Princeton High School (New Jersey)

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Princeton High School
File:Princeton High School Logo.jpg
300px
The entrance of the school - tower and flagpole.
Location
151 Moore Street
Princeton, NJ 08540
Information
Type Public
Established 1898
Principal Gary R. Snyder
Faculty 119.8 (on FTE basis)[1]
Enrollment 1,447[1] (as of 2012-13)
Student to teacher ratio 12.08:1[1]
Color(s)      Blue
     White
Athletics conference Colonial Valley Conference
Team name Little Tigers
Website

Princeton High School (PHS) is a four-year comprehensive public high school in Princeton, New Jersey, United States, operating as part of the Princeton Public Schools district, which serves all public school students in Princeton. Students from Cranbury Township attend PHS as part of a sending/receiving relationship with the Cranbury School District.[2] The school has been accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Secondary Schools since 1932.[3]

As of the 2012–13 school year, the school had an enrollment of 1,447 students and 119.8 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 12.08:1. There were 105 students (7.3% of enrollment) eligible for free lunch and 40 (2.8% of students) eligible for reduced-cost lunch.[1]

PHS is notable for its high academic standards and strong arts programs that rival many of the nation's private schools. The school consistently ranks amongst the top open-admissions public high schools in the state concerning SAT scores, and was ranked first in the state amongst open-admissions schools in 2009.[4]

Overview

File:Princeton-HS-NJ-overhead.jpg
This image of PHS from above (with old municipal boundaries pre-dating the January 1, 2013, consolidation of Princeton highlighted) predates the 2000s construction. The building complex to the right of the athletic fields and track is John Witherspoon Middle School, also pre-construction.

Princeton High is located between Moore Street and Walnut Lane. The district middle school, John Witherspoon Middle School, is located across from the high school athletic fields on Walnut Lane.

The school offers 200 courses in many subjects and levels, including most of the courses in the Advanced Placement Program. More than 70% of students take at least one AP or accelerated course.[5] Additionally, the High School Program at Princeton University permits qualified juniors and seniors to take free courses at Princeton University if they have exhausted all high school course alternatives within a discipline, receiving only high school credit for any university courses successfully completed.[6]

The school contains over 250 classrooms, several equipped science labs, two gymnasiums, a performing arts center, a fitness center, a garden, athletic turf and tennis courts. Some of this came from significant reconstruction from 2003 to 2007 as part of an $86 million project to renovate the district's school buildings, also including a new mathematics wing and renovated library.[7]

The school's principal is Gary R. Snyder, and its assistant principals are Jessica Baxter, Harvey Highland and Lori Rotz. The Athletic Director is John Miranda.[8]

Awards, recognition and rankings

Nationally, Princeton High School ranked in Newsweek's top high school list in 2004 (113), 2005 (212), 2006 (113), 2007 (208), 2008 (142), and 2009 (210).[9] In The Washington Posts's "Most Challenging High Schools" list, PHS ranked in 2011 (370), 2012 (330), 2013 (322), and 2014 (467).[10] In U.S. News & World Report, Princeton High School was ranked in 2009 (94), 2010 (113) and 2014 (216).[11] In 2007, The Wall Street Journal, ranking the country's high schools based on a percentage of 2007 high school seniors sent to eight selective colleges (Harvard, Princeton, MIT, Pomona, University of Chicago, Johns Hopkins, Swarthmore, and Williams), placed Princeton High School at #27. PHS was the second highest ranked publicly funded school, with a total of 31 students matriculating to those schools.[12]

Statewide, New Jersey Monthly's "Top Public High Schools" has ranked Princeton High in 2006 (13), 2008 (6), 2010 (44), 2012 (59) and 2014 (67).[13] Schooldigger ranked the school in 2011 (75), 2013 (50) and 2014 (44).[14] The 2009 U.S News & World Report ranked Princeton High as the highest ranked open-admissions high school in New Jersey.[15]

School policy

Schedule

School is held Monday through Friday from 7:51 a.m. - 2:51 p.m. for 180 days per year. The daily schedule consists of eight academic periods (45 minutes), except for Wednesdays which have 30 minute periods and a 12 minute homeroom period between the second and third periods, and a break (30 minutes) between the fifth and sixth periods.[16] There are four minutes between each class period for the students to get to their next class.[16]

