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That's Music to our Ears

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Blogger's Note:This news from MC3 really hits the right note.

Montgomery County Community College will be offering expanded music courses at its West Campus in Pottstown this fall.

MCC West Campus on College Drive
"We continue to offer general interest music courses, such as the very popular Music Appreciation, a survey of Western Music History, and Fundamentals of Music, an introductory course in music literacy. But now, thanks to the completion of our Music Keyboard Laboratory, we can offer piano classes and music production classes," says Associate Professor and Coordinator of Music Andrew Kosciesza. "All the classes are open to the public; you do not have to be a music major to enroll.”

The curriculum includes four levels of piano instruction, from beginner to advanced. Classes are taught using touch-sensitive Clavinova digital piano keyboards. Students receive individualized attention and have access to the lab for practice time outside of class.

The North Hall of MCC in Pottstown on High St.
The lab is also equipped with state-of-the-art PROTOOLS digital production hardware, and an array of music production software packages. In the Digital Music classes, students will learn the techniques of recording, sequencing, mixing, and mastering high-quality digital audio materials.

"Of course, we are also offering more traditional classes as well," Kosciesza says. "Like our guitar classes and the West Campus Choir."

Classes are led by highly skilled musicians with advanced degrees and extensive professional experience.

"We are thrilled to have Vincent Ryan come on board as our director for the West Campus Choir," Kosciesza said.

Ryan is well-known in the Pottstown and surrounding communities. 

He serves as the Minister of Music at Advent Lutheran Church, Harleysville, where he directs and oversees the church’s five musical ensembles. Previously, he was organist and choirmaster at The Hill School in Pottstown. He has composed or arranged more than 265 works for a wide variety of solo instruments, ensembles, and choirs.

Also, MCCC’s Piano and Digital Music classes are taught by Howard Gordon, who has been an active musician in the Philadelphia area for more than 20 years. 

He is an experienced studio musician, working extensively with Grammy-nominated producer David Ivory, and has performed session work at Dylanava Studios, Sigma Sound, Studio 4, Philadelphia International Records and numerous other recording studios in the Philadelphia area.

Gordon is a graduate of Philadelphia’s University of the Arts with a master’s degree in Jazz Performance with concentrations in composition and music technology. He also is a recipient of the Steinway Award for Outstanding Pianistic Ability, Musicianship, and Artistic and Academic Scholarship, as well as the National Academy of the Recording Arts and Sciences Award for Excellence.

Guitar classes are led by Dr. Michael Simmons, who holds a Bachelor of Music degree in Guitar
Performance from The University of the Arts, a Master of Music degree in Guitar Performance and Music History from Temple University, and a Doctor of Musical Arts in Music Education from Boston University.

Additionally, he was the winner of the 1993 Philadelphia Classical Guitar Society Competition and a finalist at the 1995 National Guitar Summer Workshop Concerto Competition. 

As a member of the Philadelphia Classical Guitar Trio, he has performed both nationally and internationally, including at the 1999 Festival Internacional de Guitarra de Puerto Rico and the Third Encuentro Internacional de Guitarra Panamá 1999. In addition to teaching guitar and music history at MCCC, Simmons serves as the Fine Arts Department Chair at the Woodlynde School in Strafford, Pa.

To register now for fall classes, visit mc3.edu.

This Saturday in Science (Education)

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Blogger's Note: Pottstown Schools Information Minister John Armato pointed this one out to us,from our sister paper, The Times-Herald.

Several Potrstown elementary school teachers are in the midst of receiving direct, hands-on training from scientists with Arkema Inc. in how to teach certain scientific principles in the classroom this year.

For the 18th year, Arkema, a chemical company with research centers spread across the world, will hold its “Science Teacher Program” to combat deficiencies in teaching.

“Arkema developed the Science Teacher Program in 1996 to address a negative trend discovered while interviewing teachers in elementary and secondary education: teachers did not enjoy teaching and were not adequately equipped to teach hands-on science,” a release from the company said.

Teachers choose kits focusing on different science subjects that they will want to teach about in the fall and receive training in those specific areas.

From Thursday through Sunday, the first set of teachers are going through the specific kits they chose at the Arkema King of Prussia Research Center.

Andrea Hunsberger and Nicola Alutius, from Pottstown School District’s Barth Elementary School, are working on a variables science kit, Jamie Fazekas and Allen Ferster, of Pottstown’s Rupert Elementary School, are going through animal studies, and Patti Grzywacz and Donna Kehs, from New Hanover Elementary School in the Boyertown Area School District, are going over motion and design.

Also from Rupert Elementary, Rebecca Wyatt is going over a measurement kit with Sally Jenkins, of Pottstown’s Lincoln Elementary School.

Starting Aug. 5, John Slichter, from Upper Providence Elementary School of the Spring-Ford Area School District, will also receive training from Arkema scientists.

His training will end Aug. 8.

“Arkema’s Science Teacher Program is all about empowering teachers in an age where strict school budgets and curriculum often deny access to the world of science, said Arkema Vice President of Research and Development Ryan Dirkx.

More than 800 teachers took part in the program since it began in 1996, benfefitting more than 50,000 students across the country, according to Arkema.

Just-in-Case Tablets

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Blogger's Note: An announcement from the Montgomery County Health Department: 


The Montgomery County Health Department will be participating in the Pennsylvania Department of Health Annual Free Potassium Iodide distribution on Aug. 8

The health department will provide free potassium iodide tablets to Montgomery County residents who live, work, or attend schools within a 10-mile radius of the Limerick Generating Station on Thursday, Aug. 8,  from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Pottstown Health Center, 364 King St., Pottstown. 

Residents can call the Pottstown Health Center at 610-970-5040 anytime of the year to inquire about the KI tablets.

Potassium iodide, or KI, can help protect the thyroid gland against harmful radioactive iodine when taken as directed during radiological emergencies. 

Individuals should only take KI when told to do so by state health officials or the governor.

Each adult will receive a two day supply of KI (four 65 mg tablets). Children will be given smaller doses based on their age. 
Exelon Nuclear's Limerick Generating Station

Individuals can pick up KI tablets for other family members or those who are unable to pick them up on their own. Directions detailing when to take the tablets and how to store them will be provided with the KI.

Businesses within a 10 mile radius can also pick up KI tablets for their employees. 

Unlike families, businesses are given a one day supply of KI (two 65 mg tablets). Businesses with over 100 employees are encouraged to call the Pottstown Health Center at 610-970-5040 to schedule a pick up time for their KI tablets.

Anyone can take the tablets as long as they are not allergic to iodine. They are safe for pregnant women, women who are breastfeeding, people on thyroid medicine, and children and infants. 

Individuals who are unsure if they should take KI should contact their healthcare provider.

For more information regarding Potassium Iodide distribution, please visit: www.montcopa.org/index.aspx?nid=581

Summer Bash Celebrating Reading: Where Else? At the Library

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Children who participated in the Pottstown Regional Public Library's summer reading program will be treated to an "End of Summer Bash" tomorrow from 5 to 7 p.m. at the library, according to children's librarian Leslie Stillings.

