1st August 2008

Concert at Community Worship Center

Every year, Valley Forge Christian College hosts auditions for students to be on one of three ministry teams. Two are worship teams/bands and other is a drama ministry team. Auditions are based on musical ability, personality, grades and most importantly, the students relationship with God. One of these ministry teams is Chosen 2008, which features local Tyrone resident Josh Shaffer on keyboard and vocals. Chosen 2008 will be performing at Community Worship Center, 1300 Bald Eagle Avenue this Sunday at 10 a.m. The public is welcome to attend. (Courtesy photo)

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1st August 2008

Presbyterians to host Norm Huff and Eileen Mitchell

At 10:30 morning worship this Sunday, August 3, 2008, Tyrone Presbyterians will host Reverend Norman Huff and soloist Eileen Kough Mitchell, as they lead the congregation in the hymns of Bucknell President Robert Lowry.
With Pastor Mark Liller on a 300th anniversary tour to Germany with the Church of the Brethren, Reverend Norman Huff will lead worship and deliver a message entitled, “The Real Miracle,” based on Christ’s feeding of the 5,000. Huff serves as interim pastor at Lower Spruce Creek Presbyterian.
In addition to Reverend Huff, guest musician Eileen Kough Mitchell will offer two soprano solos – “Lord Make Me An Instrument Of Your Place” and “You’ll Never Walk Alone.” In the autumn of 1982, Mrs. Mitchell sang Waring’s favorite, “You’ll Never Walk Alone,” when Tyrone citizens unveiled the monument to Fred Waring on the front lawn of Lincoln School.
For many years, Mitchell has worked as Director of Choral Music at Juniata Valley High School in nearby Alexandria. She also serves as Minister of Music at Tyrone’s Church of the Good Shepherd. A 1975 graduate of Tyrone, Mitchell earned her bachelor and masters degrees from Penn State.
To enhance her musicianship, Mrs. Mitchell spent two summers studying voice and choreography with Fred Waring, in the early 1980’s, at Waring’s summer workshops at Penn State. For five summers, she also conducted her Juniata Valley music students to Waring music workshops at East Stroudsburg University, near Waring’s home at Shawnee on the Delaware.
Both Reverend Huff and Eileen Mitchell will lead the audience in singing three hymns by Robert Lowry. Lowry lived from 1826 to 1899.
He distinguished himself as a Baptist preacher, hymn composer, and both professor and president of Bucknell University, in nearby Lewisburg.
The audience will sing these three Lowry favorites – “Shall We Gather At The River” and “All The Way My Savior Leads Me.” They will end with these Lowry lyrics: “My life flows on in endless song, about earth’s lamentation/I hear the clear, though far off hymn, that hails a new creation/No storms can shake my inmost calm, while to the rock I’m clinging/Since Christ is Lord of heaven and earth, how can I keep from singing?”

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1st August 2008

Weekend packed with activities during Col. Crowther Day weekend

This weekend everyone is invited to take part in Colonel Crowther Day Weekend at Reservoir Park in Tyrone.
A variety of historic events are planned for Saturday and Sunday. Stop by and take a look at life at camp or stay to watch a demonstration or two. There will also be period music and a church service, to name a few activities.
Camp opens to the public at 6:30 a.m. with Reveille on Saturday. Interested individuals will be able to stop by and take a peek into camp life until the exhibits close.
A flag raising ceremony, firing of the cannon and military dress parade will be held in the small field next to camp at 8 a.m.
At 9 a.m., the excitement moves to downtown Tyrone with the recruitment of Company A, Tyrone Infantry at City Hotel Park, 10th St. and Pennsylvania Ave.
The flag retreat ceremony will be held at 7 p.m.
Immediately following at 7:15 p.m., a period concert will be held at Camp Crossman Pavilion No. 12. This event is also open to the public and interested individuals are invited to bring a chair and enjoy the music.
Also throughout the day on Saturday there will be several demonstrations and living history programs.
Infantry drill and demonstrations will be held in the small field next to camp at 10 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.
At Camp Crossman Pavilion No. 12, there will be civilian living history demonstrations at 10:30 a.m. and 2 p.m.
A Union Army Signal Corps demonstration will be held at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. in the field next to camp.
Afterwards visitors can see the “incident at Camp Crossman” at the back entrance and small field at 11:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. This is a living history re-creation of documented actual events that occurred in the fall of 1861.
A hospital scenario demonstration and lecture at Camp Crossman will follow at 11:45 a.m. and 3:45 p.m.
Artillery demonstrations, Tyrone Artillery, will be held at 1:30 and 4:30 p.m. in the field next to camp.
All activities will conclude and camp will close to the public at 8:30 p.m.
Sunday will bring many more activities to the area and will once again begin with Reveille, as camp opens to the public at 6:30 a.m.
A flag raising ceremony, firing of the cannon and military dress parade will be held at 8 a.m.
At 8:30 a.m. a non-denominational church service will be held at Camp Crossman Pavilion No. 12, conducted by 110th PVI, Co. A Chaplain Thom Gressman.
Graveside honors for sergeant William E. Crowther at Grandview Cemetery, Tyrone, will be held at 10:15 a.m. Simultaneous honors for Colonel James Crowther at Fredericksburg National Cemetery will be conducted by Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War Camp No. 4, Irish Brigade, Fredericksburg.
The various demonstrations and living history programs will also be held on Sunday.
Infantry drill and demonstrations will be held in the small field next to camp at 1 p.m.
At Camp Crossman Pavilion No. 12, there will be civilian living history demonstrations at 1:30 p.m.
Artillery demonstrations, Battery D, Tyrone Artillery, will be held at 2 p.m. in the field next to camp.
A Union Army Signal Corps demonstration will be held at 2:30 p.m. in the field next to camp.
Afterwards visitors can see the “incident at Camp Crossman” at the back entrance and small field at 3 p.m. This is a living history re-creation of documented actual events that occurred in the fall of 1861.
A hospital scenario demonstration and lecture at Camp Crossman will follow at 3:15 p.m.
The encampment will close and participants will depart at 4 p.m.
Units participating in this weekend’s events include: The Keystone Regiment; 46th PA Regimental Band (The Logan Guard); Mason/Dixon Regiment and Brass Band and other living historians.

