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Fans, restaurants across Delaware Valley prepare food ahead of Super Bowl Sunday

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Fans, restaurants across Delaware Valley prepare food ahead of Super Bowl Sunday


PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — The Eagles may not be playing for the Lombardi Trophy like many in the Delaware Valley hoped for, but that isn’t deterring fans from watching the Kansas City Chiefs face the San Francisco 49ers during Super Bowl LVIII.

Football fans say they’ll be enjoying some good food while they’re at it.

In Roxborough, dozens of shoppers hustled to ACME to get the foods they needed to put their game day spreads together.

RELATED | Super Bowl 2024: Time, channel, halftime show, how to watch Chiefs vs. 49ers livestream

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This year, residents are expected to stock up on plenty of finger foods like pretzels, mozzarella sticks, and pistachios, according to an Instacart survey of 2,000 U.S. adults.

However, no other food tops tortilla chips for game day.

That’s right up Diane Loebelo’s alley, who said tortillas would be on her Super Bowl Sunday menu.

“We got all of our snacks for tomorrow,” Loebelo said. “Flour tortillas with cheese and meat and we’re going to put a pineapple salsa.”

Scott Green wasn’t leaving his game day nourishment up to chance so he went to pick up his order of buffalo wings on Saturday.

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He said among the hoagie trays and various dips that would be at his son’s house, where he’ll be watching the game, he said the buffalo wings would be the star of the show.

“Wings are my item,” Green proclaimed. “I try to bring wings every year.”

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Chicken wing lovers are in for a treat. The National Chicken Council’s 2024 Wing report estimates Americans will devour 1.45 billion wings on Super Bowl Sunday alone.

That is welcomed news to restaurant owners like Rifih Fahd, co-owner of Wings To Go, who said he was already fielding pre-orders and preparing to be swamped on Sunday.

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“Super Bowl for us is a very, very busy day,” Fahd said.

He said it was like Christmas for him and other shop owners around the country. Fahd said preparation for the big day started days in advance with buying and preparing hundreds of pounds of chicken wings.

He even has to bring in additional staff to keep up with the 4,000 chicken wings he estimated would be ordered for consumption.

His shop has more than two dozen flavors, but he said classic buffalo wings are the most popular.

“Most people are more into mild or hot sauce, actually. But the store carries more than 27 flavors from hot all the way up to Asian fusion, medium, you name it, we have it,” Fahd said.

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Longtime Del. lawmaker Joe DiPinto remembered as an ‘outstanding person’

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Longtime Del. lawmaker Joe DiPinto remembered as an ‘outstanding person’


DiPinto was first elected to City Council in 1973 before moving up to represent Wilmington in the General Assembly from 1987 to 2006. He returned to city government after leaving Dover, serving as Wilmington’s Director of Economic Development under then-Mayor James Baker, a Democrat.

“Joe knew that this position gave him the opportunity to directly help the people of Wilmington through development agreements that provided jobs for city residents and revenue to support city services,” Baker said. “Joe cared about people regardless of their standing in life, race, religion, or politics. He served the people of Wilmington well.”

“Joe always put Delawareans first and looked to improve the First State,” said U.S. Sen. Chris Coons, who was New Castle County executive while DiPinto was leading the city’s economic development office. “We forged our friendship through civic service at different levels of government.”

DiPinto was also active with a number of cultural groups and other organizations, including Delaware’s Science and Technology Council, the Delaware Commission on Italian Heritage and Culture, the Riverfront Development Corporation, the Greater Wilmington Convention and Visitors Bureau, and the Delaware Science and Technology Commission.

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DiPinto was also once a member of WHYY’s board of directors.



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Former Delaware County emergency services director faces assault, harassment charges

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Former Delaware County emergency services director faces assault, harassment charges


From Delco to Chesco and Montco to Bucks, what about life in Philly’s suburbs do you want WHYY News to cover? Let us know!

The Pennsylvania Office of the Attorney General has filed criminal charges against Delaware County’s former emergency services director Timothy Boyce.

Boyce faces three misdemeanor counts of simple assault, harassment and indecent assault without consent. The charges stem from the same allegations of workplace ageism, discrimination and sexual harassment that led to his May 10 firing.

A preliminary hearing has been scheduled for June 5. Michael S. Dugan, Boyce’s attorney, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Neither did Boyce.

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Boyce was placed on administrative leave on April 25 after two female employees filed complaints with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission, alleging he fostered a hostile work environment.