The bash, which will feature a petting zoo, games, food and prizes for participants, is designed to "create a sense of community, parents meet other parents and children find new playmates," according to Stillings.

"Children and their families get to celebrate their accomplishments," she wrote of the event.

"Literacy is a family affair," according to Stillings.

"We are not a silent library – we encourage exploration through play and hands on interaction with books, animals, games, and educational toys," she wrote.


"The library is a place of active exchange; an exchange of ideas, information, and social matters," according to Stillings.



Hot Dogs, Gardens, Movies and More in the Core Neighborhood

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National Night Out will be celebrated tonight at the park at

Chestnut and Washington Streets from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
Things are hopping in Pottstown's Core Neighborhood, thanks to the efforts of numerous organizations, including the Mosaic Community Land Trust and its Community Garden, Genesis Housing Corp., National Penn Bank and ArtFusion 19464.

-- Tonight, from 6:30 to 8 p.m., all will join forces for National Night Out, a nationwide anti-crime event designed to help neighbors get to know each other and watch out for each other.

To be held at the Chestnut Street Park, at the corner with Washington Street, the event will include free hot dogs, donated Rita's Water Ice, pretzels, popcorn, balloons, a bean bag toss, other kids games and a disc jockey providing music.

Information booths from the organizers will also be on hand.

--This event follows on the heels of Free Movie Night Sunday, during which more than 100 people packed at Chestnut Street Park with a showing of the Dr. Seuss classic, "The Lorax."

"The day began with a balloon artist making dozens of animals, claws, hats and other neat things out of balloons. Children stood in line to get a chance at owning one of the wacky balloon items," wrote Community Garden Manager Laura Washington in the most recent newsletter.

"Then as the sun set, neighborhood families headed over to the snack table to get their treats and drink in hopes to take a seat right in front of the big screen."
-- As for the MOSAIC's Community Garden, down the block at 423 Chestnut St., not only has been chosen as a finalist for the 2013 Montgomery County Planning Commission Awards but the garden has also been nominated for an award from the Pennsylvania Horticulture Society Greening Project, Washington reports.

"The Planning Commission judges were very impressed with our garden and the PA Horticulture Society judges are planning to visit the garden in the next few week," she wrote in the garden's newsletter.

-- For those unlucky enough to miss out on getting a plot in the garden this year, fear not as work on creating a second garden at 615 Chestnut St. is underway right now.

-- An "All About Herbs" workshop will be held at the garden at 423 Chestnut St., during the Saturday, Aug. 10 "Work and Play Day."

"Tina will walk us through the many types of herbs grown in the wild and in our gardens. She will explain
culinary and medicinal uses of some of our most common herbs and lead a lesson on when and how to use them," wrote Washington.

-- On Saturday, Aug. 24 from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m., Learn how to set up your garden in a way that best for you and your plants! Uncover tips and tricks on how to keep pesky critters out (in a safe and natural way). Discover ways to keep your garden growing in the most productive and fruitful way long beyond the typical growing season! It's a great time learn and prepare for fall planting!


-- Look out for information about the garden's Produce Stand in The Mercury in the next few weeks. 

The children of the garden will be using the stand to sell produce and other goodies from the gardens and the art program. The proceeds will be used for additional youth programs/activities.


Put Your Head in the Stars

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Photo by Frank Colosimo
Just one of the many nebulae on which Starfest telescopes will be trained Saturday night.

Blogger's Note: While we would normally reserve an entry like this for our wildly popular "This Saturday in Science" series, the timing would not benefit our friends at the Chesmont Astronomical Society, so we are posting it today, so you have time to mark your calendar.

The line-up from a previous Starfest.
The Chesmont Astronomical Society invites you and your family to Starfest 2013, at Hopewell Furnace National Historical Site on Saturday, Aug. 10, starting at 7 p.m..

The hallmark annual star party will feature a line-up of speakers, door prizes, and a variety of telescopes to observe the wonders of the night sky.

Visitors can listen to speakers present on various astronomy-related topics, and when nightfall sets in and the stars emerge, join society members at their telescopes trained on different types of celestial objects, such as planets, galaxies, nebulae, and star clusters. 

Photo by Frank Colosimo
The Ring nebula
Those who come early can see the telescopes during daylight.

The event is weather dependant, and will move to Sunday, Aug. 11, in case of cloudy or rainy conditions on the scheduled date.

You can check for updates at www.chesmontastro.org.

Prizes will include a 102mm Celestron refractor telescope with mount and eyepieces and a 80mm Orion telescope with mount and eyepieces, plus limited quantities of astronomy material.

Here is the schedule:

  • 6 to 7:30 p.m.: Astronomy-related presentations
  • 7:30 to 8 p.m.: Dark sky preservation talk
  • 8 to 8:45 p.m.: Guest speaker
  • 8:45 to 9 p.m.: Drawing for telescope prizes
  • 9 to 11 p.m.: Stargazing 
The event is free for all ages and free parking is available, but cash donations are appreciated.

So grab your kids, bring a lawn chair, and come learn about the night sky!

Free Classes Getting Ready for Kindergarten

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Blogger's Note:The following comes courtesy of Mary Rieck, coordinator for PEAK, Pottstown's early education readiness program.

The Pottstown School District Pre-K Counts partnership announces a new early learning opportunity for Pottstown students entering kindergarten. 

The Pennsylvania Office of Child Development and Early Learning awarded the partnership funding for six summer kindergarten readiness classes.

The six free Summer Kindergarten Readiness Program classes will be offered at the PEAK community early learning partner sites beginning Aug. 12.

To be eligible for the classes, students must be entering Pottstown School District kindergarten in September and meet income requirements. Family income cannot exceed 300% of the federal poverty level – for a family of four that is an annual income of approximately $70,000.

Spaces are limited – call now to register. 
Mercury Photo by John Strickler
Children in a pre-K program at Warwick Child Care Center,
a PEAK partner.

The classes will be offered at Montgomery Early Learning Centers, Pottstown YMCA, KinderCare Learning Center, Warwick Child Care Center, YWCA Tri-County Area and Pottstown School District Pre-K Counts. 

A complete listing of the sites and contact information can be found on the PEAK web site at www.peakonline.org.

PEAK (Pottstown Early Action for Kindergarten Readiness) is a partnership between Pottstown School District and community early learning programs and agencies seeking to prepare children and families for success in kindergarten. 

To learn more about PEAK or the Pre-K Counts classes, visit www.peakonline.org, e-mail Mary Rieck at mrieck@pottstownsd.org or call 610-970-6655.

For a Few Dollars More

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Photo by Evan Brandt

This building, the former Rosenberry's Supermarket and former McCabe's Auto Supply, will be knocked down and replaced with a new building to house a Family Dollar store according to information revealed at Wednesday night's borough council meeting.

A new building for a new Family Dollar Store is being planned for the site of the former McCabe's Auto Supply at 381 Farmington Ave.

(Of course, if you are a long-time resident of Pottstown, you will remember it as having been Rosenberry's Supermarket, but that was many years ago indeed.)

The news comes by way of Pottstown Borough Council, which, at Wednesday night's work session, indicated support for the developer's request for a zoning variance to allow a larger-than-allowed sign to be installed out front.

