Yearly Archives: 2023

Roundup: Small Plane, Car Thefts …

One of the highlights of my summer was a Saturday morning flight over Westport, with 17-year-old pilot Aiden Schachter.

The Staples High School rising (in more ways than one) senior has been very busy, since earning his (flying) license in June.

The other day, he took his father Seth on a tour of New York City.

This young man is clearly going places.

Aiden and Seth Schachter.

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Hard to believe, but we still have to repeat this.

An “06880” reader writes: “I have heard of 3 instances in the last day of Westporters having their cars stolen from out of their garages during the day, or while on vacation, with keys or credit cards left in the car.

“Readers should take care and lock their cars.”

Absolutely. Whether you’re parked at home or somewhere else, do not leave valuables in your car. Take your keys and/or fob with you. 

Don’t say we didn’t warn you.

Again. And again. And again.

Take it with you!

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The Artists’ Collective of Westport sponsors regular pop-up exhibits.

Each includes a variety of artists, genres and styles. Each is special.

The next one is September 7-10 (2 to 6 p.m., Westport Country Playhouse barn). An opening reception (with food, wine, conversations with artists, and Chris Coogan on piano) is September 6 (6 to 8 p.m.).

There’s an artists’ talk on September 10 (5 p.m.).

Participating artists include Ann Brecher-Bogart, Janine Brown, Randijane Davis, Susan Fehlinger, Susanne Keany, Emily Laux, Mary Jo McGonagle, Toby Michaels, Jay Petrow, Diane Pollack, Kim Porio, Mark Schiff, Kris Toohey  and Cynthia Whalen.

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Betty Dorfman died peacefully at Meadow Ridge in Redding on Tuesday. She was 101 years old.

Westporters with long memories remember her as part of the family that owned the Connecticut Yankee — a clothing store where ASF Sports is now. But there’s much more to her life.

The Brooklyn native was raised by a father who was left an invalid after World War I, and a strong mother who ensured her children the finest educational opportunities.

Betty graduated from City College of New York with a BA in business administration in 1941. She added an MS in 1945.

She married college sweetheart Arnold Dorfman in 1942. While Arnold served in the US Army during World War II, Betty taught high school. After the war they moved around for Arnold’s retail business, and began to raise daughters Merle and Wendy.

The family moved to Westport in 1955, where they opened their Connecticut Yankee store. Betty worked alongside Arnold there. So did her mother Estelle, who had then moved to Westport as well.

Betty became active in the Temple Israel Sisterhood, and served as president of the Fairfield County chapter of the National Council of Jewish Women.

After the Connecticut Yankee closed, she earned a 6th year professional diploma in education. She joined the University of Bridgeport as associate professor of secretarial studies in 1964.

Her career at UB was long and successful. Betty established and directed the nation’s first university-level word-processing major. She shared her expertise with educators, publishers, and executives from around the country.

Betty was a stickler for the English language. She insisted that all secretarial students learned traditional English grammar and punctuation, and later taught journalistic style and usage to students in the Mass Communications Department.

Upon retirement in 1985, Betty was named associate professor emeritus by the UB Board of Trustees. Arnold suffered a serious stroke the following year, and she spent the next 6 years as caregiver. He died in 1992.

During the next 2 decades Betty was an active member of Y’s Women, including co-chair of Trips and Travel for 10 years. She organized day trips and some European excursions with co-chair Dorothy Coen.

She enjoyed playing bridge and taking classes at the Senior Center. Betty also had a rewarding 10-year relationship with fellow Westporter Max Levinson. They had been couples friends for years. Max’s wife Eve had died a year after Arnold.

Betty moved to independent living at Meadow Ridge in 2012, where she remained active as chair of the Activities Committee. She moved into assisted living/memory care there in 2018.

Betty received wonderful care from Meadow Ridge and from her private part-time aide, Andrea Roudenis.

