Archive | March, 2009

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Show Features Lower Pottsgrove Art

They picked up the brush.

Student art lives.

LOWER POTTSGROVE PA – Works created by students at Lower Pottsgrove Elementary School, 1329 Buchert Rd., will be featured during a “Gallery Night” exhibit of young artists to be held April 15 (2009; Wednesday) at 6:30 p.m. in the Norristown Public Library, 1001 Powell St., Norristown PA.

Pottsgrove School District spokeswoman Beth Trapani said the exhibit is part of the library’s observance of Youth Art Month, and features the talents of students from kindergarten through 12th grade across Montgomery County school districts.

Photo from Clipart.com

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Pottsgrove Day Encourages Entrepreneurs

LOWER POTTSGROVE PA – Even during the country’s current economic straits, more new jobs are created within small businesses than anywhere else. Inspiring future entrepreneurs to launch their own businesses will be the theme of Entrepreneurship Day, scheduled to be held this morning (Tuesday, March 31, 2009) from 9-11:30 at Pottsgrove High School, 1345 Kauffman Rd., for students from several area school districts.

Pottsgrove High School

Pottsgrove High School

The event intends to connect students with current entrepreneurs who can tell them about the training, time, education and money necessary to start a business, according to Pottsgrove School District spokeswoman Beth Trapani. Many students, she said, report their future plans include owning their own companies.

Among today’s featured round-table speakers are Lower Pottsgrove resident Tom Orlando of Orlando’s Photography, as well as Chris and Karen Foster of Positively Pasta in Pottstown PA. Other local companies participating are Zap Digital, Pottstown Auto Parts, and Main Line Financial, all of Pottstown; Three Peas in a Pod of Royersford PA, and Everything Postal in Bechtelsville PA.

Pottsgrove is the first host district for what is envisioned as an annual event. Guidance counselors from several participating districts – Pottsgrove, Pottstown, Spring-Ford, Perkiomen Valley and others – worked with the Montgomery County Industrial Development Corp. (MCIDC) to create a consortium that would host career days each year at different schools with varying themes.

MCIDC and the county’s Education and Workforce Partnership arranged speakers for the day. At Pottsgrove, the event is being coordinated by the high school’s Career Development Committee and its DECA student marketing club. Committee members are Don Petrella, Kyra Ebert, Megan Delena, Bev Stuart, and Eileen Forsyth.

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Pius Students Part Of Tonight's Concert

Music sounds tonight at Kimmel.

Music sounds tonight at Kimmel.

POTTSTOWN PA – Two St. Pius X High School students will be among more than 475 representatives of schools in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia who perform tonight (Tuesday, March 31, 2009) at 7:30 as part of its annual spring musical Concert of Excellence at Verizon Hall in Philadelphia’s Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts.

Bryan Washko of St. Pius is scheduled to play trumpet in the All-Catholic Concert Band, and Michael Zubert will sing tenor in the All-Catholic Chorus, according to archdiocesean spokeswoman Michelle Bauer.

The concert features musicians in archdiocesan bands, choruses and orchestras performing selections from American folk music, spirituals, musical theater and movies, all tied to the theme, “A Tribute to the Music of America.” It honors Monsignor Louis A. D’Addezio, director of the archdiocese’s Office for Special Projects, who Bauer said was being acknowledged for his “selfless dedication to nurturing the arts” in its schools.

Photo from Clipart.com

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Pottsgrove Falcons Sports For March 31, 2009

Pottsgrove Falcons Sports For March 31, 2009

  • Boys Varsity Tennis at Perkiomen Valley, 3:30 p.m.
  • Girls 8th Lacrosse, Scrimmage vs. Perkiomen Valley East, Pottsgrove, 3:45 p.m.
  • Girls Varsity Softball at home vs. Chichester, 3:45 p.m.
  • Girls JV Softball at home vs. Chichester, 3:45 p.m.
  • Boys Varsity Lacrosse at home vs. Daniel Boone, Lower, 3:45 p.m.
  • Boys JV Lacrosse at home vs. Cancelled – Daniel Boone, Lower, 5 p.m.
  • Girls 7th Lacrosse at home vs. Perkiomen Valley East, Pottsgrove, 5 p.m.

Provided by HighSchoolSports.net

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Today's Food For Thought

Today's Food For Thought

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Learn how to show your support for our troops.
Click here or on the graphic above and visit AmericaSupportsYou.mil

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Poll: Economic Trust In Government Wanes

Here to help, huh?

Here to help, huh?

MANSFIELD PA – “I’m from the government, and I’m here to help the economy.”

Yeah, right, a slight majority of Pennsylvanians respond.

Fifty-two percent of state residents surveyed say they don’t trust the government to guide the nation’s economy, according a poll conducted by Mansfield University, the results of which were released Monday (March 30, 2009). Thing is, 44 percent of respondents say they have little or no trust in the free market to guide the economy, either.

Pennsylvanians’ opinions on how the economy could be managed show greater consensus, though. Eighty-nine percent oppose having large companies and banks as the primary recipients of federal economic stimulus money; 57 percent say stimulus packages should be targeted first to individual taxpayers.

