Woodstock Public Schools
Monday: Hamburgers, baked beans, fruit. Tuesday: Waffles, sausage, fruit. Wednesday: Chicken tenders, dipping sauce, mashed potatoes, broccoli, fruit. Thursday - Elementary: Field Day - rain date will be tomorrow. Thursday - Middle: Pizza, carrot sticks, ranch dip, fruit. Friday - Elementary: Pizza, carrot sticks, ranch dip, fruit. Friday - Middle: Field Day.
Monday, June 19:
Elementary: Half day - Hot dogs, oven fries, fruit. Middle: Half day - no lunch.
Putnam Elementary/Middle
School's Out. Happy Summer. Serving FREE Summer Meals June 12-Aug. 11. Juneteenth and July 4 holiday, all sites closed. Call 211 for more information.
Putnam High
School's Out. Happy Summer. Serving FREE Summer Meals June 12-Aug. 11. Juneteenth and July 4 holiday, all sites closed. Call 211 for more information.
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Legal Notice
PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
Town of Pomfret
Planning and Zoning Commission
The Pomfret Planning & Zoning Commission will hold the following Public Hearing at its
meeting on June 21, 2023, starting at 7:00 PM.
1. First Selectman, Town of Pomfret Planning & Zoning Commission, 5 Haven Road, text amendment updating Section 6 of the Subdivision Regulations – Special Flood Hazard Areas/Floodways.
Town of Pomfret
Dated this 24th day
of May 2023
Lynn L. Krajewski,
Clerk
Planning & Zoning Commission
June 7, 2023
June 14, 2023
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Golf fund-raiser set
The Pomfret Community School Class of 2024 is having a charity Golf Tournament at 11 a.m. June 25 at the Dudley Hill Golf Club at Nichols College.
It’s a shotgun scramble tournament and its $100 per person. LMT Oil in Charlton is the main sponsor. There will be a closest to the pin and longest drive contest with prizes. Big Boy’s Toys in Pomfret is sponsoring a hole-in-one contest with a chance to win a Landmaster Utility Vehicle.
The tournament proceeds will benefit the students of Pomfret Community School Class of 2024 — more than 40 students — who will travel to Washington, D.C., next May. This is an annual trip PCS students, teachers and parent chaperones have done every year for at least 40 years, except for the COVID years. Atticus Paine is the second generation of “Pomfret-ite” that will go on the journey. His father, Travis Paine, PCS Class of 1993, and his brother, Seth Paine, PCS Class of 1987 both remember their trips to D.C. fondly. “It’s the first time as a kid that we traveled somewhere, without our parents, and experienced life outside the walls of Pomfret,” said Travis Paine. “It’s a unique experience,” he said.
The golf tournament is open to all, golfer or not! They will also welcome sponsors and donations. For additional information please see the website: www.pcsgolffordc.org.
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I like my food spicy. That is, I like some spice; enough to hit the back of my throat with bold flavor, but not too much so that I can’t taste anything else. If my spice preference could be likened to a jar of salsa, I am a medium. Given this, whenever I see a spicy red hot pepper or other spicy indication next to a menu item that I am considering, I feel that it is best to ask the server how spicy the item actually is because spicy, is really a subjective term. For example, my medium level of spice might feel like extra super-hot to someone who doesn’t like any spice flavor whatsoever. Unfortunately, the subjectivity of spice flavor also holds true to the chef in the kitchen who is preparing the meal and what may be mild in spice one day, can end up being quite hot the next…And I hate it when that happens!
I have a favorite meal at a restaurant that is, typically, not very spicy. However, I always ask for the array of house made spice sauces so that I can add my own level of spice to it. I do this so often that I have learned which sauce is my favorite and just how much to add to my meal so that it is spicy, but not too spicy. However, just recently, when I added my small, but not too small, dollop of spice to my meal, mixed it around and started eating, I quickly realized that my meal was now VERY spicy. Eating it made my eyes water and my nose run so much so that didn’t really enjoy my meal as it felt more like excretion management rather than eating.
I didn’t want to blame my favorite restaurant because my food being too spicy was a direct result of me making it too spicy. I had become too complacent in ordering the same meal and adding the same amount of the same spice. I no longer tasted any of the spices or added just a little, stirred it around and then tasted my meal to see if I needed to add any more. It was a spicy wake-up call to not only my mouth, but also to my head as I realized that my consistent meal selection and behavior had become boring, or dare I admit it, even a bit bland. Because beyond just liking my food a bit spicy, I also like my life to be a bit spicy. I like to wear dark-colored clothing but LOVE a bold and colorful shoe. I like a danceable pop song but LOVE a classic ACDC rock tune. I enjoy a solid blue square ski run but LOVE the challenge of a black diamond. Ultimately, the next time I went to my favorite restaurant, I tried something new and added just a little bit of spice to it. It was delicious.
Mild? Medium!
Kathy Naumann, possessor of NATURALLY curly hair and the understanding that you can’t control everything!
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