Every Wednesday, (termed "short Wednesdays" or "one-forty-nine days") and on days when special events are planned, the school day is shortened and ends at 1:49 p.m. Students attend 35 minute class periods, and homeroom and break periods are not shortened. Short Wednesdays exist to permit the operation of the mandatory freshmen Peer Group program between 1:49 and 2:51. This period of time is also used for community service group meetings for sophomores, other extracurricular activities, and school-wide events such as pep rallies, the Fall Festival, and Spring Fling.[16]

Lab days

The school days are assigned letter labels, cycling from A through G. This is done to accommodate double periods for science classes, which are scheduled so there is a gym class during the preceding or following period. For two out of these seven days (either A and E, B and F, or C and G depending on the class, so that D day is the same for everyone) the science class meets two periods in a row to give the class opportunity for a lab experiment. For example, if a student has lab on B and F days, he or she will not have gym, health or driver's education on those cycle days and will instead have a double science period. D Days are often used on the first few days of school, the first day of each marking period, midterms and finals, or other drastic changes in schedule.[16]

Graduation requirements

In order to receive a diploma from Princeton High School, students must successfully complete a minimum of 120 credits from grade 9 to grade 12. Each year-long class counts for 5 credits; each semester class counts for 2.5. The exception is science classes that have one or two lab periods count for 5.7 and 6.4 credits, respectively. Additionally, each student must have completed 50 hours of community service, usually completed during a students sophomore year. Required courses include English I and English II (which must respectively be taken in the first two years) and two more years of English; three years of science, including biology and chemistry; one year of a foreign language, though three years is recommended; three years of mathematics; one year of gym for every year that the student is enrolled; two years of United States history, one year of world history; one year of visual/performing arts; one year of practical arts; and one half year of financial literacy.

In addition, students must show proficiency in the PARCC assessment. Previously, the school used the HSPA 11 - the class of 2015 is the last class to rely on this.[17] Students must also pass the Biology State Assessment the year they are enrolled in a Biology course.

PHS has a policy of revoking credit for a student's course if a certain amount of absences in a class are reached. More than 18 absences from a year-long course or 9 absences for a semester course will lead to credit revocation. Tardiness counts as one-third of an absence for the purposes of revoking credit.[16]

Extracurricular activities

Princeton High School offers over 100 extracurricular activities, including clubs, publications, competitive teams, and other organizations. Chartered organizations include Anime Club, Amnesty International, Asian American Club, Dance Club, Democrats Club, Do Something, French Club, Chess Club, Chinese Club, Computer and Robotics Club, Crew Club, Environmental Club, Fashion Club, Fellowship of Christian Athletes, Filmmaking Club, Gender Sexuality Alliance, Japanese Club, Junior Statesmen of America, Just Wing It (improv group), Korean Club, Latinos Unidos, Math Team, Mock Trial, Model United Nations, Muslim Society and Friends, Numina (art gallery), Odyssey of the Mind, Operation Smile, Photography Club, Pokémon Club, Prayer Group, Republican Club, SADD, Save the Elephants, Science Olympiad, Speech and Debate, Spork (food magazine), The Ivy (arts magazine), The Prince (yearbook), The Tower (newspaper), Tiger News (weekly broadcast), and UNICEF. Students can create their own clubs with prior approval.[18] As of December 2014, contract negotiations have led to cancellation of uncompensated activities, including most clubs. This issue was resolved the following school year.[19]

Athletics

The Princeton High School Little Tigers participate in the Colonial Valley Conference, which includes high schools from Mercer, Middlesex and Monmouth Counties, operating under the supervision of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA).[20] The school was classified by the NJSIAA as Central Jersey, Group IV for most athletic competition purposes for the 2014–15 school year.[21] Princeton High has teams in baseball, basketball, cheerleading, cross country, fencing, field hockey, football, golf, ice hockey, lacrosse, soccer, softball, spring track and field, swimming, tennis, volleyball, winter track and wrestling.

