Monthly Archives: January 2021

Barbara Pearson-Rac Says Goodbye

After nearly 30 years in Westport, Barbara Pearson-Rac is leaving.

She has made a difference here in so many ways. That’s literal: Make a Difference Day was one of her wonderful projects.

So was First Night. For 2 decades, our town rang in New Year’s with a host of fun activities. Hundreds of volunteers made it work. But none of it would have been possible without Barbara’s prodigious passion, energy and talent.

Soon, Barbara will leave this town she has done so much for. She’s been diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer. As she explains below, she’ll spend precious time with her daughter and family.

Westport owes an enormous debt to Barbara Pearson-Rac. She’s done so much for us, for so long. Godspeed, Barbara, from the town that loves you just as much as you’ve loved us.

Dear Westporters,

In the early 1990s, my family moved to Westport. We visited many towns in Fairfield County, but were always drawn back here. We sensed this welcoming and inclusive town would be ideal to raise our elementary school age daughter.

Barbara Pearson-Rac

As a product of the ’60s, I experienced the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Bobby Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr. These tragedies led to a conscious decision to devote myself to community service. I realized I couldn’t move mountains but any impact, no matter how small, was my goal.

Shortly after we settled in Westport, I participated in the ADL World of Difference program. The outgrowth of my experience became Westport’s Make a Difference Day.

We mobilized adults and children to work on projects for non-for-profit organizations. We went beyond our town borders to help people in need across Fairfield County. This day of volunteering in October grew every year. It was so successful that in our 10th year we received national recognition for our work.

During 2020, due to COVID we had to scale back dramatically, but we were able to help where we could. I am so proud of our many Westporters who have made this event an integral part of our town culture.

First Night, our town New Year’s Eve party, was designed to bring our community together to share in a joyous entertainment event and strengthen ties. I ran the event for many years with a dedicated board and many community volunteers. Together we enjoyed music, fun for all ages, and the beginning of a new year.

The evening always ended at Jesup Green. Everyone gathered around a bonfire watching the fireworks. The happiness in everyone’s faces kept me and the board active in this endeavor for over 20 years, until it was no longer financially feasible. But it was our gift to the town.

John Videler’s drone captured 2016’s First Night fireworks over Westport.

Now I am on a new journey. I have to say goodbye to my beloved Westport and all the wonderful friends I’ve made over the years.

I have been diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer. Soon my husband and I will move to Pennsylvania to be close to my daughter, son-in-law and 2 small grandsons. I want to spend as much time with them as I have left.

Do not feel sorry for me, though. Diagnosed in August, I have responded to chemotherapy better than the doctors ever expected. I remain active, with 3 yoga classes a week, working on my 5th novel (it’s almost completed), participating in virtual author talks, serving on the Senior Center board, and in Zoom with my friends.

I may have cancer, but my life goes on. I hope I’ve been a role model for my daughter on how best to cope when life throws you a curveball.

So with sadness I say goodbye to Westport, all my friends and colleagues, and the opportunities it has given me.

Pic Of The Day #1379

Reflection near Old Mill (Photo/Les Dinkin)

Roundup: Library Reopening, Light Up Westport, More

===================================================

The Westport Library returns soon to its December COVID schedule.

Effective Monday, February 8, appointments will no longer to browse the adult collection, speak with a librarian or use an Express computer.

Patrons visiting the Children’s Library, MakerSpace, media studios and store must still make appointments. Click here for more information.

The Library will be open weekdays from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Saturdays between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. It will remain closed on Sunday. Entrance is only through the upper parking lot doors.

Late fees will continue to be waived. Conference and meeting rooms will remain closed.

======================================================

For 4 years, WestportMoms has lit up Westport online. Now the multi-platform group wants to do so — literally.

Megan Rutstein and Melissa Post have launched “Light Up Westport.” The “appreciation project” charity fundraiser encourages people to send luminaries and personal notes of gratitude to friends, local businesses and first responders.

On February 4 (7 p.m.), participants should place their luminary in front of their homes or stores. They’ll light up the town.

They’ll then share photos on social media, and tag #lightupwestport.

Click here to order luminary kits. They include a WSPT luminary, note card and LED tea light. Volunteers will deliver them the day before the event.

All proceeds will go to Filling in the Blanks. The organization provides weekend meals to needy children throughout Fairfield County. WestportMoms have partnered with Ali Dorfman of Purpose 2 Purchase on this initiative.

