crosslands chronicle - Kendal Crosslands Communities
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OCTOBER 2015 CROSSLANDS CHRONICLE OCTOBER 2015 Volume 42, Number 8 CROSSLANDS ARBORETUM UPDATE Since the accreditation of the Kendal/Crosslands Arboretum in 2013, each campus has developed two loop walks with tree lists, descriptions and a map showing how these trees can be easily viewed from walkways. Now a third list of trees has been created at Crosslands for a self-guided walk between Parking Lots 9 and 13. Beginning with a large Ash tree close to the Rushmore entrance, this loop walk includes 31 significant trees and ends with an enormous Chinese Elm behind the last group of cottages at PL 13. Almost all the trees can be seen from walkways. The first guided walk will begin in Parking Lot 9 at 10 a.m. on Saturday October 3. Transportation will be provided for interested residents starting from the Center at 9:45 a.m. and returning before 11:30 a.m. AN ADOPTIVE PARENT IS NEEDED FOR EACH TREE! The only responsibilities are to check for disease or damage after a storm and report any unusual findings to Adopt-A-Tree Coordinator Peg Parker. A sign-up list will be posted after the walk. The www.KCArboretum.org web site is in the process of being updated to include eight photographs of each deciduous tree—four seasonal views, the flower, seed, bark and leaf. Tree descriptions and photographs will eventually be printed in hard copy for residents who would like to take one of the walks on the web. The Crosslands Arboretum Team is looking for new members who could help with some of the tasks involved in caring for what will be more than fifty of the most special trees on our lovely campus. If you are interested, please contact Jennifer Allcock or Bonnie Marcus. ARBORETUM GUIDED WALK A THIRD LIST OF SIGNIFICANT TREES HAS BEEN CREATED ON THE NORTHEAST SECTION OF THE CAMPUS BETWEEN PARKING LOTS 9 & 13. The first guided walk will begin in Parking Lot 9 at 10 a.m. on Saturday October 3. Transportation will be provided for interested residents starting from the Center at 9:45 a.m. and returning before 11:30 a.m. 2 OCTOBER 2015 FROM THE CRA PRESIDENT Few will disagree when I say that life at Crosslands is endlessly interesting. I have agreed to share my observations about that life in the ‘Chronicle’ regularly, and I am most grateful that Bonnie Marcus, Anne Curtin, Elizabeth Rhoads and others have stepped up to ensure that we have a monthly ‘Chronicle.’ As I write, the display in the hall Showcase is in transition. Residents are taking home the carved items that filled the case over the summer, and tomorrow we shall discover how our community members interpreted the new theme, ‘It’s a wrap,’ a request for items that ‘wrap around’ us. That will be easy for our household: we will not miss a leather belt from Montana and a silk sari from India in the coming weeks. Each month the variety of the exhibits reflect the variety of the residents themselves. The arrangements are very tastefully done. Most of the things on display have special memories for their owners to have survived the downsizing of a move to Crosslands. It is a pleasure to share them. In contrast to the Showcase there are many valuable activities here that are much more private. I think of the volunteers who change the water pitchers in Firbank, who meet in support groups, or give hand massages, or those who are specially trained to visit patients on the Hospice program. And this is just the beginning. It is inspiring to read over the list of all the Crosslands Committees. In contrast, there is nothing like an exciting game of water volleyball to bring out the humor, the competition, and the exasperation of a dozen octogenarians or near octogenarians at Kendal or Crosslands. It gets really interesting when a variation of the game requires each side to hit the ball three times, and once by a woman, before sending it back to the other side. “How can you (Melanie Williams, life guard and scorekeeper) say that ball was out?” Even the best players will sometimes swing wildly at a ball which splashes in the water without ever being touched. We scramble out of the pool after an hour well spent. Until next month. . . . Char Gosselink CROSSLANDS CHRONICLE DID YOU KNOW THAT. . . — June Westcott is enthusiastic about Game Night on Thursdays in the William Penn Lounge? Go beyond rummy and learn new games like Uno and Skip-bo, and there’s always Mahjong! — Michele Birardi, Director of KendalCrosslands Marketing and Community Outreach, is coordinator of the Denim and Diamonds Fundraiser Dinner, a popular prelude to the Unionville Community Fair on Thursday, October 1 from 6:30-10:00 p.m. in the Red Barn at Landhope Farms at Willowdale. Local restaurants will provide a scrumptious dinner. — The Meditation Room, opposite the elevators, is providing a comfortable meeting place for many study groups: Presbyterian, Catholic, Buddhist, Parkinson Caregivers, Grief Support, and Cancer Support groups. — After