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THE WAY WE WERE
JUNE 28, 1974
William H. Johnson reapplied last week to the Planning & Zoning Commission for
a special exception to locate a treatment and therapy center for alcoholism on
his 10.96 acre property on Alberts Hill Road, Sandy Hook. The proposal for the
facility, called Eagle Hill, is Mr Johnson's second. In 1972 he submitted
plans for the hospital to the Planning & Zoning Commission, which approved
Eagle Hill by a 2-1 vote. However, a group of residents of the area appealed
the decision to the Court of Common Pleas in Bridgeport, which handed down a
decision in May of 1973 that the Commission had not acted on the application
by a majority of its five members and the P&Z vote was nullified. Planning &
Zoning will hold a public hearing on the application. The hospital for
alcoholics is allowed in the two-acre zone as a special exception under the
zoning regulations.
Charter Revision Commissioners on June 26 voted to include a code of ethics in
the proposals they will offer Newtown voters in November. The proposal that a
board of ethics be established to investigate complaints and enforce the code
was defeated despite the efforts of seven members of the League of Women
Voters to defend the concept of an ethics board. "I approve of having a code,
but what can a board do that we can't do with the machinery we have now?" was
the query with which Ronald Costa turned back a motion by vice chairman
William Lavery to establish a board and have the board promulgate a code and
rules for enforcement.
Tennis balls, balloons and fireworks... all will be launched in the name of
Summer Festival fun during the coming week. "Balloons to the Moon" and rockets
in the sky are scheduled for the evening of July 3 at the Dickinson Town Park.
Starting at 6:30 pm, children (and adults, too) may put their names and
addresses on cards, attach them to hydrogen filled balloons and watch them
float off into the distance. Each balloon will cost 25 cents or $1 per family.
For one lucky balloonist the investment will reap a super return: a "summer
fun package," donated by Time-Out, Inc, Wheeler Shopping Center, Newtown. The
person whose card is returned from the most distant point by August 3 will
receive the prize, which includes the following: swim mask, frisbee, mini
flashlight, portable hammock, badminton set, giant tic-tac-toe game, duncan
yo-yo, and a swim raft. In addition, there will be a prize for the person who
sends back the winning card. The fireworks display will begin at dark. It
promises to be a very fine Independence Day show.
Following its regular meeting on June 25, the Board of Education authorized
architect Richard Butterfield to prepare specifications for the relocatable
classrooms which will be placed at the elementary schools this summer. The
Board also prepared an invitation to bid for the installation of the
classrooms, and the legal notice for the invitation appears in this week's
issue of The Bee in the classified section. The project will be for the
installation of the portables at Hawley, Sandy Hook and Middle Gate elementary
schools.
If the members of the Newtown High School Class of 1974 got together and said
some special prayer for good weather on commencement night, their efforts were
certainly more than successful. When 6 pm came on June 22, it was a benevolent
sun which shone in a clear blue sky as 253 seniors filed to their seats in the
high school stadium. Giving the valedictory address was Cynthia St. Jean, and
the commencement address was delivered by a member of the graduating class,
Kathleen Addis, who began her talk with a quotation from Thoreau.
Mr and Mrs David E. Brown, directors of the American Adventurer Travel Camps
in Newtown announce that all staff and equipment are ready to begin this
summer's travel camping program on Friday, June 28. This summer's program
includes an 8-day trail hike leaving June 28 and a canoe trip leaving July 8.
Bike trips to the Green Mountains will leave July 8, to Cape Cod will leave
July 21, to Block Island will leave August 12. Assisting this summer will be
Judy and Brian Newton of Newtown.
State Rep Sarah Frances Curtis of Sandy Hook reports that she has received
word from the office of Commissioner of Transportation Joseph Burns that a
contract has been let for the construction of a permanent, paved car-pool
parking lot on Route 25 in Hawleyville. The cost is estimated at $27,986.20
and the project is expected to be completed in two months. Construction should
start soon on this parking area which is one of the first of its kind in the
area.
State Representative Sarah Frances Curtis of Newtown has received a letter
from Joseph B. Burns, commissioner of the State Department of Transportation,
regarding the proposed construction plans for the Rochambeau Bridge which
spans the Housatonic River between Southbury and Newtown on Route I-84. Rep
Curtis has announced her opposition to the construction plans, as has Rep
Eloise Green of Southbury. If the bridge work were to be done, it would affect
homes in Newtown and Southbury, with the greater number taken from Southbury
residents. No timetable has been set for the beginning of the construction but
the state has started to negotiate to buy properties along the proposed work
area, and plans are drawn up for the work.