WSPT luminary. (Photo/John Videler for Videler Photography)

=======================================================

If you haven’t visited George Billis Gallery, you’re missing a great addition to Westport.

The newest addition to Main Street — in space formerly occupied by Jonathan Adler — announces its first big events.

An international exhibition, is set for February 5-28. There’s an opening reception from 3 to 7 p.m., including a Zoom walk-through with juror Lisa Cooper from 3 to 3:30.

The exhibit features over 30 national and international artists presenting painting, photography, sculpture and works on paper.

George Billis Gallery, 166 Main Street.

=======================================================

“06880” is looking for stringers/interns to cover town meetings: Board of Education, Board of Finance, Board of Selectmen. Town knowledge, enthusiasm, writing chops, ability to watch for hours needed. Perfect for bored college students and anyone else interested in town affairs. Interested? Email dwoog@optonline.net

======================================================

Bernie Sanders is a very impatient guy.

He was spotted yesterday outside Gold’s, waiting for bagels and lox …

(Meme courtesy of Our Town Crier)

… and then at Loeffler Field, waiting for the 2021 soccer season to begin.

=======================================================

And finally … on this day in 1996, “Rent” opened officially at the New York Theatre Workshop. It was a bittersweet moment: composer/playwright Jonathan Larson died hours before, from an aneurysm.

Twenty-five years later, his work is considered one of the most monumental and important musicals of all time.

Move Over, Barnes & Noble. Another Bookstore Is Opening Downtown.

It’s been years since downtown Westport had a bookstore.

Next month, Barnes & Noble opens in the former Restoration Hardware.

This Thursday, a second bookstore opens right around the corner.

It’s smaller. It will sell only used books. But its story is huge.

The Westport Book Shop is a partnership between the Westport Library and Westport Book Sales, the non-profit with 2 important missions: They raise funds for the library by running its book sales, and they hire adults with disabilities.

For nearly 3 decades, the Summer Book Sale has been a beloved ritual on Jesup Green. So it’s fitting that the Westport Book Shop will be located between Green & Tonic and the new Basso restaurant (formerly Matsu Sushi).

In other words: It’s directly across Jesup Green from the library.

The new home of the Westport Book Shop.

The new venture — believed to be Westport’s first-ever used bookstore — came together quickly. The idea began in the spring, but the right space — a former art gallery — was not available until last month. Final town approval came on Friday.

The 5,000 or so books, in over 40 categories, come from donations to the annual book sales. There’s also a large selection of vinyl records, audio books, CDs and DVDs.

(In addition to the ginormous summer one, there are other book sales throughout the year. However, they’re on hold during COVID.)

The view from inside the Westport Book Shop, across Jesup Green to the library.

Books cover all major categories: fiction, non-fiction, biography, children’s, you name it.

“We’ll be talking to customers and ask what they especially want,” says Mimi Greenlee. The longtime volunteer will continue to work with Westport Book Sales on this project, with fellow members Jocelyn Barandiaran, Linda Hopper, Dick Lowenstein, Sharuna Mahesh and Deb Poulley​. Jennifer Bangser is the Library’s liaison.

The Book Shop also features the Drew Friedman Art Place. Miggs Burroughs will curate rotating exhibits of area artists.

Hours are Thursdays and Fridays, 3 to 6 p.m.; weekends, noon to 5 p.m. COVID restrictions apply.

Mimi Greenlee inspects a book n the children’s section.

Founding donors include The Drew Friedman Community Arts Center, Eileen Lavigne Flug, Dan Levinson, Jeffrey Mayer and Nancy Diamond, Jocelyn and Walter Barandiaran, Linda Monteiro-Hopper and Scott Hopper, Robin and Brad Berggren, Rebecca L. Ciota, The Kail Family, The Michael M. Wiseman and Helen A. Garten Charitable Foundation, Abilis Community Foundation, The Betty R. and Ralph Sheffer Foundation, Craig Rebecca Schiavone, Westport Sunrise Rotary, Rita Allen Foundation, and Berchem Moses PC. Local law firm Verrill donated most of the bookcases.

For more information, email info@westportbooksales.org.

TEAM Westport’s Teen Essay Contest Tackles Timely Topic

For 7 years, TEAM Westport’s Teen Diversity Essay Contest has considered specific, newsworthy topics.