The matter is ultimately the decision of Pottstown's zoning Hearing Board, but council precedent says council can be neutral to a request, oppose it or support it.

Borough Council President Stephen Toroney said he intends to ask council to vote Monday on sending the zoning board a letter supporting the request.

Toroney said he and councilman Dan Weand, who both also sit on the planning commission, had already seen the plans.

"They're going to tear down what's there and put up a new building," Toroney said.

Photo by Evan Brandt

The building is located at the split between Farmington Avenue and 
North Hanover Street.
He said the planning commission voted to support the developer's request for relief from the restrictions of the sign ordinance.

"It's going to be a great project moving forward," said Toroney.

Weand agreed.

Specifically, the developers, Boos DEvelopment Group Inc., are seeking a variance to erect a 36-square-foot "monument sign" as well as two 30 square-foot wall signs on both sides of the building one 31 square-foot "medallion" sign.

According to the legal notice published in Tuesday's Mercury, the signs exceed the zoning code "regarding the maximum number of permitted signs, the total square footage of the signs and the maximum limitations of the individual signs."

Council will vote on Toroney's request for a letter of support at Monday night's council meeting, 7 p.m. Monday in the third-floor council meeting room of borough hall.

The zoning hearing board will consider the matter at its meeting on Wednesday, Augl 21 at 7 p.m. in the same room.

Photo by Evan Brandt
The new Sears store is in the space formerly occupied by 
Blockbuster Video
Should the variance be granted, the project must still received final site plan approval from both the planning commission and borough council.

That is not the only variance from the sign ordinance that the zoning board will consider at the Aug. 21 meeting.

Sears has also submitted a variance request seeking a variance form property at 223 Shoemaker Road.

There, permission is being sought to install a "free-standing pylon sign" whose proposed height exceeds the maximum allowed in the ordinance according to Borough Solicitor Charles D. Garner Jr.

Additionally, the free-standing sign, plus a wall sign planned, would together exceed the total sign area allowed under the ordinance.

All Creatures Biting and Slimy, Scaly and Small ... and (UPDATE! Testicle-Munching Fish!)

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We know you've been watching the calendar.

We know you've been urgently asking yourself "is it Saturday yet?"

Well, gentle reader, it's here and your patience is now rewarded with another satisfying installment of our sometime-series:

This Saturday in Science!

Lunch!
Having spent several science Saturdays in space, we thought this week we would bring things back
down to earth for a bit and spend some time with its inhabitants.

First up is the humble and hated mosquito.

If, like my wife, you are one of those people who can't look out a window without getting a mosquito bite, we have some good news for you.

Your belief that mosquitoes like you more (I've always told The Mrs. that mosquitoes keep away from me because of my inherently high blood-alcohol level), it turns out you are not a sad, paranoid sufferer of insect randomness -- YOU WERE RIGHT!

As this article in The Daily Beast indicates, science know believes there is evidence to suggest mosquitoes just like some people more.

Mosquitoes, some researchers say, are the deadliest creatures in the world, killing over a million people a year through diseases like malaria, dengue, and West Nile.

There are a lot of people trying to learn more about how mosquitoes choose their prey, people funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, or, as Dr. Leslie Vosshall of New York city's Rockefeller University is, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
She says, mosquitoes really do find some people more attractive than others.
A lot of people doubted that this was the case, she says, despite the plethora of anecdotal evidence. Skeptics thought that everyone gets bitten about the same, but people whose immune systems react more strongly to the mosquito’s anticoagulant simply notice bites more. Vosshall designed her pilot study to weed out this variable. Volunteers exposed a patch of their forearm and a machine blew air across it, enticing mosquitoes into a trap. She found that mosquitoes found some people’s body odor four times as appetizing as others.
Speaking of appetizing...

We all know that people in France are different, and they sometimes eat some things we might
consider unusual occupants for the dinner plate -- like snails.

But it seems the French may now have found an entirely new use for snails -- skin treatments and facials.

According to this article in Reuters, which also provided the hilarious photo that accompanies this entry,
Louis-Marie Guedon says the mucus secreted by snails are full of collagen, glycolic acid, antibiotics and other compounds that regenerate skin cells and heal cuts.

Guedon, from Champagnolles in the west-central region of Charente-Maritime, believes it could presage a cosmetic revolution and has developed a secret technique to harvest the slime.

He is busy turning the innovation into France's first industrial-scale snail mucus extraction operation with a target to harvest 15 tons of it next year.

Not to be outdone, the Japanese are cutting out the middle man and simply putting snails on people's faces to let the benefits (and the slime) accrue naturally.

The process, which entails live snails crawling across a person's face, distributing their mucus along the way, is said to remove dead skin, soothe any inflammation and help the skin retain moisture.


"Snail slime can help recovery of skin cells on the face, so we expect the snail facial to help heal damaged skin," Yoko Minami, a manager at the salon chain's flagship store, told Japan Daily Press.

The $243 treatment, called "Celebrity Escargot Course," also features a massage, a mask and electrical pulse machines.

Snail mucus contains hyaluronic acid and proteoglycans, both of which are popular ingredients in cosmetics. The former, for example, is known to give tissue flexibility and promote healing. As a result, brands such as Missha, Dr. Jart+ and Labcconte have taken to developing creams such as "Snail Gel" containing extracts of the animal's secretions.

But, according to this article in Nature World News, dermatologists remain unconvinced:
"This clearly is not very scientifically done," dermatologist Stephen Mandy of Miami Beach, Fla. told ABC News, pointing out that, given the variety of facets to the treatment, it would be impossible to tell which one is helping.
Furthermore, it's not clear how well snails' version of hyaluronic acid would affect human skin, Mandy said, explaining that even if it does work as a filler, it wouldn't make it through the outer layer of the skin without some kind of injection.
For this reason, Williams Stebbins, a dermatology professor at Vanderbilt University, expressed similar doubt.
"I'd be surprised if this has any lasting effect on skin health," he told ABC.
On another topic from the animal kingdom -- FRANKENFISH!

Don't you love that nickname? I do.

Science can't seem to make up its mind about every headline writers favorite invasive species, the northern snakehead (also a cool name if you ask me.)

According to this April 30 article in The New York Times, the discovery of a northern snakehead in a portion of a favorite pond in Central Park was cause for near panic.
The snakehead is a relentless and efficient predator that devours just about everything in its path — fish, frogs, crayfish, beetles and aquatic insects. And it does not meet death easily; it is able to survive under ice or live on land for days in damp conditions. It has been called Fishzilla.
“I would describe them as the freshwater fish equivalent of a tank,” said Ron P. Swegman, a fly-fishing expert and author whose writings about fishing in Central Park include an essay, “Bright Fish, Big City.”
“They are heavily armed,” he said, “strong, and can cover almost any territory, aquatic and — at least for short periods — on land.”
New York City anglers, and those elsewhere, had been warned to kill the fish immediately and not return it to the water.

But one month earlier, Deborah Zabarenko, environmental correspondent for Reuters, was reporting that perhaps "Fishzilla" (another great nickname) was getting a bad rap.

