April 7, 2010

Police log for April 8

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A 25-year-old man from Glen Mills was arrested and charged
with DUI, disorderly conduct and defiant trespass, according to a state police
press release. Police said troopers were responding to a call from Duffer’s Pub
on Route 1 in Concord Township at 1:51 a.m. on April 6 when they found pub
employees already detaining Daniel Asher Mahler after a three-vehicle crash in
the parking lot. According to the report, Mahler had been asked to leave the
pub because of disorderly conduct; he did leave, but returned an hour later.
When he came back, the report said, Mahler hit two vehicles in the parking lot.

• State police reported an early morning accident at Route
202 and Dilworthtown Road in Chadds Ford. The accident happened just before 5
a.m. on April 7. According to a police report, a Toyota Sienna, traveling south
on Route 202, struck a tractor-trailer turning left from Dilworthtown Road into
the southbound lane of Route 202. The report said the tractor-trailer was making
the left turn with the light. No injuries were reported.

• Alexander Murray, 20, of West Chester was charged with DUI
after a traffic stop along Route 202 near Beaver Valley Road in Concord
Township, a police report said. The report said Murray was driving his 2003
Saab in an erratic manner shortly after midnight on April 4.

• Someone removed two loading ramps from an open trailer at
the Planet Honda motorcycle dealership on Route 202 sometime between midnight
and 10 a.m. on April 5, a police report said. The ramps were valued at $700,
according to the report.

About CFLive Staff

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Kennett Symphony of Chester County presents Meet the Music: Mozart Requiem

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The Kennett Symphony of Chester County, under the direction
of Music Director & Conductor Mary Woodmansee Green, will continue their
2009-2010 season with the compelling “Mozart Requiem” on Saturday, April 24.
There will be two performances at 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. in the Westminster
Presbyterian Church, located at 10 W. Pleasant Grove Rd in West Chester.

Joining the Kennett Symphony will be the renowned
Westminster Presbyterian Chancel Choir, with over 100 members, under the
direction of Robert Morris. Soloists are Ashley Fisher, soprano, Diane McCabe,
Alto, Lee Fisher, tenor, and Alex Krenz, Bass. The second in the Meet The Music
series, Maestra Mary Woodmansee Green and Westminster Presbyterian Choir
director, Bob Morris, will provide musical insights of the Mozart Requiem prior
to the performance of the piece.

The Requiem was Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s last
composition, written in Vienna in 1791 during the last year of his life. It is
considered one of Mozart’s most popular and respected works, however probably no
other major musical work has generated as much mystery as surrounds the
Requiem. The circumstances of its composition are the subject of endless debate
and speculation, highlighted in the 1984 Oscar-winning film “Amadeus.” In conjunction
with the April 24 concerts, the Kennett Symphony is partnering with the Kennett
FLASH in a showing of the movie on Sunday, April 11 at 2 p.m. For more
information on the movie showing, check the FLASH website at www.kennettflash.org.

This concert is generously supported by our sponsor, Herr
Foods. Tickets are available for both the 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. concerts. Adults
are $35 and students are $10. Free parking and facilities for those with
mobility impairments are also available. For information call 610-444-6363 or
visit www.kennettsymphony.org.

Kennett Symphony of Chester County presents Meet the Music: Mozart Requiem Read More »

Crozer opens Dialysis Access Center at Brinton Lake

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With the introduction of the Dialysis Access Center at
Brinton Lake, Crozer-Chester Medical Center now offers comprehensive dialysis
access services just minutes from dialysis centers in Delaware County and
Chester County. 

The Dialysis Access Center is located in Suite 210 of the
Crozer Medical Center at Brinton Lake, 300 Evergreen Drive in Glen Mills. The
Center is dedicated to providing state-of-the-art dialysis access services in a
convenient and easily accessible setting. A department of Crozer-Chester
Medical Center, the Center’s experienced team helps develop management plans
for meeting dialysis access needs.

The Dialysis Access Center team offers a range of services
for patients, including:

• Catheter placement/exchange: Placing a catheter or
replacing one that a patient is having a problem with.