Betty is survived by daughters Merle Spiegel and Wendy Roberts; granddaughters Kate Rosewood (Rich), Jenn Roberts Ma (Roger), and Amanda Pierson (Gene), and great-grandchildren Vanessa and Fiona Rosewood, Owen Ma, and Robbie and Bennett Pierson.

Her family says, “Betty was beloved for her sharp wit, deep intellectual curiosity, kindness, fierce loyalty to friends and family, and impeccable elegance. She was a true force of nature.”

 

Betty Dorfman

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Spotted lanternflies continue to be spotted in Westport.

Today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature shows this one, at Jilda Manikas’ house.

Notifications of sightings should be emailed to ReportsSLF@ct.gov. Their website for more information is https://portal.ct.gov/DEEP/Forestry/Forest-Protection/Spotted-Lanternfly

 

(Photo/Jilda Manikas)

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And finally … in honor of Aidan and Seth Schachter’s flight (story above):

(New York is an amazing place. But Westport has something the Big Apple doesn’t: “06880.” Please click here to support your hyper-local blog. Thank you!)

Online Art Gallery #176

Is everyone on vacation?

After a summer of robust art activity, submissions were slim for this week’s online gallery.

Perhaps our artists are out on the water. Nearly half of our works this week show a nautical theme.

Of course, the quality remains high. And the subjects, wide-ranging.

With back to school near, we continue to welcome atercolors, oils, charcoal, pen-and-ink, acrylics, lithographs, collages, macramé, jewelry, sculpture, decoupage, needlepoint — whatever you’ve got. Email it to 06880blog@gmail.com. Share your work with the world! (PS: Please include the medium you’re working in — art lovers want to know.)

Age, level of experience, subject matter — there are no restrictions. Everyone is invited to contribute.

“Sunset Reflected From a Car Window” (Benji Porosoff, age 16)

“Sailing Near Fishers Island with an Easterly Wind” (Peter Barlow)

“Three Masted Galleon in a Manischewitz Bottle.” Steve Stein explains, “I did this with my grandsons one Sunday afternoon. The boat is built outside the flat-sided wine bottle with the masts hinged back and down, to be pulled up by long threads after placement in the bottle. The hardest part is getting the green clay ocean to lie flat.”

Untitled (Werner Liepolt)

“Spud Chef” (Lawrence Weisman)

“Standing Together: Our Past and Future” — Kathmandu, Nepal (Mike Hibbard)

“Poppy” (Ken Runkel)

(Entrance is free to our online art gallery. But please consider a donation! Just click here — and thank you!)

 

Old Mill Grocery Seeks New Operator

Last year, when a group of Westporters saved the former Elvira’s from possible conversion to a large home, they needed an experienced operator.

The Granola Bar stepped up. In just a few weeks they had Old Mill Grocery & Deli running.

The July 2022 opening filled a void, reinvigorating the neighborhood while also serving hungry folks headed to and from Compo Beach.

But as The Granola Bar expands, opening new locations in Connecticut and New York, they’re focusing staff and resources on that brand.

They’ve opted not to renew their lease. Their final day will be September 30.

Old Mill Grocery & Deli reopened in July 2022. (Photo/Matt Murray)

Soundview Empowerment Alliance founders Jim Hood, Ian Warburg, Emily Zobl, Chris Tait and Tommy Febbraio — who formed a non-profit to buy the century-old building, renovate it and re-open the market/deli, while also providing employment and training opportunities for people with disabilities — are working closely with the Granola Bar team on the transition.

SEA is also working to identify a new restaurant operator. They’re talking with several, and invite any group interested to contact them by email: SoundviewEmpowerment@gmail.com.

“Together since July 22, The Granola Bar Hospitality Group and Soundview Empowerment Alliance have proudly fulfilled SEA’s mission to save the historic building and to empower adults with disabilities, while creating a special space in the community to share delicious food together,” SEA says.

“Since day one, the team has remained focused on ‘preserving history and serving good,’ with incredible support from the community.”

The renovated building has won 3 state and local preservation awards. The training and employment program for adults with disabilities began several months ago.