Tracy Sedlak has bought the flowers for the Dining Room, Café, Firbank, and Audland tables, then Mike Bennett and Bonnie Marcus arrange them in the vases and place them on all the tables? Connie Fleming Deadline for the November 2015 CHRONICLE articles is October 10. Calendar deadline is October 5. All articles must be signed and are subject to editing. Please put them in the Chronicle’s open box or send them by email to: [email protected] CROSSLANDS CHRONICLE Published by and for the residents and administrators of Crosslands. P.O. Box 100, Kennett Square, PA 19348 Editor: Anne Curtin Interim Managing Editor: Elizabeth Rhoads Editorial Staff: Jean Barker, Anne Curtin, Betty Nathan, David Peacefull, Sally Tweedie, Staff Artists: Nicholas La Para, Clare Victorius, Proofreaders: Jane Andrews, Selma Hayman, Charlie Reed, Dick Voldstad, Jack Yeatman Production: Dick Baxter, Mike Bennett, Carol Bossert, Nancy Evoy, Amy Lewis, Marge Moretzsohn Distribution: Ernie Peck, Ruth Trimble, Margaret Tsan 3 OCTOBER 2015 MUSIC COMMITTEE LIGHT ‘n LIVELY Charles Abramovic, Piano Tues., Oct. 13—Wm. Penn Room—7:30 p.m. Saturday, October 10 at 7:30 p.m. William Penn Room Charles Abramovic has appeared at Crosslands frequently and always with an enthusiastic reception. He is Professor of Keyboard Studies at Temple University’s Boyer College of Music and has won acclaim for his international performances as a soloist, chamber musician and collaborator with leading instrumentalists and singers. He has appeared with the Baltimore Symphony, the Pittsburgh Symphony, the Colorado Philharmonic and the Florida Philharmonic. He has performed in recitals with such artists as Midori, Sarah Chang and Kim Kashkashian. He is an active participant in the musical life of Philadelphia. He is a graduate of the Curtis Institute and the Peabody Conservatory. He received his doctorate from Temple University. Just in time for the World Series . . . Light ‘n Lively presents an impersonation of Bill Veeck—“baseball’s bad boy”—by Gordon Bennett. If you thought Leo Durocher and “Yogi” Berra were characters, wait ‘til you hear from Bill Veeck. You ain’t seen nothing yet! Pat Koedding SING ALONG WITH SARAH LEE “Old Friends—New Friends” Fri., Oct. 16, 7:30 p.m. William Penn Lounge Mendelssohn Piano Trio Ya-Ting Chang, Piano – Peter Sirotin, Volin Fiona Thompson, Cello Tues., Oct. 27—Wm. Penn Room—7:30 p.m. Ya-Ting Chang, originally from Taiwan, graduated from Johns Hopkins University with a degree in piano performance and has performed extensively throughout the United States, Germany, Hong Kong and Taiwan. Fiona Thompson’s music education began in Manchester, England and continued at the University of Southern California. Peter Sirotin is from Ukraine and graduated from Moscow’s Central Music School and the Peabody Conservatory of Music. Each has appeared as soloist with many orchestras and chamber groups in addition to their appearances as a trio. We welcome them back to Crosslands. Esther Cooperman You don't need a great voice—just hum, tap your feet and enjoy being together—with old friends and new friends. NEED A RIDE HOME AT NIGHT AFTER A CONCERT, FORUM OR OTHER EVENING EVENT? Dial Firbank at 5622 and a bus will come for you in minutes. Forget the number? Refer to the sign on the telephone table. 4 OCTOBER 2015 CROSSLANDS CHRONICLE FORUM COMMITTEE “Look Up and Learn: What the Skies Can Tell You” Speaker: Mark Manning, Former Aviation Weather Forecaster Tues., Oct. 6—Wm. Penn Room—7:30 p.m. “Hagley: The History of Business and the Business of History” Speaker: Dr. Erik Rau, Director of Library Services at Hagley Museum and Library Tues., Oct. 20—Wm. Penn Room—7:30 p.m. Will you need your heavy coat later today? Should you bring an umbrella, sun glasses or a wind breaker? Accurate weather predictions inform so many of our daily activities. Yet, we often rely on media to tell us what people used to know just by looking at the skies. Wouldn’t you like to do the same? Most of us are familiar with the museum, historic buildings and grounds at the Hagley Museum, but how many realize that the Hagley Library houses one of the world’s most outstanding and unique collections on the history of American business and technology? Starting with the du Pont family and Du Pont company papers, the Library now houses the archives of many major corporations in America. Hailing from Oregon, Dr. Rau originally trained to become an engineer, but somewhere along the way, he became aware that what had interested him in technology in the first place was the stories that people told to explain how their lives had come to be. He began to realize that every place and era possesses a unique but comparable material culture that gives life to the documents and the other stuff of history. Merging his interests in technology and history, Dr, Rau has focused on building the collections and on connecting Hagley’s resources with researchers in the history of business, technology and consumer culture. Under his