Date: Fri 20-Nov-1998
Date: Fri 20-Nov-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
Mountain-bluebirds
Full Text:
TOP OF THE MOUNTAIN
It's a good thing the holiday season is just about to blossom, because the
world needs a little color in it right now. With all the leaves gone from the
trees, the landscape is pretty dreary. It's enough to make you feel blue.
My friend Helen Kriger dropped me a note this week to say that the world
outside her kitchen window seemed a little blue last weekend.
Helen says that while sitting at her kitchen table last Saturday, she was
astonished and delighted to see a bluebird land on the fence directly opposite
the window. While she was admiring the visitor, two more bluebirds came and
landed in the birdbath, and two more arrived after that to investigate the
holes in the fence posts. Helen says she could see a lot more bird activity
out in the orchard, but because of the distance and a few leaves still on the
trees, she couldn't tell whether they were bluebirds. The birds stayed for
only a few minutes and then moved on. Helen wonders whether anyone else's yard
was also awash in blue last Saturday.
I wonder if Louise Tambascio has put up her Christmas village yet? Louise was
spotted leaving the St Rose craft fair with two large angels that she bought.
She said she was planning to go home and put up the village because the past
couple of years she has been too busy to do it when she waited until after
Thanksgiving.
This Friday evening there's a testimonial dinner at the Fireside Inn to honor
Gerry Frawley whose decades of community service include 22 years on the
Police Commission as well as service as a selectman. Tickets are $30 and are
available by calling Chuck Pilchard or Earl Smith.
Stephanie Nickse is going to be in New Haven on Saturday to swim in the state
open championships at Yale. Stephanie, who is on the Newtown High School swim
team, qualified by finishing in the top 18 in the state in the 50-yard
freestyle and the 100-yard butterfly.
Saturday morning, at 9:30, a Mass and dedication is being held at St Rose
Church to designate the church as a national historic site. The plaque will
commemorate the first Mass celebrated in Fairfield County, an event which took
place in Newtown during the Revolutionary War when the French forces under
Count De Rochambeau passed through the town.
They've been kidding Rick Orton down at the town garage because his picture
appeared in The Bee last week with First Selectman Herb Rosenthal at a
fund-raiser for two local kids who have serious medical conditions. The
broadly smiling Mr Rosenthal had his arm around Rick in the picture. It seems
the last time Rick had his picture in The Bee, he was shown with former First
Selectman Bob Cascella. The time before that, it was former Police Chief
Michael DeJoseph sharing the spotlight with Rick. Why are all these high-level
types seeking out Rick? Does he have some influence he's not telling the rest
of us about?
Rick's not the only one who seems to have a lot of influence. Eight-year-old
Michael Ryan Iorfino was the winner November 13 of a birthday cake from
Luigi's Italian Pastry. (Each week one of the birthday kids listed in The Bee
wins a cake.) But this isn't the first time he's gotten a call from The Bee
announcing he had won. He also won the cake for his birthday last year. Seems
he's on a sweet winning streak.
There's going to be a port wine tasting at Clearwaters Restaurant by Steve's
Liquor Store and Glen-Ro Spirit Shoppe on Tuesday, December 1, to benefit the
Regional Hospice of Western Connecticut. The $30 tickets include the donation
and hot and cold hors d'oeuvres. Call Steve's at 426-0557 or Glen-Roe at
26l-6166.
When I mentioned last week that all five of the Alexander offspring, plus
their wives and children, were home for Marilyn's 60th birthday, somehow
Stuart's name got lost in the shuffle. Stuart was there with his wife and
three children. He's now a lieutenant commander at the Oceana Naval Air
Station in Virginia Beach.
Don't ever accuse the class of 1988 of being conventional. Unlike most
classes, which hold their reunions around Thanksgiving, good ol' `88 has
scheduled its reunion in late January or February. Class president Sue
Belanger is calling it the class of 1988's 11th reunion.
The Congregational Church roast beef dinner sign disappeared from outside
Edmond Town Hall Saturday night. When members of the church went outside to
remove the sign for storage until next time, they found it gone. The
easel-type sign weighs about 40 pounds, according to church member Terri
Ferris. She said if anyone knows the whereabouts of the sign, church members
will be glad to go out and pick it up. She can be reached at 270-1406.
When Emily Warner was talking to her math professor at Skidmore about going
home for Thanksgiving, the professor asked her where home was. Newtown,
Connecticut, Emily replied. It turned out that her math professor, Barbara
Henriques, knew exactly where that was. Ms Henriques was a math specialist at
Head O'Meadow School nine years ago and even remembered Emily's younger
brother, Reid, who was in fourth grade at Head O'Meadow at the time. Reid now
is a freshman at Dartmouth.
Yes, it is a small world, and there are stories every week that seem to make
it even smaller. So be sure to...
Read me again.