“As the team works together to identify and transition to a new operator, OMG&D will remain open through September 30, serving everything from morning coffee to award-winning pizza in Westport’s most beloved building.”

Old Mill Grocery, soon after reopening. (Photo/Maggie Moffitt Rahe)

Pic Of The Day #2320

Loki, at Winslow Park (Photo/Mark Mathias)

“06880 On The Go”: Baron’s South

Like many Westporters, Andrew Brennan spent years in Westport without setting foot on Baron’s South.

Or even thinking about it.

But the other day — just before leaving for his junior year at Hamilton College — our “06880” intern headed to the 22-acre town park, between Compo Road South and Imperial Avenue.

He recorded himself walking the trails, climbing the hills, and discovering this hidden gem, a few yards from downtown.

Click below, to join Andrew on his tour:

(Baron’s South is open from sunrise to sunset. Click here for more details from the town website. Click here for “06880” stories, from the archives.)

(“06880” is more than a blog. We cover Westport with words, photos — and video. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Friday Flashback #362

Michael James graduated from Staples High School in 1960.

He co-founded and ran Chicago’s Heartland Café for 36 years. He is now working on a book about it: “Hot Grits & Politics.”

Michael has published 3 books of his photos: “Michael Gaylord James’ Pictures from the Long Haul.” He teaches a course called “Activists and Activism Since 1960″ at DePaul University; hosts the weekly Live from the Heartland Show, is active in politics (past president of Chicago’s 49th Ward Democratic Party), and as a member of SAG/AFTRA is currently on strike. He plans a visit to his beloved hometown of Westport this fall.  

He posts and writes about his photos on Instagram (@michaelgaylordjamesphotography). Many of his photos can be seen at michaelgaylordjames.com.    

This reminisce is from “Pictures from the Long Haul.”

I’m back home in Connecticut, an original colony—the “Nutmeg State” turned “Constitution State.” I grew up with constant reminders of the Revolutionary War. On Red Coat Road we played “fight the British” near where real Red Coats marched to burn hat factories in Danbury.

Westport is where I learned to love America, where we played in fields, in woods, and on the shores of the Saugatuck River and Long Island Sound. It’s where in the late 1940’s we hiked along the Wilton Road singing “John Brown’s body lies a-moldering in the grave, but his soul goes marching on; glory, glory hallelujah.”  And my town really supported the new United Nations.

My teen-dream romance comes rapidly undone one night at the beginning of the summer. That was it; young love, over and done. I spend the summer in pain, a shredded heart — “one mizzable bastard,” to use one of my dad’s favorite expressions.

Life goes on. I have a job at the YMCA’s Camp Mahackeno. It’s where artist Harold Von Schmidt — in full Indian regalia — taught us about the Sioux. The camp’s Rotary Pavilion became the Downshifters Hot Rod Club garage during off camp months, and we were there — and upset — when the Russians and their Sputnik machine beat us into space.

A young trumpeter, I was a Mahackeno bugle boy, blowing reveille in the morning before the Pledge of Allegiance. In the afternoon I blew taps while our beloved flag was lowered. At Camp Mahackeno I suffered major yellow-jacket abuse while trying to save the bees from a clean-up brigade with a forceful hose.

Pledging allegiance, Camp Mahackeno.

There I earned my Minnow, Fish, Flying Fish, Shark and Porpoise badges, and grew up through the ranks: a Papoose, Hiawatha, Brave, Sachem, and CIT (counselor in training).

Camp Mahackeno waterfront. In the distance in the Saugatuck River: the famed “Moby Dick.”

Now I was a counselor and unit leader. We marched our tribe through the woods to my family home on the Wilton Road. My mom Florence fixed lemonade and sandwiches.  Mom (Dad didn’t allow me to call her Ma) also gave me an illustrated kid’s book with stories of Bre’r Rabbit and his adventures. I read them to campers during rest periods.

Kids being kids, at Mahackeno.