"The threat of the snakehead, which is believed to spawn repeatedly during the year unlike other species that spawn just once, is that it is such a hardy newcomer that it could squeeze out longer-established and more desired fish," Zabarenko wrote.

Virginia fisheries biologist John Odenkirk said so far, the fish have not wreaked havoc with the Potomac River ecosystem.

Odenkirk dismissed the notion that they have no natural predators. Snakehead young, if left unguarded, are easy prey for ospreys and eagles, he said.

Maryland manages the snakehead differently than Virginia, which prohibits commercial sales to avoid creating a market for the fish. Maryland encourages sales, maintaining that eating snakehead gives other fish a chance.

John Rorapaugh, director of sustainability at ProFish, a Washington seafood wholesaler, said his company pays $4 to $5 a pound for snakeheads, compared to $.50 to $1 for catfish.

The snakehead population has risen since 2004. But so has the population of large-mouth bass, a prized regional sport fish that brings in $622 million a year to Virginia and accounts for more than 5,500 jobs in the state, according to the American Sportfishing Association.

But perhaps the snakehead's competition will come from its own ferocious nature as a sport fish.
Photo by The Free Lance-Star via Associated Press
Caleb Newton, who lives in Spotsylvania County, Va., holds the 17 pound, 6 ounce northern snakehead he caught Saturday in Aquia Creek in Virginia

According to this Aug. 8 report in Nature World News, a Virginia man has caught a huge, record-breaking snakehead.

Jack Vitek, world-record coordinator for the Florida-based IGFA, told the The Free Lance Star of Virginia Monday that the organization confirmed the 17 pound, 6 ounce northern snakehead as the largest ever caught with hook and line in the world.

Caleb Newton, a plumber and weekend fishing enthusiast, caught the snakehead, sometimes known as "Frankenfish," on June 1 during a fishing tournament.

Northern snakeheads are voracious predators and would not think twice about biting down on an errant hand or limb, so Newton had to exercise caution when handling the fish.

"They're creepy critters, but the danger is all in how close you put your hands to it," he told the Washington Times.

And, if you think the Frankenfish is scary, we present, in honor of Shark Week, what was found inside the stomach of the largest Mako shark ever caught.




THIS JUST IN!!!!!
Having dealt with "Frankenfish" and a monstrously large Mako shark's stomach, we stumbled across this item in the U.K. Guardian this morning that deserves your immediate attention if you have any plans to travel to Sweden and go swimming.
The alert came after a fisherman in the Oresund Sound last week retrieved a 21 centimetre pacu - a relative of the piranha that is most commonly found in the Amazon region.
You DO NOT want to meet this fish in Sweden without a pair of 
sturdy swim trunks to protect the family jewels!
"Keep your swimwear on if you're bathing in the Sound these days - maybe there are more out there!" cautioned the National History Museum in neighbouring Denmark.
The freshwater fish, which can grow up to 90 centimetres and weigh up to 25 kilogrammes, has been nicknamed the "ball cutter" for its attacks on the male genitalia.
In areas where pacus proliferate, fishermen have reportedly bled to death after losing their testicles to the fish's crushing jaws.
Found in most rivers in the Amazon and Orinoco basins in South America, they have also been spotted in Papua New Guinea, where it is believed they have been introduced to boost fish stocks. Discoveries have also been reported in several US states; in 2006, officials at one Texas lake reportedly put a $100 bounty on the pacu caught there.
So next time you think "invasive species, what's the big deal?" consider those poor Swedish swimmers...

(Put's a whole new spin on that candy "Swidish Fish" does it not?)

Contentment

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Having linked up on Facebook with all sorts of Pottstown people to be sure I know as much about what's going on in the borough and environs as possible, I noticed a post by Sheila Dugan the other day that got me thinking.

In addition to being Pottstown's Main Street Manager, Dugan is also fairly passionate about her advocacy for her Pottstown neighborhood.

(I've noticed that many of Pottstown's greatest champions are often those who have come from other places and perhaps recognize Pottstown's charms with the eyes of an outsider, but that's a discussion for another day.)

Anyway, Sheila and her husband Gene own and run Grumpy's Hand Carved Sandwiches on High Street and live with their brood of vivacious children just a block away on North Hanover Street.

Sheila posted on Facebook asking people to contribute to a page describing what they like about Pottstown.

This seemed like a good idea to me.

Certainly, there is no shortage of places where people can complain about Pottstown, The Mercury's own Sound Off being primary among them, "so why not a place where things you like can be posted?" I thought.

It's one of the reasons Eileen Faust and I started the "Positives in Pottstown" Facebook page.

Several of Dugan's neighbors posted with lists of things to like about this town; the usual suspects -- downtown stores trying to stand out, Smith Family Plaza, Memorial Park, historic architecture, walkable community.

I thought briefly about contributing something, but I wasn't sure what it was I would say.

Then I got busy and the opportunity slipped away.

But last weekend my sister, in an abundance of generosity, decided to give me a birthday present that consisted of her family and mine using her credit card points to stay overnight in a motel at the Jersey Shore.

As I have written about here in the past, when I was a child, my grandparents owned a small, unheated, un-air conditioned house on Long Breach Island (in Brant Beach of course).

It was purchased in a time you did not need to be a millionaire to do things like that and when barrier island property prices did not rival those found on Manhattan island.

So as a child, I spent two weeks each August in Brant Beach with my parents, my sister and the friend each of us had selected to come along.

Many happy memories and rituals -- all fiscally impossible on a reporter's salary in today's top-down economy -- were made there.

Nevertheless, the imprint was made so the Atlantic coast has always had a special place in my heart and it is invariably the place where I become the most contemplative, whether its on LBI, Sag Harbor or Cape Cod.

We were in Seaside Heights last weekend, and I will confess time on the boardwalk there does not inspire contemplation, except, perhaps, about -- how shall I put this? -- the uniqueness of American culture?

But a swim in a calm Atlantic Sunday, helping my son and nephew body surf, had its usual effect and when we got back to good old Pottstown, I took my Hillary Mantel book (and a strong gin and tonic) out onto our front porch.

When Karen and I placed our bets and put all the money we would ever have down on a house in Pottstown, I had only two requirements -- off-street parking and a front porch.

Our home, built in 1918 with some truly gorgeous built-in woodwork, is in a quiet neighborhood in the numbered streets and has both.

To be sure, it has given us headaches: a new roof, a new waterline, new porch posts, plumbing, heating, all the usual burdens of home ownership.

But if time on the beach has taught me anything, it's how to put those things out of your mind and take a moment to look around.

It's something Buddhists call "mindfulness," and it also figures in many yoga practices.

So that moment came as I sat on my porch and looked around.

I thought about something Tom Hylton once wrote that has always struck me; that we all know what kind of town we want to live in, it's where we go on vacation.

Perhaps it was residue from a day at the beach, or because the temperature was so mild for August, or because the light was so pleasantly diffuse, but I had that same feeling sitting on the porch that I usually only have in the early evening at the beach.

Across the street, my neighbor on a double lot has the oldest house on the street and keeps his lawn in pristine condition.

