Author Archives: Dan Woog

Roundup: Bus Shelters, RTM Map, Marxism In Connecticut …

For years, Westporters have been distressed watching Coastal Link bus riders standing on the side of the Post Road.

Employees of local businesses are there in broiling heat, freezing cold, torrential rain and driving snow.

Two new shelters should provide some protection.

Measuring 6 by 12 feet, with roof solar panels for light, electric heat and a small computer screen displaying bus arrival times, they’ve been built on Post Road West.

One is in front of Schulhof Animal Hospital. The other is across the street.

Each shelter costs $60,000. Funding is shared by the state and town (through an ARPA grant).

On the westbound side of Post Road West …

… and across the street. (Photos/Amy Schneider)

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At the other end of town, Big Y took a big step toward its opening.

The logo is up over the supermarket, in the former Barnes & Noble building.

(Photo/Arthur Hayes)

A soft launch is set for October 24.

Meanwhile, they’re hiring in the bakery, meat, seafood, deli, produce and floral departments, along with cashiers, overnight stock clerks, and assistant management and management positions.

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Sometimes the wheels of government grind exceedingly slowly.

Other times they work at warp speed.

On Sunday, a Westporter — frustrated he could not find a map of Representative Town Meeting districts on the town website — emailed RTM moderate Jeff Wieser and 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker.

Couldn’t it be somewhere much more visible, he wondered? Like, in the main menu on the RTM page?

Voilà!

By yesterday afternoon — the first day back at work, after Sunday and the Labor Day holiday — the link was right there, just below “Members/Contact Information.”

Click here to see. Or just look below:

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Speaking of government: “A Public Conversation on Marxism in CT, Trafficking in America, Rank Choice Voting, and Election Integrity” is the title of a September 18 event (7 p.m., VFW Joseph J. Clinton Post 399.

The event is sponsored by Connecticut Centinal.

Panelists include Lt. Gen. Rod Bishop, USAF Ret., chairman of STARRS.us; Joe Oltmann, host of the Conservative Daily podcast; Connecticut State Senator Rob Sampson, and Linda Szynkowicz, founder of Fight Voter Fraud.

In-person tickets are $30 ($100 premier). Livestream tickets are $25. A percentage of the proceeds will be donated to VFW Post 399 to fund infrastructure development.

Click here for tickets, and more information. (Hat tip: Sal Liccione)

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The bad news: Next Tuesday (September 10), the Starbucks near Carvel closes for a month, for renovations.

The good news: For 4 weeks, we can all drive safely on that stretch of the Post Road.

(Photo/John McKinney)

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On August 18, “Paulie” set out on his fourth “Push.”

The former flight attendant is honoring the heroes of American Flight 11, the first aircraft hijacked on September 11, 2001.

Paulie left from Boston’s Public Garden 9/11 Memorial. He’s pushing an airline beverage cart 210 miles, to the National 9/11 Memorial & Museum at New York’s Ground Zero.

This morning (Wednesday), he’ll come from Fairfield through Westport. Around noon, he’ll stop at Westport Fire Department’s Post Road East headquarters.

Keep your eye open for Paulie, as he “pushes” his way through town.

“Paulie” pushes his cart through Westport, on a previous journey.

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If you’ve never been to an Artists Collective of Westport pop-up exhibition: You’ve missed some of the most creative shows in town.

The opening receptions are especially fun.

The next one is set for Thursday, September 19 (6 to 8 p.m., Westport Country Playhouse barn).

It runs Friday and Saturday, September 20-21 (noon to 4 p.m.), with an artists’ talk on Sunday, September 22 (4 p.m.).

Exhibiting artists include Peter Mendelson, Lisa Silberman, Lois Goglia, Rosalind Shaffer, Melissa Newman, Lucienne Buckner, Erin Nazzaro, Elizabeth DeVoll, Andrew Graham, Nancy Woodward, Miggs Burroughs and Susan Lloyd.

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Sara Deren — yesterday’s Westport Rotary Club lunch speaker — has a unique job, and a moving story to tell.