• Catheter removal: When a patient has a usable permanent
access for dialysis, the catheter can be removed.

• Thrombolysis/thrombectomy: Commonly called a “declot,”
this procedure involves removing blood clots from a patient’s access to allow
for a renewed blood flow and adequate dialysis treatment.

• Central venous access placement for temporary use: Placing
a catheter within a vein in the patient’s neck or groin to enable dialysis
while awaiting a new surgical access or maturation of a fistula. 

• Fistulagram: Performed to monitor the function of a
fistula.

• Graft study: Performed to monitor the function of a graft.

• Duplex ultrasound: Performed to evaluate the condition and
blood flow of a fistula or graft. 

• Graft or fistula revision: Grafts or fistulas can be
studied to determine the cause of any underlying problems and have these issues
addressed with balloon dilatation and/or stenting.

• Venous or special mapping: Placing a small IV in a
patient’s hand to inject IV contrast (dye) to determine where best to place a
patient’s fistula or graft.

• Venous angioplasty: Introducing a balloon into the vessel
and inflating it, thereby opening up a narrowed portion of the vein.

The Center is open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4:30
p.m., and Saturday by appointment. Most major insurances are accepted. Ample,
free parking is available. 

For more information or to schedule an appointment, call
(610) 579-3515.

Crozer opens Dialysis Access Center at Brinton Lake Read More »

Blogging Along the Brandywine: Easter, by any other name

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Easter morning started out perfectly.

I opened my sliding patio door as the first rays of sun were
coming up and took a deep breath of spring air. Six weeks ago I had looked out
the same door to see two feet of snow swirling through the tall trees.

But now, my daffodils had burst into little fanfares while
the first birds of dawn sounded like flutes echoing through the treetops.

I walked over to my computer and opened up an email from a
childhood friend now in Missouri. It was a Jacquie Lawson electronic greeting
card. I clicked on it.

A rich pealing of church bells emanated from my computer
blending with the sweet strains of Bach’s “Sheep May Safely Graze.” The scene
enlarged to include the obligatory sheep, an orchard thick with apple blossoms,
birds and butterflies. Soon a rustic English farm came into view while a group
of ducks floated peacefully along a marsh-lined creek.

I got dressed, drove a few miles and pulled into a familiar
parking lot.

The dozen or so cherry trees planted in freshly mulched
islands had burst into full bloom, while a church bell beckoned early morning
worshippers.

But then, at precisely 7:55 a.m., the Pascal perfection of
the morning ended…I was at work.

I work for a company that owns several hotels and fine
dining restaurants in the Brandywine Valley as the executive assistant to a man
who is not only a partner in the controlling company but owner of one of the
properties.

And no matter what your job description, you work Easter.

By 8:05 a.m., the phones had begun to ring off the hook as I
started fielding two to three calls per minute—not one of my strong points.

“…Hello, are you doing anything special today?” came the
voice.

 “Dear one,” I
wanted to ask, “When did you first realize it was Easter?”

But I looked at the little picture of Jesus I keep taped to
my computer screen, took a deep breath, smiled and told her we were sold out
through 3:30 p.m. and thanked her so much for thinking of us.

“…Hello, we have reservations for eight people at the brunch
buffet and have to cancel as we all came down with the flu this morning,” came
the next call.

I wanted to tell them the dog ate my homework, but looked at
my little picture again, took a deep breath, smiled and said how sorry I was
and that we would surely miss them.

Three hours into the brunch buffet, one of our long-time
cooks who could open her own catering company, walked by my office.

 “Make it stop,”
she cried in mock desperation.

At some point during the middle of the afternoon, I walked
down to the quasi-Roman food orgy in the ballroom and observed our executive
chef at a buffet station, carving our signature slow-roasted prime rib of beef.
A large, robust man, he was still smiling and looked like a Santa Claus in a
chef’s jacket. What had he put in his cappuccino that morning, and could I have
some too?

By 5 p.m., after 9 hours of taking calls, I felt like I had
been through the wringer. There were still two more hours of reservations, but
the phones had mercifully stopped. Easter was over for another year and
Mother’s Day was only five weeks away.