The golf team went five for five in its 2007 tournaments, including the Group III State Championships, the Mercer County Tournament, Sectional Championships, the Bunker Hill Tournament, and the Cherry Valley Tournament. The team over had a record of 47-2 during the 2007 and 2008 seasons. The 2008 team repeated as Group III champion.[22]

The varsity girls swim team won the 2007 NJSIAA Central - B State Sectional Championship with an 87-83 win over Ocean Township High School.[23] They again beat Ocean Township High School in 2008 for the second year in a row, claiming their 6th consecutive NJSIAA Central - B sectional championship.

The 2009 boys swimming team won the Central Jersey Group B Sectional title with a 99-71 win against Ocean Township High School.[24] In 2011, the boys swimming team won the Central Jersey Group B Sectional title with a 102-68 win against Freehold Borough High School.[25] Following that, the team advanced to the NJSIAA Public B finals, ultimately losing to Scotch Plains-Fanwood High School, 80-90.[26] In 2012, the boys swimming team again won the Central Jersey Group B Sectional title. After that, Princeton once again faced-off against their rivals last year Scotch Plains-Fanwood. This time Princeton boys swimming team won 109-61, giving them the NJSIAA Public B state champion title.[27]

In 2008, the varsity cheerleading squad competed in the Colonial Valley Conference Competition, and won Best Dance, first place in Medium Division and Overall Grand Champions. They competed against 13 other teams in order to win the Grand Champion Award. In 2010, the squad competed again, and won first place in Small Division.

In 2009, the varsity boys' soccer team won the Group III state championship, capping off an undefeated season with a 2-1 win over Millburn High School.[28]

The Princeton High School Choir

PHS Choir is technically an elective and not an "extracurricular" activity, as it is a regularly scheduled course for which credits and grades are given.

Founded in 1944, the Choir is nationally and internationally known as one of the top high school choirs in the world. It is composed of 60 to 80 students in grades 10 through 12 every year, with auditions conducted at the end of each academic year for entry in the following year. The Choir tours internationally (and occasionally nationally) once every two years. Past tours of special significance include the 1977/78 invitation from the American composer Gian Carlo Menotti to participate in Spoleto, a world-renowned summer festival where they premiered Menotti's opera, "The Egg" and an invitation to perform at the 850th anniversary of the city of Moscow.[29] More recent destinations include Austria, Canada, China, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Russia, Sweden and the United Kingdom. A national tour with the entire Choir to Washington D.C. in the spring of 2009 included a performance at the Washington National Cathedral.[30] The Choir toured Barcelona, Spain, in February 2011, appearing on national Spanish television as well as gaining special permission to perform in the Cathedral of Montserrat.[31] Since December 1944, the Choir has performed its annual winter concert in the Princeton University Chapel, often filled to capacity with over 1,200 attendees, including numerous Choir alumni.[32] The Chamber Choir, composed of members of the main choir, has performed at the White House on numerous occasions.

The Choir has been under five directors: Harvey Woodruff from 1944 to 1948, Thomas Hilbish from 1948 to 1965, William Trego from 1965 to 1993, Charles "Sunny" Sundquist from 1993 to 2008, Vincent Metallo from 2008 to present.[32] )

Debate

Princeton High School has a rich history of success both in the National Forensics League and the Catholic Forensics league.The school debate team competes in the three largest forms of High School Debate : Public Forum,Lincoln Douglas, and Congressional Debate.The team of Sinan Ozbay and Pragya Malik were nationally ranked as the best Public Forum duo for the majority of their senior year(2015),with their most notable accolade being the Champions of the Harvard Round Robin Debate.


A cappella

PHS has four student-run a cappella groups. There are two "choir affiliated" groups (members must be part of the main choir): The Cat's Meow and Around 8, with two "choir unaffiliated" groups: Testostertones and Cloud Nine. All four perform at various events in and out of school such as Back To School Night, Fall Festival, Friday Night Live (FNL), Winter Arch Sing WWP-South's Acappellooza, Spring Fling, and Final Arch Sing, among others. All sing songs arranged by current and former members and produce an album yearly. The a cappella groups hold auditions at the end of each school year and admit a small number of new members.

The Cat's Meow is all girls, established in the early 1980s and features five "classic" songs along with 15-20 new arrangements on their CD. Around Eight was formed 1992, originally a mainly madrigal-oriented group, but became more pop-oriented with complex beatboxing. The name came from the original eight members being slightly late or early to their 8 pm rehearsals. Cloud 9 is all female, formed to give girls not in the choir a chance to showcase their abilities. The Testostertones is the only all boys group, and is the most recent group formed.

