Hurried off after the cartoon ended. Thankfully, considering I took my bike today, I did get to work on time. To be honest, I could have been infinitely late. We were pin-drop quiet for most of the morning. There were barely any carts to gather. It's the end of the month and the day after the last major holiday of the spring. By the time it started picking up a little, I was done. I was in and out with no trouble whatsoever.
I took the long way down Nicholson Road, over the hill next to the railroad tracks, and down Atlantic Avenue over to the White Horse Pike. I can't remember the last time I ate at Jalapeno's Bar and Grill. They were quiet and dark as can be at 1:30. I think there was one other guy there. I enjoyed the chipotle chicken quesadilla lunch special with their home-made tortilla chips in air-conditioned silence.
Since it was two blocks away, I had dessert at an equally quiet Dunkin' Donuts. I'm surprised at how many donuts they had left. I guess people had enough desserts at their barbecue yesterday. I got the same Marshmallow Vanilla Matcha Latte I did last time (and it was just as good this time), but since they didn't have the fruit punch donut, I went with a nice, simple cruller instead.
Headed to Thomas Sharp after that and got there just in time. We had 23 kids today, 9 at my table. Thankfully, they were in the cafeteria when I arrived. The music class had just finished their annual end of the year concert outside. I had no trouble in the bathroom or with snack time. They were a little unruly in the cafeteria after they ate, mainly because we're almost out of paper to color on and they all wanted to color. The sharpener was unplugged - I had to sharpen colored pencils in the library.
I'm glad we were able to get outside a little early today. The weather was gorgeous. Humid, breezy, and a little cloudy, but much warmer, in the upper 70's. They all had a blast running around, and swinging later when enough had gone home. It was Hat Day. Most kids had brought some kind of hat, from the boy who brought a paper chef's toque to the younger boy who had a Lake George sunhat and the girl who had a tye-dye baseball cap. I kept telling some of the older boys not to fill their hats with mulch and throw them. Honestly, other than that, we had a great time. Those who weren't throwing hats or swinging danced to "Ghostbusters," "Summertime" by DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince, "I Like to Move It" from Madagascar, "Try Everything" from Zootopia, "Zoo" from Zootopia 2, songs from Trolls and KPop Demon Hunters, and a plethora of Taylor Swift hits. One boy even found a ladybug and hoped for good luck.
We took them inside around quarter of 5 and settled them down at a table coloring. That lasted for all of 10 minutes before they saw the older kids running around on the blacktop and ran out to join them. There were 4 younger kids and 6 older ones left playing soccer on the blacktop and shooting baskets before I headed home.
Took the trash out when I got home, then went straight into Match Game '74. Most of the night was devoted to the week with Morey Amsterdam and comedian George Kirby, who sat in Charles Nelson Reilly's seat while he was out sick. Admittedly, between Amsterdam's wisecracks and Kirby's imitations, it was one of the funnier weeks of the year. Charles returned the next week, just in time to see Scoey Mitchelll make his debut on the show.
Finished the night and the Memorial Day holiday with the Family Feud Armed Services Week tournament from 1990. Military build-up was just starting in the Middle East when these episodes debuted, making these battles more important and tense than ever. Though the Air Force made a good showing and the Army did well, for the second year in a row, it was the Marines who played the hardest and won the biggest...though ironically, they had more trouble with the last Fast Money...
Honor those who fought and died in the First Gulf War with this intense and very funny week of military Feuds!