Headed out after that. I was slightly late. Not a good thing, since we were busy all morning. I have no idea why we were busy. Memorial Day Weekend is next weekend. The only things going on this weekend are various yard sales and farm markets. I was behind on carts for a lot of the day. At least it was windy and chilly but not bad. The sun was in and out at that point. The clouds wouldn't start really clearing out until after I finished work and was making my way to Oaklyn.
(I also got my schedule before I left work. In good news, I'll have plenty of time to rest next week and will have no problem getting to Thomas Sharp's half-day next Friday and the Collingswood May Fair on Saturday. The only days I work at the Acme next week are Sunday and Wednesday, and they're both short hours. The head bagger is actually bagging, and a lot of college kids just got out of school. It does mean my Acme paycheck will be lousy, but it also means I'll have a chance to do more research.)
I had a quick lunch at Phillies Phatties, about a block from the school on West Clinton Avenue. They were surprisingly busy for 1:30, mainly with local families. I watched a darling little miss climb around (and try to climb into the back of) her stroller while enjoying a slice of basil and mozzarella and a slice of mushroom pizza and a can of Diet Pepsi.
Since I had plenty of time, I dodged road repair on West Greenwood as I made my way down to Dunkin' Donuts. I still had that $5 gift card I got for Teacher Appreciation Week last Friday. They were dead as a doornail. Not even anyone in the drive through. I enjoyed a fruit punch donut (regular donut with very very pink fruity icing and crunchy topping) and Marshmallow Vanilla Matcha Latte (green tea with marshmallow topping, almond milk, and a shot of vanilla). Oooh, yum! They were both really good. The donut was a little dry, but the icing did taste like fruit punch. The latte was smooth and creamy and very sweet with the marshmallow topping.
Instead of hanging around Dunkin', I just left for Thomas Sharp early. I made the right call. There was no one there to greet the kids when I came in. The head teacher called out. Fortunately, the other teachers weren't far behind me. We had 26 kids today, 9 at my table, and they were absolutely wild. Two of the little girls went to the bathroom on their own without asking an adult. I found them in a stall, flushing the toilet and giggling. I climbed under the door and into the stall to tell them not to hide and why this wasn't a good idea. Later, they hid under one of the cafeteria tables again and couldn't be coaxed out for anything. I tried to pull one out, and she bonked her head on the table. I gently held them on my lap while I apologized for pulling at her, rubbed her head, and pointed out that bonked heads were a big part of why they aren't supposed to play under the tables.
It was almost 4 when we finally got them all outside. On one hand, they did argue over the swings and kept trying to go on them when there were too many kids around. On the other hand, when they did get on, they were hilarious. Near the end of my shift, I pushed a boy and a girl who kept laughing and saying they were going higher and faster than the other, even though I was pushing them about the same height and speed. They were sooo funny! The other teachers had just taken the remaining 3 younger kids to play with the 4 older kids still in the cafeteria when I left.
Went straight into Price Is Right and Match Game '73 when I got home. Tonight's episodes were entirely devoted to the week with "Mama" Cass Elliot that also gave us the debut of game show host Bill Cullen on the show. It's too bad Cass didn't live to come back. Other than some unnecessary weight jokes from Richard Dawson, she seemed to have a good time that week and played pretty well. Brett Somers spent the week arguing with her then-husband Jack Klugman in the seat next to her (for the last time until 1978).
Finished the night with Murder She Wrote. It's "A Fashionable Way to Die" when Jessica attends a fashion show put on by her dress designer friend Eva Taylor (Barbara Rush) and they find her benefactor dead in his hotel room shortly afterwards. Turns out the gentleman had been extorting cash from just about everyone around him, including Eva, a popular model (Tania Elg), and the daughter of a cabaret singer (Juliet Prowse). Jessica has to convince the local gendarme that he has the wrong woman with the help of two maids who heard gunshots 20 minutes apart.