth Through Leadership.

Payne and his cohorts at A New Equilibrium will present a Leadership and Spirituality Summit at Princeton Theological Seminary from Sunday afternoon, May 14, through Monday afternoon, May 15. Cost: $85. The title: Becoming a Spiritually Intentional Leader.

Princeton and the Royal Wedding

We’re just back from London, having taken our 14-year-old granddaughter on the Tauck “Castles and Kings” family tour. I want to tell about it, of course, but how to link that trip to Princeton?

Through Climate Central, the Palmer Square-based temperature-watchers who issued a Royal Wedding climate chart.

“In central England, we have three and a half centuries of directly measured climate data,” writes David Kroodsma, a data journalist at Climate Central who helped synchronize the dates of all the royal weddings with all the temperature charts, as below:

Go to the original and you will get all kinds of fascinating click throughs, but Kroodsma points out that five of the ten hottest years in Britain have been in the past 10 years.

We certainly would agree with that. The week before the big wedding it was hot hot hot in London.

Some side notes:

*Princeton-based Michael Lemonick, former star reporter from Time magazine, is working for the three-year-old Climate Central.

*The photo shows the Buckingham Palace gates with me, my spouse and our Michigan-based granddaughter.

*The ever-imaginative Jamie Saxon crafted a U.S. 1 Newspaper connection to The Wedding in this week’s cover story. Here’s the inside scoop on the cover shoot at Jasna Polana. Four brides got to recapture their magic moment for another day.


I thought I would be blase about The Wedding, but it was a thrill to see crowds march behind the police cordon to the very gates we’d been standing in front of, just 10 days before.

As for the trip, though jet-lagged, I’m still on Cloud Nine.

Two for Wednesday

In haste, I point to two excellent programs on Wednesday.

Robert Tignor speaks at a Princeton Chamber breakfast at the Nassau Club at 7:30 on the topic “Middle East Uprisings, How the Past Informs the Present.”

NJEN presents Venture Capital: Critical Components to Closing a Deal, an interactive discussion with a panel of venture capitalists at noon at the Princeton Marriott.

Look for news of the Innovation Forum in Wednesday’s U.S. 1 Newspaper.