headline
Full Text:
THE WAY WE WERE
SEPTEMBER 6, 1974
The Board of Selectmen filed five of the six proposals of the Charter Revision
Commission with Town Clerk Mae Schmidle Wednesday, September 4, and expressed
the hope that they will not rest in peace in her office until the November
election. The board met in executive session preceding the regular Tuesday
night meeting to act on the proposed charter changes, which must be submitted
to the Secretary of the State in Hartford by September 20. First Selectman
Frank DeLucia urged voters to become familiar with the charter changes, which
will signal Newtown's initiation into representative government and substitute
a professional financial director for the present Town Treasurer and Board of
Finance.
The skies were gray and threatening on Monday, but this didn't stop the many
participants in Newtown's fine annual Labor Day Parade from stepping fancy
through the center of town for the enjoyment of the hundreds of people who
turned out. Honorary Parade Marshal Richard Hibbard and wife, and parade
co-chairmen Bob McCulloch and Judy Furlotte, were in the two lead cars,
followed by each of Newtown's volunteer fire departments leading a division,
local dignitaries and politicians from all over the state. The parade was
planned by the Newtown Summer Festival committee. From the reviewing stand set
up on Queen Street, the parade officials judged each of the passing entries as
announcer Edward Sullivan informed viewers of the identities of all concerned.
Carla Polcyn, 15-year-old Newtown High School sophomore, became Miss Teenage
Newtown in a presentation by the Newtown Exchange Club Thursday, August 29 in
Edmond Town Hall. Eleven contestants from an original field of 15 appeared in
a competition in which talent, personality, appearance, poise and scholastic
achievement were major considerations.
On September 4 schools opened in Newtown with nary a hitch. Reports from all
of the schools were that everything went very smoothly without any mishaps as
4,454 students were ticked off the attendance lists throughout the system.
Broken down, the attendance records showed 656 students at Hawley, 717 at
Sandy Hook, 641 at Middle Gate, 1,100 at the Middle School, and 1,340 at the
high school. The count is merely an attendance one, and the official school
enrollment figures will not be in before October 1. Although the elementary
schools found their core facilities turned into classrooms because the
portable classrooms are unfinished, the principals of those schools reported
that all went surprisingly well.
For the second time in less than a week torrential rains pelted the area, and
once again Newtown's highway department was out on the roads attempting to
stem problems caused by washouts on the town's dirt roads. Last Thursday the
men and machines were in the Pootatuck Park area, as well as at a few other
roads after the rain on Wednesday night. A large portion of Pootatuck, a
private development, was immobilized after parts of eight roads flowed away
with the water. On Tuesday night heavy rain came again. Highway Superintendent
Edward Napier reports that his department received two calls on Tuesday, one
at 11:30 to remove a tree from a road, and again at 2:30 am from a family in
Pootatuck Park that couldn't get to their home. Mr Napier says he finally was
able to bring them over the road in his station wagon. Wednesday morning the
highway department crews were out gray and early, with a grader, front end
loader and several trucks to repair the damage in the Park.
The League of Women Voters has planned a series of information and fund
raising activities to begin during League of Women Voters Week September 14
through 20. The League will kick off with a luncheon on September 14 at the
Hawley Manor Inn at noon. The speaker will be Ann Spencer Menousek who will
speak on Resolution Number 1, the proposed state constitutional amendment
prohibiting discrimination on account of sex. The resolution is on the
November ballot. Mrs Menousek is editor of the Brookfield Journal and a member
of the Permanent Commission on the Status of Women. She is the chairman of the
committee for the resolution.
Real estate developer William Laws of Kale Davis Road came before the
Conservation Commission on Wednesday, September 4, to ask how the Wetlands and
Watercourses Regulations applied to him. Mr Laws was the first potential
applicant to come before the commission since the regulations went into effect
on August 27. He confessed that he came expecting argument and had armed
himself with a $25 check in case the Conservation Commission required him to
submit a regulated activities license application.
According to a count made by Frances Stevens, Newtown High secretary, who was
taking in the Labor Day parade in the vicinity of the grandstand on Queen
Street, 38 balloons managed to escape from the little hands which were
clutching them.
