A faithful reader asked me to mention the two wonderful crossing guards at Unionville High School, Dave Edwards and Barb Cruthers. She writes:
"These two individuals are the unsung heroes Monday through Friday during the school year. Not only do they ensure that our students walking to and from school can safely cross busy Route 82, they also have improved the flow of traffic, especially during the morning rush.
Regardless of the weather conditions, Barb and Dave are there standing outside the warmth and safely of their cars, keeping constant vigil until all students have arrived to school.
I have never seen traffic run so smoothly and I know it is a result of their team effort. They are the unsung heroes of the morning and after school rush."
I wholeheartedly second that. Thank you, Dave and Barb!
Friday, May 6, 2011
Thursday, May 5, 2011
To the max
I got an eyewitness account of swindler Tony Young's sentencing on May 5.
My source said it was "wonderful" to see the ersatz financier enter the federal courtroom in handcuffs and dressed not in a dapper business suit but rather a green prison jumpsuit with an orange T-shirt underneath. His wife, Neely, mouthed "I love you" to him as he was brought in.
My source said Judge Juan Sanchez lectured Tony about the successful career he could have had if he had done the right thing and then passed sentence: 210 months, the maximum possible.
Tony's attorney asked Judge Sanchez if he could turn himself in when the site of his incarceration was determined.
No, said the judge.
The attorney then asked if Tony could serve his sentence in a Florida facility so he could be close to his wife and son and daughter.
The judge was noncommittal.
To allow Tony some privacy to say goodbye to his family, the judge then cleared the courtroom.
"I never go into Philadelphia," said my source, "but I'm so glad I went. Just to see him there ... Now maybe the community can start to heal."
My source said it was "wonderful" to see the ersatz financier enter the federal courtroom in handcuffs and dressed not in a dapper business suit but rather a green prison jumpsuit with an orange T-shirt underneath. His wife, Neely, mouthed "I love you" to him as he was brought in.
My source said Judge Juan Sanchez lectured Tony about the successful career he could have had if he had done the right thing and then passed sentence: 210 months, the maximum possible.
Tony's attorney asked Judge Sanchez if he could turn himself in when the site of his incarceration was determined.
No, said the judge.
The attorney then asked if Tony could serve his sentence in a Florida facility so he could be close to his wife and son and daughter.
The judge was noncommittal.
To allow Tony some privacy to say goodbye to his family, the judge then cleared the courtroom.
"I never go into Philadelphia," said my source, "but I'm so glad I went. Just to see him there ... Now maybe the community can start to heal."
Fauna of Unionville
Before this spring, I don't think I'd seen a dog tick for a few summers. You know, the big old-fashioned kind that used to alarm us, or rather our mothers, when we were kids, before the much more menacing deer tick came along. Rocky Mountain spotted fever vs. Lyme disease, who's gonna win that one?
So imagine my surprise when I saw two of them, fortunately unembedded, just this past week!
I shared this interesting news with a hip urban sophisticate friend who lives in, uh, downtown West Chester.
"Too much information," he said dismissively. He doesn't have stink bugs invading his home, either.
So imagine my surprise when I saw two of them, fortunately unembedded, just this past week!
I shared this interesting news with a hip urban sophisticate friend who lives in, uh, downtown West Chester.
"Too much information," he said dismissively. He doesn't have stink bugs invading his home, either.
Fungus of Unionville
Thanks to a tip from a certain sharp-eyed mushroom expert who lives in my neighborhood, I got to see these morels growing in the needles under some white pines. Amazing!
Hi, Bill!
I saw my dear old pal Bill Landmesser having breakfast with a friend at Perkins this morning. A retired engineer, Bill is now a very active community volunteer and serves on many boards and groups, as well as being a much-sought-after parker for the annual Bayard Taylor Library House & Garden Day (which is coming up Saturday, June 4 -- get your tickets before they sell out!).
Colors
Some springs are pink, with cherry trees, azaleas and redbud, and some are purple, with a carpet of violets across a pasture. This one has definitely been yellow. Near Doe Run there's a hillside covered with mustard, just glowing with yellow. The other day I pulled over and gaped in wonder, forgetting about pressing deadlines for a few minutes.