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1st August 2008

Your Bargain Place: A new look to the old News Agency

This summer has brought a lot of new and exciting things to Tyrone including TNT Tattoo parlor, the Dog House re-opening and now Your Bargain Place has become one of the newest additions to the Tyrone area.
So, the question is, what does this new business have to offer? Residents can find almost anything from videos, books and clothing to nice furniture, gaming accessories and antiques. There is something for everyone at Your Bargain Place located at 20 West 10th Street across from the Beauty Salon.
Susie Robinett, owner of Your Bargain Place, started her business 12 years ago in Duncansville. She had a lot of foster kids’ clothing and toys and wanted to sell these things in a store and not just as a yard sale.
“When I lived in Bedford, one of my friends owned a store and I was curious to see how she actually ran the store,” Robinett said. “She showed me all of the basics of how to run a small business and four months later, I was up and running.”
Robinett was born in Canton, OH, but lived most of her life in Bedford County where her desire to start her own business occurred.
“It’s been a while since I’ve started out, but we’re always looking to improve and attract new customers. Our store is based around the new furniture we have to offer and you can get a nice cabinet or a computer desk for a reasonable price instead of spending gas money and buying more expensive items at a Wal-Mart or K-Mart. We’re right around the corner and want to help out the community in any way we possibly can.”
Your Bargain Place recently opened on July 11, 2008, and has been running well since. Currently they are selling items such as an Air Hockey table, some china cabinets and a “one out of 5,000” antique doll that are all at affordable costs. They are also selling DVDs, books, clothing, plates and glasses and tons of classic antiques that are set at great prices.
“In the near future, we are looking to establish gaming tables and tools for the guys. It will be their own section and we look to have new games and special tables all assembled and no hassles for a cheap price. We also take in any yard sale items that weren’t sold for free so if you are having trouble selling something, give us a call.
“The store location is very nice and the people around here are fantastic. I couldn’t have asked for a nicer set-up in Tyrone.”
If anyone is interested in shopping at Your Bargain Place, they have a lay-a-way that can be held up to four or five weeks. There is a warehouse to store the products that have been sold in the back and there are several more items that are awaiting people to check out.
Your Bargain Place is located at the old News Agency beside Gardners Candies and across from the Beauty Salon. For more information, please contact Susie Robinett at 814-327-9473 and check out all the latest things at the hot new business in town.

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1st August 2008

Tyrone native’s hydrology discovery shows alternative reasons for chemicals spilling into the Chesapeake Bay