SEPTEMBER 9, 1949
The Edmond Town Hall was the scene on Wednesday night of two of the largest
party caucuses ever held in Newtown. Some 450 Republicans gathered in the
gymnasium, with an attendance of about 200 at the Democratic caucus held in
the Alexandria Room. A number of contests developed in each caucus, requiring
ballots which consumed a great deal of time, especially in the Republican
caucus with such a large vote involved. In the Republican caucus, over which
W.W. Holcombe, town chairman, presided, a contest developed for the office of
Assessor for the full four-year term. Thomas Ramsdell, endorsed by the
Republican Town Committee, was defeated by John A. Carlson by a vote of 270 to
165. The second contest occurred in the candidates for First Selectman, with
Walter Glover, endorsed by the Republican Town Committee, winning over Robert
D. Fairchild by a vote of 292 to 166. The third contest came in the nomination
for Town Clerk, Miss May E. Sullivan, Democrat and present incumbent, winning
the nomination over Mrs Myrtle Way Smith, 246-186.
Last Friday evening's special town meeting, held in the Alexandria Room of the
Edmond Town Hall, drew an attendance of fewer than 50 taxpayers and voters.
Judge Paul V. Cavanaugh was named chairman, following which a motion was made
by William Hunter that a part of the warning for the meeting be used as a
resolution for adoption, to authorize and empower the Newtown Ambulance
Association, Inc, to construct and equip an addition to the Newtown firehouse
for the purpose of housing and maintaining the ambulance, said addition to be
constructed without cost, to the Town of Newtown.
Starting this Saturday, September 10, Newtown residents will be given a week's
viewing of the various types and kinds of aircraft now in use by the US Air
Force. "Operation Lookout" is the name which has been given to a seven-day
exercise which will run from Saturday, September 10, until noon on Friday the
16th. Planes will be sent over during designated periods on these days to test
the efficiency of radar, backed up by ground observer stations, in detecting
modern high speed planes and tracing their directions.
Newtown residents will be privileged to see much of the printed work produced
by their fellow citizens when on Saturday the Cyrenius H. Booth Library begins
an exhibit featuring the books written by local authors. Not only the finished
product but galley proofs and other adjuncts of the writing craft will be on
display, the exhibit to continue for an indefinite time.
Officers of Raymond L. Pease Post American Legion and its Auxiliary unit were
seated at an impressive joint installation ceremony in the Sandy Hook Hotel
Tuesday night at 8 o'clock. Post officers are: George L. May, commander;
Oswald Peck, senior vice commander; David Dayton, junior vice commander;
Frederick Harris, adjutant; Hubert Roswell, chaplain; William Honan, Jr.,
finance officer; Richard Lane, historian; Charles Lockwood, sergeant-at-arms.
The officers of the Auxiliary are: Mrs Florence May, president; Mrs Lauvisa
Lane, vice president; Mrs Frederick Harris, secretary; Mrs Esther Liskin,
treasurer; Mrs Belle Lockwood, chaplain; Mrs Joseph Tani, sergeant-at-arms;
Mrs Thomas Mularcik, historian.
Mrs William Crawford White, president of the alumnae Association of Wellesley
College, held a tea at her summer home in Head O' Meadow District on Thursday,
September 1, for Wellesley women in the Newtown area. Those present from
Newtown were: Mrs N.M. Wagner, Mrs H.N. Kirby, Mrs David L. Oleson, Mrs
Raymond Hall, Miss Katherine Kirby, Mrs Richard McCallister, Mrs Russell F.
Strawburger, Miss Mabel Wright and Mrs Jerome P. Jackson.
SEPTEMBER 5, 1924
A young tornado paid a visit to Newtown on Tuesday afternoon about 4 pm, the
fury of the storm seeming to center over the Borough. Trees were blown down in
the yards of the Misses Dikeman and Mrs S.C. Glover, in front of the residence
of M.D. Beers at Sandy Hook, and large limbs twisted off trees in front of the
Beers-Sanford residence and in other places.
Mrs John Hubbell is having a two-car garage erected in the rear of her new
residence recently completed.
The Class of 1922 of Hawley High School held a class reunion, Friday, August
29. Early in the evening a roast was held at Taunton Lake, after which the
members of the class were conveyed by an unusual fliver to Danbury, where they
witnessed America at the Empress Theater. Those present were: Helen Egan, May
Platt, Esther Coger, Edna Stowe, Laura Ruffles, Charles McLaughlin, Joseph
McCarthy, and Frank Hopkins.