Archive | October, 2009

Keep Healthy This Week

Keep Healthy This Week

SANATOGA PA – Health care news for Sanatogans (and anyone else!), Nov. 1-7, 2009:

Monday, Nov. 2

A Breast Surgery Support Group next meets tonight, and the first Monday of every month, at 7 p.m. in Classroom 1 of the Chesmont Professional Building, 13 Armand Hammer Blvd., Pottstown PA.  For more information, call 610-327-7719.

Tuesday, Nov. 3

“What’s New in Laparoscopic Surgery,” a free Lunch ‘N Learn program for members of Pottstown Memorial Medical Center’s Senior Circle group, will be presented at 11 a.m. by Dr. Scot Paris in Classrooms 1 and 2 of the Chesmont Professional Building, 13 Armand Hammer Blvd, Pottstown PA.  Seating is limited.  For more information or to register, call 610-327-7699.

Wednesday, Nov. 4

A Depression Support Group next meets tonight, and the first Wednesday of every month, at 6 p.m. in Private Dining Room A on the ground floor of Pottstown Memorial Medical Center, 1600 E. High St., Pottstown PA. For more information, call 610-327-7633.

The first of twice-monthly meetings of the Grief Support Group sponsored by the Pottstown branch of the Freedom Valley YMCA will be held at 6:30 p.m. in the Y, 724 N. Adams St., Pottstown PA. For more information, call 610-323-7300.

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Workshop Teaches Genealogy To Beginners

Workshop Teaches Genealogy To Beginners

POTTSTOWN PA – A workshop for beginning genealogists will be conducted Nov. 15 (2009; Sunday) from 2-5 p.m. by the Pottstown Historical Society in its headquarters, 568 High St., Pottstown PA.

The workshop will feature lectures by four experienced local genealogists: Betty J. Burdan, Beth Calhoun, Naomi Ficthorn, and Clara Hoss.  Topics to be covered include “Genealogy on the Internet,” “How to use Cemetery and Church Records and the Federal Census,” “How to Take Accurate and Meaningful Research Notes,” “Oral Histories, Family Bibles, and Other Publications,” and  “Research in D.A.R. Libraries and Other Lineage Societies.”

The workshop concludes with a panel discussion of audience questions. From 5-6 p.m., participants will have access to PHS library records, with experts on hand to answer specific questions. Refreshments also will be served.

Registration is required, and costs $20 for society members and $25 for non-members. Checks should be made payable to the “Pottstown Historical Society.” Registration forms are available at the Pottstown Public Library, the Pottstown YMCA, the High Street Diner, the Elks Club or  from the society’s web site.

For more information, call Dave at 610-323-9273 (days) or Clara at 610-323-2636 (evenings).

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Local Artists' Works On Display

Local Artists' Works On Display

POTTSTOWN PA – Original artwork created by more than 25 local artists who are members of the Gallery On High, 254 High St., Pottstown PA, are on display daily through Nov. 17 during the gallery’s Fall Member Art Show.

Among the artworks exhibited are original watercolors, oils, pastels and acrylics, along with jewelry, pottery and glass. Show hours are Tuesdays through Fridays from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. All show receptions are free and open to the public.

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Sermatech Closing Its Royersford Plant

Sermatech Closing Its Royersford Plant

POTTSTOWN PA – Sermatech International, an industrial coatings manufacturer that was headquartered in Lower Pottsgrove (PA) Township and which was purchased by a competitor during the summer, is closing its facility in nearby Royersford PA.

The Sermatech International website as it appeared Friday (July 10, 2009).

Sermatech International website as it appeared this July.

About 10 workers, or 20 percent of the 50-employee work force, said goodbye to colleagues Thursday (Oct. 29, 2009) during their last day on the job, according to Royersford plant administrative assistant Linda Jones. The remaining 40 also are expected to be laid off by year’s end, she said.

The plant is located at 159 S. Limerick Rd., Royersford PA. Sermatech’s new owner, Praxair Surface Technologies Inc. of Danbury CT,  is moving Royersford’s work to similar facilities in Connecticut, California, and Canada, Jones said.

Royersford plant General Manager Tom Lewis was said to be on vacation and unavailable for comment.

“It’s not easy for anyone here,” Jones said of the closing. “There are some people who came to work here right out of high school, 30 to 35 years ago,” and of those, Jones added, none are expected to be retained or moved to other Praxair units.