An American flag was waving in the warm summer breeze from his front portico and I noticed I was taking the kind of slow, deep breaths usually reserved for watching the sunset over Barnegat Bay.

For a few moments I felt content; just to sit there, sip a drink and enjoy the quiet moment.

I would like to say this is a regular occurrence, but in this electronicized interconnected time; in this punishing economy; working in a business that is fighting (badly in most cases) for its very life, there isn't a lot of opportunity for moments of contentment.

The house directly across from mine has been foreclosed upon, dashing hopes of a worthwhile home re-financing and our front door has twice had its glass shattered by vandals.

And despite what I still stubbornly continue to believe to be its undeniable potential, Pottstown continues to drift, with little agreement about what it wants to be when it grows up, or how to get there; so often see-sawing between those who want to "worship the problem," as former schools superintendent Reed Lindley once so exactly put it, and those who want to pretend those problems will go away if we stop reporting them.

It is not a recipe for long-term contentment

And it occurred to me that perhaps it is an absence of contentment that is felt so keenly by so many of the borough's older residents, those who expected to quietly live out their days in the house they had finally paid off, living off their pensions and Social Security.

The fact that it has not turned out that way, that the tax burden has made that income inadequate, that Pottstown is no longer the town they had known in their youth, all create an environment for uncertainty, and its offspring, anxiety, not for contentment.

But despite all these challenges, contentment can be found in Pottstown --

  • Sometimes that contentment comes in small dollops, like sitting in the beer garden with friends at the Carousel of Flavor; 
  • Sometimes it comes in a rush that comes and goes before you recognize it was there, like the way the community came together last year to save the Halloween parade;
  • And sometimes contentment creeps up on you like a kind of slow burn, maybe when you're sitting on your porch with a good book, and you start to think about how lucky you are in neighbors; that your child is quietly thriving in an diverse school district which is unfairly under-rated -- a school district that is populated with teachers who inspire him and which is replete with free opportunities for growth and new experiences; that your commute to your job is less than three minutes and, despite its frustrations, that you love what you do.

I'm sure there are people who will tell me that contentment is a state of mind independent of where you are. But although Americans move around a lot more than in other cultures, we still cling tightly to the idea of "home," and I find it hard to contemplate being content without being happy in my home.

So I guess ultimately, I would answer Sheila Dugan's question -- "what do you love about Pottstown?" -- by saying that: Contentment is possible here, but, counter-intuitively, sometimes you have to work at it.



A Community Blockbuster Coming to a Community Center Near You

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The Olivet Boys and Girls Club at the Ricketts Community Center is planing a "Community Blockbuster" event at the center at Beech and Adams streets on Saturday, Aug. 17.

According to director Jan Burgess, the event will feature a giveaway of free school back-packs stuffed with school supplies like pencils and notebooks and crayons, thanks to the efforts of the Community First Development Corp.

Crystal Hills, the executive director of Community First, said about 200 back-packs will be on hand to be given away and are mostly geared toward elementary school and middle school-aged children.

The day will also feature a basketball tournament for high-school aged children, performances, vendors and free hot dogs.

Vendors tables are still available for a small fee, Hills said.

Organizations which will have informational tables at the event include the Pottstown Regional Public Library, St. Aloysius Church, Montgomery County Community College.

Hills said her organization is based out of the Heart of God church at Beech and North hanover streets and offers youth mentoring, workshops for teen mothers and advice on first-time homebuying.


Beef and Beer Supports Art of Vietnam Veterans

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Blogger's Note:The following is provided through a Facebook post by Norah Cannon, a friend of the former Gallery on High.

ArtFusion 19464 will host a beef and beer to raise funds for their upcoming education exhibit on Saturday, Aug. 24 from 6-9 p.m. at the Ballroom on High, 310 E. High St. 

This end-of-summer event features beer courtesy of Victory Brewing Company, food by Boneyard Joe’s and Montesano Bros., live music by local musician Elisha Kane and a fun 50/50 raffle.

Victory Brewing Company is generously donating all the beer for this event. 

The brewers at Victory meld European ingredients and traditions with American creativity, and their beers feature the finest ingredients to achieve their exciting flavors.

Tickets are $20 and include beer, hot beef sandwiches, great side salads, homemade desserts, and water and soda. Vegetarian wraps are available by pre-order only. 

There are a limited number of tickets available, and no tickets will be available at the door. 

Tickets can be purchased in person at ArtFusion (254 E. High St.), on their website at artfusion19464.org, or over the phone at 610-326-2506.

All proceeds will support ArtFusion’s upcoming special educational exhibit "When We Were Soldiers: Personal Stories of Our Vietnam Veterans." 
When We Were Soldiers will focus on the personal recollections of veterans of the Vietnam War. The show will open Sept. 20 with a Welcome Home reception and run through Veterans Day. 

In conjunction with this exhibit, ArtFusion will host free field trips for local middle and high school students to help them learn about this important period in our country’s history.

ArtFusion 19464 is a 501(c)3 non-profit community art center located at 254 E. High St. in downtown Pottstown. 

The school offers day, evening and weekend classes to all ages. The goal of these classes is to help students develop their creative skills through self-expression and independence. 

ArtFusion’s gallery hosts rotating shows featuring local artists. The gallery also sells handcrafted, one-of-a-kind gift items. 

The gallery is open Tuesday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.. The gallery is closed Sunday and Monday.

Borough Should Find Money for New Pool and for Ricketts says NAACP

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Mercury Photo by John Strickler
Instead of swimming in Manatawny Creek, NAACP Vice President
Johnny Corson told council that Pottstown's children need a pool.
The president and vice president of the Pottstown chapter of the NAACP told borough council
Monday that if the borough and school district can find $5 million to fix sidewalks and install bike lanes, they should also be able to find similar amounts to build a pool in Pottstown help the Ricketts Community Center.

"I went by Memorial Park the other day and I saw kids swimming in the Mantawny (Creek)," NAACP Vice President Johnny Corson told council.

"I know I wouldn't let my children swim in that creek. Who knows what's in it, animal feces and the like," Corson said.

"If we had a pool, we wouldn't have to worry about that," he said.

Johnny Corson
Pottstown did have a pool, Gruber Pool, but it closed in 2000 when it was discovered that long-deferred maintenance on the electrical system posed a safety hazard to swimmers.

When the borough could not come up with up with the money to make the repairs, the decision was
made to fill in the pool and over was constructed the Trilogy Park BMX track.

In the meantime, the borough used grant money to construct and open the spray park in Memorial Park.

However, Corson and NAACP President Newstell Marable argued that the pool is needed not only to help residents to keep cool, but to learn to swim.

Newstell Marable
"A swimming pool is very important," Marable told council.

"A town this size should have a pool and a good community center," Marable said.

"If you had a good director, and people who could grants, you'd be surprised where that center could go," Marable said.

Although the Ricketts Community Center is owned by the borough, it has been operated since 2009 by the Reading-based Olivet Boys and Girls Club.

Both Marable and Corson spoke out against that arrangement, both before it was made and since it was implemented, arguing the center should be operated locally and that the club's rules make it more difficult for adults to use it.