She is founder and CEO of the Westport-based national non-profit, Experience Camps. They provide a free week of sleepaway camp for 1,300 children a year who are grieving the loss of a parent, sibling or caregiver.

Deren noted that the camps don’t try to “fix” the grief. Instead, they ameliorate the sense of isolation it causes, by teaching youngsters how to talk to the staff and with other youth in the same situation.

That, and the support of others, gives them the tools they need to move on with their lives in a positive way.

Sara Deren, at the Westport Rotary Club. (Photo/Dave Matlow)

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Norwalk native Mike Camacho headlines this Thursday’s Jazz at the Post (September 5, VFW Joseph J. Clinton Post 399; shows at 7:30 and 8:45 p.m.; dinner at 7 p.m.; $20 music cover, $15 for veterans and students).

The drummer will be joined by pianist Ben Rice, bassist Alec Safy, and saxophonist Greg “The Jazz Rabbi” Wall. Click here for tickets.

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Nature photographer Lou Weinberg took today’s very compelling “Westport … Naturally” image. It shows a green sweat bee on Autumn Joy Sedum, at the Westport Community Gardens.

(Photo/Lou Weinberg)

Lou explains: “The green sweat bee gets its name from the fact that is attracted to the salt in human perspiration. (Don’t worry — it won’t sting unless it is really threatened; even then, its sting is mild.)

“These beautiful critters live in the soil and feed on the nectar from flowers and a sweet ‘honeydew’ created by little bugs called aphids. They store ‘pollen bread’ for themselves and their young.

“Green sweat bees add to the incredible biodiversity found in the Long Lots Preserve surrounding the Community Gardens. They are one of over 300 species of native bees found in Connecticut. Native bees are incredible pollinators, more efficient than the European honeybee.

“They have innate habits adept at pollinating hundreds of important native plants — the same plants (trees, shrubs and wildflowers) that have been planted in the Long Lots Preserve.

“As habitat loss and decreasing plant biodiversity are the primary sources of native bee population decline, it would be incredibly disappointing to destroy the Long Lots Preserve as well as the Westport Community Gardens.

“Populations of dozens of other species are being brought back by the native plantings reestablished there. When you disturb the soil, you destroy the bees.”

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And finally … in honor of our new bus shelters:

(Politics, art, business … just another day at “06880.” If you enjoy our daily Roundups — or anything else we do — please click here, to make a tax-deductible donation. Thank you!)

“The Apprentice” Fights Back

Everyone in America has heard of “The Apprentice.”

The quasi-real TV series featured eager businesspeople battling for a $250,000 contract. It made “you’re fired!” a national catchphrase, and catapulted Donald Trump onto the path to the presidency.

You may not have heard of the movie version of “The Apprentice.”

At least, not yet.

The film explores a young Trump’s rise to power, beginning in the 1970s with attorney/fixer Roy Cohn.

It debuted at the Cannes Film Festival in May, and earned an 8-minute standing ovation. Its North American premiere at Telluride last weekend was equally successful.

But because the film offers “an unfiltered look at Trump’s complicated and often unseemly journey,” his campaign issued a cease and desist order. They hoped to halt its release in the US — at least before the November election.

It was reported that Trump (who had not seen the film) was particularly incensed by scenes that depict him raping his first wife, Ivana; abusing amphetamines to lose weight, and undergoing liposuction and plastic surgery to remove a bald spot. (The rape scene was based on divorce records.)

Legal threats caused major media companies to shy away from distribution.

“The Apprentice” stars (from left) Sebastian Stan as Donald Trump, Jeremy Strong as Roy Cohn, and Maria Bakalova as Ivana Trump. 

Filmmakers are now pursuing a grassroots, independent approach. It is scheduled for limited theatrical release on October 11.

That’s good news for the cast, crew and producers of “The Apprentice.”

Including the writer, Gabriel Sherman.

The 45-year-old attended Kings Highway Elementary, Bedford Middle and Staples High School (through 10th grade).

After graduating from Holderness School in New Hampshire and Middlebury College (2001), he wrote for New York magazine and Vanity Fair. He’s been a regular contributor to NBC News and MSNBC.