leadership, the Hagley Library has sponsored courses at Osher and a biweekly series of “Stories from the Stacks” sharing insights from the Library’s rich resources. Cathy Elder Our speaker, Mark Manning, studied atmospheric science at Rutgers before joining the Air Force providing aviation forecasting for pilots and their crews—forecasts which focus on predictions of winds, cloud heights, types, thickness and of ground visibility. Subsequently, Mark rose to the rank of captain and taught aviation weather at the Specialized Undergraduate Navigation Training school to U.S. and international students. His enthusiasm for weather is contagious. Come and learn from his experience. Cathy Elder GREAT DECISIONS “Brazil's Metamorphosis” Moderator: Wellington Ow Mon. Oct. 26—George Fox Room—9:45 a.m. Brazil—it’s the “B” in the acronym BRICS, five emerging economies once seen as soon-to-be superpowers. After economic troubles in the 1990s, Brazil has risen to new global prominence. It is drawing in more investment, working on global issues ranging from climate change to peacekeeping, and even hosting the 2016 Olympics. But some of Brazil’s trickiest problems—deep divisions over how to tackle serious income inequality, weak civic institutions and poor regional leadership— have held it back. Please join in this discussion. The briefing book is in the library. Chuck Gosselink SCHOOL BOARD CANDIDATES DEBATE Thurs., Oct. 8—Wm. Penn Room—7:30 p.m. A debate between the Democratic and Republican candidates for School Board Directors for the Unionville-Chadds Ford School District will be held on Thursday, October 8th at 7:30 p.m. in the William Penn Room. Be prepared to hear a lively discussion with a Q&A session following the debate. Pat Koedding 5 OCTOBER 2015 BOOK REVIEW TUESDAY EDITION ON THURSDAY Penelope Fitzgerald: A Life By Hermione Lee Reviewer: Anne Curtin America’s Concentration Camps: World War II Internment of Japanese Americans Speaker: Dan George Mon,, Oct. 19—11:00a.m. Wm. Penn Room Thurs. Oct. 29—Wm. Penn Room—10:30a.m. Hermione Lee, the acclaimed biographer of Edith Wharton, Virginia Woolf, and Willa Cather, gives us an intimate portrait of one of the most quietly brilliant novelists of the twentieth century. Penelope Fitzgerald, the English writer whose career didn’t begin until she was nearly sixty, would go on to win two of the most coveted awards in literature—the Booker Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award. The talent of the biographer matches that of her subject. Ernie Peck In 1942 after the beginning of World War II, the US. Army, with authority of an Executive Order, forced all people of Japanese origin living on the West Coast to be relocated to prison camps in the interior of the country, where they lived in tarpaper shacks behind barbed wire fences, guarded by soldiers with rifles and fixed bayonets. There were about 120,000 interned, 80,000 of whom were U.S. citizens. None was ever charged with a single crime. This presentation will cover details of the move, loss of property, the racism that caused it, life in the camps, as well as the aftermath. Carol Bossert BETTER HEARING COMMITTEE INTERFAITH DIALOGUES “Beyond Silence” Thurs., Oct. 29, 7:30 p.m. Wm. Penn Room “Creating the Common Good“ A Filmed talk by Author Barbara Ehrenreich plus brief discussion “Beyond Silence”, a 1998 Academy Award nominee for best foreign film, deals with some of the emotional hurdles families with hearing impaired members may have to cope with and overcome—especially if one of their children is a musician. Robert Ebert, film critic, says it is “one of those films that helps us escape our box of time and space and understand what it might be like to live in someone else’s. . . . The whole movie is a process of breaking through the ice into the air of communication.” Although in German, with English subtitles, Ebert points out that it doesn’t really matter what language the film is in. “The subtitles handle not only the spoken dialogue but also describe the music and sound effects, like thunder.” Wed, Oct. 14—Wm. Penn Room 4:00 to 5:15 p.m. Betty Nathan This fall’s Interfaith programs will revisit three programs on the theme of Economic Inequality originally presented by Trinity Institute in January 2015 and viewed by some of us here at Crosslands at that time. The conference took on the pervasive, overwhelming issue of economic inequality and featured speakers with “real world” experience making change happen. Please join us for the October 14 talk entitled “Nickel and Dimed: This Land Is Their Land” by author Barbara Ehrenreich. The program time will be extended to 5:15 to allow for brief discussion of what this speaker shares about how the common good can be extended to all. Sharon Sundial 6 OCTOBER 2015 CROSSLANDS CHRONICLE CAMERA CLUB PRESENTATION IN THE GALLERY “Having Fun with Photography” June M. Cason Friday, Oct. 9—Wm. Penn Room—7:30 p.m. Marilyn Bauman August 27—October 29 Our guest photographer this month has been