PHS Studio Band

The band program is technically an elective and not an "extracurricular" activity, as it is a regularly scheduled course for which credits and grades are given. The band, an elite high school performance group, was the inspiration for the 2014 film Whiplash.

Program

Princeton High School has several levels of bands to accommodate all levels of playing from beginning to professional skill. Tiger I & II, Nassau I & II, Jazz Ensemble, and Studio Band are the 6 bands by order of pure playing ability. Students are assigned to their respective band level according to skill, being an upperclassman holds no extra sway.

The Princeton High School Studio Band, currently directed by Joe Bongiovi, selects its members by audition only. All Studio Band members are expected to excel in sight-reading, master finger positions, and be familiar with all techniques that apply to their instrument (e.g., trombone F-attachment). They are also expected to attend all rehearsals both during and after school. During the band's preparation for competition, ensemble rehearsal can be over 12–20 hours in 1 week.

The Studio Band is known to play a wide variety of genres arranged for Big Band. About one Friday evening each month throughout the school year the Studio Band hosts dances known as Big Band Dances.

History

The original director and founder of the Studio Band was Dr. Anthony Biancosino. Biancosino was the director of the Studio Band for 26 years. During those years the Studio Band had many successes, including playing at the inaugural balls of both Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush. The film Whiplash is based on writer/director Damien Chazelle's experiences in the band program under Dr. Biancosino.[33]

When Biancosino died in December 2003, his brother, Joseph Downey, took over as director of the Studio band. Under his direction the Studio Band continued to play and compete. In 2007 the Studio Band took first place at the Berklee College of Music High School Jazz Festival. Prior to performing, Downey dedicated the set to Dr. Biancosino. Incidentally, his brother Joe stepped in to direct the band at the 1982 Berkee Festival, when they won the competition for the first time, while Dr. Biancosino was at the bedside of his ailing daughter. The set in 2007 consisted of three pieces: Whiplash, Of Another Time, and Cherokee; the same set the Studio Band had played when they won previously at Berklee twenty-five years earlier. Joe Bongiovi later took over the band director's position, with the help of band director Scott Grimaldi. Under the direction of Joe Bongiovi in 2009, PHS Studio Band won first place overall, best woodwind section, and best brass section at the Disney Jazz Festival. Later in the year, they also won first place overall and best saxophone section at the NJAJE State Finals. The set consisted of Heat of the Day, Mumuki, and What is This Thing Called Love. At the Berklee Jazz Festival of 2010, the PHS studio band took first place in Division 2 for large ensembles. The set was It Don't Mean a Thing (If it Ain't Got That Swing), The First Circle, and Besame Mucho. The band played well once again at the Berklee Jazz Festival of 2011, winning first in Division 2 for large ensembles, second in Division 1 for small combos, and second in miscellaneous BandSlam groups (this time Wake'N'Ska).

Jazz Festival

The Princeton High School band program also hosts an annual Jazz Festival, nicknamed "Jazz Fest", at which local high school jazz bands are invited to perform for adjudication. Like many other similar high school jazz festivals, the host band traditionally plays last and is not scored for competition. Each year, the band program invites a guest artist to perform after the festival for its attendees.[34]

Jazz Festival Guest Artists

  • 2008- Berklee School Of Music Concert Jazz Orchestra
  • 2009- Tierney Sutton
  • 2010- Cherry Poppin' Daddies
  • 2011- Tim Hagans & Marvin Stamm
  • 2012- Denis DiBlasio
  • 2013- Peter Erskine
  • 2015- Bob Mintzer

Spectacle Theatre

Spectacle Theatre is Princeton High School's student-run drama club. Each year, students will act in and produce a fall play (generally in November) and a spring musical (generally in March). After the conclusion of the musical, seniors have the opportunity to direct single-act plays in a Student Directed Play production. Each production involves tech, make-up, lighting, and costume departments as well as a stage crew.

The program was the first high school to premiere "Brigadoon" and "Carousel". They have also performed operas at Princeton High School, the first of which was Cavalleria Rusticana, a one-act opera written by Pietro Mascagni.

Spectacle Theatre is currently directed by Pat Wray, the PHS drama teacher and former Broadway dancer and actress.