In 2014, Sherman wrote a biography of Fox News Channel president Roger Ailes called “The Loudest Voice in the Room: How the Brilliant, Bombastic Roger Ailes Built Fox News – and Divided a Country.”

He began work on “The Apprentice” in 2018.

Gabe Sherman

Hoping for widespread distribution before the election — and fearing possible retribution after, if Trump wins — the film’s backers have started a Kickstarter campaign.

The goal is to raise $100,000, to enable additional distribution beyond the first 17 cities where it is planned to be screened.

As with all Kickstarter projects, donors will be charged only if full funding is secured.

That seems likely. The deadline is September 29. In just 2 days, nearly the entire amount has already been raised.

Donors are offered streaming rights, tickets to a preview screening, on-screen memorabilia from the production, access to the filmmakers — and their name in the credits.

Not far from Gabriel Sherman’s.

(Click here for the Kickstarter link.)

(“06880” regularly highlights the careers of Westporters, past and present. To support our work, please click here. Thank you!)

Pics Of The Day #2695

Yesterday — Labor Day — marked the unofficial end of summer.

All around Compo Beach, perfect weather sent the season out in style.

Of course, we know a secret: September is also one of the best times of the year here. Enjoy!

(All photos/Dinkin Fotografix)

 

 

Roundup: Levitt Shows, Optimum Outage, Raccoon Rescue …

Four big — no, huge — shows highlight the final 6 weeks of the Levitt Pavilion.

Concerts include:

  • Peter Frampton (Sunday, September 15, 7 p.m.)
  • Arrival from Sweden: The Music of ABBA (Friday, September 20, 8 p.m.)
  • Tower of Power (Saturday, September 21, 7:30 p.m.)
  • Brad Tursi: singer/songwriter with Old Dominion, and Staples High School graduate; solo show (Saturday, October 12, 7:30 p.m.).

Click here to purchase tickets, and more information.

But wait! There’s more!

The Levitt also offers free shows, too. They include:

  • DNR, the (almost) all-physician rock band (Friday, September 6, 7:30 p.m.)
  • Billy and the Showmen (Saturday, September 7, 7:30 p.m.)
  • Amy Irving’s Birthday Show (Tuesday, September 10, 7 p.m.)
  • Bia Ferreira Trio: Songs of Brazil (Tuesday, October 1, 7 p.m.)

Click here, then scroll down to reserve free tickets to those shows.

Peter Frampton

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Optimum’s outage last night — affecting thousands of customers in the tri-state area — had many Westporters fuming.

And not just at the lack of internet and TV service.

Calls to the company went unanswered.

Some users heard a recording that they were experiencing a “higher than average” volume “due to the COVID pandemic.”

One caller — okay, I — heard the spectacularly unhelpful suggestion to go online, at Optimum.net.

Service has now been restored. Let’s hope their call volume is down too.

Even with everyone stuck at home, because of the pandemic.

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Westporters love our US Postal Service clerks.

From time to time, we give shout-outs to extra-special efforts. Here’s one more, from Karen Como:

“On Friday, Ruben went above and beyond for me.

“I had to return a skirt to a fly-by-night company. He found the smallest (least expensive) envelope. He folded the skirt for me, put it in the envelope, helped me attach the address with his tape, and found me the cheapest way to send it.

“Then he advised me to call my credit card company to report what I feel is a scam.

“He was sooo nice, and sooo helpful!”

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Hot on the heels of the rescue of 5 kittens from a Post Road East storm drain, comes another animal-saving story.

Once again, the Westport Fire Department and Animal Control played big roles.

Larry Hoy reports: “Yesterday morning, my son Colin Hoy and his girlfriend Zoe spotted 4 little feet hanging from the storm drain grate on Quentin Road, next to Gray’s Creek.

Trapped raccoon …

“They realized the tide would soon rise, and drown the little feller.

“Quick action by Westport’s Bravest freed the little varmint. Then Animal Control came to insure its safety.”

Well done, Colin, Zoe, the WFD and Animal Control!

… and the “grate” rescue. (Photos courtesy of Larry Hoy)

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Labor Day marks the unofficial end to summer.