I loved Uncle Remus, the storyteller. He took a lot of hits for being an “Uncle Tom” during the Black Power years. It’s hard today to find a copy of the Disney film Song of the South. In my mind he was kind and wise, a cool old dude. I am glad I saw that flick. Bre’r Rabbit was definitely cool!

I head to Rhode Island. Not to Charlestown and the drag races of my high school years, but this time to the Newport Jazz Festival. I’m with high school chum Don Law and his dad, a C&W producer with Columbia Records.

We party late into the night with Nigerian drums-of-fire-guy Babatunde Olatunji and jazz great Horace Silver. In 1963 the cultural activities committee at Lake Forest College will bring Olatunji, his drummers, and wild Haitian (and gay) dancers to campus during Africa Week. And Silver’s Sunday school teacher in Norwalk turns out to be the mother of my adopted brother, body builder Jim Arden.

I look forward to heading west and back to school. I do it via a run south to Birmingham with fellow Downshifter John Willoughby. On a late summer night we hit Bristol, Virginia and Bristol, Tennessee, and I swear the Bristol Stomp was on the radio. The tune is about a dance in another Bristol (Pennsylvania), and was being played nationwide.

The Downsifters were Michael James’ hot rod club. This photo was taken in the back yard of his Wilton Road home.

Willoughby’s mom nourishes me for a day. Then I don my sport jacket and hitchhike, mostly up US 41, back to college. Near Pulaski, Kentucky I get a short ride in a beat up car with a group of juiced up folks, both white and black. They’re having a fun time.

I am crammed into the back seat, surrounded by heat, wind, and people drinking — a scary-reckless-ride. I do accept a hit of whiskey from their pint. A feeling of relief engulfs me when the ride is over and I get to stick out my thumb again.

(To read more of Michael James’ writings, click here.)

Michael James, today.

Roundup: School Security, Daryl Hall, DPIC …

On Wednesday, the Board of Finance authorized the addition of 3 officers, to patrol 6 Westport schools.

They will be responsible for security at 2 campuses: one each at Coleytown Middle and Elementary Schools;  Kings Highway and Saugatuck Elementary, and Long Lots/Greens Farms Elementary.

They will remain outside, unless called to an emergency inside.

The cost for a full year is $576,084. The request must now be approved by the Representative Town Meeting.

A second security item — a fob on all Staples High School staff members’ identification lanyard, which can summon help in a 500,000 square foot building and sprawling outdoor athletic facilities that does not have full cellphone service, or access to emergency phones everywhere — was withdrawn before the meeting.

One Westport police officer will be assigned to Coleytown Elementary School (foreground) Coleytown Middle (rear).

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Before the start of last night’s Levitt Pavilion benefit concert with Daryl Hall and Todd Rundrgren, disgruntled patrons emailed “06880.”

“There is a tent blocking the view for a good portion of the patrons’ section,” one person wrote.

One view of the obstructed view …

“The sound board obstructs the view for most patrons,” someone else said.

… and another.

Carleigh Welsh — the Levitt’s director of development and marketing — responded to an “06880” email, as soon as the complaints were forwarded to her.

She wrote: “We have been moving people into non-obstructed seats. It would help greatly if they could email the box office right now if they are still in a legitimately blocked seat and we can relocate them. Some people we have approached have opted to stay put.

“Happy to share more about the rain tent covering the console in an email after show, but right now helping ushers fix any issues.”

Meanwhile — despite rain — the show went on. Todd Rundgren and Daryl Hall are pros.

And the audience raised funds to help the Levitt provide another 60 or so free concerts next year.

Daryl Hall

Todd Rundgren (Photos/Les Dinkin)

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The Downtown Plan Implementation Committee says “thank you” to all who attended Tuesday’s charrette at the Westport Library.

The slideshow, and a presentation by Public Works director Pete Ratkiewich, are now available at the DPIC website (scroll down; right side).

Just below that is a chance to provide comments and feedback. The deadline is September 5.