The Tower

The Tower is the school's newspaper, which was founded in 1911 as The Observer. In 1925, it was again renamed to The Blue & White, and received its present title in 1929 to commemorate the new high school building, which is presently the oldest building on campus. The first incarnation was published fortnightly in a smaller format, while the current edition is published monthly in a traditional newspaper size. It has been printed and typesetted by various local publishers, including the Town Topics and most recently the Princeton Packet. The newspaper is distributed for free in school, in addition to online publication.[35]

The Tower has varied enormously in content and style throughout its publication. The nameplate has changed significantly, with the original pencil drawing of the tower with The New York Times-style lettering continually removed and reinserted in between redesigns, but the current masthead dates to the eighties. Features in The Tower include a monthly quotes section, "Cheers and Jeers" of various cultural and school-specific events, a two-page topical opinions/forum spread called Vanguard, and a monthly calendar of local events called "Pencil These In". Many of these topics have been resurrected from past issue of The Tower. General topics include opinion pieces, arts and entertainment, and sports news. Once a year a joke issue is published, which is a tradition first created in a 1920s issue called The Black & Blue - more recent examples being a mid-2000s issue alleging that a giant condom had been placed on top of the school and lolcats being featured in a 2009 issue.

The Tower has faced competition. From 1990 to 1994, a rival "underground" newspaper called The Free Press published after a split between several potential editors of The Tower.[36] Currently, an Onion-style news site called The Dungeon has been publishing since 2013.[37]

The Ivy

The Ivy is the school's visual and literary arts magazine. The title of the magazine comes from the ivy that grows on some of the older school buildings. Student-submitted work is reviewed anonymously and the staff creates the magazine based on these votes. The magazine is printed and distributed for free in school, in addition to online publication.[38]

Spork

Spork is the school's food and dining magazine. It was created during the 2011–12 school year through funds generating via Kickstarter.[39] The Spork staff writes and adapts recipes, reviews local Princeton restaurants, and publishes food-related features and articles. Spork is printed and distributed for free in school, in addition to online publication.[40]

The Ideas Center

The Princeton High School Ideas Center provides most of the students in need at the school with peer tutors. Tutors work with their fellow students in one-on-one sessions or study groups. Tutoring is often done as a community service requirement, though this is not always the case.

Achievement gap

PHS has been considered a case study of the achievement gap in elite high schools. The gap between different groups in academic progress received greater attention in 2005, after the school failed the No Child Left Behind Act. The New York Times ran an article entitled "The Achievement Gap in Elite Schools," by Samuel G. Freedman on September 28, 2005, which essentially accused Princeton High School of neglecting its responsibility to educate minorities. While the cause may be due to socioeconomic status rather than racial segregation, many students in the overwhelmingly white-and-Asian-populated advanced classes can spend most of their high school career without sharing but a few classes with their Hispanic or African American peers. According to Freedman's article, "In the early 1990s, an interracial body calling itself the Robeson Group—in homage to Paul Robeson, the most famous product of black Princeton—mobilized to recruit more black teachers and help elect the first black member to the school board."[41]

In 2003, the school became part of the Minority Student Achievement Network, a network of 21 different schools across the country, that share Princeton High School's achievement gap problem. MSAN gathers high achieving minority students, to address and help fix the growing achievement gap, in their schools.[42]