Hummingbirds have been at my feeder for a couple of weeks, the red-winged blackbirds are swooping over the pasture, and behind the light on my deck there's a beautifully constructed robin's nest, with three eggs in it. I'm checking on it daily.
Hummingbirds have been at my feeder for a couple of weeks, the red-winged blackbirds are swooping over the pasture, and behind the light on my deck there's a beautifully constructed robin's nest, with three eggs in it. I'm checking on it daily.
The old days
I was idling going through the archives of a volunteer group I belong to and spotted a Chester County Day newspaper from autumn 1968. It was like going back in a time machine! Phone numbers had letters as prefixes. There were ads for the Farmer in the Dell restaurant, Betty's Ice Cream, Jimmy John's, the Black Angus, and the Yellow Bow, a charming little craft shop that used to be right across Strasburg Road from the Four Dogs in Marshallton. There was even an ad for the (soon-to-be-closed) Brush and Palette back when it was on North Broad Street in Kennett.
Route 162 traffic
A Newlin resident writes:
"Maybe you could blog in your column about my next pet peeve: the new stop signs on 162 at Powell and Brandywine Creek. It's a very dangerous curve and all of us who live around here were thrilled when the stop signs were installed. However, at least 50 percent of the time I see people blowing through the curve without even slowing down, let alone stopping. The law applies to everyone, even knuckleheads. Especially knuckleheads!"
"Maybe you could blog in your column about my next pet peeve: the new stop signs on 162 at Powell and Brandywine Creek. It's a very dangerous curve and all of us who live around here were thrilled when the stop signs were installed. However, at least 50 percent of the time I see people blowing through the curve without even slowing down, let alone stopping. The law applies to everyone, even knuckleheads. Especially knuckleheads!"
Mixed blessing
Controversial Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Michael Vick lost out to Cleveland Browns running back Peyton Hillis as the athlete on the cover of this year's "Madden NFL" videogame, produced by Electronic Arts. Mr. Vick may not be too upset, though: being featured on the cover is widely believed to jinx one's season.
"The so-called Madden Curse is the stuff of legend, where players who make the cover of EA's football game find themselves injured or face career slumps," says the videogame website gameinformer.
"The so-called Madden Curse is the stuff of legend, where players who make the cover of EA's football game find themselves injured or face career slumps," says the videogame website gameinformer.
Buck & Doe
Congratulations to Amy McKenna, new president of the Buck & Doe Trust, a conservation group based in Unionville. Amy, a real-estate agent with Country Properties, takes over the position from Terry Corkran. Other officers are Joe Huston, vice president; Nina Seder-Burnaford, secretary; and John Goodall, treasurer. Board members are Billie Bailkin, Liz Bailey, Gus Brown, Richard Buchanan, Terry Corkran, Jeb Hannum, Anthony Jenks, Brendan Miney, Joe Nolan, Jamie O'Rourke, Maria Pfeffer, Kate Poole, Soctt Richard, Bill Rubin, Janet Sidewater, Ann Givens Sinclair, Susannah Small and Pam Smyth.
Thouron Road
I was getting concerned.
8:15 p.m. had rolled around, the West Marlborough supervisors were zipping through the agenda of their monthly meeting -- but nothing had happened that was remotely Tilda-worthy.
With a worried face I turned to my neighbor and pointed to the blank page in my notebook.
Then, as has happened so many times before, Richard Hayne came to the rescue.
Township roadmaster Hugh Lofting said that because of the extensive construction that Mr. Hayne has done on Doe Run Farm, Thouron Road has been "pretty much destroyed from Route 841 to the Thouron driveway and beyond."
Mr. Hayne has agreed to repair the road at his own expense, and Mr. Lofting assured the residents that "we'll be watching over that."
8:15 p.m. had rolled around, the West Marlborough supervisors were zipping through the agenda of their monthly meeting -- but nothing had happened that was remotely Tilda-worthy.
With a worried face I turned to my neighbor and pointed to the blank page in my notebook.
Then, as has happened so many times before, Richard Hayne came to the rescue.
Township roadmaster Hugh Lofting said that because of the extensive construction that Mr. Hayne has done on Doe Run Farm, Thouron Road has been "pretty much destroyed from Route 841 to the Thouron driveway and beyond."
Mr. Hayne has agreed to repair the road at his own expense, and Mr. Lofting assured the residents that "we'll be watching over that."
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