About Sally Denk Hoey

Sally Denk Hoey, is a Gemini - one part music and one part history. She holds a masters degree cum laude from the School of Music at West Chester University. She taught 14 years in both public and private school. Her CD "Bard of the Brandywine" was critically received during her almost 30 years as a folk singer. She currently cantors masses at St Agnes Church in West Chester where she also performs with the select Motet Choir. A recognized historian, Sally serves as a judge-captain for the south-east Pennsylvania regionals of the National History Day Competition. She has served as president of the Brandywine Battlefield Park Associates as well as the Sanderson Museum in Chadds Ford where she now curates the violin collection. Sally re-enacted with the 43rd Regiment of Foot and the 2nd Pennsylvania Regiment for 19 years where she interpreted the role of a campfollower at encampments in Valley Forge, Williamsburg, Va., Monmouth, N.J. and Lexington and Concord, Mass. Sally is married to her college classmate, Thomas Hoey, otherwise known as "Mr. Sousa.”

Blogging Along the Brandywine: Easter, by any other name Read More »

The Naked Winemaker: The wines of spring

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Every year, when the weather does what it’s doing now –
beautiful warm clear days, cool bug-less nights, the pull to be outside with
friends and family – my mind has already arrived at the next excuse to open a
bottle of wine.  As a certified
Cork Dork I have two criteria.  One
is to taste things I have not tasted before. The other is to open things I have
not been thinking about over winter (with its heavy, sturdy, “comfort” foods
and wines).

In the Not Tasted Recently Department, it’s embarrassing to
admit that the first thing I open is my own Spring Wine from last fall’s
vintage.  It’s not spring for me
until that wine is out and we’re doing crisp fresh asparagus with a light
vinaigrette.  I love Spring Wine’s
bright fruit and fresh character that somehow makes me see green, think green,
feel green, and want to act like a daffodil.  I mean just hang out and look around at the wonderful
changes taking place in the garden, the tree tips, the lawn.

A few nights ago, Lee and I shared a bottle of Selbach 2008
Riesling from Bernkasteler in the Mosel Valley, Germany.  We took it with us to The Gables
Restaurant.  Jack was debuting his
new spring menu and I had a near religious experience having this wine with his
duck salad.  For the bone-dry wine
drinker it might be a little sweet, but it’s lively acidity, feint mineral
taste and delicacy of low alcohol sent me into a tail-spin and I felt like a
daffodil all over again.

What’s in your picnic basket?

So what else is on my list for this upcoming picnic and
party season?  Mostly light fresh
crisp whites!  A few suggestions:

·     
German Rieslings like the Selbach I just
mentioned

·     
Those wonderful slightly sweet low alcohol
Muscatos from Northern Italy

·     
New Zealand Sauvignon Blancs (Lee’s favorite)

·     
French Chablis (these are the lightest
Chardonnays from Burgundy)

·     
Loire Valley whites (like Muscadet)

·     
Chenin Blanc from just about anywhere it’s made
(We had a very good one from Baja California in Mexico this winter.)

Even though whites are at the top of the spring list, some
of us are going to drink reds anyway! 
So time to transition and move the big heart-warming tannic “take me to
your steak” reds back to the cellar, in favor of lighter reds like Pinot Noir,
Cotes du Rhone and even some of the less expensive delicious Garnacha’s
(Grenache) from Spain.  These are
fruitier dry reds and they work so nicely with lighter meats ranging from lamb
to fresh pork to roast chicken. 
I’m happy using these selections through most of the summer…or at least
right up until we crank up the grill and baste on Uncle Ray’s BBQ sauce. Which
we will discuss at a later date.

One final thought on spring-ish wines: don’t wait till
summer to look for a nice clean dry Rosé
to stock your larder (read that cry rosé, not the sweet pink blush wines)
.  Start now so you know what to take with
you to the shore, on the boat, or just out to the back patio.  What intrigues me so much about
delicious dry rosés (besides
the fact that they are so perfect with cheese, sausage, olives and crusty
French bread) is that they come out of the refrigerator cool and crisp like a
white…and then warm up on the table to a light red.  So everybody’s happy!