Notable alumni

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 School Data for Princeton High School, National Center for Education Statistics. Accessed March 29, 2015.
  2. Staff. "Cranbury trims 23 jobs in wake of aid reduction", The Times (Trenton), March 25, 2010. Accessed July 14, 2011. "Cranbury public schools serve about 600 students in pre-Kindergarten through eighth grade. The district’s high school students attend Princeton High School."
  3. Princeton High School, Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Secondary Schools, backed up by the Internet Archive as of March 30, 2012. Accessed March 29, 2015.
  4. Mooney, John and Robert Gebeloff. "In New Jersey, Magnets Give Suburban Schools a Race", The New York Times, February 06, 2009.
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  22. Alden, Bill. "Tiger Athletes Made National Impact in 2008 While Traditional High School Powers Thrived", Town Topics (newspaper), December 31, 2008. Accessed July 24, 2011. "The Princeton High boys’ golf team won its second straight Group III state title while the Little Tiger girls swimming, girls’ tennis, and boys’ tennis team each won sectional titles. The PHS boys’ soccer team won a second straight Mercer County Tournament title."
  23. 2007 Girls Team Swimming - Central - B, New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association. Accessed June 4, 2007.
  24. Pratico, Mark II. "Princeton topples Ocean Twp. for sectional swimming crown", The Trentonian, February 20, 2009. Accessed July 24, 2011. "Last night at North Brunswick High School, the top-seeded Princeton High boys swim team managed to hold off the Ocean Township Spartans for a 99-71 victory. With the win, the Little Tigers brought home the Central Jersey Group B Sectional title."
  25. Staff. "Princeton 102, Freehold Borough 68 (High school Boys Swimming scores and results) - Boys Swimming ", The Star-Ledger, February 14, 2011. Accessed February 27, 2012. "Compared to the ear-splitting din of the bigger regular-season swim meets the Princeton High boys hosted, the feeling at yesterday’s NJSIAA Central B semifinal was rather calm. For a team with bigger goals in mind, the mood was apropos. The Tigers brushed aside Freehold Borough with relative ease by a 102-68 score that could have been much more lopsided."
  26. Bevensee, Rich. "Princeton (80) at Scotch Plains (90), NJSIAA Group Tournament, Final Round, Public B", The Star-Ledger, February 27, 2011. Accessed February 27, 2012. "For the first time in the program’s history, Scotch Plains, No. 5 in The Star-Ledger Top 20, earned a state championship by virtue of a 90-80 victory over No. 6 Princeton in the NJSIAA Public B final at The College of New Jersey in Ewing."
  27. http://www.nj.com/times-sports/index.ssf/2012/02/princeton_boys_swimming_wins_p.html
  28. Eckert, Daniel. "Millburn Drops a Heartbreaker to Princeton in Boys Varsity Soccer 2-1; Millers Come Up Just Short of A Second Consecutive State Title", TheAlternativePress.com, November 22, 2009. Accessed July 22, 2011. "A late rally by Millburn after being down 2-0 was thwarted by Princeton who held on to win the NJSIAA Group III State Tournament ending the Millers' season on Friday night at the College of New Jersey."
  29. "The Princeton High School Choir: A Short Introduction"
  30. "PHS Choir Tours and Collaborations"
  31. Gilbert, Ellen. "Princeton High School Choir Wows Audiences In Catalonia With Music and Language Skills", Town Topics (newspaper), March 2, 2011. Accessed July 24, 2011.
  32. 32.0 32.1 "Choir Historical Highlights"
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  42. About MSAN, Minority Student Achievement Network. Accessed November 4, 2007.
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  44. Gilbert, Ellen. "Gold Key Recipients Hear Richard Besser Talk About Meeting Life’s Challenges", Town Topics (newspaper), June 8, 2011. Accessed July 24, 2011. "ABC News Chief Health and Medical Director Richard Besser, who graduated from Princeton High School (PHS) in 1977, returned last week to deliver the keynote address at the Gold Key Award Ceremony."
  45. Staff. "Chris Barron: Spin Doctor helps old high school", Wilmington Morning Star, March 14, 1995. Accessed August 5, 2014. "CHRIS BARRON, lead singer of the Spin Doctors, gave a pocketful of cash to his old high school. Mr. Barron returned to Princeton High School on Sunday for a benefit concert to help the New Jersey school choir raise money for its trip to England and France next month."
  46. Staff. "N.J. natives John Lithgow, Laurie Berkner to play McCarter Theatre ", NewJerseyNewsRoom.com, March 26, 2010. Accessed August 5, 2014. "Making her first McCarter appearance on Saturday, April 17 for two performances at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. will be Princeton native (and Princeton High School alum) Laurie Berkner, the 'Pied Piper of Pre-Schoolers.'"
