Date: Fri 11-Jul-1997
Date: Fri 11-Jul-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
way-we-were-july-11
Full Text:
THE WAY WE WERE FOR JULY 11, 1997
JULY 14, 1972
The Planning & Zoning Commission has been served with papers ordering it to
appear in the Court of Common Pleas in Bridgeport regarding its decision to
adopt new zoning regulations which became effective June 15. The plaintiffs
are F. Frank D'Addario and D'Addario Sand & Gravel Inc of Newtown, Inc. The
complaint says the new regulations constitute the taking of the plaintiff's
property without due process of law and are an abuse of the police power of
the community. The new regulations cover the removal of topsoil from the site
of an excavation, permits involving ponds and non-conforming buildings.
A Superior Court trial scheduled to begin this week on the lawsuit brought by
Lyman D. Rogers and Albert H. Goodrich against the Board of Education has been
postponed until July 18. The lawsuit enjoins the town from acquiring the Boyle
property as a school site. However, the judge to whom the case was assigned
disqualified himself because of business contacts with Attorney Thomas Cheney
who is also a plaintiff in his capacity as trustee holding title to the Boyle
property. So the case has been assigned to a different judge who will not be
available until next week.
A Newtown police officer and an auxiliary officer were injured on July 7 on
Church Hill Road when their police cruiser was hit in the rear by another car.
Officer Robert Wrabel and auxiliary officer George Stowe were taken by Newtown
Ambulance to Danbury Hospital along with the driver of the other car, a
Westport man, for treatment of minor injuries. Lion, the police dog, also was
in the cruiser but was not injured. The other driver was issued a ticket for
following too closely and was given a warning for driving under the influence
of liquor.
The Newtown Choral Society will have a new director for the 1972-73 season:
Eugenia (Jean) McGrath of Mt Pleasant Road, the wife of the Rev Donald
McGrath, pastor of Christ the King Lutheran Church. She has had a great deal
of experience as an organist and choir director. Most recently she served the
Immanual Lutheran Church in Danbury and now is the director of the newly
formed Christ the King choir.
A large group of parents attended the July 11 Board of Education meeting to
express concern about the route which the school bus will take to transport
kindergarten students who have been reassigned from Sandy Hook School to
Middle Gate. The move was necessary because of the assignment of a classroom
at Sandy Hook for library use. The parents did not protest the move but said
roads such as Hammertown and High Bridge are hazardous because they have blind
corners, a railroad viaduct and a railroad bridge. The board agreed but said
there are many similar roads in town which the busses must use because there
are no practical alternate routes.
JULY 11, 1947
Hundreds of cars brought participants and onlookers to the parking lot of
Edmond Town Hall on July 4 for the town's largest and most stirring
Independence Day Parade in many years. Credit for the successs of the parade
goes to the parade committee composed of A. Fenn Dickinson, chairman; Louis
Carboneau and Robert Lockwood, cooperation of the town's four fire companies
and the many organizations which were involved.
A meeting was held in Edmond Town Hall this week to present the plans for the
new memorial hall honoring World War II dead which will be built on a plot of
ground opposite Newtown Country Club on South Main Street. The hall is being
planned by the Charles Howard Peck Sr and Jr Post 308 of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars. Post Commander William K. Daniells said the plans are still in
the preliminary stages. The proposed addition would be two stories high,
approximately 40 by 60 feet, with a hall approximately the same length as the
Alexandria Room and somewhat narrower. The cost is estimated at $25,000 for
construction and $500 to $700 a year for maintenance. Cmmdr Daniells said the
post has a current membership of 65 and a potential membership of about 300.
Curriculum questionnaires for the planned Regional High School District Number
3 have been returned and are being tabulated and evaluated. Although no
conclusions have been drawn yet, some answers have proved enlightening. Of the
435 students who responded, 352 said "no" to the question of whether high
school should provide only a general, rather than a technical, education. High
school graduates, both college and non-college, said a very good business
course is needed at the high school. Since for the past several years 40 to 50
percent of the high school aged persons have not been in high school, the need
is for a curriculum which will encourage students to remain in school. About
50 percent of the parents of students in grades 7-12 said they expected their
children to go on to college. Teachers said they expected about 19 percent of
the students to attend college and another 16 percent to pursue other
post-secondary education such as nursing, technical trades and commercial
training.
Advertisement: "Home in the country for elderly people; plenty of milk and
butter and strictly fresh eggs. Good foods and good care. Call Newtown 62W1."
Newtown residents have a choice of summer entertainment: Mario DiCecco and the
Newtown Orchestral Society will hold their second summer concert on July 31 at
the Edmond Town Hall theater. Dorothy Gorman will be the soloist of the
evening. Next weekend the Guilet Quartet will play in the Alexandria Room with
a program of chamber music to include the works of Mozart, Schubert and
Brahms. And the Town Players are beginning to cast Noel Coward's "Blithe
Spirit" for performances on August 13-14.
