Monthly Archives: March 2016

Hockey Heartbreak

A large crowd at the “Yale Whale” rink — including former players from Staples’ 1970s-era championship teams — roared with delight when the Wreckers’ co-op team scored this morning, just 35 seconds into the Division III state finals.

They agonized when the Stamford-Westhill squad grabbed a 4-1 2nd period lead.

They thrilled to a 3rd period comeback, as Staples knotted the score 4-4.

They were devastated when Stamford scored the game winner on a breakaway, with just 27 seconds left before overtime.

Though certainly not as devastated as the players, who came so far.

It was a whale of a game. Big props to the Wreckers.

You guys are champs in our eyes!

(Courtesy of WWPT radio)

(Courtesy of WWPT radio)

Let’s Go Wreckers!

The only thing more important than sleep to Westport teenagers on a Saturday morning is supporting their ice hockey team in the state finals.

Here’s the scene at 8 a.m. today, at the train station:

Staples fans headed to hockey finals

By train, fan bus and car, a large contingent is heading to Yale’s Ingalls Rink, for the 10 a.m. Division III championship match.

Can’t make the game? Tune in to WWPT-FM 90.3 — or click here for the livestream, anywhere in the world.

Enjoying A Max Shulman Revival

Back in the day, Westporter Max Shulman was a bestselling author. He also achieved success on Broadway — writing the book for the Tony-nominated “How Now, Dow Jones” — and in Hollywood, with many screenplays.

Max Shulman - How Now Dow JonesLike many authors who achieved fame more than a half century ago, Shulman’s books went out of print. Then, last month, Open Road Media made his works available once again, as e-books.  

In addition, the complete run of the hit TV show “The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis” — based on Shulman’s short stories — is now available on DVD.

“06880” contributor Fred Cantor recently reached asked Max’s son Dan — a Staples High School 1962 grad, now a prominent antitrust attorney in Minneapolis — for his recollections about growing up in Westport in the 1950s as the son of a celebrated writer. Here is Fred’s report:

Max Shulman moved his family to Westport in 1948, when Dan was 4. Max, the son of Russian immigrants, had grown up poor in St. Paul, Minnesota. He came east because the publishing industry was based in New York. Dan says Max considered this “a dream come true…a nice house in the country.” In 1950, Westport’s population was just 12,000.

Shulman was soon immersed in a community of fellow writers, and others who made their living in the arts.

Max Shulman at work.

Max Shulman at work.

Among his Westport friends were actor David Wayne and writers Jerome Weidman (the 1960 Pulitzer Prize co-winner for drama), Jean Stafford (a Pulitzer winner for fiction), Rod Serling and Peter De Vries.

Fairfielder Robert Penn Warren came over to the house too.

Dan was not star-struck seeing such famous people hanging out with his dad. He viewed them as “just family friends.”

But Dan recalls that it was “a big deal” when, at 10, he traveled with his family to Boston for the pre-Broadway run of a play his dad co-authored, “The Tender Trap.” Dan was thrilled to have dinner with the play’s co-star, Robert Preston. A year after the play reached Broadway, it was made into a movie starring Frank Sinatra and Debbie Reynolds.

While a number of Westport dads commuted to New York in the 1950s, Max Shulman had a much shorter commute: to a 2nd-floor office in the Sherwood Building on State Street (the Post Road), next to the Westport Bank & Trust building (now Patagonia). The office door had frosted glass, with “Max Shulman” painted on it.  It looked just like Sam Spade’s door in ‘The Maltese Falcon.”

Shulman used an Underwood typewriter, and was “a very meticulous writer. If he wrote 5 pages, that would have been a very good day.” He spent considerable time editing and rewriting.

Rally Round the Flag - 2

As part of that process in creating “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!” — the book set in Westport that led to the movie that led to Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward moving here — there was even a role for Dan. He read chapters aloud, so his father could hear how it sounded.

At age 13, he excitedly watched the book rise on The New York Times bestseller list.

Max Shulman’s writing was not done solely for publishers. In the 1950s, the Y held an annual father-son banquet. Each year Max wrote a comedy routine for Dan and his brother Bud to perform and sing. Here’s a sample:

A child should be polite.
His manners should be sweet.
A child should help old ladies
When they try to cross the street.
Especially a lady whose leg is in a cast,
‘Cause when you snatch her purse away,
She cannot run so fast.

You can’t keep a good humorist down.

Anthony Banbury: “The UN Is Failing”

Anthony Banbury served the United Nations as assistant secretary-general for field support. He dealt with the Haiti earthquake, conflict in the Central African Republic, and the prohibition of chemical weapons in Syria.