The classic dry rosés
are from southern France (Provence) and Portugal, but today you can find them
just about anywhere.  I’ve had some
very nice ones from California and Chili, and we even make them here in
Pennsylvania.

 

Have a great
spring filled with delicious wines and foods,

Eric

The Naked Winemaker: The wines of spring Read More »

Denise Hyde Wood of Kennett Square

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 SEQ CHAPTER h
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 SEQ CHAPTER h
1Denise Hyde Wood, 92, died April 6 at her home in the Kendal
Community of Kennett Square.  She
was known for her international work for reconciliation and for her creative
work of community building.

Denise was born in Boston. Her father was a Bostonian and
her mother a Parisian. She grew up in the neighborhood of Boston and spent many
summers in France visiting her French grandparents.  She attended the American School in Paris for two years and
graduated from The Winsor School in Brookline, Mass.  She graduated from Vassar College where she was president of
her freshman and senior classes.

After World War II Denise returned to Europe, taking a leading
part in the worldwide enterprise of Moral Re-Armament, building trust and new
relationships between the former warring nations.  During the next twenty years the outreach of MRA took her to
port workers in Calcutta, to Hyde Park, N.Y., for lunch with Eleanor Roosevelt,
to the Congo (Zaire)in its first year of independence, escorting the First Lady
of the Congo to visit Pope John XXIII in Rome.

In 1965 Denise became Dean of Women at the newly founded
Mackinac College, a liberal arts college on Mackinac Island, Mich., focused on
developing leadership.

In 1967 Denise and John Wood, a colleague in the work of
MRA, were married in New York City. 
Denise joined New York’s School Volunteer program and was named chair of
its board of directors.  At an
all-boys high school in the Hell’s Kitchen area of Manhattan’s West Side she
taught students on a one-to-one basis how to read.  In 1972 Denise and John moved to Pasadena, Calif.  She became Dean of Students at
Marlborough School, a college-preparatory school in Los Angeles. On retirement
from the school Denise founded the Office for Creative Connections based at All
Saints Episcopal Church in Pasadena. 
It was a gift to the city, designed to bring together a multi-ethnic
community and address its needs and opportunities.

In 1990 the Woods moved to Kennett Square where Denise
mobilized a Church of the Advent team to survey the wide community for its
needs. This led to the founding of After-the-Bell.

Denise is the author of two books: “Experiencing Pasadena”
and “Growing up in Pasadena: What Are Our Children Telling Us?” and she
translated from French to English a book: “The Piercing Pain of Freedom”
written by a formerly imprisoned Soviet dissident and published by the Hoover
Institute in Palo Alto, Calif.. 
Denise also played a distinctive role in a documentary film, “For The
Love of Tomorrow”, portraying the life of a French woman socialist member of
parliament who had led a resistance movement in Marseille against the German occupation
in World War II.  Denise had become
her friend and colleague after the war as this woman moved beyond her hatred of
Germany and worked for reconciliation between former enemies on several
continents.

Denise is survived by her husband, John Wood; by a nephew,
Nathaniel Hyde; and a niece, Cynthia Hyde Kinnealey , both of Maine; by a
nephew, Dwight Hyde, of New Hampshire  and Nova Scotia; 
and by three great-nieces, Brittany, Jamie and Jessie.

A Service of Thanksgiving will be held on Saturday, April
24, at ll a.m. at the Episcopal Church of the Advent, 401 North Union Street,
Kennett Square.  The service will
be preceded by a graveside burial service at 9 a.m. at Union Hill Cemetery, 424
North Union Street, Kennett Square, adjacent to the Church.  At 10 a.m. the family will be receiving
guests at the church.  A luncheon
reception in the parish hall will follow the Service of Thanksgiving.

In lieu of flowers the family suggests contributions be made
to the Kennett After School Association, 
P. O. Box 1068, Kennett Square, PA 19348-1068, for its After-the-Bell
program.

