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WAY WE WERE FOR JUNE 27, 1997
JUNE 30, 1972
Newtown voters went to the polls on June 28 and elected Frank R. DeLucia as
their first selectman. The vote tally, including absentee ballots, was 2,641
for Mr DeLucia and 1,984 for his Democratic opponent, James M. Costello, a 3-2
margin of victory. The special election had been petitioned for by the
Democratic party following Mr DeLucia's appointment as interim first selectman
following the death of First Selectman Timothy B. Treadwell in February. Mr
DeLucia had first received the endorsement of the Republican Town Committee
and then was elected by the elected officials of his party. He will serve
until May 3, 1973, the time for Newtown's regular elections.
Rain postponed graduation exercises for Newtown High School seniors and also
caused the ceremonies to be moved into the auditorium when they were finally
held on Friday evening, June 23. Dan W. Lufkin, commissioner of the state
Department of Environmental Protection, gave the commencement address,
comparing the work ahead for the seniors to the six mythical labors of
Hercules. Paul Shierloh was the valedictorian, Garry Ober was salutatorian and
Ruth Lawrence was class president.
Two meetings in succession Monday evening dealt with the transfers normally
required just before the end of the fiscal year. The Board of Selectmen met at
7 pm in the selectmen's office followed by a meeting of the Board of Finance
at 8 pm in the Mary Hawley Room at Edmond Town Hall. Both boards approved the
transfer of funds to pay for a new braking system for Hook & Ladder's Engine
11 and the truck should be on its way to Massachusetts for the work by the end
of this week. The discussion prompted W.W. Holcombe, finance board chairman,
to ask Fire Marshall Jim Cavanagh which fire district he, Mr Holcombe, lived
in. It seems that Mr Holcombe had been solicited for contributions by both the
Dodgingtown and Hawleyville districts. Mr Holcombe was urged to contribute to
both, although he lives in Dodgingtown. Most of the discussion was in jest,
referring to the fact that generations ago, residents of the Dodgingtown
district were said to claim Newtown residence when the Bethel tax collector
turned up, and Bethel residence when the Newtown tax collector arrived - hence
the area came to be called Dodgingtown.
At its meeting on Tuesday evening the Board of Education voted on budget cuts
and announced them to the public. The cuts amount to $115,000, an amount
designated by the town meeting of May 31. The proposed new position of plant
manager for the district schools will not be filled. Activities required for
this job will be handled by the business manager and the maintenance
supervisor. The vacant post of administrative assistant at the high school
will be filled by a counselor instead. Media responsibilities in the middle
school will be assigned to the librarian, freeing a teacher to return to
classroom duty. Two new library clerks were eliminated. There were also cuts
in department chairmen fees, special education stipends, teacher tuition,
adult education, educational supplies and testing.
The state Department of Transportation has again raised the possibility of a
rest area on I-84 within Newtown. This time the proposed site is only on the
westbound side in an area near the Brookfield line and Old Hawleyville Road.
This is an area proposed by the late First Selectman Timothy B. Treadwell
after the state announced plans to build a rest area on Currituck Road which
included a large section of the Andrew Sedor farm, and another similar rest
area on the eastbound side. More than 250 people attended a public hearing in
May 1970 to object to the plan. The new plan, for a rest area on the westbound
side only, would include parking for 54 cars and 15 trucks and would be
significantly smaller than the original proposal which would have accommodated
84 cars, 16 campers, 42 trucks, picnic tables, grills, an information building
and sanitary facilities.
JUNE 27, 1947
The Charles Howard Peck Post No 308, Veterans of Foreign Wars, this week
announced plans to erect a building on property now owned by the post directly
across Newtown-Bridgeport Road (Route 25) from the country club. Since the
post was founded in 1939, meetings have been held in various public and
private buildings in town. The VFW plans to erect this building in memory of
the Newtown servicemen who died in World War II.
Arthur Godfrey of early morning radio fame gave The Newtown Bee a "plug" one
morning last week and Mrs Bowen's "Hawley Manor Notes" got a laugh. In the
usual rush of writing the column, Mrs Bowen told of the Hadley's recent move
from the Manor into their remodeled home "which has been excessively
remodeled." She meant extensively remodeled, of course. In this week's "Notes"
Miss Sarah Drake and Mrs George Mently were the first occupants of the new
addition at the inn. The new connecting corridor on the second floor proved
itself welcome in the recent rainfall, allowing annex residents to go from one
building to another without stepping outdoors.
Mr and Mrs John J. Craffey of Boston announced the engagement of their
daughter, Jeanne Marguerite, to William A. Honan, Jr, son of Mr and Mrs
William A. Honan of Main Street. Miss Craffey graduated from St Gregory's High
School and is with the John Hancock Insurance Company. Mr Honan is an alumnus
of Providence College and is now doing graduate work with the New England
Institute of Anatomy and Embalming in Boston. He is a veteran of World War II,
having served 33 months with the US Navy. The wedding is expected to take
place in the late summer.
At a special town meeting at Edmond Town Hall last Friday night a motion was
passed to rescind the power given to the Permanent School Building Committee
in regard to the proposed addition and alterations to Hawley School because
the powers were considered too restrictive to enable the committee to do its
job properly. The committee now has the power and authority to draw on a sum
of $30,967 which is the accumulated unexpended balance of the town
appropriations. About 70 voters and tax payers attended the meeting.
The second annual Firemen's Carnival will begin next Monday night at the
Taylor Field behind Hawley School and continue through Saturday, July 5.
Besides nightly concerts by the Sandy Hook Fife, Drum & Bugle Corps, there
will be at least a dozen brilliantly lighted booths with games of skill and
chance. This year's committee reminds residents that the proceeds from the
carnival are the only funds to maintain much of the town's firefighting
apparatus and to equip its personnel. Improvements to Newtown's firefighting
facilities this year have included purchase of a new fire truck at Newtown
[Hook & Ladder] and the purchase and remodeling of Glover Hall for the Sandy
Hook fire company.