Competitor Praxair bought Sermatech in early July 2009. The local company, which maintained its North American headquarters on the third floor of 1566 Medical Dr., Pottstown PA, manufactured coatings for applications “where resistance to corrosion, erosion, fouling, and high temperatures is essential,” according to its website. Sermatech products were used in the aerospace, chemical processing, industrial gas turbines, oil and gas drilling, and semiconductor industries.

There was no immediate word on what would happen to the Lower Pottsgrove offices, although Jones noted that two Sermatech administrators will be relocated to offices in Indiana.

Remaining workers at Royersford will wrap up in coming weeks as they pack and ship that plant’s tooling to other facilities, Jones said. However, workers elsewhere in the Praxair system – who benefit from the local closing – reportedly have not yet been certified in jobs Royersford workers performed. As a result, Jones said, a skeleton crew will remain at Royersford until the out-of-state employees are qualified.

The date of locking the Royersford plant doors “is up in the air right now,” Jones said. “We’ll be open as long as it takes to get the others qualified.”

The combined companies’ declining financial picture may have played a role in the Royersford plant’s fortunes.

During a teleconference for investors held Wednesday (Oct. 28, 2009) on Praxair’s fiscal third quarter 2009 results, company officials announced the “Sermatech acquisition contributed $22 million in sales” but offered “minimal operating profit, net of integration costs.”

Praxair also reported quarterly sales for its surface technologies division, into which Sermatech was merged, were down overall by 17 percent year over year, and that operating margins had fallen from 17.2 percent in 3Q2008 to 13.3 percent in 3Q2009.

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20091030-UrbanTraining-HometownNews

Sanatogan's Soldier An Unexpected Teacher In Bulgaria

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Joint Task Foce East puts Army construction skills to work in Bulgaria.

By Air Force Staff Sgt. Jessica Switzer

SANATOGA PA – As a builder, Steve Kukulski can join wood and lay brick with the best of his peers, helping to raise schools in an area that desperately needs them. But as a soldier, U.S. Army Pfc. Steven C. Kukulski – the son of Deborah Piergrossi of 702 Walnut Ridge Estates, Pottstown PA – didn’t imagine he would also become a teacher.

Kukulski today is deployed in Bulgaria and adjacent Romania, about 5,000 miles from his mother’s home, as part of the Army’s participation in Joint Task Force East. He’s a carpentry and masonry specialist, and one of his many jobs in those former Cold War nations, along with others in his unit, is to teach the art of construction to Bulgarian troops with whom he works and trains.

It’s a challenging task. Despite the availability of interpreters, “I have learned that the language barrier is very frustrating sometimes,” says Kukulski, who has been in the Army for nearly two years.

Given cultural differences and the lack of a common tongue, how do American soldiers and their Bulgarian and Romanian counterparts understand each other? “Sometimes,” Kukulski admits, “we have to use hand signals and body language to communicate.”

The gestures work, as Kukulski’s unit helps the Bulgarian Army restore several schools in the area around Novo Selo, a three-hour drive north of the nation’s capital, Sofia. So do the soldiers’ mutual attempts to learn basic words and phrases. The result, Kukulski says, is successful. “We’re teaching them a lot about construction and they’re doing pretty well, considering some of them are not from construction career fields.”

Joint Task Force East is a multi-national operation intended, according to the Army, to make stronger allies of Romania and Bulgaria. Its focus is to help people living in some of the poorest areas of the two European countries. A side benefit is that it also hones the skills of soldiers from all three nations.

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Troops train side-by-side to hone their skills, including clearing urban combat areas.

European and U.S. troops train side-by-side in individual and company-level movements, as well as in armored vehicles, with a variety of weapons, and on combat life-saving skills. They also practice the coordination needed to go into and clear hostile urban areas.

As he travels with his unit across the face of southeastern Europe, Kukulski sees constant reminders of a different era, 40 years ago, when the Cold War made such joint efforts impossible. Cultural and historic references are everywhere. Near the Novo Selo training area, the Army private has seen the now flaking, faded and subdued murals that once depicted the glory of a former enemy, the Soviet military.

That was then. Now, “training with the Bulgarian army is a great experience,” Kukulski observes. “It’s an honor to work and train with them, and see how they handle business. Our great forces have much we can share with, and learn from, each other.”

Military training isn’t the only reason American service members are overseas with the task force. A group of doctors and nurses is traveling to villages around training bases in both countries. The team works with local health care workers and translators to provide optical eye and general health screenings. An additional team of Navy Seabees is helping renovate and upgrade local schools and medical facilities.