wielding a camera since her high school days, when she learned to develop her own film and print her images in a darkroom. As the field evolved, her equipment changed but not her enthusiasm for photography, which she “loves for the creative outlet and satisfaction it provides.” After switching to digital cameras, she became adept at using modern software tools, techniques, and tricks to enhance her photographs in interesting ways. In her presentation, she will show us some of her favorite images from the past few years, including some “before-and-after” comparisons to illustrate how original photographs can be creatively reworked to great effect. June M. Cason is a longtime member of the Delaware Photography Society, and her work has been well received in the society’s monthly competitions. She is a Chester County resident. Hollis Scarborough SHOWCASE Oct. 13—Nov. 9 GERMANY AND AUSTRIA Artwork, Photographs, Clothing, and Objects CROSSLANDS PLAYERS Poetry Night Fri., Oct. 2—Wm. Penn Room—7:30 p.m. The Crosslands Poetry Group with the support of the Crosslands Players will present the Fall Poetry Night. A sign-up sheet will be posted September 15 for all who would like to participate. There is a five-minute time limit and readings may be done with a microphone from your place in the auditorium. For information, contact Nicholas La Para (610) 388-7640. Celebrate Fall with the reading of your favorite and original poems. Nicholas LaPara Delaware artist Marilyn Bauman, who has painted over several decades, employs intense color, sharp contrast, and active lines in her work. She paints different subjects on site and abroad, including portraits, still life and landsapes. Many are represented in private and public collections. Marilyn has other accomplishments. She is the author of the book, Edward R. Loper, Sr.: The Prophet of Color, published in 1999. As an art educator, she has taught at the University of California at Davis, the University of Delaware, and West Chester University. During the past ten years, she developed and taught "Adventures in Perception," a seminar in aesthetics and appreciation of the visual arts based on the pedagogy developed by Dr. Albert Barnes and Violette de Mazia at The Barnes Foundation. Nancy Geary Pereira SHOWCASE COMMITTEE “GERMANY AND AUSTRIA” is the theme of the next display, from October 13 through November 9. It will feature artwork, photographs, clothing, and objects from these countries. The committee wishes to thank the many Crosslands and Cartmel residents who contributed to the seven Showcase displays last year. The schedule of themes for 2015-16 is posted on the wall beside the display case, and we encourage participation by all. Contributing to a Showcase is easy. Twelve days before a new display goes up, our clipboard is hung on the Activities bulletin board with a sign-up sheet. Residents who sign up will receive instructions in their open boxes about when and where to bring their items. Hollis Scarborough CRA CONCERNS SESSION Tuesday, October 20 Music Room 10:00—11:00 a.m. OCTOBER 2015 7 WELCOME NEW RESIDENTS Bill and Kay Wells Apt. 193 April 1, 2015 Bill Wells was born in Port Chester, NY and has lived in Brigantine, NJ, Abington and West Grove PA. He has degrees from SUNYFarmingdale, Temple University and Penn State. Bill served in the US Marine Corps for four years and then became a nurseryman. He was Chairman of the Horticulture Research Institute and was a member of the PA Nursery Association. Bill volunteered as a Scoutmaster for the Boy Scouts of America and was a Rotarian. His interests include sailing, horticulture and travel. Bill says that. "So far [this is] a great place and great people, too." Kay Wells was born in Abington, PA and has lived in Chadds Ford, West Chester and West Grove, PA as well as Brigantine, NJ and Deer Park, NY. She has a B.S. in elementary education from Kutztown University and did graduate studies at Penn State. She has worked as a middle school teacher and as the office manager for the family firm. Kay has volunteered at AAUW, Planned Parenthood, cub scouts, the Chester County Hospital Auxiliary and as a tutor. Her interests include bridge, travel and activities with friends and family. Bill and Kay have three sons, a daughter and nine grandchildren (seven girls and two boys.) Elinor Brosius Thomforde Apt. 63 Feb. 18, 2015 Elinor has lived in West Marlborough Township, PA all of her life; she was born in West Grove and attended Unionville High School. She attended Oberlin College. She also is a Penn State Master Gardener. She and her late husband, Harold, owned and managed their small family farm and business near Unionville, PA just eight miles west of Crosslands. In 1968, they opened the converted barn as the Stone Barn Restaurant and Banquet Hall, a favorite destination of many in this area. Her volunteer activities include Quaker committees focused on pastoral care and reevaluation counseling, the West Marlborough Planning Commission, the London Grove