Date: Fri 10-Nov-1995
Date: Fri 10-Nov-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
Mountain-election-Sleepers
Full Text:
MOUNTAIN FOR 11/10
Of all the election trends that have been chewed over since the polls closed
on Tuesday night, the one that interests me the most is the one that has
gotten the least serious attention: election night food.
I have noticed over the years that the Democrats seem to offer more homemade
stick-to-your-ribs kind of fare, whereas the Republicans seem to favor
ready-made, eat-on-the-fly kind of things. I've also noticed that the
Republicans seem to pour more champagne on election night, but I don't think
that it has too much to do with personal preference. Deep down inside, I think
Democrats would really like to drink more champagne on election night.
This year, the Democrats gathered at their headquarters in the Queen Street
Shopping Center where Bunny Madden, member of the State Central Committee and
longtime former local party chairman, had made her popular Election Day Chili
for "about the 15th time."
"Bunny wasn't going to make it but I told her she had to keep up the
tradition," Jack Rosenthal said. "I had it for lunch."
While the Democrats snacked on the chili, split pea soup, hot dogs with
sauerkraut, fruit salad, and cheese and crackers, the Republicans munched on
slices of a six-foot submarine sandwich made by the Newtown General Store and
platters of fruit and vegetable crudites. They popped their first bottle of
champagne about 35 minutes after the polls closed.
The election wasn't the only excitement in town this week. Film crews were
back at Fairfield Hills doing location work on the movie Sleepers. The various
machines with which movies are made were strewn about the core of the campus.
Work was underway at Woodbury Hall, near Kent House, at Stratford Hall and at
Fairfield House.
The huge lighting platforms used to illuminate movies, as well as trucks full
of electrical and photographic equipment, plus the many mobile homes,
1960s-era autos and catering trucks made for a colorful scene. The burly men
of the film crew were dressed for cold weather. And every now and then men
walkie-talkies stopped traffic as needed to keep it out of the film frame
during shooting.
Beryl Harrison has been attempting to find homes for the six cats who live out
back of the Booth Library before winter sets in. She trapped two, using
Have-a-Heart traps, and found them a home with a woman who has a barn. The
next two cats, tiger cats that have been neutered, are living in Beryl's
laundry room. One of the cats obviously was someone's pet because it already
had been spayed, according to Beryl. Anyone who is interested in adopting one
of these cats should call Beryl at the library, 426-4533.
With four cats now in from the cold, Beryl put the traps out to catch the last
two, including one particularly handsome black cat. Unfortunately, the black
and white animal that wound up in the trap Wednesday morning wasn't the cat -
it was a skunk. Jim Kearns tried to throw a blanket over the trap to calm the
skunk so he could open the trap door and let it loose. Unfortunately the skunk
saw him coming and took no prisoners.
"Jim got sprayed everywhere," Janet Woycik said. "We used 16 different kinds
of deodorant trying to get rid of the smell. And, although Jim got the trap
door open, the skunk is still in there and won't come out."
Jim Crouch got a surprise recently when his car fell into a hole created when
rain washed out the dirt under part of his driveway. The culprit apparently
was the sewer construction work that has been underway on Castle Hill Road.
Jim's wife had just driven the car into the driveway when the ground gave way
and the right front wheel dropped into a hole. The car had to be towed out,
then towed to a service station for a minor repair to the wheel.
Jim says the sewer company "couldn't have been nicer," especially after
learning that he is the chief of the town's 911 emergency dispatch center in
Edmond Town Hall. "They wasted no time in taking care of everything," he said.
Sewer crews are continuing to dig holes everywhere, including on the bridge
over I-84 at exit 10. The workmen are preparing to install a suspended,
pressurized sewer line under the bridge. Sewers in the air. What will they
think of next?
The crew at Newtown Exxon Service Center on South Main Street took the concept
of "service" far beyond its normal boundaries this week. They came to the
rescue when a motorist who was about to pay for gasoline he had pumped dropped
a $10 bill on his way into the gas station's office. A gust of wind caught the
bill and it blew across the gas station parking lot as the motorist chased it.
As luck would have it, the bill blew over a flat storm sewer grating and fell
downward into a catch basin full of water. Station staffers lifted the catch
basin grating off its mount and one of them was lowered down into the basin by
his ankles. He was able to snatch the bill from atop the puddle below. He gave
the bill back to the "grate-ful" motorist who then presented it as partial
payment for the gasoline which he had pumped.
Well, my "news gauge" is on the big "E" for now. I've got to go fill 'er up,
but be sure to be back here next week so you can...
Read me again.
