Nan Xiang Announces Grand Opening Celebration in Lawrence Township, NJ

A trendy restaurant that many people are buzzing about on TikTok is having its grand opening celebration in Lawrence Township. Nan Xiang Express Princeton has officially opened in Mercer on One (formerly Mercer Mall) on Route 1 South.

Nan Xiang Express Princeton’s mission is to “recreate the most memorable flavors of Shanghai and share them with you.” The menu features a variety of delicious options including soup dumplings, their signature dim sum, appetizers, noodles & rice, soups, and beverages. You can check out the full menu [here](#).

### Grand Opening Celebration: October 18

The grand opening celebration will take place on Saturday, October 18. However, specials and deals will begin earlier, starting Thursday, October 16 through October 18.

### Special Offers

– **Spend $50 or more and receive a free Bobo doll (while supplies last).** It’s adorable and a fun bonus for your visit!
– **Buy One Get One Free vegetable spring roll special on October 18** for the first 100 customers. Be sure to arrive early to take advantage of this tasty deal.
– **Top Up Bonus (October 16–18):** Add $100, $200, $500, or $1000 to your store card and get up to $200 extra in store credit. (Available at the Princeton location only.)

Visit the new Nan Xiang Express Princeton at Mercer On One, located at 3349 Brunswick Pike. It’s in the same shopping strip as Olive Garden.

If you’re not confident with chopsticks yet, don’t worry—they have spoons too!

### What’s Coming Soon?

In addition to Nan Xiang Express, Kura Sushi is also opening soon in Mercer on One.

Stay tuned for more updates on exciting new dining options in Lawrence Township!

**Related:**
– [It’s official: Raising Cane’s opening first Mercer County location](#)
– [Major change underway for Chick-fil-A in Lawrenceville](#)
https://nj1015.com/ixp/942/p/nan-xiang-express-lawrence/

His birthday, your birthday

The dread you have of being forgotten is of your own making. Your pride dissuaded you from stating the date of your birth on your social media accounts. That would have assured digital prompts to your followers to wish you. But you desire to be greeted without reminders, as a heartfelt expression of sentiments for you. This is why you don’t throw birthday parties—for the guests wouldn’t but remember greeting you.

You turn wistful on hearing that a prominent Delhi school has asked children to make e-cards and upload videos wishing the prime minister on his birthday. The school’s circular suggested they highlight, in their greetings, a reform introduced by Modi that has had a significant impact on the nation.

You are again reminded of your ordinariness, for you have never received a card appreciating the difference you made to a person’s life. You suddenly remember long queues outside banks in the aftermath of demonetisation and migrant labourers walking home during the COVID shutdown. Remembrance can, indeed, be manipulated. But you also know nothing can make you feel as lonely as your birthday being forgotten, for it establishes your sheer unimportance.

You belatedly remember you too have engaged in manipulation—promising your family a treat on your birthday. It’s a device for feeling special on a special day. This self-knowledge turns you forgiving as you leaf through newspapers dated September 17, 2025—pages after pages of advertisements wishing the prime minister on turning 75.

You note the names of those who issued them. You wonder: do they want to extract a benefit from Modi in return for remembering him? What makes them feel he’d be pleased? You think he’s perhaps no different from you, as much a child as you are in equating remembrance with worthiness and love.

Your expansive mood turns sullen as you check social media timelines. Dozens of celebrities remember the prime minister’s birthday! From film stars to cricketers to business tycoons to, obviously, politicians, they have sent messages to the prime minister. Some describe their fleeting moments with him or laud him for leading the nation to scale the peak of glory by 2047.

For sure, he can’t possibly share your fear of being forgotten.

But then you stumble upon chess grandmaster Viswanathan Anand’s message, wherein he ecstatically describes how he was once treated to a delicious Gujarati thali by Modi. On re-reading the message, you notice it is addressed to Viswanathan Anand ji, not to Modi ji. He obviously forgot to substitute his name with the prime minister’s.

In the bitterness oozing out of your ordinariness, you now know that Anand was commandeered to send his greeting to the prime minister, with even the text written out for him.

The discovery of Anand’s message is your eureka moment. It’s so silly of you not to have a birthday bash only because you want your friends to wish you without a prompt or pretext. You realise you shouldn’t be so insecure as to compulsively gauge your importance to them every year. You resolve you will, from now on, be as unabashed as Modi is about celebrating his birthday.

But you discern a problem, for the celebration of Modi’s birthday involves organising blood donations and cleanliness drives. Ordinary mortals cut cakes, but Modi, on September 17, launched an initiative that will have the government organise 10 lakh health camps for women between September 17 and October 2.

His gesture impresses you—even though you wonder why the camps weren’t held at another time in the year.

You then remember your grandfather, who’d give you money when you’d wish him on his birthday. Patriarchs have a keen sense of what makes love and loyalty work.

Your problem is your family and friends would baulk if you were to celebrate your birthday by inviting them to, say, donate blood.

Just as poet Sahir Ludhianvi thought that by building the Taj Mahal for his beloved, Mughal emperor Shah Jahan mocked the love of the poor, you too think ordinary birthday desires are caricatured every September 17.

Fear, like love, has many expressions.
https://www.mid-day.com/news/opinion/article/his-birthday-your-birthday-23595142