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The rare time when a vehicle doubles as playground equipment.

There’s a public relations component, too. Soldiers take time to visit local villages and allow children to explore vehicles they use. Service members like Kukulski,the Army reports, are working to keep positive relationships between the nations going long after everyone returns home.

Kukulski, a 2005 graduate of Plymouth-Whitemarsh (PA) Senior High School, is a member of the 15th Engineer Battalion in Schweinfurt, Germany, and currently is stationed at Mihail Kogalniceanu Air Base, Romania.

Editor’s Note: This feature and accompanying photos by Air Force Master Sgt. Cecilio Ricardo were supplied to The Post by the Joint Hometown News Service.

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20091009-RoyersfordPA-PottsgroveBandAtSFGame (21Edit)

Falcon Marchers Head To Ephrata This Weekend

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The Falcon Marching Band steps on to the field at Spring-Ford High School to provide football game half-time entertainment Oct. 9 (2009).

EPHRATA PA – Members of the Pottsgrove High School Marching Band will spend Halloween Day (Saturday, Oct. 31, 2009) on the fields at Ephrata (PA) High School, 43 miles west of Sanatoga village center, intent on raising the “spirits” of visitors there and hoping to bring home another trophy.

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Pottsgrove drummers get into the swing of things.

The band will be among five competitors in the Independence class of Ephrata’s Showcase of Bands contest that begins at 1 p.m. at the high school, 803 Oak Blvd, Ephrata PA. Fighting the Falcons for top honors will be units from Bermudian Springs High, York Springs PA; Columbia High, Columbia PA; Lebanon Catholic, Lebanon PA; and Halifax High, Halifax PA.

The event is sanctioned by the Cavalcade of Bands Association Inc.

Pottsgrove marchers were busy last weekend, too. They placed second, with a score of 86.85, among five Independence units that competed Oct. 24 (2009; Saturday) at a Cavalcade event at Upper Perkiomen High School in Pennsburg PA. Winning first in the division was Pittston High, with a score of 90.80. Taking overall honors there was Warwick High of Lititz PA, with a score of 91.75.

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20090603-NightAtNewYankeeStadium-Madaes

How Come They Didn't Bet Loaves And Fishes?

20090603-NightAtNewYankeeStadium-Madaes

Night falls over the new Yankees Stadium.

PHILADELPHIA PA – Two men of substantial cloth – the archbishops of the Roman Catholic archdioceses of Philadelphia and New York, respectively – have bet against each other on the outcome of baseball’s World Series.

Philadelphia’s Cardinal Justin Rigali and New York’s Archbishop Timothy Dolan placed a friendly wager on the series’ outcome, according to a press release Wednesday (Oct. 28, 2009) from the Philadelphia end. Dolan put up a dozen fresh New York bagels as his stakes in backing the Yankees; Rigali, a case of Tastykakes in support of the Phillies.

“Cardinal Rigali is one of my closest and dearest friends,” Dolan said. “For several years he even served as my Archbishop, so I feel a particular loyalty to him.  I know he has exquisite taste in most matters. I just wish he had better taste in baseball teams.”

“I have great esteem for Archbishop Dolan,” Rigali countered. “He is a gifted spiritual leader who has been a true friend for many years.  That is why I am so sorry he will be disappointed when the Phillies successfully defend their World Championship.  We have the cream cheese ready for the bagels that I know will be arriving shortly, after the Repeat in the City of Brotherly and Sisterly Love.”

Terms of the bet apparently were settled Tuesday night (Oct. 27, 2009). The Philadelphia archdiocese includes Montgomery County (PA).

Photo by Madaes via Flickr under a Creative Commons license

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20091029-PickACard-ClipartCom

Stuff To Do This Weekend

SANATOGA PA – Weekend activities for Sanatogans (and anyone else!), Oct. 30-Nov. 1, 2009:

Halloween activities and events (there are more than a dozen locally this weekend) can be found here.

Friday, Oct. 30

Up for a challenge? The Amity Chess Club meets from 7-10 p.m. at St. Paul’s UCC Church, 1312 Old Swede Rd., Douglassville PA, for chess matches and lessons at all ages and skill levels. For more information, call 610-385-6324.

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Go ahead, pick a card. Any card.