His latest assignment was as head of the UN Mission for Ebola Emergency Response.

Anthony Banbury

Anthony Banbury

He’s earned kudos for his work around the globe — and at UN headquarters in New York. He commuted there from his Westport home.

Now Banbury is leaving.

In a story to be published in this Sunday’s New York Times — and already posted online — Banbury writes: “I care deeply for the principles the United Nations is designed to uphold. And that’s why I have decided to leave.”

The Westporter describes a

blur of Orwellian admonitions and Carrollian logic that govern the place. If you locked a team of evil geniuses in a laboratory, they could not design a bureaucracy so maddeningly complex, requiring so much effort but in the end incapable of delivering the intended result. The system is a black hole into which disappear countless tax dollars and human aspirations, never to be seen again.

Banbury describes astonishingly, scarily frustrating incidents involving his Ebola work; lack of accountability; decisions driven more by “political expediency” than by the UN’s own values, and more.

A 10-year-old Ebola survivor, and Tony Banbury.

A 10-year-old Ebola survivor, and Tony Banbury.

He concludes:

I am hardly the first to warn that the United Nations bureaucracy is getting in the way of its peacekeeping efforts. But too often, these criticisms come from people who think the United Nations is doomed to fail. I come at it from a different angle: I believe that for the world’s sake we must make the United Nations succeed.

In the run-up to the election of a new secretary general this year, it is essential that governments, and especially the permanent members of the Security Council, think carefully about what they want out of the United Nations. The organization is a Remington typewriter in a smartphone world. If it is going to advance the causes of peace, human rights, development and the climate, it needs a leader genuinely committed to reform.

United Nations

The bureaucracy needs to work for the missions; not the other way around. The starting point should be the overhaul of our personnel system. We need an outside panel to examine the system and recommend changes. Second, all administrative expenses should be capped at a fixed percentage of operations costs. Third, decisions on budget allocations should be removed from the Department of Management and placed in the hands of an independent controller reporting to the secretary general. Finally, we need rigorous performance audits of all parts of headquarters operations.

Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is a man of great integrity, and the United Nations is filled with smart, brave and selfless people. Unfortunately, far too many others lack the moral aptitude and professional abilities to serve. We need a United Nations led by people for whom “doing the right thing” is normal and expected.

To read Anthony Banbury’s entire piece, click here.

(Hat tip: Maxine Bleiweis)

Good Advice

All week long, spring was in the air.

Westporters flocked to their favorite outdoor spots.

Alert “06880” photographer Irene Penny headed to Sherwood Island. This sign caught her eye:

Sherwood Island - Irene Penny

Of course, this is March.

The forecast for Sunday: up to 5 inches of snow.

Westport Library’s Amazing Museum Freebies

You can get anything you want at Alice’s Restaurant. Excepting Alice…

Westport Library logoYou can also get anything you want at the Westport Library. Including passes to the Guggenheim, Intrepid Sea Air & Space Complex, Mystic Aquarium and Seaport, New York Historical Society and Discovery Museum.

Plus 22 other museums, science and nature centers, and attractions all over Connecticut and New York. There’s even one in Massachusetts.

Who knew?

Apparently, tons of people.

The program began in 2013. Residents and non-residents can go to the library, and borrow a pass for up to 3 days. You’re allowed 1 pass per adult library card at a time.

But that one pass is gold. At the Guggenheim, for example, there’s free admission for 2 adults and up to 3 additional guests. You also bypass ticket lines — and get a 10% discount in the Museum Store and Cafe.

The fine print: You can’t reserve passes. And if you lose one, you’re out anywhere from $50 to $350.

General admission tickets to the Guggenheim usually cost $25. But if you borrow one from the Westport Library, it's free.

Go to the Guggenheim. It’s free!

The collection of passes changes, based on user feedback. Right now, the 5 most popular passes are to Earthplace, Beardsley Zoo, Guggenheim, Stamford Museum & Nature Center, and Stepping Stones.

And you thought the library was only good for its Maker Space, Blu-Ray Discs and coffee.

(For more information — including a complete list of all 27 museums — click here. Hat tip: JP Vellotti)

Staples Hockey Team Skates To State Finals

They don’t have their own rink.

They’ve added a couple of players from Weston and Shelton.

But the Staples co-op boys ice hockey team is headed to the state finals.

The team — almost all of whom are legit Westporters, and who wear a big “S” on their jerseys — won a wild, sudden-death overtime game Tuesday night, 6-5 over Woodstock Academy.