JULY 1, 1949
The combined fire companies of Newtown, Dodgingtown, Hawleyville and Sandy
Hook are holding their annual carnival for four days next week beginning on
Wednesday and running through Saturday night. The location is Yale Field,
opposite Lovell's garage, at the junction of Route 202 and 25. The big parade
will take place Thursday night and a special program will mark each of the
four nights of the carnival. Fire Marshal Walter L. Glover states that, in
view of the ban on wheels of chance, substitute games of skill and other
entertainment will be provided, as the committee has already ordered several
hundred dollars worth of merchandise to be disposed of at the carnival. The
giant parade will take place Thursday night, forming at the foot of Mt
Pleasant and starting at 8 o'clock.
To many children the Fourth of July without fireworks is like celery without
salt, and this year the Newtown Senior Boy Scout troop has planned to highly
season its holiday. Beginning at 9 o'clock on Monday evening, an exhibition of
fireworks will be displayed at Taylor Field in back of Hawley school. The
public has been cordially invited to attend the affair, and it promises to be
a bang-up time with enough soda and ice cream on sale to satisfy all. The
town's young fries will especially enjoy the display. The event is being
sponsored by the Boy Scouts and the Scout Troop committee for the camp fund,
and it is hoped that all who can will attend. A donation will be solicited at
the main entrance. The committee in charge of the affair includes Paul
Cullens, Scoutmaster; James Osborne, Tom Conway, Sandy Allport, fireworks;
Dominic Digilio, lighting; Roy Byrne, refreshments; Aksel Jensen, finance; and
Donald McCain, Fred Bauer, William Knox, Harold DeGroat, Henry McCarthy and
Richard Hibbard, members at large.
An audience composed of parents and friends and filling the auditorium enjoyed
the Commencement Exercises, held last Thursday evening at the Edmond Town Hall
for the graduating class of Hawley High School. Following the traditional
processional "Pomp and Circumstance" by Elgar, during which the Senior Class
marched to the stage under arches of ferns held by girls of the Junior class,
the Invocation was given by Rev Walter R. Conroy, pastor of St Rose church.
From that point an innovation from the usual commencement speeches took place
and proved most entertaining and worthwhile for all present. The theme, "The
House We Live In," was opened by Miss Doris Pully, salutatorian, who spoke on
the subject, "America, The Promised Land For Whom?"
Governor Chester Bowles on Wednesday night announced interim appointment of
several minor court judges as he completed selection of judges for the minor
courts of the state. John F. Holian was named judge of the Newtown court, with
Fred J. Carmody as deputy.
With all the dash and color of former years, Newtown will enjoy another
Independence day parade on the morning of the Fourth of July. Fully a score of
organizations will be represented in the mammoth parade, which will be
balanced with marching units, floats and fire apparatus à all interspersed
with marching musical corps. It will form at 10 o'clock Monday morning at the
rear of Edmond Town Hall. The line of march will be down Main Street to the
flag pole and then down the hill to the fire house at Sandy Hook.
A special town meeting has been called by the Board of Selectmen for Thursday
evening, July 7, at the Edmond Town Hall at 8 o'clock. The purpose of the
meeting is to provide a one-man Assessor for the town of Newtown, in place of
the present three-man board.
JUNE 27, 1924
"The Old Orchards" tea room at the attractive old Peck homestead on Mt
Pleasant, now owned by H.H. Taylor, will formally open for the season on
Saturday of this week under the management of Mrs H.H. Taylor and Mrs Laurent
Fernier of Brooklyn, N.Y. They will serve tea, cake, cream and meals as
desired.
The graduation exercises of the Hawley High School will take place on Thursday
evening, June 26, at the Hawley school auditorium at 7:30 pm. The program will
be as follows: Song: By the School. Invocation: Rev G. Herbert Ekins. Song: By
the School. Salutatory, Frederick Child Mead. History, Jesse Harriette Tarbox.
Valedictory, Anna Marie Keane. Violin solo, Miss Carolyn Washburn. Hartford
School of music piano accompaniment, H. Carlton Hubbell. Piano solo,
Rachmaninoff's Prelude, Natalie Ellen Kiernan. The members of the graduating
class are: Evelyn Louise Bresson, Helen Veronica Casey, Wilbur Allen Griscom,
Ruth Madeleine Hanlon, Anna Marie Keane, Natalie Ellen Kiernan, Frederick
Child Mead, Jessie Harriette Tarbox, Charles William Phillips, Ruth Hubbell
Wheeler.