Compo Beach was packed yesterday, with residents and visitors enjoying a gorgeous day. The weather, humidity and sun were perfect.

The picnic tables and grills on South Beach were all taken.

These folks may have had to go to Plan B — the pavilion — for their dinner.

But they made the most of it.

(Photo/Gil Ghitelman)

Also making the most of it: a large party on the Old Mill sand bar, celebrating Popup Bagels’ founder Adam Goldberg’s, and his wife’s, birthdays.

The timing was perfect, for food, drinks, even a band on a boat that floated away with the tide.

(Photo/Dave Briggs)

(Photo/Dave Briggs)

(Photo/Dinkin Fotografix)

Meanwhile, off Old Mill in the Sound just a few yards away, a dozen or so boats moored.

The adults socialized, while the kids skim boarded. Another great way to end the summer. (Hat tip: Anna Rycenga)

(Drone phot/Matt Shiel)

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Gabriella S. Izzo died peacefully at her Westport home on Sunday. She was 87.

The native of Ielsi, Campobasso, Italy came to the US with her family in 1947. She was educated in Norwalk, and graduated from cosmetology school. She was a hairdresser in Darien for over 50 years, until her retirement in 2020.

Gabriella was a talented chef, and gave home-grown grape jelly, fresh tomato sauce, homemade sausage, Christmas cookies and Easter pies to family, friends, co-workers and cherished clients.

She honored Ielsi by cooking and baking traditional recipes for special holidays. As a longtime member of Assumption Church, she volunteered for many years. She was a member of the Catholic Daughters until it disbanded.

Gabriella was predeceased by her husband of 57 years, Joseph, and brother Nicholas Testa. She is survived by her daughter Lisa (George) Stanton of Westport, son Joseph (Jennifer) of Wilmington, North Carolina, and daughter Felicia (David) Smith, of Westport; grandchildren Melissa (Edward) Carter, Jeffrey Stanton, and Timothy and Kevin Izzo, and many nieces and nephews.

Calling hours are tomorrow (Wednesday, September 4, 5 to 8 p.m., Harding Funeral Home). A mass of Christian burial will be celebrated at Assumption Church at 10 a.m. on Thursday, September 5. Interment will follow at Willowbrook Cemetery.

Condolences may be left online at www.hardingfuneral.com. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in Gabriella’s name to Assumption Church.

Gabriella Izzo

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Don’t call them “birdbrains.”

Every spring, for years, birds know to return to the same spot at the Playhouse Condominiums.

There — atop a fire alarm, underneath the protected parking garage — they build their nest.

The mother sits on the eggs. Eventually, they hatch.

They hang out for a couple of months, doing whatever birds do all day.

At night, they sleep.

And next spring, the baby will return to do it all over again.

It’s “Westport … Naturally” at its finest.

(Photo/Dick Truitt)

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And finally … as soon as you saw the raccoon rescue story (above), you knew this was coming:

(Some Levitt Pavilion shows are free. Well, ALL “06880” content is. But we couldn’t do this without contributions from readers like you. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

 

Rob Eichler: ALS Story Comes Full Circle

Rob Eichler — a 1971 Staples High School graduate, who was involved in Players, the music program and more — now lives in Peterborough, New Hampshire, with his wife Martha. His sister Lissie lives nearby; so does John Zurich, a longtime Westport friend.

Rob Eichler, in the Staples 1971 yearbook.

A year ago, Rob was diagnosed with ALS (Lou Gehrig’s Disease). It has progressed rapidly.

John suggested an article on ALS research. There’s a hook: a story Martha wrote about Rob’s dad, Jack Eichler — a longtime Westport resident. 

Here it is. It shines an important light on the disease, and on its impact on several former Westporters.

Martha wrote:

Jack Eichler, Rob’s dad, was a quiet, kind, methodical man whose pocket protector and slide rule were ever-present in his shirt pocket.

He was an Eagle Scout as a teen, then later a Boy Scout leader and beekeeper.

Jack was also a pilot in World War II, carrying parachute troops, towing gliders, and transporting soldiers between the US, Central America and Africa, with 182 ocean crossings.