The latest plan for Parker Harding Plaza, presented Tuesday by the Downtown Plan Implementation Committee.

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True to its word, the Westport Country Playhouse is introducing new, one-day-only programming aimed at a broad audience.

Emmy- and Tony-winning actor/singer/storyteller Mandy Patinkin brings his “Being Alive” concert to Westport September 28 (8 p.m.).

It’s an evening of his favorite Broadway and classic American tunes, from Irving Berlin and Cole Porter to Stephen Sondheim and Harry Chapin.

Tickets are $175 and $150. Click here to purchase, and for more information. The event sponsors are Bud and Roz Siegel.

Mandy Patinkin

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Westport’s Volunteer Emergency Medical Service responds to 2,500 9-1-1 calls each year.

As partial thanks, the Levitt Pavilion offers an annual “first responders tribute.”

This year’s event is September 8 (7:30 p.m.). As always, DNR — the great, fun and rockin’ (almost) all-physician band will play.

EMTs and volunteers will be on hand. An ambulance will be there too, for tours (and, if needed, any emergency).

Like most Levitt shows, it’s free. But tickets are required: click here.

DNR

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A new school year starts Tuesday.

Which means everyone who graduated in June from Staples is now off to college, working, in the military, taking a gap year, or otherwise amusing themselves.

Which also means: Isn’t it time you took down your “Home of a 2023 Staples High School graduate” sign?

We get it. You were proud. Congratulations!

Now let’s move on …

Graduation is over! (Photo/Dan Woog)

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MDSolarSciences — the Westport-based sunscreen company — spent a day last week on a “sun safety tour.”

They handed out products to grateful — and now-protected — police, firefighters, EMTs, and Longshore employees.

MDSolarSciences representatives, and Westport firefighters.

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Braiden Sunshine — who recently open for Leann Rimes, and mesmerized the audience — stars at the next First Folk Sunday (September 3, VFW Joseph J. Clinton Post 399, 12:30 p.m.; $10).

In 2015 — just 15 years old — he reached the semifinals of “The Voice.”

Click here for tickets. For more information, email info@firstfolksunday.com, or call 203-222-1441.

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Ellie Hamby and Dr. Sandy Hazelip — 81-year-old friends — got plenty of attention last year, when they circled the globe in 80 days. They traveled to 18 countries, and visited all 7 continents.

At the Yale Club on Wednesday, Howard Matson — a Westporter, and past international president of the Circumnavigators Club — honored the women with honorary memberships in the 121-year-old organization.

Howard Matson, with octogenarian circumnavigators.

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It’s a “Westport … Naturally” scene many Westporters don’t see.

But Mary Sikorski was up early, and captured it:

(Photo/Mary Sikorski)

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And finally … in honor of last night’s Levitt Pavilion benefit concert (story above):

(Another day, another Roundup of all things Westport. If you enjoy this daily feature, please consider supporting our work. Just click here — and thank you!)

 

Scarice Challenges School Staff: Listen. Grow. Make A Difference.

The Westport Public Schools employ nearly 1,000 people.

And every one — teachers, administrators, paraprofessionals, nurses, psychologists, social workers, cafeteria workers, custodians, secretaries, security guards — impacts every one of its 5,300-plus students.

Every adult impacts every other one, too.

That was superintendent of schools Thomas Scarice’s message yesterday, at the opening convocation of the 2023-24 year.

The high-energy event in the Staples High auditorium marked the only time all year the entire staff gathers together.

They heard the 4th-year superintendent speak in intensely personal terms about his family, his life, and his vision for the district.

It’s ranked 17th nationally, out of all 13,452 school districts, by Niche.

Superintendent of schools Thomas Scarice, at yesterday’s district-wide convocation.

“I dismiss the value of rankings, and their methodology,” Scarice said. “But they mean something to a community.”

More important than rankings, he noted, is that the school experience be valuable and meaningful to every single student.

