Rushed out to the Acme to do this week's grocery shopping, cutting across the Newton Lake Park...and of course, when I arrived there, I realized I had forgotten my wallet. At least I figured it out before I went in the store and did actual shopping, but it was still embarrassing. I wouldn't have time to go back out. I'd have to do it after I finished at Thomas Sharp.
So I just rode back home, had lunch, and cheered myself up with an episode of Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In. This was the first episode of the sixth and final season, and it opens with cheerleaders introducing the newcomers on the show, among them eventual Match Game semi-regulars Sarah Kennedy and Patti Deusch. We kick off with a pretty darn decent Frank Sinatra imitator carrying off the lamppost he leans on, Patti's infamous Howard Cosell's mother imitation, Kent McCord and Martin Milner parodying their characters on the cop show Adam-12, and Willie Tyler and Lester spoofing All In the Family's theme song. John Wayne's a lot less happy when he's stuck in a goofy blue furry suit and has to give evidence to Dan Rowan.
I left a little bit early so I could get a free donut at Dunkin' Donuts for Free Donut Day. I think I should have left a lot earlier. I got the Pepsi Zero, but there was such a long line at the drive-in, I ran out of time to wait for my jelly donut and never did get it. All that made me late for work on a really hot day.
Which was absolutely not a good thing. Though we only had 21 kids, 8 at my table, they were all absolutely insane today. First of all, the head teacher called out. Second, though the older kids did go out on the blacktop for a while, it was too hot to take the pre-schoolers outside. (Especially since a lot of them were wearing long-sleeved flannel pajamas for Pajama Day.) We stayed in the cafeteria the entire afternoon. None of them would sit down. They ran around, shrieked, climbed under tables, ran into the music teacher's office that's blocked by heavy velvet curtains for a reason, argued loudly over the magnetic tiles (and broke them), and ripped the paper we taped down for them to draw on so badly, we cut word search papers in half for them to draw on instead.
They were really a pain in the rear in the bathrooms. Two of the girls took 10 minutes to stop giggling, whispering, and climbing under each other's stalls. I felt sorry for the poor girl who went like a normal person and had to wait for them to finish. I spent ten minutes yelling at them before they finally got out. I did figure out how to keep one of the older boys from wandering in the halls during bathroom breaks. I told him to be the line leader, which seemed to focus him, at least enough for him to help me get the others together.
I hadn't originally planned on eating dinner out, but I wasn't up to digging out something at home after all that. I just had a slice of vegetable and a slice of pepperoni at Crust N' Cravings on Collings Avenue. The pizza was good, as it always is, but I felt a little nervous there. They're across from the notoriously troubled Parkview Apartments on the White Horse Pike, and their clientele in the evenings and at night tend to be sketchy. I ate, watched Action News on Channel 6, and hurried out.
At least it was a nice day by then for the long ride back to the Westmont Acme. There's a lot of repairs and remodeling going on in Newton Lake Park right now. I think they're redoing the pavement on the back path, so I stuck to the front path, going past the playgrounds and pavilion, over the footbridge, and around a group of Canadian geese and their growing goslings looking for dinner. The weather was still pretty warm when I arrived in Westmont, sunny, hot, dry, and in the lower 90's.
Thank heavens the Acme wasn't busy when I arrived. I needed a lot. Restocked sliced chicken, yogurt, soda, granola, strawberries, granola bars, coconut milk, and cookies. I had an online coupon for a free Acme brand peanut butter, and another for the large container of blueberries. Found slices of lemon cake roll for really cheap in the bakery.
Had the cake rolls for dessert while watching the last episode this week of Match Game '74 when I got home. By the time I got in, they were starting the week with Broadway star Robert Morse and TV favorite Adrienne Barbeau. This was also the week where a diminutive red-headed contestant kept chasing Fannie and Brett every time he won, to the point where Richard and Charles had to stand up and defend their ladies' honor.
(Got my schedule at this point, too. In good news, next Saturday off. I'll be able to hit the farm market and explore another neighborhood in Cherry Hill. Bad news, not nearly enough hours. The head bagger must be back to her normal working hours, and given they're cutting hours, they probably don't want people working multiple jobs.)
Finished the night at YouTube for the Universal action movie Gypsy Wildcat. Gypsy dancer Carla (Maria Montez) intercepts a message from Michael, one of the King's men (Jon Hall) and a wicked Baron (Douglas Dumbrille) who is persecuting the gypsies. He knows a secret about Carla, one that he hopes will allow him to marry Carla and steal her fortune. Michael helps young Tonio (Peter Coe) rescue the gypsies from the dungeon and save Carla from a fate worse than death. I love all of the Montez-Hall action films I've seen, and while this isn't the greatest of them, it's still a lot of fun. If you love historical action with an Eastern European flair, you'll really get a kick out of this one.