Later he flew recreationally with a flying club out of Bridgeport, and taught flying and instrument flight aviation.

He became a mechanical engineer, and invented a machine to insert fruit filling into strudel at Pepperidge Farm. Another invention was circular windshield wipers for airplanes.

Like Rob, Jack was a man of many talents. Until Rob was diagnosed with ALS, I had completely forgotten about another of Jack’s significant accomplishments.

One of Jack’s best friends, nuclear physicist Hugh Neale, suffered from ALS. Though Hugh became paralyzed, he could still use his eyes to communicate because eyes are not incapacitated by ALS.

With Hugh, Jack designed a device called the ETRAN Communicator: a rectangular plexiglass window, with a smaller rectangular hole cut out of the middle.

Clusters of letters and numbers were embedded at certain spots around the perimeter of the ETRAN window. Hugh could communicate by indicating certain letters or numbers with a glance of the eyes.

With Hugh on one side of the ETRAN and an observer on the other side, the observer could register which letters Hugh’s eyes selected, and string the letters together into words and sentences.

Using the ETRAN Communicator.

Jack donated the ETRAN Communicator to humanity. He never expected or received any remuneration.

Rob recalls Jack telling him that he called this device “ETRAN” because those ar 5 of the 8 most-used letters in the English language.

In 1982, the ETRAN Communicator was underwritten by the Fran and Warren Rupp Foundation for production and distribution. Jack and Warren Rupp were fraternity brothers at Case Institute of Technology (now Case Western Reserve University).

More than 1,000 requests for the device from all 50 states were fulfilled that year. Additional orders came from Australia, Canada, England, and non-English speaking countries.

One ETRAN board was issued to British mathematician and nuclear physicist Dr. Stephen Hawking.

A monumental shift for patients and their families occurred, enabling communication for formerly silent individuals.

Jack Eichler, with his invention.

This sea change was noted in an article published by the Dorr-Oliver Corporation, the company founded in Westport where Jack worked as a senior design engineer in the early 1980s.

It noted: “Even small children afflicted by cerebral palsy can use ETRAN II, with symbols instead of letters. Jack’s file is 5 to 6 inches thick, with letters of thanks from parents and relatives so grateful for the chance to communicate with paralyzed loved ones.”

Although more advanced, high-tech options are available now to help non-verbal individuals communicate, ETRAN is still used today.

During an appointment, Rob’s communications augmentation specialist pulled out an ETRAN to confirm its present use.

But at the time of Jack and Hugh’s collaboration, the ETRAN Communicator was a brand new and indispensable tool. It was a selfless and generous contribution to humanity, designed to improve the quality of life for those with ALS and other debilitating, speech-robbing diseases.

We have two ETRAN Communicators in our basement. One is the original prototype board that Jack created to communicate with Hugh Neale. The other was produced by the Fran and Warren Rupp Foundation for public use.

Perhaps one of these will come into use for Rob someday.

How strange a coincidence that Jack would invent a device for those suffering from ALS, never knowing that his son would someday be afflicted with this diagnosis.

But also, how poignant it is that Jack made such an effort to help a friend, and in so doing, improved the lives of countless others also suffering with severe physical limitations.

Clearly, the spirit of helping is a quality that Jack passed down to Rob.

Anyone who knows Rob knows he goes above and beyond to help others, always with kindness, concern and love for humanity. For both father and son, I am eternally grateful.

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Westporters — and everyone else — can help raise funds for ALS research, in Rob’s name.

There is a walk October 5 in New Hampshire. Contributins are welcome, even if you can’t be there. Click here to donate.

Rob writes:

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s Disease) is a progressive, fatal neuromuscular disease that slowly robs the body of its ability to walk, speak, swallow and breathe.

I was diagnosed with ALS in August of 2023.

Rob Eichler

But I first learned about it when I was 13. My dad had a colleague with the disease. I visited a few times with my dad. I was somewhat daunted by the hospital bed in the dining room, the immobile father surround by his wife and several sons around my age.

Years later a college professor of mine was afflicted, forcing his early retirement.