Nelsons Illusions, featuring a family of skilled magicians and illusionists, blends theatrical magic, mystery, romance, and comedy, in performances tonight (8 p.m.), Saturday (3 p.m. and 8 p.m.) and Sunday (3 p.m.) at the Tri-County Performing Arts Center, 245 High St., Pottstown PA. Tickets cost between $13 and $15, and discounts are available for groups of 10 or more people. Tickets also include admission to TriPAC’s Halloween Fun House.

Saturday, Oct. 31

Although its 24th season won’t officially start until Nov. 28, the Lower Pottsgrove Athletic Association (LPAA) will accept registrations from 9 a.m. to noon in the upper lobby of Pottsgrove Middle School, 1351 N. Hanover St., Pottstown PA, from boys and girls from grades 3-8 interested in playing recreational basketball. Registration costs $45 for players in grades 3-6, and $50 for grades 7-8. For more information, call 610-970-2175.

Northern Star Farm, on PA Route 113 at Main Street in Trappe PA – Trappe’s only remaining family-owned and operated farm – continues its second annual Community Fall Fest today and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., weather permitting. The festivities will include a dairy farm tour, hay rides, pony rides, a corn maze, opportunities to watch the Dairy Herd being milked, a pumpkin patch where you can “pick your own” pumpkin, and additional special events.

A performance by the Ursinus College Jazz Ensemble is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. in the college’s Kaleidoscope Lenfest Theater, Main Street, Collegeville PA. The concert is free, open to the public, and no tickets or reservations are needed. (This event from the TriCounty Chamber)

Sunday, Nov. 1

Friendship Fire Co. and Ambulance, 269 Green St., Royersford, will host its second annual Basket Bingo today. Call Danielle at 484-369-8175 for more information or to purchase tickets. (This event from SF Reporter)

Boyertown PA’s Relay for Life team “A Giant Step” is having Longaberger Bingo today. Doors open at 11:30 a.m. and games begin at 1 p.m. at the Keystone Fire Company, 240 N. Walnut St., Boyertown PA. Tickets are $20 for 20 regular games. Specials are additional. Extra sheets will be sold. All baskets are filled with goodies. For more information or for tickets call Tracey at 610-367-4064 or Angie at 484-614-9758.

Photos from Clipart.com

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20091029-TaxForms-ClipartCom

Family Center Needs Tax Volunteers

20091029-TaxForms-ClipartCom

Got some tax savvy? Lend your hand.

SANATOGA PA – The Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program – a free tax assistance preparation service provided by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) – at the Pottstown Family Center, 1976 E. High St., Pottstown PA, is looking for volunteers.

Under VITA, trained volunteers assist low-to-middle income individuals and families in preparing and electronically filing simple income tax forms. All volunteers receive free instruction and training, as well as certification materials needed to prepare basic income tax returns.

“Anyone can be VITA volunteer,” VITA site coordinator Victoria Gagliardi said Wednesday (Oct. 28, 2009), “college students, law students, homemakers, members of volunteer or community organizations, or business professionals.”

For more information, call Gagliardi at 610-326-1610 Ext. 222 or send her an e-mail.

Established in 1993, the Pottstown Family Center offers support programs and services intended to help families learn, grow and achieve self-sufficiency. It is overseen by the Montgomery County non-profit, Family Services of Eagleville PA.

Photo by Clipart.com

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Library's Wine-Tasting Fund-Raiser Returns

Library's Wine-Tasting Fund-Raiser Returns

20080912-pottstownpubliclibrary-4edit

A different place to get a taste of fine wines.

POTTSTOWN PA – The third annual wine tasting fund-raiser conducted by the board of directors of the Pottstown Public Library is scheduled for Nov. 7 (2009; Saturday) from 7-9 p.m. at the library, 500 E. High St., Pottstown PA. The event benefits library operations.

Unique fine wines will be presented by wine educators and consultants Dean and Lisa Foster of Vintage Connections, and paired with foods catered by Bause-Landry Caterers of Pottstown PA.

The Fosters have been wine enthusiasts for more than 15 years. They have visited hundreds of wineries, taught wine appreciation classes at Montgomery County Community College’s  Pottstown campus, and are active members in the Perkiomen chapter of the American Wine Society. This is their second year as the wine presenters for the library tasting.

Bause-Landry Catered Events‘ artful presentation and professional staff also is expected to delight the tasting’s guests, Packard said. The evening’s atmosphere will be enhanced by live classical guitar music and wine basket raffles.

Although space is limited, tickets are still available, according to Library Director Michael Packard. Admission is $40 per person, or $350 for a group of 10. For more information, call the library at 610-970-6552.

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