A majority of state residents surveyed also think the government needs to focus first on long-range economic goals, rather than short-term quick fixes.

The university’s 2009 study was conducted by its sociology professors, and surveyed 708 state residents older than age 18. It has a 3.6 percent margin of error, they said. Mansfield University is located in the north central part of the state, 32 miles south of Corning NY.

Composite created from photos at Clipart.com

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Mad Hatters Took To Tea Sunday

Friends Janice Hull, left, of Bechtelsville, and Fay Ludy of Gilbertsville, came to Sanatoga as a hatter's pair.

Friends Janice Hull, left, of Bechtelsville, and Fay Ludy of Gilbertsville, came to Sanatoga as a hatter's pair.

Betsy Schaeffer of St. Peters PA.

Betsy Schaeffer of St. Peters PA.

SANATOGA PA – The hat Betsy Schaeffer wore Sunday afternoon (March 29, 2009) was a chapeau of her own creation: an outlandish green felt stovepipe with floppy brim, dotted with bright red flowers and featuring a three-dimensional lobster. To almost any observer it looked goofy and silly and frivolous. To Schaffer, it looked like a cure for cancer.

The St. Peters PA resident was among dozens of women who traveled to Cutillo’s Restaurant, East High Street, during the weekend to sip tea, enjoy lunch and raise money to benefit the American Cancer Society (ACS). All were part of The Mad Hatter’s Tea Party, an event hosted by one of the teams that will participate in May’s ACS Relay for Life at Pottsgrove High School.

Organizers Bev Price, Sally Churgai and Erica Harting, all of Pottstown PA, estimate the event grossed several thousand dollars, a substantial portion of which – once expenses are paid – will be contributed by their Apple Basket Relay Team to the fight against cancer, a disease recognized as one of the country’s major health problems. This was their second year in staging Mad Hatter, and 2009 represents their 12th year in the Relay.

“We’ve been with it (Relay for Life) from its start here in Pottstown,” Churgai said. “It’s exciting, and we love doing it.”

Isa Sykes, age 8, of Elverson PA.

Isa Sykes, age 8, of Elverson PA.

Xochi Sykes, age 11, of Elverson PA.

Xochi Sykes, age 11, of Elverson PA.

In keeping with the party’s theme, most guests covered their heads with millinery of either the staid or send-up varieties. Isa Sykes, age 8, of Elverson PA, smiled from beneath a crown of multi-colored horns that looked like a pin cushion run amok. Her older sister, Xochi, 11, carried a flowering vine garden on her head. Gilbertsville PA’s Fay Ludy opted for a more reserved pillbox shape, but had fun with its color: bright orange satin with white pinstripes.

And that lobster on Schaeffer’s hat? It was accompanied by a bold, block letter banner that proclaimed the party-goers were “Clawing Our Way To A Cure.”

During Pottstown’s Relay for Life, teams of people will gather May 30-31 at Pottsgrove High School’s stadium, 1345 Kauffman Rd., Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township, to take turns walking or running laps around its track. Each team tries to keep at least one team member on the track at all times, and contributions are collected for every lap. Pottstown’s Relay has consistently been among the most successful in Pennsylvania; this year it hopes to raise $1.1 million.

Bev Price, left; Sally Churgai, center; and Erica Harting, all of Pottstown, were co-chairs for the Mad Hatter's Tea.

Bev Price, left; Sally Churgai, center; and Erica Harting, all of Pottstown, were co-chairs for the Mad Hatter's Tea.

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Easter-Themed Program Opener Draws Crowd

You can almost hear the squals, as three girls compete Saturday in Lower Pottsgrove's bunny hop sack races at Gerald Richards Park.

You can almost hear the squeals, as several girls competed Saturday in Lower Pottsgrove's bunny hop sack races at Gerald Richards Park.

Kaitlyn Fanus, age 5.

Kaitlyn Fanus, age 5.

SANATOGA PA – When her race had been run Saturday (March 28, 2009) and her smiling mother finally caught up to her, Kaitlyn Fanus was huffing and puffing slightly, like a tired rabbit that had just scooted across a lawn. Which she was, sort of.

Fanus, age 5, the daughter of Don and Rayanne Fanus of North Valley Road, Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township, was one of dozens of children to compete during the weekend in the municipality’s annual spring egg hunt and bunny hop sack races at Gerald Richards Park on Buchert Road. The event was sponsored by the Parks and Recreation Board, and attracted about 200 kids of all ages and their accompanying adults.

Kaitlyn made some huge hops in her race, grinning ear-to-ear as she moved down the 20-foot-long course, her blond hair flying behind her. At the end, her cheeks were flushed as pink as the outfit she wore, and she finished only third in her heat. But township employee Jennifer Corley, who was among several supervising the activities, gave her a round of applause and a pat on the head that made her feel like a winner nonetheless.

Saturday morning’s skies were gray and gloomy. A light overnight rain had covered fields where the races and hunt were held with a layer of wetness that created a chill. Hooded sweatshirts and spring jackets were the order of the day, and here and there adults sported umbrellas.