Monthly Meeting plant sale, Community Gardens of Chester County and Longwood Gardens. Elinor's interests are family, gardening, reading, people, conservation, the natural world, social justice and peace. She has five children and ten grandchildren. Elinor has several connections at Crosslands - her sister is Peggy Jones and her parents, Maklon and Dorothy Brosius, were residents here. Nancy Camp Apt. 80 Jan. 9, 2015 Nancy comes to Crosslands from Cartmel. She was born in South Bend, IN and lived in Indianapolis, IN, Rochester, NY and Needham, Wayland and Weston, MA. She attended Vassar College and worked as a nursery school teacher and a homemaker. Nancy has been a Sunday school teacher and Elder in the Presbyterian Church, President of the Junior League of Rochester, a board member of the Rochester Garden Club and the Rochester General Hospital Women's Board. Her interests include travel, music, art, gardening, bridge and reading. Nancy has a son and daughter and four grandchildren. 8 OCTOBER 2015 CROSSLANDS CHRONICLE WELCOMING COMMITTEE FLOWER COMMITTEE RECEPTION FOR NEW RESIDENTS Flowers, leaves, branches and twigs have their own internal principles in expressing their beauty and usefulness of LIFE and DEATH. Flower arranging by the Flower Committee at Crosslands allows us to investigate and explore intimately our own Philosophical and Belief Systems in the most economical and fun way of expressing ourselves during these last chapters of our lives. We need more new members to do this safe and fun work. Please ask any member for more information about this committee. Loan Anh Small, Chairperson Wednesday, October 21 9:00—11:30 a.m. William Penn Lounge Meet and greet residents new to our community COMPUTER LAB NATURE CONSERVANCY New in the Computer Lab Monarch Butterfly Migration: Unravelling the Mystery Speaker: Dr. Barry Marrs Sat., Oct. 31—Wm Penn Room—7:30 p.m. The Computer Lab now has the capability to scan items such as documents and photos. Scanning allows you to create a digital computer file of your item, which you can then use in many ways (e.g., copying it onto your flash drive; sending it as an attachment in an email message, or inserting it into a document or newsletter or PowerPoint you are working on). In the Computer Lab, the physical scanning is done by the Copy Machine, and the resulting computer file is accessible on the computers in the lab. You can choose to scan either in black-and-white or in color. Detailed printed Instructions for scanning can be found beside the copy machine in the Computer Lab. And to protect your privacy, please remember to heed the final item of the instructions, which is to delete the file on the computer in the lab when you are finished working with it. Failure to do so would leave your scanned documents available for anyone to see. Les Small, for the Computer Lab Committee In 1974, nobody knew where Monarch butterflies spent the winter. They flew south each Fall and returned each Spring, but no other butterflies were known to engage in a true seasonal migration. Could Monarchs really be migrating? Barry Marrs will tell the story of how this mystery was unraveled; what scientists are learning today about how Monarchs find their way to Mexico each year; and how that migration is endangered by human activities. Dr. Marrs has a Ph.D. in Biology and is retired after a career that included Director of Life Sciences in Central Research & Development at DuPont and founder of three Biotech Startup companies. Les Small 9 OCTOBER 2015 FOOD ADVISORY COMMITTEE ELECTRONIC BULLETIN BOARDS Crosslands’ Electronic Bulletin Boards Crosslands operates an internal TV cable network that includes two channels serving as Electronic Bulletin Boards. Channel 9, which is updated daily by resident volunteers, is devoted to important special announcements and listings of the day’s activities and menus. The TV in the reception area of the Center is normally set to display Channel 9. Channel 8, also operated by resident volunteers, displays information related to a variety of schedules that do not change frequently, and thus does not change from day -to-day. This channel includes information on regular Crosslands transportation schedules; on Resident Care schedules; on Wellness Center and Pool hours; on Fitness and Wellness classes; on Food Service hours; and on Bank hours at Crosslands. A telephone audio version of Channels 8 and 9 can be accessed by dialing 484-770-5711. Although this audio version was created to assist people with vision difficulties, any resident may find it useful as a quicker way to access a specific piece of information. All residents should be able to access Channels 8 and 9 on their TV sets at home. To do so, it is necessary to switch between the Verizon FIOS cable channel system and the Crosslands inhouse cable network. (Channels 8 and 9 on the Verizon system do NOT display the Crosslands information.) For some TV setups, this switching can be done simply by using the “TV input” button on