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THE WAY WE WERE
MAY 4, 1973
The town moved a step closer to clearing its title to the Boyle property this
week when Judge George Saden in Superior Court denied a motion for a new trial
of the suit brought by Thomas L. Cheney, trustee. The property on Boggs Hill
Road was purchased by the town last year as the site for a new elementary
school but only after a group of property owners sued for an injunction to
prevent it. The town won the case and was allowed to take title to the
property pending appeal, however the trial judge died before the appeal could
take place, and the plaintiffs demanded a new trial. The effect of Judge
Saden's decision is to make it possible for the appeal to be heard and Town
Counsel Robert Hall hopes it will be completed this fall.
There wasn't much discussion of the town budget at the annual town budget
meeting Tuesday evening and there wasn't much discussion of the merits of
voting by referendum either. But there were a lot of angry comments and in the
end the meeting did the only thing it could do: fix dates for the referendum
(May 15) and the adjourned town meeting (May 16) that will follow it. This
action was required because Suzanne Sturges of Head Of Meadow Road,
representing the Newtown Taxpayer's Group, brought a petition of more than 200
signatures to the town clerk's office on Monday afternoon to force the
referendum. Some residents at the town meeting were angry about the petition
because they wanted individual items in the budget to be voted upon at the
town meeting and now, instead, they must cast a "yes" or "no" vote on the
entire budget.
The Sandy Hook Volunteer Fire Company brought their new fire engine to Edmond
Town Hall last weekend to show it to town dignitaries and their friends in
Hook & Ladder. It cost $45,000 and goes only four miles to the gallon, but
Police Commission Chairman George McLachlan, a H&L volunteer, commented that
it's just the right size for Newtown's narrow roads.
Monday, May 7, is election day in Newtown and 8,238 persons are eligible to
cast votes for town offices ranging from first selectman on down and to vote
on five proposed revisions to the town charter. Republican First Selectman
Frank DeLucia will face Democrat Gerald Frawley at the top of the ballot.
The Connecticut Mothers' Committee of American Mothers has announced the award
of Merit Mother for 1973 to Audrey Sherman Gaffney of Newtown. Mrs Gaffney is
the wife of Vincent P. Gaffney, who teaches mathematics at Newtown High
School, and she is the mother of four sons. The award was presented to Mrs
Gaffney by Gov Thomas Meskill in a ceremony in his office on April 25.
Volume 1 of the Encyclopedia America is missing from the Cyrenius H. Booth
Library, and the library staff would appreciate having it returned. The
encyclopedia set is a newly acquired one, and the return of the first volume
is vital.
It has been brought to the attention of The Bee by Chief of Police Louis
Marchese that some person is making calls in the name of the police department
and asking for protection money from local businessmen. One local businessman
reported the incident, saying the caller requested $175 but later reduced the
request to $27.50, to be put in the mailbox of the person receiving the call.
The caller does not represent the Police Department and any such calls should
be reported immediately.
MAY 7, 1948
Last Thursday evening's special town meeting lasted four minutes. It was
attended by eight persons, including the first selectman and the town clerk
and the six "interested" citizens, four of whom were asked to lend their
attendance so that the necessary business could be dispatched. Richard Lane
acted as chairman, with Town Clerk Miss May Sullivan as clerk. First Selectman
W.W. Holcome presided. The meeting approved a special appropriation of $800
for the Town Aid Fund and a special appropriation of $2,000 for the State Aid
Fund, and that the Board of Selectmen be authorized, instructed and empowered
to repay the loans of $800 and $2,000 from the budget for the fiscal year
which will begin on October 1, 1948.
Irate housewives who have answered their doorbells a dozen times in the past
few days to find eager ticket sellers on their doorsteps know that the Mardi
Gras is coming! The event planned by the young people of the Newtown
Congregational Church is fast becoming an annual tradition. During the weeks
ahead residents will buy votes for the girl of their choice and one will
become the queen of the Mardi Gras festival. Candidates who have already
received votes for this year's competition are Loretta Nichols, Joan Weeks,
Scotty Ferrier, Ruth Mayer, Patty Smith, Bernice Carty, Betty Platt, Gertrude
Diamond, Caroline Stokes, Lys Jackson, Carmen Rommel, Verne Knapp, Vivian
Mayer, Dorothy Baker, and Virginia MacKenzie. Voting is being done at The Kegs
restaurant (on the corner of Church Hill Road and Queen Street).
Anyone who plays a musical instrument is invited to bring both himself and the
instrument to the Newtown Congregational Church next Friday evening. At that
time amateur musicians, young and old, male and female, will assemble in the
social room of the church and Mario di Cecco, conductor of the Newtown
Orchestral Society orchestra, will be on hand to direct. This is a preliminary
rehearsal, the first of many to follow each Friday night until June 24, at
which time the orchestra will perform in its first concert of the season.
Richard F.Gretsch, who has been assistant to the president of the Danbury &
Bethel Gas & Electric Company in Danbury, has been elected president of the
company to succeed James L. Stone, who retired on May 1 after 43 years in the
public utility field. Mr Gretsch becomes one of the youngest presidents of a
major utility company in the United States. He was born in Brooklyn in 1908,
earned a degree in mechanical engineering at the University of Michigan in
1930 and a law degree at St John's in 1936. During his career, he has been
involved in the management of various public utility properties in the East
and the Midwest. He served in the Army Corps of Engineers in World War II and
in 1945 married Barbara Jean Ininger, who was then a lieutenant in the WAC.
They have three children.
The retirement of Mrs Roger Howson of Newtown from the presidency of the
Planned Parenthood League (PPL) of Connecticut was announced at the league's
annual meeting in the Hotel Elton in Waterbury on April 29. Under Mrs Howson's
leadership, the PPL gave strong support to the Alsop Bill, which was
introduced into the 1947 General Assembly, to permit licensed physicians to
prescribe birth control measures to married patients where danger to the life
and health indicate this to be necessary. Mrs Howson was elected to the
presidency of the league to fill an unexpired term in 1946 and was re-elected
in 1947.
Henry L. McCarthy was elected warden in the annual Borough election Tuesday,
succeeding Arthur J. Smith, Jr, who declined renomination after having served
in that capacity for 14 years. Other officers elected include Miss May E.
Sullivan, clerk; William Hunter, burgess; Walter L. Glover, burgess; Judge
Walter A. Reynolds, treasurer; Charles F. Cavanaugh, tax collector; Gilbert
Aiken and Raymond T. Connor, assessors; F.H. Duncombe and Joseph Hellauer,
board of tax review; William Hunter, registrar of voters; John Carlson, pound
keeper; John Carlson, Judge Walter A. Reynolds and Judge Paul V. Cavanaugh,
fire inspectors.
Harry Greenman, injured April 20 in a fall from a ladder at Lovell's Garage
where he is manager, is progressing satisfactorily at Danbury Hospital where
he has been a patient since the accident. He is looking forward to his release
from the hospital, which should be at the end of June.
Marking his fourth year as resident officer in Newtown, Detective Sergeant
Robert H. Murphy of the State Police was given a testimonial dinner at the
Pines Inn on Wednesday evening, an affair attended by nearly 150 townspeople.
John T. McCarthy served in the capacity of toastmaster. In appreciation for
his service to the community, Judge Paul V. Cavanaugh presented Sergeant
Murphy with a $250 savings bond, a gift of those who had assembled to do him
honor.
