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Common calendar, Packet papers, June 25 - centraljersey com
centraljersey.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from centraljersey.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Common calendar, Packet papers, June 18 - centraljersey com
centraljersey.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from centraljersey.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Common calendar, Packet papers, June 4
Common calendar, Packet papers, June 4
Ongoing
Every Friday evening, Saturday and Sunday in June, July and August, Terhune Orchards on Cold Soil Road in Princeton will present its weekly Sips & Sounds and Weekend music series.
Sips & Sounds is Fridays, 5-8 p.m. Enjoy wine and light fare.
Weekend Music Series continues all summer, with live music Saturday and Sundays from 1-4 p.m.
The winery opens at noon on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
The current schedule is: June 4 Kara & Corey; June 5 Fabulous Benson Boys; June 6 Bob O’Connell; June 11 Bill Flemer and Friends; June 12 Brian Bortnick & Sam Bortnick; June 13 Jerry Steele; June 18 Mark Miklos; June 19 Bill Flemer; June 20 Jim Matlack & Joe Kramer; June 25 Catmoondaddy; June 26 Mike & Laura; June 27 Acoustic DuoVer;
Common calendar, Packet papers, May 28
Common calendar, Packet papers, May 28
The Princeton Mercer Regional Chamber will return to hosting in-person events.
The first in-person event on the calendar is June 24’s Business After Business, which will be held at Arm & Hammer Park, home of the Trenton Thunder. The event will run from 5–7 p.m. and will include light appetizers and beer and wine. It is open to both members and non-members.
The summer calendar includes many in-person events:
· Princeton Pitch Stop, a program of the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Council, will be hosted by Grounds for Sculpture on July 13. This event will feature pitch presentations from various start-ups with real-time feedback from experienced investors including Sean O’Sullivan of SOSV and Kelly Ford from Edison Partners.
Tue Mar 9, 2021
Bruce Bawer is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. Stand-up comedians used to have a simple rule: no subject is off-limits if the joke is funny. It was a good rule, and it made for some great comedy. The rise of the woke left represents an existential threat to that rule, and to good comedy generally. When it comes to comedy, indeed, the mantra, increasingly, is that any gag that might conceivably offend anyone, especially someone belonging to what the woke left considers a victim group, should simply not be tolerated – period. To an alarming extent, this comedy-killing mentality has been institutionalized at outfits like Netflix and Comedy Central, at some comedy clubs, and in the mainstream media. So it is that the comics who are most honored in such circles are dreary scolds like the Tasmanian lesbian Hannah Gadsby, whose acts are light on actual humor and heavy on identity politics. You don’t hear a lot of laughter from these peop
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