In 2012 a work colleague of mine had a brother with ALS. I volunteered to join an ALS 50-mile bike ride to raise money for research and direct patient care support.

I read somewhere that medical students, when they come across ALS, say, “boy, this is the one you don’t want.”  I thought about ALS occasionally, and felt the same way.

Now that I have ALS, I’m discovering it is much more prevalent than I had thought: about one in 300 men, one in 450 women. Many people I meet acknowledge they had a parent, a cousin, an in-law who struggles with ALS or who has succumbed to it.

Now, in addition to raising funds for research, direct patient care support, and advocacy through the ALS Association, I am volunteering to participate in a clinical trial, and several studies to determine bio-markers for ALS.

Thank you for helping me reach my Walk to Defeat ALS fundraising goal. The Walk to Defeat ALS raises funds to support those affected by ALS and to spread awareness of the urgency to find treatments and a cure.

The life expectancy of a person with ALS averages 2 to 5 years from the time of diagnosis. ALS can strike anyone, and presently there is no known cause or cure.

I’m walking to change the statistics. To bring help and hope to those living with the disease. To ensure that no one ever hears the words: “You Have ALS” again.

The past 2 years have brought incredible advancements in ALS research, expanded access to care for people living with ALS, and enabled legislation that impacts the quality of life of people with ALS and their families.

But we can’t stop now. The key to a cure begins with you.

Please consider walking with me or sponsoring me (click here). With your help, we will be able to make a difference in the lives of people affected by this disease.

Pic Of The Day #2694

Hillspoint Road and Compo Hill, from Compo Cove footbridge (Photo/Susan Garment)

Roundup: Board Of Ed, Motorcycle Rally, Ben Casparius …

The Westport Board of Education meets this Thursday (September 5, 7 p.m., Staples High School cafeteria). Their full agenda includes:

  • Redistricting
  • Student enrollment report
  • Staffing Report
  • “No Place for Hate”
  • Code of Conduct
  • Second reading of student discipline policy.

The Long Lots School Building Committee also meets on Thursday (September 5, 6 p.m., Town Hall Room 201). An agenda is not yet available.

Westport’s current elementary and middle school map. Possible minor redistricting may be discussed this year.

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Connecticut’s largest annual 9/11 tribute — the CT United motorcycle ride — roars to life this Sunday (September 8, Sherwood Island State Park).

The event honors victims of the terrorist attack, first responders, and also state first responders who lost their lives on the job this year.

The 60-mile motorcycle ride is nonstop. Riders — escorted by police — proceed through intersections and stop lights without stopping, so drivers can expect significant delays.

From Sherwood Island, riders take I-95 to Exit 17. They head up Route 33 (Saugatuck and Riverside Avenues, and Wilton Road), through Wilton, Redding, Bethel, Newtown, Monroe and Trumbull, before ending at Bridgeport’s Seaside Park.

Proceeds from the fundraiser go to the Connecticut Professional Fire Fighters Emergency Relief Fund, and the Hundred Club of Connecticut, for loved ones of law enforcement officers who died in the line of duty.

Motorcycles mass before the start of the 2021 CT Ride United, at Sherwood Island State Park. (Photo/Penny Pearlman)

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Two follow-ups to yesterday’s “06880” Roundup item about Ben Casparius, the 2017 Staples High School graduate who earned his first Major League Baseball win with a 1-2-3 inning in relief Saturday night, for the Dodgers in Phoenix:

Before he was a state champion player for the Wreckers — and Connecticut’s Gatorade Player of the Year –a dominating Casparius won a Little League town title in 3rd grade. Even then, teammates, opponents, coaches and fans knew he was special.

Casparius’ girlfriend has some serious athletic chops herself.

Erin Matson is one of the most famous field hockey players ever. She led the University of North Carolina to 4 NCAA championships. Just a month after graduating, she was named head coach of the Tar Heels. (Hat tip: Jeff Mitchell)

Ben Casparius

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Kevin Gasvoda has not lived in Westport long.

But he’s quickly appreciated the wildlife near his Lees Pond home.