For that to happen, Scarice said, every staff member, at every level and position in the district, must understand that every interaction with every student matters.

He illustrated his point by mentioning 2 recent graduates. Both had uneven paths during school; both are now successful and happy.

Scarice asked anyone in the auditorium who ever had any interaction with those students — no matter how small — to stand.

Dozens did.

Scarice expanded on that idea by describing his family’s summer trip to the Grand Canyon. As majestic as it is, it was formed very slowly — changing only the depth of a single piece of paper, a year at a time.

“Everyone should see the Grand Canyon,” superintendent of schools Thomas Scarice said, to appreciate both its grandeur and the importance of change.

“Change is inevitable,” he said. “But it’s important that as we change, we also progress.”

Scarice quoted Jacob Riis: “Look at a stone cutter hammering away at his rock, perhaps 100 times without as much as a crack showing in it. Yet at the 101st blow it will split in 2, and I know it was not the last blow that did it, but all that had gone before.”

He related that quote to his own family — particularly the experiences of his father, who grew up in a New Haven divided strictly by race and ethnicity.

It was big news when Scarice was 9, and a Black family moved next door in their suburban neighborhood.

His father’s relationship with Calvin — the man next door — grew slowly over the years. When Calvin died of cancer in 2003, Tom’s family attended the evangelical church service.

Scarice will never forget his father’s words about Calvin: “He was a good man. He was one of the best friends I ever had.”

That was only the third time in his life that Scarice saw his father cry.

“That is how we change over time,” he said, tying the story back to his earlier comments.

Scarice challenged every district employee to change and grow. The way to do that, he added, is to listen to every student and colleague’s stories.

Every day, he said, “is an opportunity to strike at that stonecutter’s stone.” Every interaction — no matter how seemingly small or unseen — matters.

Soon, the convocation was over. The nearly 1,000 attendees headed back to meetings, planning and preparation.

A new school year — filled, as always, with excitement, anticipation, and countless chances for growth — begins Tuesday.

(The opening convocation also included the announcement of Westport’s Teacher of the Year: Bedford Middle School social studies instructor and team leader Lou DeFichy. A full story will appear later on “06880.”)

(Education is important to “06880” — this blog, and this community. Please click here to help us continue covering all our schools. Thank you!)

Pic Of The Day #2319

Sherwood Mill Pond sunrise (Photo/Sunil Hirani)

Roundup: Victoria Kann, Verso University, Judy O’Meara …

Victoria Kann is back!

The famed Westporter and Pinkalicious author will read from her book “Pink or Treat” on Sunday, October 22 (10 a.m.).

The headline event is part of the kids’ component of StoryFest 2023. It also includes a “Pink or Treat” Halloween book reading and parade; a Pinkalicious Halloween parade with fun giveaways; a picture book reading on the Library steps with picture book authors, and a Monster Lab where kids can make their own 3D Monster Figurine or a Halloween mask.

The event is free with registration. There is an option to buy a signed copy of “Pink or Treat” for $15, and many other Kann favorites.

The 6th edition of StoryFest — the largest literary festival in Connecticut — runs October 20-22, with writers of all forms and from all genres.

Best-seller Neil Gaiman kicks off StoryFest 2023 on Friday evening, October 20, in conversation with Stephen Graham Jones. Saturday features author conversations and panel discussions, closing with a staged reading of Eric LaRocca’s new play, “Gentle Hacksaw.” Additional events are set for Sunday.

Victoria Kann

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More Westport Library news: Verso University — its lifelong learning arm — offers a number of classes this fall.