That put them in the Division III championship of the Big Dance — er, the Big Skate — on Saturday. The puck drops at 10 a.m., at Yale’s Ingalls Rink (aka The Whale).

(Courtesy/Staples Sports)

(Courtesy/Staples Sports)

As they’ve made their march to the title game — playing at rinks far from home — the Wreckers have picked up a large corps of enthusiastic fans.

They’ll be out in force Saturday morning. Let’s hope they’re joined by plenty of other Westporters.

If you’ve never seen a high school hockey game, you’re in for a treat.

And — hopefully — a championship.

(Can’t make the game? Tune in to WWPT-FM 90.3 — or click here for the livestream, anywhere in the world.)

Click below for all the goals in the Wreckers’ semifinal overtime win. Video by Cooper Boardman of Staples Sports:

Duck!

He’s in China now.

But soon, you’ll see this guy all around Westport:

Duck

The Big Duck is coming here to promote Westport Sunrise Rotary‘s  Great Duck Race. The 8th annual event — which funds dozens of charities, around the corner and around the world — is set for June 4.

He’s 23 feet high, 15 feet wide and 15 feet long. He takes 15-20 minutes to be inflated (with an electric pump). When he’s full of air, he weighs 260 pounds.

He’s being shipped from Guangzhou, through the Panama Canal. He should be here in late April.

He’ll be unveiled to club members tomorrow morning. Starting in late April, he’ll pop up all around town.

Maybe even the Duck.

(For more information on the Big Duck, Westport Sunrise Rotary or the Great Duck Race, call Steve Violette at 203-451-3339 or Dennis Wong at 203-858-5828.)

Water, Water Everywhere…

In the 1st World, we don’t think much about water. (Unless — as happened recently in Flint and at Staples High School — it turns discolored.)

But Ben Goldstein does.

Since age 9, Ben — now a Staples senior — has raised money for charity. He’s earned awards from Autism Speaks, for bringing in more than $10,000 a year for 5 years.

As a sophomore — fascinated by business — he decided to start his own venture. He wanted to include a charitable component too.

That summer, Ben took a business course at Brown University. It spurred him to develop an idea, a name and a business plan. He chose Choice Water.

Choice Water logo

Ben spoke with industry professionals, bottlers, plastic manufacturers and deli owners. He learned all he could about the bottled water industry.

What makes Choice Water different from the bajillions of other water bottles out there is that — based on the label they choose — consumers can direct a portion of the purchase price to different charities. So far, Ben  has lined up 2: Autism Speaks and Child Advocates of Southwest Connecticut.

Using the 99designs website, Ben found a woman in Indonesia to create his logo, and a man in Hungary to design the label.

Ben hit the pavement, talking with local deli and grocery store owners about refrigerator space. It’s not easy competing against Poland Spring and Coke. But Choice Water is on sale in all 4 Garelick & Herbs locations, Oscar’s, Gold’s, Fortuna’s and Village Bagels.

Ben Goldstein and Jim Eckel at Gold's Delicatessen.

Ben Goldstein and Jim Eckl at Gold’s Delicatessen.

“Each store is different,” Ben says. “Competition is different, space is different, the clientele is different.” In one store he may compete against 1 brand of water; in another, 6. He’s learned to adapt his product’s presentation for each store.

Ben believes Choice Water is important because “it’s an easy way for people to do good, while doing something they were going to do anyway. If you have a choice between buying water that supports a local charity, or a bottle from a multi-billion-dollar company…”

In addition, Choice Water empowers consumers to pick exactly which charity they like. Ben hopes to have more choices soon, and more locations throughout Fairfield County.

Westport Sunrise Rotary has honored Ben for his work.

Now it’s up to us. Which water will we choose?

Choice Water bottles

 

Downtown Skyline Back To Normal

After 6 months of dramatic fascination, the crane that dominated downtown is gone.

It appeared suddenly in September, as part of the Bedford Square project.

First Night 2016 - 6 - bus and crane

It moved enormous pieces of construction equipment effortlessly, and gracefully.

It even lit up like a jinormous Christmas tree, during the holiday season.

(Photo/Wendy Cusick)

(Photo/Wendy Cusick)

Now its work is done. It’s been disassembled, and trucked back to wherever huge cranes go between jobs.

Coming down. (Photo/Denise Torve)

Coming down. (Photo/Denise Torve)

It was fun while it lasted.

And years from now, boys and girls who are toddlers today will ask themselves — and their parents — whether their memory of a huge crane towering over Westport was really real, or just something they dreamed up as kids.

Heading home. (Photo/Denise Torve)

Heading home. (Photo/Denise Torve)