Monthly Archives: July 2013

’83 Orphenians Ride The Chariot — Again

Most high school reunions include lots of laughter, drinking, reminiscing, drinking and dancing. Plus drinking.

The Staples Class of 1983 — well, some of them — added singing.

Thanks to current choral director Luke Rosenberg, they didn’t have to rely on (perhaps) fading memories. He provided Roger Wolfe with music.

Before last night’s big event, former members of the elite a cappella group got together at the Westport Inn to bring back their favorite songs —  including the famous, always-concert-ending “Ride the Chariot” spiritual.

It was a blast. Click here for a video of the Orphenians — 30 years later.

Among the Orphenians participating in the reunion songfest: susan Baer, Kristen Gehr Carley, Anne Burke Conley, Lisa Jones, Jack Rose, Sara Schapiro, Elizabeth Owens Wakefield, Cahterine Webster, Andy Weeks, David Witzel and Roger Wolfe

Orphenians at the reunion songfest included Susan Baer, Kristen Gehr Carley, Anne Burke Conley, Lisa Jones, Jack Rose, Sara Schapiro, Elizabeth Owens Wakefield, Cahterine Webster, Andy Weeks, David Witzel and Roger Wolfe.

Browsing By The River

Small tents shade artists and artwork, while huge tents welcome book lovers this weekend.

Westport is buzzing with the 40th annual Downtown Merchants Association Art Show in Parker Harding Plaza. Just a few steps across the Post Road, the library sponsors its yearly book sale.

The art show runs until 5 p.m. today. The book sale continues tomorrow; on Tuesday (9 a.m.-1 p.m.), everything is free (though donations would be nice).

Former second selectman Betty Lou Cummings stopped by some striking animal art.

Former 2nd selectman Betty Lou Cummings stops by some striking animal art.

Lou Frederick takes a break from selling handcrafted jewelry.

Lou Frederick takes a break from selling handcrafted jewelry.

"Don't mime me," this guy says.

“Don’t mime me,” this guy says.

The library takes its "big tent" mission literally.

The library takes its “big tent” mission literally.

40 Years Later, Green’s Farms Renews Shopping Center Battle

In 1971 the owner of a 6-acre vacant lot on the Post Road, between South Morningside and Church Street, proposed a new shopping center.

It would include a supermarket, drugstore, retail shops and 366-seat movie theater. Plans included a driveway on the southern part of the property — directly on South Morningside. Directly opposite Green’s Farms Elementary School.

The Green’s Farms PTA swung into action. They quickly got 700 signatures — from all over town — on a petition that claimed the driveway would be hazardous to children. (The PTA was not against the shopping center itself.)

Their protests led to a new traffic plan. For 4 decades, traffic from (then) Waldbaum’s and the Post Cinema, and (now) Barnes & Noble and Pompanoosuc Mills, has exited only onto the Post Road and Church Street.

The main entrance and exit for Post Plaza Shopping Center.

The main entrance and exit for Post Plaza Shopping Center.

But everything old is new again. This Tuesday (July 23, 7:30 p.m., Town Hall) the Zoning Board of Appeals will consider a zoning variance. It’s a request — you knew this was coming — for a new commercial driveway to be built in the rear of the Post Plaza Shopping Center, onto South Morningside. Directly across from the Green’s Farms School bus exit.

Owners estimate that 20% of shopping center traffic — cars, commercial vehicles, and delivery and garbage trucks — would use the new driveway.

RTM members John Suggs, Dewey Loselle and Matt Mandell are not pleased. They’re concerned about safety — particularly at school pickup and drop-off times, when vehicles parked on both sides of Morningside make sight lines difficult.

A truck navigates through cars parked on both sides of South Morningside Drive...

A truck navigates through cars parked on both sides of South Morningside Drive…

Morningside is also clogged for events like plays, Back to School Nights and softball games.

Opponents point out too that Westport prohibits the construction of a driveway within 400 feet of a school driveway. That ordinance was waived in January by the Board of Selectmen. No RTM member or  Green’s Farms Association member attended the meeting. The selectmen have been asked to rehear the matter for several reasons, one of which was that the public notice was “deficient.”

The State Traffic Administration — which in 1971 forbid construction of the driveway, thanks in part to the PTA petition — has been asked whether it is legal for the town to now permit the driveway, without seeking state approval.

...and a bus squeezes through, while a student crosses the street.

…and a bus squeezes through, while a student crosses the street.

Back in 1971, Green’s Farms PTA president Penny Heatley said, “We want to be certain that there will be no access to South Morningside Drive across from the school, even if the present owners were to sell out to somebody else in a year or two.”

Or even if the current owners, 40 years later, decided to try the same thing.

