9-20 WWP

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COMMUNITYNEWS.ORG

SEPTEMBER 2020 FREE

Deadline latest hurdle to Census accuracy

School district cancels fall sports

Top of the mountain

BY SAM SCIARROTTA

BY MICHELE ALPERIN

As we approach the finish line for the 2020 Census, enumerators in New Jersey are facing serious obstacles to achieving a fair and complete count. A shortened deadline, fewer enumerators (formerly known as census takers) than planned due to the pandemic and fears of completing the census—particularly in the Latino community—sparked by actions and words of the Trump administration, are just a few of the hurdles in the way of an accurate count. The U.S. Census, completed every 10 years, “is designed to count every resident,” to determine apportionment of seats in U.S. House of Representatives and to distribute hundreds of billions of dollars in federal funds to local communities, according to census.gov. “There’s a concern from many, especially in the immigrant population, about privacy and security, especially when our current administration had, in many of our minds, been undermining the process: first, by trying to include the citizenship question, and lately by shortening the deadline,” says Princeton councilwoman Leticia Fraga, who is See CENSUS, Page 6

Thirteen-year-old West Windsor resident Vyshakh Thejaswi (left) summited California’s Mount Whitney on Aug. 9, after a grueling 22.5 mile hike with an overall elevation gain of 6,700 feet, with his father, Thej Gurumurthy. Mount Whitney, in the Sierra Nevadas, is the tallest mountain in the contiguous United States, with an elevation of 14,505 feet. Thejaswi is an 8th grader at Grover Middle School.

Teaching the art of healing WWAC show to debut virtually BY SAM SCIARROTTA

The West Windsor Arts Council, like many other local organizations and businesses, wanted to do something in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. So the group stuck to what it knows. The council’s exhibition committee will present Art and Healing, an online exhibition starting Aug. 31 and

running through Oct. 23. A virtual opening reception is scheduled for Sept. 11 from 7:15 to 9 p.m. The exhibition will run online only. The exhibition centers on how art can be used as a healing tool in the wake of a global pandemic and otherwise. “We invited artists to explore the theme of Art and Healing, not only as it relates to the Covid-19 pandemic and the profound impact it has had on our lives, but also as a reflection on past life experiences or feelings relating to

healing from any condition or challenge,” said Aylin Green, the executive director of the West Windsor Arts Council. “As we cautiously emerge from the quarantines of the past few months, WWAC has created an exhibition that looks at art as a healing tool, reflecting the realities, feelings, or experiences during this surreal time, or from other past events, either personal or public.” Works in the show range from transformative photoSee ART, Page 10

The West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District will cancel the fall interscholastic sports season, superintendent David Aderhold announced in a statement Aug. 6. All varsity, sub-varsity and middle school sports are affected, as well as marching band. Aderhold said the decision was made based on three factors: health, social and emotional welfare and financial implications. WW-P is the first Mercer County school district to cancel the fall sports season. “As the news continues to report stories of athletes who have tested positive for COVID19 or teams that have quarantined due to outbreaks, there is no return to normalcy,” Aderhold said. “Professional and collegiate athletic programs must endure changing conditions such as daily COVID-19 testing, altered living arrangements, and constantly shifting schedules due to the cancellation of games. These teams have access to resources that far exceed our local school districts, and yet we pretend that school districts can pull off our seasons simply because we desire the return to normalcy.” All WW-P fall varsity head coaches and marching band directors will provide virtual lessons, the statement said. These will include virtual workouts and social and emotional See SPORTS, Page 9

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