Westport students have been asked to examine — and write on — issues like micro-aggressions, the “taking a knee” controversy, white privilege, the increasingly diverse demographics of the United States, and self-segregation in school cafeterias.

This year’s contest addresses a broad, complex and crucial issue: Black Lives Matter.

All students attending high school in Westport — or who live here and go to high school elsewhere — are invited to participate. The prompt is:

The statement “Black Lives Matter” has become politicized in our country.  In 1000 words or fewer, describe your own understanding of the statement.  Consider why conversations about race are often so emotionally charged. Given that reality, what suggestions do you have for building both equity and equality in our schools, community and country?

“Since the murder of George Floyd, the nation has moved toward an inflection point on racial reckoning not seen since the Civil War,” says TEAM Westport chair Harold Bailey.

“The ultimate resolution of that reckoning will have a profound effect upon the lives of our young citizens. Through it all, ‘Black Lives Matter’ has emerged as ubiquitous in message, aspiration and vision. TEAM Westport looks forward to the exploration of the impact of this phenomenon on our nation and community by Westport students.”

The entry deadline is February 26. The Westport Library is co-sponsoring the contest with TEAMWestport, the town’s multicultural commission.

First prize is $1,000; second prize is $750, and third prize is $500. Click here for he application form.

Students joined many others last spring, at several Black Lives Matter protests in downtown Westport. (Photo/Dan Woog)

 

Lyfebulb: “Aha!” Idea For Managing Chronic Disease

Karin Hehenberger has led a lucky life.

She grew up in Sweden, graduated from an international high school in Paris, attended medical school and earned her Ph.D. in Stockholm, and did post-doctoral work at Harvard.

Karin Hehenberger

In Cambridge she became friendly with Business School students. At 26 she was hired by McKinsey as a healthcare consultant. Then it was off to Wall Street, to work for a hedge fund.

But Karin’s life has been filled with bad luck too.

In her teens she was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes. She kept it secret from everyone except her family. If others knew, she thought, they’d view her as “weak.”

Over the next 20 years, she suffered complications. Diabetes affected her eyes; her kidneys and pancreas were failing, and she had a pacemaker. “I was a walking stroke risk,” Karin says.

Her father Michael — an IBM executive who had moved to Westport with his wife and Karin’s younger sister Anna, when she was in high school — donated a kidney. Karin’s eyes were treated with a product she’d worked on in her healthcare days. Her vision was saved; she did not dialysis.

She also made the list for a pancreas transplant. On New Years Eve 2009, she got a call: Get to Minneapolis immediately. A second pancreas was available.

But it was damaged in transit. “Frozen and dejected,” Karin says, she got ready for the new year.

Providentially, almost immediately she got another call. Another pancreas was on the way.

Karin Hehenberger, after her pancreas transplant.

On January 2, 2010, Karin’s life changed. She has not injected insulin since. She’d performed that life-saving ritual 5 to 10 times a day — and spent many more hours checking her blood sugar.

As she recovered, Karin thought about her career.

She had never connected with any other diabetic. “Patients need patients just as much as much as we need doctors,” she realized.

And, she says, “even though I was so involved with innovation and technology, I’d never allowed my own experience to be part of the assessment. I didn’t want to think I was biased.”

Gradually, Karin says, “I understood that patients can be innovators. We know the problems. We can have solutions.”

That set off a light bulb in her head. In 2014 she started Lyfebulb. The name combines that idea of innovation with the optimism of “life.” (The “Y” resembles a light bulb — and the logo colors are the same as Sweden’s.)

Lyfebulb’s mission is to “reduce the burden of living with chronic
disease through the power of the patient.”

Karin started out thinking only of her experience as a transplant recipient. “It’s very complex to be alive because someone else died, or gave up a part of themselves,” she explains. “But we were all alone. I thought there needed to be a community of transplant patients.”

As she tried to find ways to empower people with transplants — “not just to take charge of their lives, but to be valued and respected” — she realized there were commonalities with people suffering from chronic diseases who did have “communities” (for example, cancer patients and those with inflammatory bowel disease).

Through digital solutions, innovation challenges, events, panel discussions, workshops, social media, newsletters and blogs, her company works with patients in 11 disease areas: transplantation, diabetes, cancer, multiple sclerosis, chronic kidney disease, IBD, migraine, substance use disorders, mental health, psoriasis and chronic cough.