Jacob Slanker, eager for his chance at the eggs.

Jacob Slanker, eager for his chance.

The children, however, concentrated less on the wet grass than on what lay atop it: hundreds of brightly colored hollow plastic eggs, just waiting to be scooped up in the egg hunt. All carried candy treats or surprises inside, many of which were donated by Paul Kennedy of SK Advertising in Pottstown, the township announced.

Sections of the fields were roped off, and to ensure everyone had a fair chance at the goodies only children in certain age ranges were allowed to hunt for eggs within specific sections. Jacob Slanker, age 5, the son of Shawn Slanker of Augusta Drive, could hardly wait for his opportunity. “I’m gonna get that one,” he told his father, and pointed to an egg closest to the barrier. He carried a baseball-shaped cloth basket in which to hold his trophies.

The Easter-themed hunt and races marked the start of the township’s parks and recreation program schedule for 2009. It currently includes a series of seven musical concerts to be held Sundays from late June through mid-August at the bandshell in Sanatoga Park on South Sanatoga Road, with sponsorship from Exelon Nuclear’s Limerick Generating Station. Also scheduled is a Halloween and Fall Festival for Oct. 25 (2009; Sunday), again at Sanatoga Park.

Desoite the damp weather, young and old alike turned out at the park.

Despite damp weather, a crowd turned out at the park for the fun.

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What They Sold For

What They Sold For

They paid how much?

They paid how much?

LOWER POTTSGROVE PA – The top price paid for a home within the township from Dec. 22-31, 2008, was $218,000, the Philadelphia Inquirer newspaper reports.

The home is located at 1993 N. Keim St. A second home, at 1321 Randy Dr., was listed as having sold for $200,000; and a third, at 2188 N. Pleasantview Rd., was said to sell for $147,000. This week’s top reported prices were listed Sunday (March 29, 2009) in “The Top 50,” the newspaper’s weekly review of highest prices paid for homes sold within the city of Philadelphia and the townships in its surrounding counties.

By contrast, during the same period, the top home sales price in Pottstown PA Borough, immediately to the west was $170,000; Limerick PA Township, east, $483,515; New Hanover PA Township, northeast, $314,900; Upper Pottsgrove PA Township, northwest, $185,000; and in North Coventry PA Township, south, none listed.

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Notebook Worthy

SANATOGA  PA – Weekend (March 28-29, 2009) jottings from a reporter’s notebook, in no particular order:

All The World’s A’Twitter

So was it a sammich, or something else?

So was it a sammich, or something else?

There’s been a great deal reported in recent weeks about Twitter, the popular Internet-based short-message service that limits communication between people to bursts of no more than 140 characters (about 20 words of 6 letters each and the spaces between them). Most tweets, as the messages are called, answer the question, “What are you doing?” Many local businesses and organizations – The Sanatoga Post, The (Pottstown PA) Mercury newspaper, Montgomery County Community College, Pottsgrove School District administrators, and others – all use Twitter accounts to let subscribing audiences, called followers, know about upcoming events, activities or stories.

There’s been so much buzz about Twitter, in fact, that one of its biggest advocates, New York-based public relations strategist Peter Shankman, last week proclaimed, “I think I liked Twitter better nine months ago when EVERY MEDIA OUTLET IN THE WORLD wasn’t doing a story on it. Just a thought.”

Due in part to the media attention, Twitter is attracting even more companies who use it in inventive ways to get themselves noticed locally.

Take, for example, the online car insurance firm, Esurance, headquartered in San Francisco. On Wednesday (March 25, 2009) it sent a tweet that announced to the world: “Pottstown, Pennsylvania is turning out for EarthHour on Saturday night. What about your town?” It’s a reference to the borough’s participation in the March 28 (2009) Earth Hour event worldwide, in which lights were turned off for one hour to conserve electricity. Any municipality that has scheduled participation in Earth Hour activities received an automated Esurance tweet.

Or look, above at right, at the automated tweet sent worldwide by national chicken sandwich-maker Chick-Fila on Monday (March 23, 2009), in which it thanked Jennifer of Pottstown PA (no last name supplied) for ordering “more great food online.” To which one can only ask, “so wha’cha have for dinner, Jen?”

Bye bye, 'Bell.

Bye bye, 'Bell.

Adios, Taco Bell

The Taco Bell restaurant at 1451 E. High St., Pottstown PA,  has closed, and the property is already being marketed by a commercial real estate broker.  A crew was on site Wednesday morning (March 25, 2009) to remove its sign. Those needing a fajita fix will now be forced to travel either to Gilbertsville PA, to the ‘Bell there on East Philadelphia Avenue; or to Royersford PA, where the ‘Bell is on South Township Line Road.

The Fire Company’s Annual Appeal

The annual fund-raising appeal from the Sanatoga Fire Company arrived at many Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township homes in Wednesday’s (March 25, 2009) mail. The fire company, which this year observes its 100th anniversary, will appreciate any contribution residents might offer. Think of it, the company rightly suggests, “as an investment” in the township’s future.

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