  47. Takiff, Jonathan. "Big Fat Close-up", Philadelphia Daily News, September 17, 1999. Accessed July 24, 2011. "Is there something in the water in Princeton, N.J., that makes you strive to become a jam band rock musician? Blues Traveler came out of Princeton High School (class of '86), along with the lead singer of Spin Doctors."
  48. Staff. "Olympian Lesley Bush shares gold at library", Princeton Public Library, August 2, 2012. Accessed August 5, 2014. "A Princeton High School student in 1964, Bush was honored with a town parade upon her return from the Olympics."
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  52. 52.0 52.1 Oksenhorn, Stewart. "Traveler's new groove", Aspen Times, July 1, 2005. Accessed August 24, 2012. "Blues Traveler was formed in 1983 by four friends from Princeton High School: drummer Brendan Hill, guitarist Chandler "Chan" Kinchla, bassist Bobby Sheehan and a character of a young man, John Popper, whose eccentricities ran from his bomber hat to his choice of instrument, the undersung harmonica."
  53. Hunt, Mary Ellen. "Arielle Jacobs stars in 'High School Musical'", San Francisco Chronicle, April 13, 2008. Accessed August 5, 2014. "A native of Half Moon Bay, Jacobs was 14 when she moved with her family from California to Princeton, N.J., just as she was to start high school, so she knows what it's like to be the new girl in town."
  54. Moser, John J. "A wake-up call to green action form Ben Jelen ** With a new CD and foundation, rocker brings eco-friendly message to Allentown", The Morning Call, April 19, 2008. Accessed August 24, 2012. "Born in Scotland of Czech descent, Jelen was raised in London and Texas before settling in New Jersey at 15, where he graduated from Princeton High School (starting ground for Blues Traveler and Spin Doctors)."
  55. LaGorce, Tammy. "John Lithgow Sings of the Sewer, and Other Funny Stuff", The New York Times, November 11, 2007. Accessed July 24, 2011. "The visit will allow Mr. Lithgow, a Princeton High School graduate, to catch up with a few school friends still in the area, he said, and to relive “loads of fond memories” of the 1960s, when his father, Arthur Lithgow, ran the McCarter Theater downtown."
  56. Persico, Joyce C. "Documentary explores life in Princeton during the late 1960s, early 1970s", The Times (Trenton), October 6, 2013. Accessed August 5, 2014. "Thomas Wolfe wrote You Can’t Go Home Again, but independent filmmaker and theater director Brad Mays is certainly going to try with I Grew Up in Princeton, a documentary he hopes will rattle a few cages and open some eyes when it has its world premiere in Princeton on Oct. 18.... Once he was bused to Princeton High School, which at the time accepted students from West Windsor, life changed for Mays, who fell in with an 'artsy' group and 'fit right in.'"
  57. Handelman, Louise. "Stories of the former world: John McPhee bridges worlds of science and humanities", Princeton Packet, April 6, 1999. Accessed September 16, 2007. "After graduating from Princeton High School, he did a post-graduate year at Deerfield Academy in Massachusetts before matriculating to Princeton University."
  58. Guest Artists: Bebe Neuwirth, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. Accessed November 27, 2006.
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  60. Alden, Bill. "PHS Alum Potts Finds Direction In Triathlon; Now Aims to Soar at Athens Summer Games", Town Topics (newspaper), July 21, 2004. Accessed August 5, 2014. " After completing a stellar swimming career at the University of Michigan, Andy Potts found himself drifting. Working as a sales representative for a payroll company in Chicago in 2002, the Princeton High alum lacked clear direction for the first time in his life."
  61. Staff. "Daniel H. Schulman, Virgin Mobile USA CEO, Inducted to Rutgers Board of Governors", Rutgers Today, July 9, 2009. Accessed October 12, 2014. "Born and raised in Newark, Schulman later attended Princeton High School."
  62. Week 10: "Hacking", North Carolina State University. Accessed October 23, 2007. "Shimomura was born in 1964 in Nagoya, Japan.... He got into an antiestablishment group at Princeton High School and got expelled for it, even though he had won a local math/science contest."
  63. Staff. "Ask Michael Ian Black and Michael Showalter", The Washington Post, January 25, 2008. Accessed July 24, 2011. "Q. I go to Princeton High School. Have you seen the additions? It's pretty weird. Did you like going here? I bet we had some of the same teachers. Michael Showalter: Go Lil Tigers!"
  64. Mroz, Jacqueline. "Sundance Honor for Film of Early Save-the-Earth Activists", The New York Times, February 13, 2009. Accessed August 19, 2015. "After attending Princeton High School, Mr. Stone studied history in college."

External links

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