Karin Hehenberger and her daughter, in Westport.

Lyfebulb — which, since COVID, Karin has run out of her Westport home — is a for-profit company. It pays patients for their insights, and uses their ideas to build products for the marketplace.

For example, a young diabetic realized he did not always remember the last time he dosed himself.

“It’s not easy to keep track of,” Karin notes. “You’re making 300 decisions a day related to food, checking blood sugar and insulin.”

The simple solution: a pen cap that allows people to record the time and amount of each dose.

“Diabetics want to live without thinking about their disease,” Karin says. “Doctors want them to test constantly, to optimize glucose control. Those two things completely contradict each other.”

But without seeking patients’ input and insights, no company would think to manufacture an insulin pen cap like that. Three now do.

Similarly, Karin says, Lyfebulb learned that diabetics wanted an insulin device that’s less bulky and institutional-looking than the standard gray ones. Nothing stopped that — except no one ever asked.

“That’s a consumer insight,” she notes. “In every other field, consumers drive product development. In healthcare, consumer marketing has always been an afterthought.”

Karin’s goal is for Lyfebulb to “replace Facebook for health information.” On the ubiquitous social media platform, she says, “there’s no moderation. Anyone can say anything about a product or remedy. It’s not safe.”

Karin’s goal is for Lyfebulb to “replace Facebook for health information.” On the ubiquitous social media platform, she says, “there’s no moderation. Anyone can say anything about a product or remedy. It’s not safe.”

This month, Lyfebulb launched TransplantLyfe, an online engagement platform for the transplant community.

Lyfebulb ensures scientific and medical reviews. “We want to harness the power of a crowd to change the way people deal with chronic disease. We take over when doctors and nurses leave,” Karin says.

“You’re not alone. You’re not different,” she says to people living with chronic diseases. “You can be helped by people just like you.”

Pic Of The Day #1378

Train streaks through Westport (Photo/Patricia McMahon)

Photo Challenge #317

Last week’s posting hit the Photo Challenge sweet spot.

It was indeed a challenge. Most guesses were wrong (and all over the Westport map). A few were right.

It impelled readers to provide thoughts on the back story too. Along the way, we traveled back in (and learned about) our town’s history.

Frank Rosen’s image of an abandoned brick and rock structure deep in some woods was not taken at Baron’s South, Nash’s Pond, Post Road West near Kings Highway South, or either the Evergreen Avenue, Willowbrook or Wilton Road/Kings Highway cemetery.

The correct answer: Newman Poses Preserve off Bayberry Lane. Specifically, it’s past a dilapidated bridge, near the river. (Click here to see.) 

Was it an ice house? A cow tunnel? Something to do with an onion farm?

We still don’t know.

But we do know that Janis Wasserman and Kathie Bennewitz both correctly identified whatever it is correctly. They know their open spaces!

This week’s Photo Challenge was taken last month, during our only snowfall this winter.

If you know where in Westport you’d see this sad, ineffective fence, click “Comments” below.

(Photo/Lou Weinberg)

Roundup: Super Bowl Raffle, End Of The World, More

=======================================================

Each year, hundreds of Westporters enjoy Westport Rotary’s Duck Race and Wine Tasting events. Their support enables the organization to support worthy causes here and abroad.

Both events are COVID-canceled. Yet charities need help more than ever. Fortunately, the Rotarians have a plan.

Their new fundraiser is The Great Rotary Raffle: Super Bowl Edition.

Tickets are $50 each. On February 5 — 2 days before the game — each ticket will be assigned a randomly selected pair of numbers.

Winners will be determined by the scores at the end of each quarter. The 1st, 2nd and 3rd quarter winners each get a $500 Visa gift card. The winner of the final score snags a $1,000 card.

50% of all ticket sales go to those prizes. The other half goes directly to charities.

Click here to buy raffle tickets.

====================================================

At Staples, 2015 grad Rachel Treisman wrote for the school paper Inklings. In college, she became editor-in-chief of the Yale Daily News.

Now Rachel writes for NPR.

Yesterday, she wrote an important, comprehensive piece. Headlined “The Vaccine Rollout Will Take Time. Here’s What The U.S. Can Do Now To Save Lives,” it covers governmental, private and personal responses to the pandemic. Click here for the story.

