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THE WAY WE WERE
JANUARY 26, 1973
Lexington Gardens, a nationally known nursery, is planning to open a branch in
the Queen Street Shopping Center area of Newtown. The garden center, owned by
Pepperidge Farm, will offer a large variety of plants for every kind of garden
imaginable as well as horticultural information and workshops. Application has
been made for a building permit, and the Borough Zoning Board is due to review
the proposed plans in the near future. If all goes well, Lexington Gardens
will open in the late spring or early summer.
It took him a long time to announce his arrival, but the first baby of the
year finally spoke up and let The Bee know he was in town. His name is Daniel
Komaromi, and he was born on January 5 in Danbury Hospital, weighing in at a
hefty eight pounds, five and one-half ounces. His parents are Mr and Mrs
Joseph Komaromi, and he joins a brother, Joe, and sister, Judy, who think he's
just fine.
On Tuesday evening, President Richard M. Nixon went on radio and television to
announce an end to the war in Vietnam. The cease fire is scheduled to take
effect at 7 pm EST on Saturday. Two hours before President Nixon's
Inauguration last Saturday, some 200 Newtowners assembled on the law in front
of the middle school to pray for peace and walk in procession to Edmond Town
Hall.
Lyndon Baines Johnson, the 26th President of the United States, died this week
at the age of 65.
Neighborhood opposition was expressed at Tuesday night's Borough Zoning Board
public hearing to the proposed shopping center at the corner of The Boulevard
and Church Hill Road. The hearing was called to hear a petition for a change
of some of the five-plus acres from residential to commercial in order to
permit construction of the shopping center. Board member Stanley Kleiner also
read a letter from the Planning Commission expressing that body's unanimous
disapproval of the proposed center, citing traffic problems, poor soil for
sewerage, and a failure to show that another shopping plaza is needed.
Attorney Seth O.L. Brody, who represented the applicants, said the rezoning of
parts of Church Hill Road for business and professional zones in 1968 and 1969
shows that the requested zone change is a reasonable step in the normal growth
of the town.
The Board of Education this week got a first look at the bill for correcting
defects in the new high school building, repairing and enlarging the septic
system at the middle school, and meeting payroll increases resulting from the
1972-73 contract settlement for teachers, administrators and other employees
of the school system. The total came to $257,000, considerably below the first
estimates which had come to a total of $346,000.
Fire, believed to have been started by carelessness with matches, completely
destroyed a barn and its contents on Blackman Road Saturday night. Twenty-five
volunteers from Newtown Hook & Ladder fought the blaze, but the barn was
totally involved in fire when the first firefighters arrived.
JANUARY 23, 1948
Subzero temperatures and several feet of snow piled alongside town roads have
led to the cancellation of meetings and events during the past week. Doc
Crowe, Sandy Hook's popular druggist, received a letter on Monday from Dr
William S. Bard who is vacationing in Florida. Dr Beard reported it was 27
degrees in Tangerine, Fla., on January 15, a cold spell that has ruined the
flowers and vegetables.
At the annual parish meeting of St John's Episcopal Church in Sandy Hook this
week, parishioners learned that the final payment has been made on the church
organ. The church building was completed in 1931 and the organ was installed
the following year. The following officers were elected at the meeting: Edmund
F. Dinkler, senior warden; W. John Murphy, junior warden; Austin E. Dinkler,
parish clerk; Mrs Ada Andrews, treasurer. Elected vestrymen are Albert Kuhne,
Sr., Mrs Carl Robinson, Albert Kuhne, Jr., Henry Johnson, Mrs Ada Andrews,
Harry Johnson, and Austin E. Dinkler.
Mirah Chapter, which is the local chapter of the Order of Eastern Star, became
a fully constituted chapter -- number 113 of the state -- at an impressive and
well conducted ceremony last Saturday. The ritual was presented in the
Alexandria Room of the Edmond Town Hall and was witnessed by a large gathering
of guest chapters and past and present officers. Preceding the formal meeting,
a reception was held at the Parker House for the more than 100 visiting
officers. Mirah Chapter 113 has been a fast expanding body since its
institution on February 22, 1947. Its membership has doubled in the past year.
James Mainwaring, son of Mr and Mrs James Mainwaring of Mile Hill Road, was
awarded the rank of Eagle Scout at the 37th annual meeting of Pomperaug
Council, Boy Scouts of America, in Stratford on Monday night. It was the only
Eagle Scout award this year in the council. James is a member of Troop 70 in
Newtown.
The Newtown High School basketball team continued its undefeated season in the
southern division of the Housatonic Valley Schoolmen's League this week on the
Armory court in Danbury with a 60-41 win over Henry Abbott Technical School.
The Hawley boys led by 18 points at halftime and 19 at the end of the game, so
the Henry Abbott team held them almost point for point in the second half.
Mickey Keough led the winners with 18 points.
This week's cold weather caused some of the pipes to freeze at the Parker
House. As they were being thawed out, it was necessary to remove some of the
wainscoating in the tap room. After work on the pipes was finished and the
wainscoating had been nailed back up, someone heard a cat crying. A search
began for the cat, Four Roses, and sure enough, she had been nailed inside
after she apparently climbed in to inspect the work in progress. Four Roses
was rescued and all was well again.
Dr and Mrs J. Benton Egg leave on Saturday by air for Bermuda where they will
spend a week as the guests of Mr and Mrs Harrie Wood of the Dodgingtown
district. The Woods have been in Bermuda since November 1 and will remain
until April, occupying Point House at Warwick.
