Date: Fri 25-Jun-1999
Date: Fri 25-Jun-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
Mountain-summer-solstice
Full Text:
TOP OF THE MOUNTAIN
I've been busy keeping track of my shadow ever since Wednesday, when I lost
track of it completely for a couple of hours. We black cats have a special
relationship with our shadows. It's not easy to tell where my shadow leaves
off and I begin, so when my shadow shrinks to the point of disappearing, I
tend to take it personally.
So on Wednesday at about noon, when I looked from side to side, my shadow was
nowhere to be found. Then I remembered that it was the summer solstice, and
the sun was as high in the sky as it gets in these parts. All I had to do was
wait and hour or two for my shadow to emerge once again from my great big
belly -- and I felt whole again.
Dog warden George Mattegat wants to remind everybody that a dog isn't whole
unless it's got a license hanging from its collar. So he is telling every dog
owner he knows that the deadline for getting dog licenses is June 30. After
that, the owners of unlicensed dogs are liable for $70 fines, especially those
who are on the delinquent list for not getting their dogs licensed last year.
Licenses are available at the town clerk's office.
VFW Post 308 Auxiliary is collecting the fronts of greeting cards to help the
children at St Jude's Hospital. This is a way to use those cards that you've
saved because they are too nice to throw away, and to help the children at St
Jude's Hospital. The auxiliary also is saving aluminum pull tabs from cans and
Campbell Soup labels. Anyone who wants to help should call Jo Ann Peck at
426-6299.
The Denlingers sure are doing their part to make sure that the country has
enough lawyers. Daughter Diane, whose engagement announcement appears in this
issue of The Bee , is a new lawyer who is marrying a lawyer. Daughters Carley
and Julie, both attorneys, also are married to lawyers. Only Pat and Bill's
son, Jim, opted for another career. He earned an MBA and works for a bank in
Seattle.
In Newtown one of the sure signs of summer is an endless stream of traffic
into and out of Treadwell Park on Philo Curtis Road. As town park department
programs got into full swing this week after the close of school, a steady
stream of minivans and sport-utility vehicles drove into and out of the park
ferrying children to and from recreational activities.
With the close of school for the summer, the town center during weekday rush
periods is a different, much less populated place. Church Hill Road and Queen
Street, which typically are full of buses and cars carrying children to and
from school, now seem like quiet residential streets. Especially noticeable is
the lack of school-aged pedestrians walking to and from Newtown Middle School.
That doesn't mean we can let down our guard as we drive around town -- the
kids are still out there, just on the neighborhood streets, so drive
carefully.
Have you noticed the newest landmark on Newtown's historic Main Street? It's a
plastic privy at the site of the new house under construction. Talk about
putting your best... er, foot... forward for guests driving through town.
Ray Craven has been coaching youth baseball for more than 30 years, during
which time he has led his players to numerous league titles. Last Saturday,
his Newtown Hardware club captured yet another title. In a show of
appreciation, his players drenched their coach with the contents of the water
cooler.
To the casual observer, it must look like Keith Simmons has the easiest job at
Yankee Discount Wines and Spirits -- he just sits at the register all day. But
if you look behind the counter, you will see that Keith is sporting a cast on
his ankle. He broke it several weeks ago walking his dog (you don't want to
know!), and he expects it will be another four or five weeks before it comes
off. In the meantime, he's a hobbler, which keeps him close to the register.
~Workmen at Edmond Town Hall this week ripped up the old set of flagstones in
front of the building, replacing them with a new, simulated-flagstone surface.
Over the years, the old flagstones had become uneven, causing a safety hazard
to pedestrians, resulting in their replacement. I guess it's only a matter of
time before we get some replacement, hazard-free, simulated public officials
to go with the new front walk.
There will be nothing simulated at all about next week's column. It will be
the real thing, so be sure to...
Read me again.