the lower left side of the Verizon remote control. But not all TV sets are the same, so the details of how to switch between the Verizon and Crosslands systems can vary. Any resident having difficulty accessing the Crosslands system should call Tracy in Maintenance and ask to have someone come to your apartment and show you how to do it. Our Electronic Bulletin Board system operates with a group of resident volunteers. If you might be interested in joining the group—or just finding out more about how we operate, please let either me or Isabel Olmsted know. Les Small for the TV9/8 Committee Crosslands Food Advisory Committee Sponsors Food Awareness Week Food Collection for Kennett Square Food Cupboard at Crosslands Center Saturday, 10/17 through Sunday, 10/25 Plan NOW to share our abundance to support our neighbors in need. Non-perishable protein items and low sugar cereals are especially appreciated. Check expiration dates as expired items cannot be accepted. Checks to KACS will be gladly accepted. Watch for specifics. Sharon Sundial & Carol Bossert PROGRAMS AT KENDAL CHOICES AT THE END-OF-LIFE Kendal Auditorium - 10:30 a.m. Oct. 1: Keeping the Peace in the Family Oct. 15: Pathways at the End of Life: There Is More Than One Way to Go Oct. 29. The Death with Dignity Movment 10 OCTOBER 2015 CROSSLANDS CHRONICLE HORTICULTURAL COMMITTEE A SENSORY GARDEN Have you seen the rolling garden? Or perhaps a more appropriate question is “Have you touched and smelled the sensory garden on wheels on the Audland patio?” Inspired by three residents with low vision (Grace Caldwell, Jean Winch and Cindy Lohr), designed by Jane Roberts, and built by George Gillespie and friends in the woodshop, with the blessings of Kris McGucken and Cathy Emig, the six-foot long rolling garden appeals to all the senses. Each plant has a distinct aroma, released when the leaves are touched. The leaves vary in texture from the soft easily-bruised leaves of basil, to the sticky spikes of rosemary, to the rough curls of scented geranium. Oregano and thyme trail down the sides of the cedar box; furry sage contrasts with narrow-leaved hyssop; peppery nasturtiums and sweet lavender cannot compete with the citron scents of geraniums. (We call them geraniums, but technically those in the rolling garden are pelargoniums.) The garden was planted June 9, 2015 by Audland and Firbank residents. By July 7, the plants were well established when 20 residents enjoyed a “Green Ladies” program, touching and smelling leaves, identifying them by aroma, and talking about the ways in which the plants are used. Q & A cards stimulated more conversation as participants went beyond their cooking experience to remember literary and Biblical references and learning how some of the plants were used in medicine. All Crosslands residents are invited to enjoy the rolling garden on the Audland patio. Come any time. Delight all your senses. Jane Roberts RESIDENT STATISTICS Transfers Helene Stiller Mary Ellen Yardley Barbara Beddall Kay Sprunt Dorothy Plyler Ernest Stadtlander Mildred Miller Katherine Davis Laurie Taylor Crosslands 509 to Firbank 706 Crosslands 201 to Crosslands 22 Crosslands 436 to Audland 540 Crosslands 513 to Firbank 608 Crosslands 418 to Audland 509 Crosslands 504 to Firbank 806 Crosslands 168 to Audland 522 Audland 544 to Firbank 702 Crosslands 433 to Crosslands128 In Memorium Martel Montgomery Jesse Green Edith Illick John Styer John Rudden Ruth Spencer William Bryan June 3, 2015 June 16, 2015 June 22, 2015 July 19, 2015 July 29, 2015 August 9, 2015 August 31, 2015 Crosslands extends its deepest sympathy to family & friends on the loss of their loved ones. IMPORTANT ELECTION INFORMATION TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3 IS ELECTION DAY October 5 is the last day for new registrations. October 27 is the last day to apply for an absentee ballot. For more information: Party Chairs - Pat Koedding (R) , David Rhoads (D) or www.chesco.org/elections or Voter Services. Answers to Crosslands Crossword #15 Across: 1 catapults, 6 advocates, 10 Alp, 11 is, 13 E.T., 14 CT, 15 veal piccata, 19 locate, 21 my, 22 L.L.C., 24 ducat, 27 Magnificat, 29 SSN, 31 Whip, 32 Alamo, 33 MCAT, 35 Inc., 38 co-educational, 42 -eth, 43 Cate, 44 sooey, 47 Lola, 49 for, 50 cat’s cradle, 51 catch, 53 toi, 54 to, 56 Ducati, 58 Cat in the Hat, 62 ha, 63 Rx, 65 pi, 66 tan, 66 silicates, 68 fraidy cat. Down: 1 cataclysms, 2 alto, 3 pp, 4 Liv, 5 T.S.E., 7 DCI, 8 EE, 9 staccato, 12 Olympic athletes, 16 a.m., 17 Cana, 18 Alfa, 20 Ed, 23 limp, 25 U.W., 26 cathode, 28 Iliad, 30 scat, 35 voter, 36 Ni, 37 Cool Cat, 39 UT, 40 Persian cat, 41 so-so, 43 Cato, 44 scatters, 45 ocicat, 46 yarn, 48 A.C., 52 H(igh) D(efinition), 55 Oh, 57 Cathay, 59 tee, 60 Apr., 61 TIA, 64 Xi, 66 TD. 20 64 41 58 45 34 24 46 31 25 59 42 26 5 39 21 16 46 It is enjoyed by cats & knitters. 48 NJ gambling town (abbr.) 52 TV option for greater picture quality (abbr.) 55 First word of our national anthem 57 Marco Polo’s name for China. 