Special to the Sun
Eighty-eight year old Betty Windsor posed for the Halloween costume contest with fists forward and left leg kicked high. She entered the Edmond Senior Center contest on Friday wearing Chuck Norris gloves, an Apollo’s muscle shirt and kick boxing specialty shoes.
Betty knows her kick boxing, having participated in the sport from ages 76 to 82 at the Edmond YMCA. She demonstrated for other costumed seniors the correct way to kick with the ball of her foot and the flat of her heel.
Betty’s friend Margaret Moberly initially protected her identity by wearing gloves to hide her wedding ring and refusing to talk. Margaret, dressed as a clown, added flair to her costume by demonstrating her light-up yo-yoing skills and blowing through a Donald Duck quacker roped around her neck.
“The last time I wore this costume was in 1986,” said Margaret, “when I rode an elementary school bus as a monitor.”
As the two visited, a crowd-stealing green gecko entered the room. Erleen Massey said she made her gecko costume from scratch to compete against Norman family members and friends at the center.
“It took me a month on and off to make this,” Erleen said. She painted nightlights from Dollar Tree to make the gecko’s realistic eyes. “I had just finished an acrylic paint class here at the center,” she said.
Dressed as a gypsy, Judith Perry made a variety of offers to the audience.
“For a dollar, I will read your palm. For a dollar, I’ll let you pet my snake,” Judith said. “Or, I’ll buy your vote for a dollar.”
Judith made her gypsy skirt from men’s silk ties that she bought at garage sales over the years. “I have worn this skirt on the street for a while,” she said. “I get my mind set to wear it, and go right on.”
Judith’s snake started as a stick she picked up in the woods to use as a cane. “I made the cane into a snake 15 to 20 years ago,” she said. At her home, the snake “sits in a corner and watches over my books. I don’t want anybody getting my books.”
“Now that I’m a widow, I’m going to have fun and act like a kid,” said Lavina Gustafson. When not playing Elvira, she comes to the Senior Center to sew with the Tuesday quilting class. Lavina made a convincing “heart-on-fire” Elvira, just as Mary Munro made a provocative vixen.
After a parading to the “Monster Mash,” the costumed seniors waited while audience members filled out secret ballots.
And the winners are:
• First place: Earldean Brokaw, grouchy old man;
• Second place: Mary Munro, vixen; and
• Third Place: Judith Perry, gypsy.
Features
Competitive seniors don creative costumes
- Features
-
-
Operating on feelings can be catastrophic
How they raise their kids is a touchy subject for lots of parents.
-
Take care with puppy vaccinations
Q: My son recently bought a 3-month-old mixed Rottweiler-German Shepherd pup from a dog breeder near Tecumseh. He was assured by the breeder that the pup had received a 5 in 1 vaccination two weeks earlier, but the pup got sick about a week after he took it home.
-
Edmond Beautiful plans Spring Garden Tour
Edmond Beautiful Inc. will have a Spring Garden Tour of the 2011 “Yard of the Week” winners May 26-27. The “Yard of the Week” program recognizes yards and gardens during the summer months for outstanding flowers and landscaping.
-
Sometimes it’s easy to let go of the familiar
Remember the clack-clack of the lawn mower you used to push over your yard every week or so before someone finally figured out how to attach a gas engine to the contraption?
-
‘Attachment parenting’ fad benefits only guru
The cover story in last week’s (May 21, 2012) Time Magazine is all about “why attachment parenting drives some mothers to extremes — and how Dr. Bill Sears became their guru.” That is the article’s subtitle. All I can say, somewhat hopefully, is “at last.”
-
Protect pets from poisons in the yard, garden
After an unseasonably warm winter, many gardens and yards around the country are growing and blossoming well ahead of schedule
-
Norman church keeps up hourly adoration
For nearly 10 years, someone has been present every hour of the day, every day of the year inside the chapel less than a block north of St. Joseph’s Catholic Church.
-
Protecting pets from poisons in the yard, garden
After an unseasonably warm winter, many gardens and yards around the country are growing and blossoming well ahead of schedule. Outdoor enthusiasts who are also pet owners are delighted with the early onset of spring, enjoying their outdoor living spaces while watching their pets run and play.
-
Norman church keeps up hourly adoration
For nearly 10 years, someone has been present every hour of the day, every day of the year inside the chapel less than a block north of St. Joseph’s Catholic Church.
Deacon Jeff Willard said when the “Perpetual Adoration” program was started at St. Joseph’s, he thought it might last six months at best. -
Fatherhood illuminates relationship to God
Like most men, when I got married I didn’t know what I was signing up for. I didn’t expect it to change me much. In fact, it wasn’t until we had children that I realized how different I had become. I didn’t sign up to have squalling infants keep me up for hours night after night. I sure didn’t sign up for diaper duty. And the one thing I definitely wasn’t expecting was that these little sewage-secreting noise machines would have cables jacked straight into my heart. What they wanted, I wanted them to have. It wasn’t even a choice.
- More Features Headlines
-
Operating on feelings can be catastrophic