Arrangements are being handled by the Foulk & Grieco
Funeral Home Inc. (610-869-2685) of West Grove. To send an online message of
sympathy, please visit www.griecocares.com.

 

Denise Hyde Wood, 92, died April 6 at her home in the Kendal
Community of Kennett Square.

 

Denise Hyde Wood, 92, died April 6 at her home in the Kendal
Community of Kennett Square.  She
was known for her international work for reconciliation and for her creative
work of community building.

Denise was born in Boston. Her father was a Bostonian and
her mother a Parisian. She grew up in the neighborhood of Boston and spent many
summers in France visiting her French grandparents.  She attended the American School in Paris for two years and
graduated from The Winsor School in Brookline, Mass.  She graduated from Vassar College where she was president of
her freshman and senior classes.

After World War II Denise returned to Europe, taking a leading
part in the worldwide enterprise of Moral Re-Armament, building trust and new
relationships between the former warring nations.  During the next twenty years the outreach of MRA took her to
port workers in Calcutta, to Hyde Park, N.Y., for lunch with Eleanor Roosevelt,
to the Congo (Zaire)in its first year of independence, escorting the First Lady
of the Congo to visit Pope John XXIII in Rome.

In 1965 Denise became Dean of Women at the newly founded
Mackinac College, a liberal arts college on Mackinac Island, Mich., focused on
developing leadership.

In 1967 Denise and John Wood, a colleague in the work of
MRA, were married in New York City. 
Denise joined New York’s School Volunteer program and was named chair of
its board of directors.  At an
all-boys high school in the Hell’s Kitchen area of Manhattan’s West Side she
taught students on a one-to-one basis how to read.  In 1972 Denise and John moved to Pasadena, Calif.  She became Dean of Students at
Marlborough School, a college-preparatory school in Los Angeles. On retirement
from the school Denise founded the Office for Creative Connections based at All
Saints Episcopal Church in Pasadena. 
It was a gift to the city, designed to bring together a multi-ethnic
community and address its needs and opportunities.

In 1990 the Woods moved to Kennett Square where Denise
mobilized a Church of the Advent team to survey the wide community for its
needs. This led to the founding of After-the-Bell.

Denise is the author of two books: “Experiencing Pasadena”
and “Growing up in Pasadena: What Are Our Children Telling Us?” and she
translated from French to English a book: “The Piercing Pain of Freedom”
written by a formerly imprisoned Soviet dissident and published by the Hoover
Institute in Palo Alto, Calif.. 
Denise also played a distinctive role in a documentary film, “For The
Love of Tomorrow”, portraying the life of a French woman socialist member of
parliament who had led a resistance movement in Marseille against the German occupation
in World War II.  Denise had become
her friend and colleague after the war as this woman moved beyond her hatred of
Germany and worked for reconciliation between former enemies on several
continents.

Denise is survived by her husband, John Wood; by a nephew,
Nathaniel Hyde; and a niece, Cynthia Hyde Kinnealey , both of Maine; by a
nephew, Dwight Hyde, of New Hampshire  and Nova Scotia; 
and by three great-nieces, Brittany, Jamie and Jessie.

A Service of Thanksgiving will be held on Saturday, April
24, at ll a.m. at the Episcopal Church of the Advent, 401 North Union Street,
Kennett Square.  The service will
be preceded by a graveside burial service at 9 a.m. at Union Hill Cemetery, 424
North Union Street, Kennett Square, adjacent to the Church.  At 10 a.m. the family will be receiving
guests at the church.  A luncheon
reception in the parish hall will follow the Service of Thanksgiving.

In lieu of flowers the family suggests contributions be made
to the Kennett After School Association, 
P. O. Box 1068, Kennett Square, PA 19348-1068, for its After-the-Bell
program.

Arrangements are being handled by the Foulk & Grieco
Funeral Home Inc. (610-869-2685) of West Grove. To send an online message of
sympathy, please visit www.griecocares.com.

 

About CFLive Staff

See Contributors Page https://chaddsfordlive.com/writers/

Denise Hyde Wood of Kennett Square Read More »

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