67 63 53 50 44 33 29 19 15 4 14 38 3 11 30 2 10 1 By Hollis Scarborough DOWN 1 Sudden violent upheavals 2 Choir voice 3 Musical notation meaning “very soft” 4 Norwegian actress, ___ Ullman 5 Author of “The Waste Land” (inits.) 7 43-down’s 601 8 Wide shoe size 9 Played with sharp separations between musical notes 12 Participants in quadrennial international games 16 Latin for “before noon” (abbr.) 17 Where Jesus is said to have turned water to wine 18 Italian automaker, ___ Romeo 20 Koch, Asner, or Wynn 23 Walk lamely or with difficulty 25 Seattle home of the Huskies (abbr.) 26 ___ ray tube 28 Epic poem set during the Trojan War 30 Vocal jazz technique that Ella Fitzgerald excelled at 34 One who casts a ballot 36 Metallic element used in coins 37 Orange-striped Looney Tunes feline 39 The beehive state 40 Very fluffy feline 41 Mediocre 43 Roman statesman long ago 44 Throws in many different directions 45 Domestic breed of pet that resembles a spotted wild animal 66 Pale brown 67 Rock-forming minerals 68 Cowardly person = C-A-T ACROSS 1 Ancient weapons for flinging projectiles 6 Publicly champions a cause 10 Jungfrau or Matterhorn, for instance 11 Exists 13 Creature from outer space (abbr.) 14 The nutmeg state 15 Italian dish of cutlets with lemony sauce 19 Find where something is 21 Belonging to me 22 Non-corporate business (abbr.) 24 Coin for commercial use since 1284 27 Popular vocal work by Bach 29 Hyphenated government I.D. 31 Official who is the disciplinarian of a political party 32 Texas Mission overpowered in 1836 33 Hurdle for future physicians (abbr.) 35 End of many corporate names (abbr.) 38 Serving male and female students 42 Common verb suffix in the Bible 43 Actress ___ Blanchett 44 Sound for calling pigs 47 Damn Yankees song, “Whatever ___ Wants” 49 In favor of 50 Game of forming complex patterns with string around one’s fingers 51 Vonnegut novel, “___-22” 53 Moi, nous; ___, vous;… 54 1953 film, “From Here ___ Eternity” 56 Italian motorcycle 58 Seuss Classic, “The ___” 62 Half a laugh 63 Prescription symbol 65 Ratio of a circle’s circumference to its diameter Hint: CROSSLANDS CROSSWORD #15 54 47 35 27 12 68 55 36 6 61 48 32 17 56 52 28 66 49 22 18 62 57 43 23 13 8 40 9 by Hollis Scarborough 59 Ball support in football or golf 60 Tax mo. 61 Mini-stroke 64 Letter that follows phi 66 6-pointer in football (abbr.) 65 60 51 37 7 OCTOBER 2015 11 12 OCTOBER 2015 CROSSLANDS CHRONICLE NEW IN CROSSLANDS LIBRARY Late September 2015 Fiction Crucet, Nennine Capo – Make Your Home Among Strangers Doig, Ivan – Last Bus to Wisdom Egan, Elisabeth – A Window Opens Flagg, Fannie – Daisy Fay and the Miracle Man Hiassen, Carl – Tourist Season Hoffman, Alice – The Marriage of Opposites Karon, Jan – Somewhere Safe with Somebody Good King, Stephen - Finders Keepers Macomber, Debbie, - Silver Linings (A Rose Harbor Novel) Rice, Anne – Prince Estat (Vampire Chronicles) Addition to the Fiction Collection Roberts, Nora – The Witness Mystery Brett, Simon – Mrs. Pargeter’s Principle Fairstein, Linda – Devil’s Bridge Fossum, Karin – The Drowned Boy Grafton, Sue – X Lagercrantz, David – The Girl in the Spider’s Web (A Lisbeth Salander Novel) Maron, Margaret – Long Upon the Land Paretsky, Sara – Brush Back Penny, Louise – The Nature of the Beast Robinson, Peter – In the Places Stout, Rex – Her Forbidden Knight Walker, Martin – The Patriarch Addions to the Mystery Collection Simenon, Georges – Dirty Snow Red Lights The Widow Biography Hodgman, George – Bettyville Nonfiction Hajari, Nisid – Midnight’s Furies: the Deadly Legacy of India’s Partition Kabat-Zinn, Jon – Wherever You Go There You Are: Mindfulness Meditation in Everyday Life Residents of Kendal at Longwood – Experiences: Life at a Continuing Care Retirement Community Audio CD Fiction Bryson, Bill - A Walk in the Woods King, Steven – Drunken Fireworks (only on audio) Lee, Harper – To Kill a Mockingbird VIDEO LIBRARY NEW ADDITIONS TO THE VIDEO LIBRARY New videos can be accessed when a library volunteer is on duty “Clouds of Sils Maria” (2014). “Two amazing performances by Juliette Binoche and Kristin Stewart” (The New York Magazine). In English, French and German. “Far from the Madding Crowd” (2015). Based on the classic love story by Thomas Hardy. Starring Carey Mulligan. “The First Grader” (2010). This heartwarming and inspiring biographical drama is based on the true story of an 84-year-old Kenyan’s fight for his right to attend school for the first time. “Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day” (2008). Starring Frances McDormand and Amy Adams. “Delightful, charming and very funny.” (Access Hollywood). “Notes on a Scandal” (2006). “Spellbinding! Explosive acting from Judi Dench and Cate Blanchett.” (Peter Travers, Rolling Stone). 