Love Was In The Air

The story of last night’s Compo Beach wedding goes way beyond the fact that it took place on the hottest day of the year.

Edwina Wilson and Matt Love were the lucky (if broiling) couple. Both are longtime Westporters.

Edwina’s grandfather — the late Ed Kahn — was chairman of the Board of Finance, and an RTM moderator. He helped the town purchase Longshore (where — of course — the post-wedding reception was held). Edwina (who was named for Ed) is in veterinary school in California.

Both she and Matt (a Staples grad) worked at the Saugatuck Rowing Club. He is pursuing a Ph.D. in psychology.

So — one day soon — they will be Dr. and Dr. Love.

How hot cool is that?!

Every wedding needs a door for the bridge to walk through -- even on the beach. (Photo by Betsy P. Kahn)

Every wedding needs a door for the bride to walk through — even on the beach. (Photo by Betsy P. Kahn)

Guests with parasols, hoping for a breeze. (Photo by Betsy P. Kahn)

Guests with parasols, hoping for a breeze. (Photo by Betsy P. Kahn)

The bride and groom don't mind the heat -- they've got each other! (Photo by Betsy P. Kahn)

The bride and groom don’t mind the heat — they’ve got each other! (Photo by Betsy P. Kahn)

A smashing end to the ceremony: the traditional breaking of the glass. (Photo by Betsy P. Kahn)

A smashing end to the ceremony: the traditional breaking of the glass. (Photo by Betsy P. Kahn)

Soothing Sherwood Mill Pond

After a week of searing temperatures and stifling humidity, it’s nice to sit back and relax.

And there’s no better way than by looking at Jeff Northrup’s photos of the Sherwood Mill Pond.

Sherwood Mill Pond - by Jeff Northrup 1

He and his family own the house on Hummock Island, and the oyster seed boat that travels back and forth between it and shore.

Enjoy these 2 special shots of a view beloved by generations of local walkers, artists and photographers.

Sherwood Mill Pond - by Jeff Northrup 2

A Perilous Crossing

An alert — and frightened, and angry — “06880” reader writes:

What’s with the crosswalk at Landsdowne, near Stop & Shop?  I was walking there yesterday. I pressed the button on the side of the road, at which point little tiny lights started flashing. I stepped gingerly into the road.

A truck barreled through the crosswalk, even though I was several feet into it.  Do drivers truly not know what the little flashing lights, white painted lines and fluorescent green signs with a silhouette of a walker mean?  Isn’t it a state law that drivers must stop if a person is in the crosswalk? A federal law?

Whether it’s a law or not, drivers — especially on Westport roads — don’t always care.

The crosswalk sign -- with tiny lights -- at tje Landsdowne condominiums, opposite 1655 Post Road East.

The crosswalk sign — with tiny lights — at the Landsdowne condominiums, opposite 1655 Post Road East.

“Gingerly” is the right way to proceed. Also “carefully.” And “with the expectation no one will stop, and I could die.”

It’s happened here before. Billy Ford — a popular Westport schools custodian and Trader Joe’s worker — was killed on December 23, 2008. He had just gotten off a bus, and was crossing the street to his home at 1655 Post Road East.

The crosswalk — with blinking lights that can’t be seen in daytime — might actually do more harm than good. Pedestrians may have a false sense of security after pushing the button.

Drivers — distracted by all the signs and traffic on this stretch of the traffic-light-and-stop-sign-less road, and by their cellphone, GPS, car entertainment system and god knows what else — may not see the crosswalk in time.

Or the pedestrian in it.

24 Hours After Our “06880” Party…

…and at the exact same spot on Compo Beach, there was a wedding.

Preparing for the ceremony.

Preparing for the ceremony.

We baked last night — in shoes and sandals. Our cake melted pretty quickly.

I can’t imagine what it’s like today, in a wedding dress.

Oh no! The wedding cake!…………..

“The Girl Next Door” Comes Home

What do you get when you cross “The Girl Next Door” with hardcore porn?

“The Girl Next Door XXX — A Hardcore Parody,” of course.

And of course — this being “06880” — there’s a tight Westport connection.

"The Girl Next Door"The Girl Next Door” — a 2004 film — was directed by 1990 Staples grad Luke Greenfield. The plot — a teenager’s dream comes true when a former porn star moves next door and they fall in love — was rooted in Greenfield’s home town. Twenty years earlier, Marilyn Chambers earned worldwide fame as the Ivory Snow girl-turned-“Behind the Green Door” star.

Mike Kulich — a Staples 2004 grad — is now the owner of Assence Films, which specializes in exactly what “Assence” sounds like. He just gave the green door light to “The Girl Next Door XXX.”