Here’s his “Westport … Naturally” contribution a bald eagle, soaring majestically overhead.

(Photo/Kevin Gasvoda)

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And finally … Happy Labor Day!

(If you’re enjoying your day off — you deserve it! But don’t forget: “06880” is on the job, 24/7/365. Please toss a few coins in our tip jar. Just click here — and thank you!)

Water Mills: A Once-And-Future Power Source?

Happy Labor Day!

If you’re thinking about this holiday at all — beyond a day off, cookouts, and the unofficial end of summer — it might be in the context of, well, labor.

For more than 2 centuries after its founding in the 1600s, Westport benefited from the labor of its residents. Dairy farmers, onion farmers, railroad and stone wall builders, coal and oil haulers, twine and ping pong ball and embalming supply factory workers — all helped make this town what it was.

A detail from Robert Lambdin’s magnificent mural, depicting long-ago commerce in town. It is on display in the Town Hall lobby.

Longtime Westporter Lynn Flint is an anthropologist. She is fascinated by the history of water power.

She has researched old water mills. One that caught her attention is the well-maintained Revolutionary War-era building on Ford Road, at the junction of the Saugatuck and Aspetuck Rivers near where Lyons Plains meets Weston Road.

Older residents know it as part of the Dorr-Oliver Laboratories. It’s remembered, Lynn says, for inventing the continuous vacuum filter for separating gold from baser elements in the early 20th century.

Dorr-Oliver mill, circa 1920.

In 1812 this was a gristmill. Later, it became a textile mill. She does not know whether a water wheel and grindstone still remain,

“I’m not suggesting we need to go back to grinding our own grain,” Lynn says.

“But I wonder if it could be the start of an idea of producing electricity using water power.”

Elon Musk produces vehicles that use alternate sources of power, she says.

“It’s electricity in his case. But most electricity is made with fossil fuels. Water power is free and clean.”

Potential source of water power on Ford Road? (Photo/Fred Cantor)

Climate change causes more and heavier rain here, Lynn says. “As we scramble to improve our drains and siphon off standing water near roads, maybe we should consider that a bounty may have been dropped on our doorstep. Maybe we can use this annoying and destructive water to our advantage as a power source.”

The number 1 source worldwide for producing electricity is coal. Natural gas is second.

Both are in finite supply. Both cause emissions, and cost a substantial amount to find and distribute.

(Not for nothing, she notes, her Eversource bill — for a household of one person — doubled last month, with no change in usage.)

Old Mill grist mill, in an undated photo.

Lynn says, “Even if the Ford Road building was reconstructed as a mill, I’m not sure there would be that much energy.

“But at least it would be a demo, something to begin to think about. Maybe some water energy could be used for the residential area near there.

“Maybe one of our brilliant Staples students could make us a working model.”

(Click here for some statistics on hydropower.)

(“06880” covers the environment regularly — along with every other area of Westport life. If you appreciate our work, please click here for a tax-deductible donation. Thank you!)

Pics Of The Day #2693

End of summer, Compo Beach … (Photo/Jim Corgel)

… and on the Sound (Photo/Tommy Magro)

Photo Challenge #505

It’s easy to miss the Westport Public Schools’  maintenance office.

It’s next to Canal Park on Canal Street, where it turns into Kings Highway North. There’s plenty of time at that traffic light to notice it — just downhill from the Willows medical complex (aka “Fort Apache”), on the Saugatuck River just north of the bridge.

But it tends to blend in with the scenery.

Four readers — Andrew Colabella, Seth Schachter, Robert Walter Mitchell and Beth Berkowitz — are alert enough, though, to have identified the weathervane atop building (which, years ago, served as a Bridgeport Hydraulic facility) as last week’s Photo Challenge. (Click here to see.)

That was the second time this summer that the Board of Education maintenance site was the subject of a Photo Challenge. The previous one, last month, showed the intricately carved door.

How about this week’s Challenge? If you know where in Westport you’d see this, click “Comments” below.

(Photo/Richard Fogel)

(Every Sunday, “06880” hosts this Photo Challenge. We challenge you too to support your hyper-local blog. Please click here to make a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)