13 OCTOBER 2015 Editor’s Note: The CRA receives copies of newsletters from other retirement communities in our general area. The following is an excerpt from The Waverly Window, the newsletter from Waverly Heights in Gladwyne, PA. Winston Churchill loved paraprosdokians, figures of speech in which the latter part of a sentence or phrase is surprising or unexpected. Here are some: Where there’s a will, I want to be in it. If I agreed with you, we’d both be wrong. War does not determine who is right—only who is left. Knowledge is knowing a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad. In filling out an application, where it says, “In case of emergency, notify:” I put “DOCTOR.” I didn’t say it was your fault, I said I was blaming you. You do not need a parachute to skydive, you only need a parachute to skydive twice. I used to be indecisive. Now I’m not so sure. To be sure of hitting the target, shoot first and call whatever you hit the target. Nostalgia isn’t what it used to be. Where there’s a will, there are relatives. Finally: I’m supposed to respect my elders, but nowadays it’s getting harder and harder for me to find one. FIRE SAFETY: NEW CROSSLANDS EMERGENCY EVACUATION PLAN G.O.N.E Get Out Now Everyone is the NEW Crosslands Emergency Evacuation Plan. When you hear an alarm you should leave your residence immediately and move away from the building. Follow instructions of staff and emergency personnel. 2ND FLOOR RESIDENTS: if the hall door is hot or there is smoke in the hallway, go to your balcony and await assistance. For information: Bonnie Marcus 404 or Hollis Scarborough 179 SO YOU THINK YOU KNOW CROSSLANDS…? Photo by Elizabeth Rhoads NEED TO KNOW WHAT’S GOING ON? Would you like to hear the information presented on either TV9 or TV8? Just call 484-770-5711. Press “9” to hear a recording of the current day’s information on TV9, or “8” to hear the general schedule information that is on TV8. Do you know where this is? Send your answers to [email protected] or leave it in the Chronicle open mailbox. Please include your name and apartment number on your entry. 14 OCTOBER 2015 CROSSLANDS CHRONICLE October Coming Events Wed., Oct. 1. NAME TAG DAY. Fri, Oct, 2. Opera Lecture—Il Trovatore. Speaker: Bob Rowland. Wm. Penn Lounge, 4:00 p.m. Fri. Oct. 2. Fall Poetry Night. Wm. Penn Room, 7:30 p.m. Sat., Oct 3. Guided Walk of Arboretum Northeast Section. Begin in Parking Lot 9 at 10:00 a.m. For transportation meet at Center at 9:45 a.m. Sat., Oct. 3. Movie. The Letter. Wm. Penn Room., 7:30 p.m. Mon., Oct. 5. Crosslands Residents Association Board Meeting. Wm. Penn Room, 10:00 a.m. Tues., Oct 6. Forum Committee. " Look Up and Learn: What the Skies Can Tell You.” Speaker: Mark Manning, Wm. Penn Room, 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Oct 8. Debate by Democratic and Republican Candidates for Unionville-Chadds Ford School Board. Wm. Penn Room, 7:30 p.m. Fri., Oct. 9. Camera Club. " Having Fun with Photography." Speaker: June Cason. Wm. Penn Room, 7:30 p.m. Sat., Oct. 10. Light 'n Lively. Impersonation of Bill Veeck by Gordon Bennett. Wm. Penn Room, 7:30 p.m. Mon., Oct. 12. COLUMBUS DAY. Tues., Oct. 13. Music Committee. Charles Abramovic, piano. Wm. Penn Room,7:30 p.m. Wed., Oct 14. Philanthropy. “Leaving a Legacy: Giving Through Your Will.” Speaker: Peter Temple, Esq., Wm. Penn Room, 10:30 a.m. Wed., Oct. 14. Interfaith Dialogues. "Creating the Common Good." Recorded talk by author Barbara Ehrenreich plus discussion. Wm. Penn Room, 4:00-5:15 p.m. Thurs., Oct. 15. NAME TAG DAY. Thurs., Oct 15. Investment Workshop, Facilitator: David Rhoads. George Fox Room, 7:30 p.m. Fri., Oct. 16. Opera Lecture: Speaker: Bob Rowland. Wm. Penn Lounge, 4:00 p.m. Fri., Oct. 16. Sing Along with Sarah Lee. " Old Friends—New Friends.” Wm. Penn Lounge, 7:30 p.m. Sat., Oct. 17. Movie. Theory of Everything. Wm. Penn Room, 7:30 p.m. Mon., Oct. 19. Book Review. Penelope Fitzgerald: A Life. Reviewer: Anne Curtin. Wm. Penn Room, 11:00 a.m. Tues., Oct. 20. CRA Concerns Session— Opportunity for private discussion with two CRA Board members. Music Room, 10:00 to 11:00 a.m. Tues., Oct 20. Forum. " Hagley: The History of Business and the Business of History." Speaker: Dr. Erik Rau. Wm. Penn Room, 7:30 p.m. Wed., Oct. 21. Welcoming Committee. Reception for New Residents. Wm. Penn Room and Lounge, 9:0011:30 a.m. Fri., Oct. 23. Introduction to Sean Kelly, President of The Kendal Corporation. Wm. Penn Room,10:30 a.m. Mon., Oct. 26. Great Decisions. “Brazil’s Metamorphosis.” Moderator: Welly Ow. George Fox Room, 9:45 a.m. Tues., Oct. 27. Music Committee. Mendelssohn Piano Trio. Wm. Penn Room, 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Oct. 29. Tuesday Edition on Thursday. "America’s Concentration Camps: World War II Internment of Japanese Americans." Speaker: Dan George. Wm. Penn Room, 10:30 a.m. Thurs., Oct 29. Better Hearing Committee. Movie: "Beyond Silence.” Wm. Penn Room, 7:30 p.m. Sat., Oct. 31. Nature Conservancy. “Monarch Butterfly Migration: Unravelling the Mystery.” Speaker: Dr. Barry Marrs. Wm. Penn Room, 7:30 p.m. Sat., Oct. 31. HALLOWEEN. COMING SOON WALLACH'S SHOE SALE Wednesday, November 4 William Penn Room 10:00 a.m.—3:00 p.m.
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