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Where is the Delaware River deepest? New map poster shows 113-foot answer

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Where is the Delaware River deepest? New map poster shows 113-foot answer


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Where is the deepest part of the 330-mile Delaware River? Where it is also widest, where the river meets the Delaware Bay? Try Narrowsburg, New York. A new map has been published showing the mysterious contours of what is called the “Big Eddy Narrows.” 

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The river, the longest free-flowing river east of the Mississippi, is 113 feet deep at River Mile 290, counting from Delaware Bay, and visible from the bridge connecting Pennsylvania and New York.  

The Delaware River’s average depth is only four to five feet, although holes of 12 to 18 feet are not unusual. 

A diver with a local search and rescue team said no light penetrates the bottom at all. 

Made a map poster

The map is available as an 11-by-17-inch poster that its creator has donated to benefit the non-profit Upper Delaware Council (UDC), announced UDC Executive Director Laurie Ramie. 

The map was developed by Lisa Glover of Honesdale, who became enthralled with this unique, local claim to fame of the Delaware River and contacted the UDC. 

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Although one might muse that the hamlet of Narrowsburg should have been named Deepestburg, its name is derived from its other distinction of being the main stem’s narrowest part. The river courses through a rock canyon before the bridge, where it is only 200 feet wide. 

Where to see it 

The Big Eddy Observation Deck on Main Street in Narrowsburg has an interpretative sign telling these distinctive topographic features. Here the public also finds a good place to watch for bald eagles as rowboats, canoes, kayaks, and rafts go by. 

Perhaps very few people paddling by or on shore looking at this scenic part of the river are aware of the fantastic underwater depth. 

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This very deep part of the Delaware also is easily seen from the Darbytown Access on the Pennsylvania side. 

The interpretative sign at the deck offers two theories of how the 113-foot hole was created. The first is that a long-drowned “plunge pool” was created from a glacial waterfall. The other theory is that a pothole was formed by tumbling rocks scoured out through erosion.

A whirlpool is often visible at the Big Eddy, where the deepest point is located just downstream from the narrows. 

Log rafts spun like tops

The deeps at Narrowsburg have been known for a very long time, impacting 19th century log rafters. The Wayne County Herald’s Feb. 20, 1873, edition reported that J.I. Appleby and J.E. Miller, of Narrowsburg, out of curiosity took soundings of the river from a boat. They concluded the river was 101 feet. “Rafts in coming down the Delaware are frequently drawn into this eddy and sometimes detained for days,” the article reads. “Whenever the wind is blowing with any force, rafts are sure to be drawn into this eddy where they have to remain until the wind calms.” 

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The Herald republished an unattributed column from The Middletown Mercury on Jan. 20, 1881, stating that log rafts caught in the Big Eddy “may spin around like a top for an hour.” Rafts so caught could create a river traffic jam of a hundred rafts. “I have seen 500 rafts in here at one time, some of them on top of each other, and some turned up on edge, and others bottom side up,” the columnist penned. 

Extensive research 

The UDC press release states that Glover read articles from the UDC’s “The Upper Delaware” newsletter which led her to interviews with National Park Service divers who had measured the hole. Glover also found various illustrations. 

She spoke of her desire for an accurately detailed map of the river bottom with the hope of potentially solving the mystery. Although topographic maps exist showing the elevation of landforms above “sea level,” bathymetric maps show depths of landforms below water. 

Glover, in her research, discovered that the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) had published a LiDAR scan of the Delaware River in 2020 and reached research scientist John Young, who provided a digital map focused on the Big Eddy section, the press release states. 

Obtaining a map 

From her research, Glover designed a topobathymetric color map with 10-foot contour lines and to-scale cross sections of The Narrows and The Deeps, printed 50 copies, and offered a stack to the UDC to share with the public as a fundraiser.  

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The Big Eddy Narrows poster is available for a $20 donation to the UDC. 

Contact Administrative Support Stephanie Driscoll at stephanie@upperdelawarecouncil.org or 845-252-3022, or stop by the UDC’s office at 211 Bridge St. in Narrowsburg (next to the firehouse) on weekdays for pick-up. 

Payment must be by check or cash. Add $3 for mail orders. 

Glover is affiliated with Highlights for Children, the Stourbridge Project, the Wayne County Arts Alliance and the Center on Rural Innovation, for which she is their Placemaking Fellow. 

She holds a bachelor’s degree in architecture and a master of engineering degree from Lehigh University and likes to use a paddle board. Her website is lisathemaker.com. 

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Peter Becker has worked at the Tri-County Independent or its predecessor publications since 1994. Reach him at pbecker@tricountyindependent.com or 570-253-3055 ext. 1588.



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