Rachel Treisman

=======================================================

There are 72 films at Sundance 2021. According to IndieWire, 15 are “Must-See,” and can be streamed at home.

Among them: “How it Ends.” Written, directed and produced by 2002 Staples High School graduate Daryl Wein and his “partner in work and love” Zoe Lister-Jones, it is “a star-packed comedic rumination on nothing less than the end of the world.”

“Timely, no?” IndieWire adds.

The film stars Olivia Wilde, Fred Armisen, Helen Hunt, Lamorne Morris and Cailee Spaeny.

Daryl Wein

======================================================

Don O’Day’s work as chair of the Coleytown Middle School Reopening Committee ended this month. The new school looks beautiful.

As one of his last acts, he hired a new security guard.

(Meme courtesy of Don O’Day)

=======================================================

And finally … Jimmie Rodgers, the pop/country singer known for “Honeycomb” and other 1950s hits — died Monday in California. He was 87.

Hank Aaron: The Westport Connection

In death, Hank Aaron has been treated with respect, admiration, even reverence.

Hank Aaron

Yet in life, the Black man who broke Babe Ruth’s home run record was hounded by racist attacks, including death threats.

He heard them again nearly 4 decades later, when he defended Lebron James and President Obama.

Carla Koplin Cohn knows exactly what was in those letters thousands of letters.

She lives in Florida now, after more than 25 years in Westport. But in the early 1970s she was a young secretary, working in the basement of Atlanta Stadium. Aaron asked for help with his correspondence. She became his full-time secretary — a first for any baseball player.

The next year, she handled his 900,000 pieces of mail. She sent a form letter for fans. Aaron kept the hate mail in his attic — after Carla reported the threats to the FBI.

One of the thousands of pieces of hate mail received by Hank Aaron — and read by Carla Koplin.

Those letters were nasty. Some included KKK hoods.

Carla got some herself. “They knew I was white, Jewish, and working for a Black man,” she told Slate.

She remained Aaron’s personal assistant for the next 10 years. Cohn sat in the stands and taught Aaron’s second wife Billye all about baseball.

After he retired, they stayed close. Aaron was a guest at her wedding.

He was a frequent guest too at the Cohns’ Punch Bowl Drive home, including her 40th birthday party. Carla ran the annual Bargain Fest; one year, the star helped raise funds by signing baseballs and books.

Hank Aaron and his wife Billye, with Jenn, Carla and Al Cohn, at Carla’s 40th birthday celebration in Westport.

Carla, her husband Al and daughter Jenn visited the Aarons every Christmas, in West Palm Beach.

Carla and Aaron last spoke a few days before his death. He’d just gotten his COVID shot, and hoped to see her soon.

Though he was 86, his death came as a surprise. Cohn’s daughter Jenn Falik — who graduated from Staples High School in 1997, is an on-air trend reporter for “The Today Show” and “Rachael Ray,” writes the “Ultimate Edit” newsletter and moved back to Westport in 2012 — is gaining a new appreciation for the achievements and life of the man she calls “just he nicest, warmest, humblest and low-key person.”

Her children — in 4th grade and kindergarten — are learning too. “They recognize all these celebrities saying great things about him,” she notes. “To them, he’s just Uncle Henry.”

Hank Aaron with Goldie Fralik, 5 years ago at Christmas in Florida. Goldie is now a kindergartner at Greens Farms Elementary School.

Aaron was Uncle Henry to Jenn too.

Which leads to a story the Hall of Famer told at her wedding.

In his toast, Aaron said that when Jenn was a Coleytown Elementary School 1st grader, students had to write biographies on either Helen Keller or Hank Aaron. All the girls chose Keller — except Jenn.

Surprised, the teacher asked why. “He’s my uncle,” she replied.

Worried that Jenn had a problem, the teacher and guidance counselor called her parents for a conference. They explained that yes, Jenn really did call Hank Aaron “Uncle Henry.”

Because to her, he was.

(Click here for a great Slate story: “The Woman Who Read Hank Aaron’s Hate Mail.”  Click here for an in-depth New York Times story on him.)

Hank Aaron, at Jenn Cohn and Brian Falik’s wedding in 2005. The Presidential Medal of Freedom winner spoke right before Brian — “a daunting lead-in for the groom,” Jenn notes.