According to a press release — yes, porn companies send out PR —

Assence Films is known for its more hardcore gonzo-type movies, but has released successful parodies in the past including “Vote For Rush,” a take on conservative Rush Limbaugh and what he does with sexy coeds once he goes off the air.

Describing “The Girl Next Door,” Mike says:

 Luke Greenfield’s movie was my childhood. We grew up in the same town, we went to the same school, and we did the same things. There are so many aspects of the movie that I lived: late nights at the Sherwood Diner, evading Robocop to get to the beach, crazy road trips with my buddies, and of course dreams of making it big in the adult entertainment business. This movie is not only going to be a great hardcore parody, but a homage to my childhood in Westport.

Westport Cinema Initiative: are you listening?

Dave Ruden’s Sports Report

As a Union College junior, Dave Ruden’s courses were filled with reading. So he took creative writing, just so he wouldn’t have to read more.

But the professor saw in Dave a writing talent the 1978 Staples grad had never seen in himself. The instructor encouraged Dave to write about his passion — sports — for the school paper.

“That was probably the worst journalism ever,” Dave recalls. But it launched him on a career in sports that took him to CBS, the New York Times and ESPN.

Now Dave is leaving the Stamford Advocate. He’s creating a blog — “The Ruden Report” — that he hopes becomes the go-to spot for Fairfield County sports fans.

Dave Ruden, in one of the many high school gyms he knows well.

Dave Ruden, in one of the many high school gyms he knows well.

His departure from the Advocate — where he has earned a reputation as a fair, sensitive, talented and insightful writer, specializing in high school sports — is amicable. He loves the paper; it has treated him well, allowing him to cover a wide variety of events (including the World Series and Final Fours).

But the paper’s sports coverage has shrunk — there are now 3 staff writers, down from 9 — and Ruden wants to delve into the human interest stories, profiles and commentary he loves. He’s seen the success of his “Overtime” blog — and he realizes print is not the only way to get news anymore.

This is the 2nd time Dave has left the Advocate for cyberspace. In 1997 — after working hard at his craft, teaching himself by writing often and reading masters like Dave Anderson and Red Smith — he joined ESPN as an online producer.

“It was the most miserable 6 months of my professional life,” he says. “I was hired to write, but they never let me.”

Back at the Advocate, he gravitated to high school sports.

Dave Ruden, at work on the FCIAC sidelines.

Dave Ruden, at work on the FCIAC sidelines.

“I love the FCIAC — the athletes, coaches and administrators,” Dave says, referring to the Fairfield County Interscholastic Athletic Conference.

“I’ve developed close relationships with the people I cover. There’s nothing more satisfying than making a kid who will never play anything after high school feel special, or having someone tell me they’ve got my stories in their scrapbook.”

“The Ruden Report” debuts the 1st week of September. Dave will continue the popular Player and Team of the Week polls from his current blog. He’ll also host a weekly FCIAC football show, highlighting teams, players, coaches, even referees and trainers.

Though Dave is always objective, he holds a soft spot for his native Westport.

“It’s special. It’s my home,” he admits. “It’s where I picked up my love for soccer. I played as a sophomore, and probably missed more goals than anyone in Staples history. But I was proud to be in the locker room for Mr. Loeffler’s 200th victory as a coach.”

Dave's current logo

Dave’s current logo

He calls Westport’s sports scene “very vibrant and diverse.” He points to success in so many different sports, and notes that youth sports are “huge. I played Little League and rec basketball. It’s great to see kids are still doing all that.”

Dave has always reached out to high school students. He advises 2 high school newspapers, and consults for a 3rd. He’ll keep doing that, and will also offer opportunities to high school photographers and videographers.

He’s lined up investors, but the business model is based on advertising. He’s developed a very loyal following, and is gratified that advertisers are signing up for “The Ruden Report.”

Readers are sure to follow. After 30 years here, Dave Ruden has developed a distinctive voice. He provides important insights, and a unique perspective on local sports.

Starting in September, it’s all available on a new, 24/7/365 platform.

Art From The Heart

Let it never be said that Miggs  Burroughs does not have a sense of humor.

The artist/graphic designer/obsessive pro bono logo contributor to Westport organizations sent out this email alert today:

This weekend (Saturday, July 20, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., and Sunday, July 21, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.), I will be in the Westport Fine Arts Festival, administering free CPR for up to 1 minute, to anyone collapsing from heat stroke in my booth (#69).

If you already own a piece of my work, I will administer CPR for up to 3 minutes. It’s a win-win for everyone.

At least, I think he’s kidding.

Miggs Burroughs with his artwork, prior to saving lives.

Miggs Burroughs with his artwork, prior to saving lives.