State-sanctioned prayer?

Steven Hart offers just the right touch of sarcasm to commemorate yesterday’s state-sanctioned Day of Prayer. I’m surprised that more people aren’t bothered by this constitutionally dubious faux event.

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Stupid is as stupid does

Stop being stupid. That’s the advice I’d give to the student or students who scrawled two bomb threats in graffiti in bathrooms at South Brunswick High School recently. I know it was a prank, but it is not funny.

Here’s the editorial we wrote last year ($) when the same kind of nonsense occurred:

Enough is enough.

Five times in just over a month South Brunswick High School has had to be evacuated because of a prank, bomb threats either called into the school or left in a note or scrawled on walls in the building.

The threats — three of which occurred in early May and two last week — were obvious pranks, according to school officials, who nonetheless decided not to take any chances. The building was evacuated with about three hours of class time lost.

We think the district has acted appropriately — it would be foolish not to take seriously any potential threat against the 2,800 or so students and staff members in the building.

The district also has made efforts to punish the pranksters while preventing future hoaxes from taking place.

Two students were arrested in early May in conjunction with one of the threats, charged with making terroristic threats, false public alarm, criminal mischief and conspiracy by local police and expelled by the district.

And school officials promise the same treatment for anyone else caught in connection with the other four threats. (An anonymous donor is offering a $500 reward to anyone with information that leads to the arrest of one of the pranksters.)

School Principal Tim Matheny also announced that additional bomb threats would result in the conversion of planned half days into full school days.

Unfortunately, threats are about the only tool administrators have at their disposal to deal with potential pranksters. It is really up to students to make sure that this foolishness stops.

Students need to understand that these hoaxes are not funny. They waste time and resources, create panic among the community and could, down the road, lead to a “Boy Who Cried Wolf” mentality, lulling students and staff into a false sense of security. The more false threats that are made, the more likely it becomes for students and staff to take them lightly — which could have dire consequences should a threat turn out to be real.

Students can make this stop by taking responsibility for their school and for the actions that their peers take. This means confronting students who find these sick jokes funny and making it clear to peers that they will not be afraid to turn in offending students.

The message has to be made clear: Bomb threats are not funny.

No. They’re not.

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Runner’s diary, Friday

Managed four today — ran them with progressively faster splits for the first three and then slowed for the last one. Over all I did the four in 34:41 and now have a very sore left knee (but that could be from climbing up and down a stool as we paint our spare bedroom).

Music: Wilco, Kicking Television — the second disc.

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Historical uncertaintiesand the Monroe high school

Ah the vicissitudes of historical debate.

The efforts by Monroe — the Township Council and the school board — to push forward with plans for a new high school on a 35-acre section of Thompson Park have turned what otherwise might be an esoteric historical question into a massive controversy with huge implications for public policy and Monroe taxpayers.

The question: Where exactly was Bethel Indian Town (also known as the Bethel Mission) actually located?

The answer appears to depend on which historian you speak with.

Monroe Township Historian John Katerba places the encampment, at which Presbyterian missionary David Brainerd converted the Delaware Indians to Christianity (or, at least, tried to), at or near the Jamesburg Municipal Building near the corner of Forgate Drive and Perrineville Road — at the southwestern corner of Thompson Park. He said the

Monroe Township Historical Society researched the Bethel site in the 1970s and concluded it was located near the Jamesburg Municipal Building. He said the research was based on “evidence or things that people had witnessed or documented,” including early 1800s documentation from Alexander Redman, who bought the property at that time.

Richard Walling, a historical consultant from Somerville, has a different location in mind — “at the headwaters of the Wigwam Brook, which was located in what is now Thompson Park.”

He said he has 19th-century geological survey maps and a 1953 Middlesex County engineering map that put the brook’s headwaters in the location where the high school is to be built.

And then there is the survey by Richard Grubb and Associates, a Cranbury archeological firm. It shows no evidence of a settlement on the high school site.

(Township Business Administrator Wayne) Hamilton said the results show no sign of the 40 cabins, two schools and church said to make up the 18th-century mission, which many believe was located on the Thompson Park parcel.

“There is absolutely no evidence of that kind of settlement being on the 35 acres,” he said. “This is based on hard, scientific evidence.”

Mr. Hamilton said the survey did turn up some artifacts but added that “with any property in New Jersey, it’s not unusual to find artifacts.”

Richard Grubb said Thursday that the company is “recommending that we did not find Bethel.”

From my perspective, there just doesn’t seem to be enough evidence to hault the high school project. Let’s get the building up.

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