They include:

  • “History of Jazz”: Tuesdays, September 5-27, 11 a.m. – noon.
  • “Location Sketch Drawing”: Thursday, September 7-28, 1 to 2:30 p.m.
  • “Transcending the ‘Unreality of Reality'”: 4 Novels of Crisis and Endurance: Every other Tuesday, September 12 to October 24, 2 to 3 p.m..
  • “Song Arts Academy Contemporary Songwriting Workshop”: Mondays, Septebmer 18 to November 13, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
  • “CT Art Trail: Housatonic Museum of Art”: Thursday, September 21, 11 a.m. to noon.
  • “Private Small Group Guitar or Electric Bass Lessons”: Sunday, September 24 to October 15, 3 to 4 p.m.
  • “CT Art Trail: New Britain Museum of American Art”: Thursday, October 12, 11 a.m. to noon.
  • “Stand-Up Comedy Workshop and Student Showcase”: Mondays, October 16 to November 6, 7 to 9 p.m. (Zoom); Showcase: Friday, November 17, 7 to 8:30 p.m.
  • “The Development of Comedy in Film”: Wednesdays, October 18 to November 8, 2 to 3 p.m.
  • “Total Cents: Empowering Parents in Financial Educations”: Starting Thursdays, October 19, 10 to 11:30 a.m.
  • “Introduction to Video Game Design”: Wednesday, November 1 to December 13, 6:30 to 8 p.m.
  • “CT Art Trail: The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum”: Wednesday, November 15, 11 a.m. to noon.

Click here for details, and registration information.

Tom Henske’s class — “Empowering Parents in Financial Education” — is one of my Verso University offerings.

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Westport Police made 1 custodial arrest between August 16 and 23.

A man was clocked by radar going 53 miles in a 25 mph zone. He had 2 active re-arrest warrants, for failure to appear, and was detained for both.

Westport Police also issued these citations:

  • Disorderly conduct: 2 citations
  • Operating an unregistered motor vehicle: 2
  • Failure to renew registration: 2
  • Failure to register a commercial vehicle: 2
  • Speeding: 1
  • Traveling unreasonably fast:
  • Improper passing: 1
  • Failure to drive in the proper lane: 1
  • Failure to grant right of way: 1
  • Operating a motor vehicle with out-of-state plates: 1
  • Failure to comply with state traffic commission regulations: 1.

Pro tip: Don’t drive double the speed limit when there are 2 warrants out for your arrest.

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A reader wonders about Judy O’Meara’s now-closed TBI Apple-authorized shop, located first on Post Road West, then a mile down Route 1 in Norwalk.

She bought 2 iMacs there. Then the shop disappeared.

“Judy and the shop are irreplaceable,” the reader writes.  “I’ve spent almost 11 months trying to find her.

The reader contacted the owner of the building and the Better Business Bureau. No one knows what happened, or where Judy is.

Readers with information on TBI and/or Judy: Please click “Comments” below.

Judy O’Meara

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Donations of new and gently used clothing and accessories are welcome now, for the Westport Woman’s Club annual clothing tag sale.

The event runs October 20-22, at the WWC clubhouse. On sale: a wide array of suits, dresses, pants, blouses, gowns, coats, scarves, shoes, jewelry, handbags and hats.

Funds raised help support the Westport food closet, charities throughout Fairfield County, and student scholarships.

Donations can be dropped off weekdays (9 a.m. to noon, and 1 to 4 p.m.) at the WWC (44 Imperial Avenue).

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Laszlo Birinyi, a noted investment adviser who analyzed money flows to determine stock moves died Monday. He was 79.

The native of Hungary founded Birinyi Associates. Its office is still in a modest building on Wilton Road.

He was inducted into PBS’s “Wall Street Week Hall of Fame” in 1999. after success as the show’s top-ranked Dow Jones forecaster for most of the decade. (Hat tip: Johanna Rossi)

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This glorious arrangement at Stephanie Mastocciolo’s Warnock Drive home provides today’s “Westport … Naturally” color:

(Photo/Stephanie Mastocciolo)

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And finally … today is the birthday of Jimmy Soul.

His 1963 hit reached #1. Its lyrics would definitely raise eyebrows today.

jimmy Soul was born on August 24, 1942. He died of heart failure just 45 years later.

(If you wanna be happy — no matter who you marry — please click here to support “06880.” Even if you’re not happy, it helps the blog. Thank you!)