Ricketts Community Center
Prior to the club taking over, the center was operated by a local group known as the Collaborative Board, which lost control over accusations of financial mismanagement.

Corson pointed to former Philadelphia Mayor John Street, an avid bicyclist, who hates bike lanes, as part of a body of evidence to suggest the money Pottstown School District and borough council are pursuing jointly to create bikes lanes, as part of a safe-routes to school initiative, could be better spent on a pool and on the Ricketts Center.

Pottstown Borough Council President Steve Toroney thanked both men for their comments.

Borough Manager Mark Flanders informed council that he and representatives from the school district met with state Sen. John Rafferty, R-44th Dist. about the transportation bill that is pending in Harrisburg and whether the Safe Routes to Schools project would be eligible for funding from it.

After Monday night's meeting, when it was pointed out to Corson that it is unlikely the state transportation funding being pursued by Pottstown to help pay for sidewalk repairs and bike lanes could be used for a pool or a recreation center, Corson replied that the borough has grant writers and could be looking for grants to pay for the pool and to support the Ricketts Center.






Borough Briefs

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A number of small items were approved Monday by borough council, all of them unanimously, although members Mark Gibson and Carol Kulp were both absent.

-- Council authorized the staff to submit an application to the Regional Recreation Mini-Grant program for $25,000 -- the maximum allowed -- for the replacement of the walking bridge in Riverfront Park.

The bridge, over a small stream near the Hanover Street bridge, was knocked out by a falling tree that fell during "Hurricane Irene."

Mark Flanders
(On a similar subject, Borough Manager Mark Flanders informed council that the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency had awarded the borough $64,000 reimbursement for costs associated with dealing with and cleaning up after the storm.)

The mini-grant program has been set up through the Pottstown Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Committee and is open only to those among the eight municipalities -- Pottstown, West Pottsgrove, Upper Pottsgrove, Lower Possgrove, Douglass (Mont.), New Hanover, East Coventry and North Coventry -- that comprise the committee that have elected to participate.

Funding comes from the Pottstown Area Health and Wellness Foundation and the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.

-- Council also approved a motion to send a letter of support for the Schuylkill River National and State Heritage Area's application to the William Penn Foundation for funding to implement the "River-Walk" concept in Riverfront Park.


During last week's work session, Assistant Borough Manager Erica Weekley told council that $100,000 is being sought to transform 30 acres of woodland in the park into an interpretive nature trail.

That, combined with the new 600 square-foot interpretive center in the Heritage Area's headquarters, which is in Riverfront Park, "is a draw for those using the trail, giving them something else to do."

-- Council also adopted an ordinance which will make a section of Spruce Street one-way south from Airy Street to Jefferson Avenue, as well as prohibiting U-turns on High Street and on Rosedale Drive, from Mulberry Street to Wilson Street, a change to prohibit U-turns now being made by parents picking up and dropping off students at the Wyndcroft School.

Plans for the extension of Keystone Boulevard
-- Council unanimously re-appointed Brian George to the Environmental Advisory Council for a three-year term; re-appointed Gail Palladino to the Codes Board of Appeals for a three-year term and approved Toroney's appoiintment of Kulp and Council Vice President Jeff Chomnuk (as an alternate) to the committee which will oversee the joint efforts with West Pottsgrove to extend Keystone Boulevard to Glasgow Street and further develop properties there.

Also appointed to that committee was Weekley.

-- Not appointed, however, is a new director of the codes department, which Flanders has said will be re-named the licensing and inspection department.

Last month, he informed council interviews were being conducted and subsequently, a candidate was identified. "But we could not come to terms," Flanders said. 

And so, the search will continue.

Proud to be from Pottstown (Part II)

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Outgoing Franklin Elementary Principal Mia DiPaolo, left, with some of her students and staff at the award ceremony at the McDonald's on High Street.

Back on July 25, The Digital Notebook presented a post about what some of the students in the Pottstown School District had written about why they are "Proud to be from Pottstown."

The awards were sponsored by Bruce and Marcia Graham, owners of the local McDonald's franchises.

The first post had an alluring titled which included a "Part I," suggesting there would be more, and there are.

Here now is the much-anticipated seqel.

In a strategy that is both helpful and greedy, information guru John Armato is trying to stretch this saga into several posts, which the staff here at The Digital Notebook appreciates given that summer is not the most fulsome time for local news.

He is trying to milk it into four installments, but we have decided upon three, because trilogies are traditional.

So presented below are writing samples from students in the second and third grades; followed by those from the fourth and fifth grades.

Here are the expressions of “Pottstown Pride” from students in second and third grade:

  • Yameen Rahim– Barth Grade 2 – I am extremely proud because at Barth we work as a team to take care of each other and we motivate each other.
  •  Christinna Longenecker– Barth Grade 3 – I take pride in Pottstown and you should too. I take pride in my town, my school, and myself. At the senior center, elderly people are safe. It makes me very happy to see their smiling faces. At Barth I walk in the door and feel that every day will be successful. I take pride in myself by keeping my neighborhood clean. When I go outside, I remove litter from the yards and park. I take pride in myself because I help people.
  • Gabrielle Cassell – Edgewood Grade 2 – I’m proud of our community because there are nice people that like me and play with me and I’m proud of myself because I am able to learn new things everyday and I can accomplish the things I want.
  • Jack Engleman– Edgewood Grade 3 – The citizens of Pottstown should be proud of their town. The Pottstown School District is 133 years old which makes it one of the oldest in Pennsylvania. I’m proud of some of the people that graduated from Pottstown High School like Lionel Douglass who was part of the television program “Sesame Street,” Robert Davidheiser made background music for Disney World, and Robert Shantz who was a pitcher for the New York Yankees and helped them win their first World Series Championship. The steel from the Golden Gate Bridge, which is one of the most popular bridges in America, came from Pottstown and Pottsgrove Manor does great things for the community and tells about the history of our town.
  • Kaela Auman– Franklin Grade 2 – We have a big volleyball tournament at Memorial Park every
    Rupert Elementary award winners joined by
    School Board President 
    Judyth Zahora, center.
    year. 
  • Akira Love– Franklin Grade 3 – We have a fantastic community, wonderful schools, and terrific people. Our police are always there to protect us. In school, our gym teacher Mr. Fabian makes up fun games for us to play that are exciting and enjoyable. My experiences in Pottstown have really helped me to become a fantastic person. You should take some time and visit us here at Pottstown and see our wonderful community, fantastic schools, and terrific people.
  • Jedi Buting–Lincoln Grade 2 – Our class is like a colorful wall of friendship. In Pottstown our schools are filled with kids who have different imaginations, minds, and sizes. We are not all the same and we learn together in peace.
  • Jayniana Williams– Lincoln Grade 3 – Have you ever been to a place where friendships are built and people work together? Well, I have. My community is a great place to be. I am proud of my community. There are great parks, wonderful people, and terrific places to eat. During the winter when you are playing in a park with your friends in a white blanket of snow, nature’s picture show looks very beautiful. Everyone in my community is generous and tries their hardest every day to be the best they can be.
  • Abigail Eagle– Rupert Grade 2 – I’m proud of the doctors that save our lives every day. I’m proud of myself for doing a food drive. I feel good for doing that. I collected canned foods that went to orphans. 
  • Gabriel Roseo– Rupert Grade 3 – I’m proud of what we do for the Relay for Life. The thought that while I’m walking on the track knowing that I’m helping find a cure for cancer makes me feel honored. Art classes at ArtFusion are fun and my favorite thing to do after school. I’m proud of being a swimmer because it takes hard work and exercise and I’m willing to do it because I love it.
And now here, are samples from grades four and five:

  • Hadaysha Rivera– Barth Grade 4 – I am proud of my school because they are like another family to me. Pottstown has special places like the Ricketts Center and the hospital. Another special place to me in Pottstown is the Red Cross. When the Westford Apartments caught fire last year, they were the ones to help me and my family. 
  • Brea Corbin– Edgewood Grade 4 – I am proud of myself for giving fifty cents to Hurricane Sandy Relief and helping charities like Jump Rope for Heart. I like the stores in Pottstown. My favorite restaurant is Argento’s. I want to help Pottstown, my school, and my community. I am proud to be training at the YMCA for gymnastics, Zumba, and yoga. In my home, I want to be a better child and in school a better student. 
  • Madison Friedman– Edgewood Grade 5 – I’m proud that my friends and I are on the honor roll. A
    Lincoln Elementary award winners, also with Mrs. Zahora.
    lot of people graduated from Pottstown. Some of those people became teachers, invented things, and served in the Army. Pottstown residents should be proud of Pottstown because we work hard and have many people volunteer for things. 
  • Kaylin Lascik– Franklin Grade 4 – Pottstown has beautiful nature. You should see the nature some time. Pottstown has green areas and parks. The parks are full of trees and flowers. Streets are lined with trees. Pottstown has a community garden. You should see Pottstown as a beautiful green town.
  • Phillip Shiffler– Franklin Grade 5 – One of the great qualities of Pottstown is their parades. The parades include Halloween, the 4th of July, and Memorial Day. Our schools in Pottstown have some of the best teachers and most enjoyable activities. Every year our schools have Fall Fest, Spring Fling, North End Pool trip, and many more activities and field trips throughout the year. 
  • Raymond Long– Lincoln Grade 4 – There are so many thoughtful people in my town. I know a vast amount of people. A lot of them are very, very nice. I always see people outside sweeping and lawn mowing for others. That is the type of kindness I am talking about. I am also proud of myself. I strive to improve Pottstown. I feel that I am a grand resident and citizen of Pottstown. I donate clothes and money to charities. 
  • Evan DeBlase– Lincoln Grade 5 – The Very Best is a hotdog place with very good hotdogs. My teacher’s opinion is that they have the best hotdogs in the world. I haven’t been there yet but I hope I will be able to some day. I wonder if they have a secret ingredient in their hotdogs. 
  • Kameryn Herpich– Rupert Grade 4 – I show pride in my community by being on safety patrol and helping first graders get on the bus safely. I take pride in being a safety because I got picked out of a lot of students. I also take pride in good quality schools in Pottstown. I show pride in myself by holding my head high when I get an A on a test and work hard on my school work. It is important to have pride in at least one thing that you do. Different people show pride in different things. 
  • Zelias Bray– Rupert Grade 5 – I am proud of myself because I caught a fish with my bare hands. I am also proud of myself because I got on honor roll for the first time. I am proud to have a good family. When I was sick, my family was there to take care of me. I am also proud that I am a good friend. When my friends need help carrying their instruments, I am there to help them.

This Saturday in (Weather) Science

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Hopefully, this is not what the new weather apparatus at Pottsgrove High School will be observing....

Blogger's Note:This week's This Saturday in Science entry is devoted to all the new meteorological learning opportunities that will be available this year at Pottsgrove High School, which will now also be a weather station.

They say everyone complains about the weather but nobody does anything about it, but you can’t say that about Pottsgrove High School any more.

This week, equipment was installed on the roof which will make the high school another location for weather observations that are part of the Weatherbug network.
Hopefully, the weather observed at Pottsgrove will be more like this...

Workers installed a high-definition camera, lightning sensor and educational software that will not only allow the station to provide data for the weather team at CBS Philly, but also to enhance the science, technology and math curriculum at the school.

“We are excited to be bringing a WeatherBug station to our school district because it will help us bring science to life for our students,” said Michael Wagman, director of technology and communications at Pottsgrove School District. “We see immediate application in our high school earth science curriculum.”

The WeatherBug Schools interactive software program, WeatherBug Achieve, enables teachers to apply real-world conditions to help teach skills and concepts in math, science and geography.

The community at large will also benefit.

“This weather station and software from Weatherbug will give members of the Pottsgrove school community the opportunity to further their knowledge about weather and climate using modern technological tools,” said Wagman.

Once up and running, the up-to-the-minute hyper-local weather conditions will be available to the community through Pottsgrove’s new web site.

Also, the district will also get advance warning of lightning and severe weather as a result of the partnership, which “will help us make critical decisions with regard to the safety of our students during athletic activities, when transporting them and with other outdoor activities,” Wagman said.

A science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) grant helped offset start-up costs “and made the technology more affordable to us,” said Wagman.

Through that technology, teachers and students have access to local weather conditions from any of the 8,000 WeatherBug sites across the country.

Teachers can also create learning activities based on both current and historical weather conditions from the stations and cameras located at the school.

“WeatherBug is pleased to welcome the students and faculty of the Pottsgrove School District as the newest members of WeatherBug Schools Program,” said Frank McCathran, director of WeatherBug Education. “CBS Philly/KYW is a strong media partner and we are delighted that a new school in the area is able to provide local weather information.”

Challenging the Pirate World's Record

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The dreaded Blackbeard goes about his bloody work....

Blogger's Note: It's indulgence time folks. Sometimes, when you have a  blog, you post something just because it tickles your fancy. 

This has absolutely nothing to do with Pottstown, Pottsgrove or Pennsylvania for that matter. This is just something that got sent to me, along with the hundreds of other things sent to me that I routinely delete. But this one I just could not resist.

After all, thanks to Johny Depp, everyone loves pirates these days and everyone loves sticking it to those uppity Brits. 

Hey, who knows, maybe Pottstown wants to send down some Schuylkill Pirates...

And pirates seem to be gaining in popularity, everything from "Talk Like a Pirate Day," which this year is Sept. 19, to "pirate name generators" can all be found on the web.

(By the way, my pirate name is "Nick 'One-Tooth Curses, the Lion of Mango Cliffs." No idea what that means, but it sounds nifty.)

Anyway, here is the information:

Call it The War of 2013, if you will.

On Sept. 21, 2013, The Mariners’ Museum will attempt to host the largest-ever gathering of pirates, in the presence of a Guinness World Records official. If the effort succeeds, the United States will wrest the honor from England.

The Mariners’ believes the United States should be the holder of the distinction. While it’s true that most of the big-league pirates were British, it’s also true that the home turf for most of their pirate deeds was off the shores of North America. Besides, taking something that belongs to someone else – it’s what good pirates do.