A former Tyrone resident and presently a professor in the Department of Earth and Environment at Franklin and Marshall College in Lancaster, Dr. Dorothy J. Merritts made an interesting hydrology discovery a few years ago while scouting research sites for her students.
At Franklin and Marshall, Merritts teaches geomorphology, hydrology, and environmental geology, but when the 1976 Tyrone Area High School graduate was examining photographs of the silty banks of the West Branch of Little Conestoga Creek, she realized something was different – the silt was laminated and deposited in layers.
After the 50-year-old professor consulted with a sediment expert, Robert C. Walter, who eventually became Merritts husband, the two agreed that the sediments were not deposited by typical stream processes but instead, were pond sediments. The finding brought the two colleagues to collaborate on a research project on the region’s waterways in Lancaster County.
Their work was published in the journal Science and a story was featured in The New York Times, among numerous other publications. In the Times article, it was reported that “their work challenges much of the conventional wisdom about how streams in the region formed and evolved. The scientists say 18th- and 19th-century dams and millponds, built by the thousands, altered the water flow in the region in a way not previously understood.”
Merritts said that the legacy of all of the early dams in the region, and around Pennsylvania, still affect the state’s waterways. Those dams and millponds pose a threat to the Chesapeake Bay.
“There are two things about the bay that researchers and policy-makers worry about – fine grained sediment and nutrients,” stated Merritts. “Robert and I showed that there’s a previously unrecognized source of fine grained sediment. Until now, it was commonly regarded that the majority of sediment in streams was eroded from farms and construction sites.”
When the old dams deteriorated, failed during storms, or were removed around the state, the water was freed to flow more swiftly. Streams began incising channels through the beds of silt, then the fine material eroded rapidly, sending tons of sediment downstream. Much of the sediment carried agricultural chemicals like nitrogen and phosphorus.
Her husband started to conduct chemical analyses when the couple made their discovery of the storage of so much “legacy sediment,” and he found high levels of phosphorus in it. The Chesapeake Bay Tributary Strategy aims to reduce nutrient pollution permanently, such as nitrogen and phosphorus, consistently throughout the bay’s watershed.
Merritts noted that phosphorus attaches to clay, and nitrogen doesn’t attach like phosphorus does – but organic matter in the fine sediments can trap the nitrogen. She said when the banks of the old ponds become eroded, it’s not just silt and clay but also phosphorus and some nitrogen making its way into the water.
“We found that no one knew about this and it was not being regulated,” said Merritts.
In Lancaster County, Merritts and Walters estimated that more than half of the 180,000 tons of sediment flushed out of the Conestoga and into the Susquehanna River each year originates from legacy sediment, and not new sources of sediment being washed off farms or development sites.
The couple also thinks that the legacy sediment each year carries with it around 135,000 pounds of phosphorus. That number is a little more than two percent of the phosphorus reduction goal for the entire 64,000-square-mile Chesapeake Bay watershed.
Pennsylvania’s agricultural industry collectively is the largest contributors of nutrients to the bay’s tributaries, discharging 46 percent of the nitrogen and 58 percent of the phosphorus flowing into the bay from the several states in the watersheds. Around 20 percent of the problem is coming from sewage treatment plants, and around 17 to 20 percent of the problem comes from state forest land.
Merritts and Walters discovery could alter those numbers.
“Sewage plants around here are very interested in our work to seek credits through the state’s nutrient trading program,” said Merritts. “There’s hope though in the next decade or so for sewage authorities, because many can’t afford the upgrades – it could take a long time to process all of this new information through the policy process.”
The nutrient trading program gives sewer plants the opportunity to sell nutrient credits if the facility goes beyond its requirements. All sewer and industrial facilities must stay below the new caps set on nutrients.
Tyrone’s wastewater treatment facility upgrades are estimated to cost ratepayers $3.7 million in total, but $800,000 of the upgrades are required over the next few years. The rest of the upgrades will be done as it becomes feasible for the borough.
Merritts’ discovery reaches further than the Chesapeake Bay’s problems. She said that the legacy sediment in deep layers could impact streamside forest planting, because the roots of the trees may never reach shallow groundwater where nitrogen is absorbed to survive.
Deep legacy sediment could also be unsuitable for infrastructure such as roads, bridges, and sewer lines, due to the possibility of erosion.
Merritts’ discovery of legacy sediment will have a major impact on how scientists look at stream restoration and the chemical pollution affecting waterways flowing into the Chesapeake Bay. She had many positive influences while growing up in Tyrone through school, church, and local organizations.
“I hesitate to name specific individuals, because so many teachers had a positive influence,” said Merritts. “I was in band, chorus, and many other organizations, and benefited from all of them.”
She added, “The surroundings in Tyrone were especially important, as I enjoy the outdoors, hiking, and field work, and to this day I still do a lot of field work every week. I loved archaeology and anthropology, and enjoyed hiking the hills around Tyrone to hunt for old glass bottles, fossils and minerals.”
Merritts is an author of two textbooks and more than 40 scientific articles, and the editor and contributing writer for numerous scientific books. In 2004-05, she was the Flora Stone Mather Visiting Distinguished Professor at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, OH. She was also the recipient of the Association of Women Geoscientists’ Outstanding Educator Award in 2006.
“I had excellent teachers at Tyrone, and I was fortunate to have influential adults in my life from the Wesley Methodist Church and other local organizations,” said Merritts.

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