Paul Little.
Wylie told the crowd on Tuesday he was lucky to have chaired the two great meeting places in town, Melbourne Cricket Ground and the library, both places with âa sense that no one is more important than anybody else and everyone belongs. Both these places have a lot in common, they share a great sense of belonging and they share a great sense of quality.â
But with one significant difference.
âIt is a bit like the difference between a Big Mac and a slow-cooked lamb. The MCG is like a juicy Big Mac, itâs instant gratification, itâs whoâs going to win in the next three hours. Whereas the library, as Paul Keating said, will do you slowly, itâs a delicious slow-cooked dish.â
Resurfacing Project to Start on U S 1, Baltimore Pike in Delaware, Chester Counties mychesco.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mychesco.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Left to Right: Allan Myers, University of Melbourne Chancellor; Paul Little, co-founder of the Hansen Little Foundation; Jane Hansen, Deputy Chancellor.
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U.S. 1 will be repaired and repaved starting May 12, so expect lane closures in areas along the Chester and Delaware county line, into Chadds Ford and Concord townships. (Shutterstock)
CHESTER COUNTY, PA Construction begins May 12 to resurface a 6-mile section of Baltimore Pike in parts of Chester and Delaware counties. The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT) announced today that a project to repair and resurface U.S. 1 (Baltimore Pike) from the Chester and Delaware county line to the Pole Cat Road intersection in Chadds Ford and Concord townships, in Delaware County. The project also includes pavement restoration to the highway in Pennsbury Township, Chester County.
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RANSOM TWP. At the Ransom Township supervisors’ meeting Monday, chairman Dennis Macheska said that the Pennsylvania State Historical Preservation is looking for sites in Ransom Township to include in their survey.
He asked for public input. He said that the responses are due on Friday, May 7. Supervisor Allan Myers announced that a Lutheran church, which the supervisors recently renovated, and its neighboring cemeteries, will be submitted to the preservation.
“If there’s anything else you can think of that’s historical in Ransom, let us know,” he told the public.
Solicitor Edmond Scacchitti added that the site has to have historical significance in some way. Things mentioned by the public during the meeting were a mill by the creek in Milwaukee, the Mount Dewey Community Hall, which used to be a schoolhouse, and the post office in Ransom Township.