The Mariners’ Museum is going to need help to claim the honor –from about 15,000 people. The record is held by Hastings, England, where the 2012 mark was set by 14,231 pirates for Hastings Pirate Day.

The Museum will attempt to break that mark on Sept. 21, 2013 at The Mariners’ Museum Park, with its Pirates Pack the Park event. The event is in celebration of the Sept. 19 International Talk Like a Pirate Day. Pirates Pack the Park is from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., with the official pirate count taking place at 2 p.m.




The attempt will be framed around a day-long pirate festival featuring a children’s area, food and drink vendors, live music and entertainment, crafts, pirate merchandise and a pirate re-enactor encampment. Participants will ride free shuttle buses to The Mariners’ Museum Park from satellite parking locations.





What constitutes a pirate? Simply, pirate pants or skirt combined with a white or striped shirt and a bandana or pirate hat. The finishing touch is an accessory item such as an eye patch, toy sword or parrot. Admission to the Museum is only $5 for everyone on Sept. 21. Later that evening, the Museums hosts the Pirate Gala, during which the final pirate count will be announced. The Gala will include food, adult beverages and live music. For more information on the pirate festival and gala, visit PiratesPackthePark.org.
The gathering place, the Mariner's Museum.

The Mariners' Museum, an educational, non-profit institution accredited by the American Association of
Museums, preserves and interprets maritime history through an international collection of ship models, figureheads, paintings and other maritime artifacts. 

It is home to The Mariners' Museum Park, a 550-acre park that includes the 160-acre Lake Maury and the 5-mile Noland Trail, and is the largest private park open and free to the public in the United States. For information, visit www.MarinersMuseum.org, call (757) 596-2222 or write to The Mariners' Museum, 100 Museum Drive, Newport News, VA 23606.

Free Slavic Music Concert at St. John's

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Photo by Joe Zlomek

St. John the Baptist Byzantine Catholic Church.
"Diversity" in Pottstown means more than racial and economic diversity, it means cultural diversity as well.

Among the many ethnic groups who settled
Pottstown and helped to build it when the factories brought work were people from the Austro-Hungarian Empire, mainly from the sub-Carpathian region which is now Slovakia and Ukraine.

It was from among these people that the founders of St. John the Baptist Byzantine Catholic Church. 

And next Friday, thanks to Pottstown resident and Hill School graduate Andrew Skitko, we have an opportunity to experience a piece of that culture for free.

Below is the text of a release telling you all about it:

A concert of sacred hymns and liturgical music of the Slavic tradition will be presented by the Theoria
Chamber Choir at 7 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 23 at St. John the Baptist Byzantine Catholic Church, 301 Cherry St. in Pottstown.

The concert is free and open to the public; a free will offering will be accepted. Please note that the church is air-conditioned and handicapped accessible via the ramp in the rear parking lot.

The Theoria Chamber Choir features students and alumni of Westminster Choir College, Princeton, N.J. 

Westminster is a four-year music college and graduate school that prepares men and women for careers as professional performers and as music leaders in schools, universities, churches, and professional and community music organizations. 

 Westminster choirs perform annually in venues including the Kimmel Center, Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln Center, and Carnegie Hall, and various groups are professionally recorded as they perform well-known composers’ new and other arrangements.

Theoria Chamber Choir is directed by Andrew Skitko, a native of Pottstown, and graduate of The Hill School. 
Photo from St. John's web site

The interior of St. John's church from the choir loft.

"Our choir is very excited to be returning to Pottstown, and we hope that with your support we can share our unique Slavic choral music, and bring the local community together for this performance," Skitko wrote in an e-mail to The Mercury.
Skitko also serves as the cantor and music director at The Assumption of The Virgin Mary Byzantine Catholic Church of Trenton, N.J., where Theoria Chamber Choir performs about once a month. Skitko also has been a cantor at St. John’s church.

In April 2012, the Westminster Slavic Choir, also under Skitko’s direction, performed at St. John’s church to a crowd that included many people who had never before heard the traditional Slavic music and asked Skitko to return to perform another concert. 

Due to keen interest, Skitko was eager to return to Pottstown with the Theoria Chamber Choir, a four-part group of powerful, professionally trained voices.

“Performing in Pottstown allows us to share this beautiful music with my hometown and support Pottstown’s growing, diverse arts presence,” said Skitko.

Joining Skitko, a baritone, will be Liesl McPherrin, soprano, Lauren Delfing, alto, and Brett Avery-Lawyer, tenor.

The concert will feature sacred liturgical choral works by composers including Bortniansky, Tchaikovsky, Vedel, and Hurko. Selections will be performed in English as well as Old Church Slavonic.

The concert is expected to last about one hour.

A Uniformly Good Idea

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A local Pottstown Girl Scout Troop  is collecting new or used clothing that can be used as student uniforms in the Pottstown School District.

Suggested donations are white, light blue, or navy polo shirts, turtlenecks, certain sweaters and sweatshirts and navy blue or khaki pants, shorts, skirts, or skorts. 

All sizes are needed. 

The Girl Scouts have drop off sites at Grumpy's Sandwich Shop, Rich Ranieri's MAB paints -- both of which are on High St -- Mike's Brick Oven pizza on Charlotte St., the YMCA, Pottstown School District Administration  Building  230 Beech St. and the North End Swim Club.

All uniforms will be donated to the Pottstown Cluster of Religious Communities. 

Victoria Bumstead, volunteer coordinator for the cluster, has indicated that many clients of the center are in need of uniforms before the start of the school year. 

For more information about the uniforms, click here.

            


            

A Perfect Record

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Photo by John Armato
Kristopher Horsey, center, accepts an award for perfect attendance throughout his entire scholastic career at Pottstown from School Board President Judyth Zahora, left, and Superintendent Jeff Sparagana.

 When he accepted his Pottstown High School diploma this June, Kristpher Horsey capped an attendance record few can match.

From kindergarten to his very last day as a senior, Horsey did not miss a single day of school.

Community Relations Director John Armato calculated it out to 2,366 consecutive days of school.

And he did more than just show up.

Horsey was in the marching band, the Interact Club, the chess club, speech and drama club, he was the prom prince and he visited Italy with the AP European History class.

He also participated in a program with Montgomery County Community College called "Upward Bound,": where he also had perfect attendance.

Throughout it all, he maintained a 4.0 GPA, and this while taking AP classes in algebra, European history, government and literature.

This fall he will attend Drexel University where he will major in computer science.

"This really goes to show you what we say all the time," said School Board President Judyth Zahora. "When we have the kids from kindergarten through high school, they really achieve here in Pottstown. We put out a good, solid education."

School board member Andrew Kefer called Horsey's record "a remarkable achievement."

"As all parents know, you can have a spotless house that is germ free and kids still get sick, so to go 13 years without missing a day of school; that's just amazing," Kefer said.

School board member Ron Williams pointed out that an award should also be given to Horsey's mother, for raising such a remarkable student.

"I was principal at Barth when he was in Pre-K and it really just goes to show you you never know how someone is going to turn out," said Superintendent Jeff Sparagana. "His best years are still ahead of him"


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