Category Archives: Staples HS

Roundup: Farmers’ Market, Teen Essays, Staples Cellphones …

There is no better sign of spring than the return of the Westport Farmers’ Market.

The annual rite is set for next Thursday (May 8). It runs every Thursday, rain or shine, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., at the Imperial Avenue parking lot near Jesup Road.

WFM will hand out free packets, to “sow the seeds of another incredible season.”

“As we begin this season, we’re not just putting up tents. We’re planting ideas, nurturing community, and growing a better food system,” says executive director Lori Cochran-Dougall.

The 2025 Farmers’ Market includes:

  • Over 50 local farms and vendors, committed to sustainabie practices and “real food.”
  • Non-profit partners, with informational tables, giveaways and more.
  • Cooking demonstrations, a revamped recipe program, kids’ events and community talks.
  • Live music.

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A cellphone-free Staples has been talked about for a while.

On Tuesday, the public gets its say.

A special Board of Education meeting (May 6, 7:30 p.m., Coleytown Middle School auditorium) has one agenda item: “Bell-to-Bell Cell Phone Free Initiative at SHS.”

The meeting notice adds: “The Westport Public Schools invite your feedback on making Staples High School a phone free school.”

Cellphone holders may be a thing of the past, if the devices are banned throughout the day at Staples High School.

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Speaking of Staples: On Monday, TEAM Westport announced the 4 winners of its 12th annual Teen Diversity Writing Contest.

As reported on “06880,” the quartet — Annam Olasewere, Aanya Gandhi, Souleye Kebe and Sienna Tzou — wrote about their identities with tremendous insight, depth, honesty and clarity.

They also delivered their essays powerfully, and passionately.

Click below to view their presentations. Their personal readings give even greater meaning to their compelling words.

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Read to Grow celebrated 25 years of providing books to Connecticut’s babies and children last night, with a great gala at the Westport Library.

Host Ian O’Malley — the well-known Westport realtor and New York radio personality — and other speakers described the impact the program has had on hundreds of thousands of youngsters, and their parents. A flagship program is the gift of baby books and early literacy information to nearly every new mother in Connecticut.

Zucca Gastrobar’s superb catering, and silent auction items featuring (among others) Ron Darling and the Doobie Brothers added to the fun.

For more information on Read to Grow, click here.

Ian O’Malley, Read to Grow gala emcee.

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Also last night: A large crowd welcomed Alex Lehr to Westport.

His Post Road store — American Colors by Henry Lehr — opened in December. But the ribbon cutting for the shop, which features casual, comfortable, contemporary clothing for men and women,  a collection of vintage belts, and much more — was yesterday.

American Colors marks a return to Westport for the Lehr family. Alex’s father, Henry, operated a very successful and much-loved women’s store around the corner on Main Street for decades.

Cutting the ribbon (from left): 2nd Selectwoman Andrea Moore, Alex Lehr, 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker, Chamber of Commerce director Matthew Mandell,  brand strategist Jay Norris.

Checking out the store. (Photos/Ryan Allen)

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Yesterday’s “Westport in Focus” newsletter from 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker included information about the Conservation Department.

She notes their “fascinating presentation about Westport’s natural habitats – vernal pools. They are a delicate habitat pressed by multiple stressors, yet home to a surprising array of life. Species such as fairy shrimp, spotted salamanders, and wood frogs call these places home and struggle to live anywhere else.

“Westport is lucky to contain hundreds of vernal pools, ranging from under 100 square feet to over a few thousand.”

The newsletter includes a link for more information about vernal pools. Another link to the Conservation Department’s page on the town website offers details on protecting natural resources while maintaining lawns and plants.

Vernal pool

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“06880” readers learned last week that Dave Briggs nominated me for the #SpeakYourMind ice bucket challenge. The videos bring awareness to, and raise funds for, youth mental health.

I was honored to be dunked (click here to see), and promptly nominated Jen Tooker, Andrea Moore and Foti Koskinas.

The selectwomen quickly rose to the challenge (the police chief was out of town). They chose Positive Directions as the next victims.

The entire board of the non-profit center for prevention and counseling accepted.

Coincidentally, PD was kicking off their New York Marathon journey the same day. Runners Gianna Affi, Cam Gaylord and Brian McGarvey will run to raise money for the organizaton. They joined Jen in dousing board members with frigid water.

Positive Directions paid it forward. They nominated Rhone, who is helping make the marathon “a huge splash” (including outfitting the runners in training and at the race), plus mental performance coach Rhodie Lorenz, who is inspiring the runners as they train.

Click here or below for the video.

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The Joggers Club — Connecticut’s largest run club — is moving from Compo Beach to Greens Farms train station.

The new routes include Beachside Avenue and nearby beaches.

Organizers say, “All the rules are the same. Have fun, all paces are welcome, enjoy free coffee from McDonald’s and bagels from Village Bagels.”

Runs begin every Saturday at 8 a.m. Membership ($50 a year) includes a free Lululemon shirt for all new members.

For more information, email thejoggersclub@gmail.com.

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Wednesday’s “06880” story — about the partnership between Staples High School drama teacher David Roth’s directing class, Westport’s Shakespeare scholar Diane Lowman and Bridgeport’s Edison Elementary School, to bring the Bard to young students — struck a chord.

Within a day, $2,125 had been raised to help fund more Bridgeport classes take part in the future. Roth and Lowman are grateful for readers’ generosity.

To help reach the $4,000 goal, click here.

Staples directing students and Edison School youngsters, working together to love Shakespeare. (Photo/Kerry Long)

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In March, “06880” profiled Zander Bauer and Elijah Falkenstein.

The Staples High School juniors are founders and co-presidents of the local Make Our Schools Safe chapter. The club empowers students and staff to help create a culture of safety and vigilance, while advocating for laws that promote safery schools.

In February, Zander and Elijah testified before the state legislature.

Yesterday, SB 1216 passed through the Senate. It calls for the installation of silent panic alarms directly linked to law enforcement, which dramatically reduces response time

State Senator Ceci Maher — who worked closely with the Staples students — praised Elijah and Zander in her social media posts. Click here to see.

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Today’s “Westport … Naturally” photos may be the last from the now-closed Community Gardens. As “06880” reported yesterday, the 20-year-old site will at some point be the staging area for construction of the new Long Lots elementary School. Later, an athletic field will be built on the site.

(Photo/Toni Simonetti)

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And finally … Today is the birthday of Manfred von Richthofen. The German World War I pilot was born in 1892. He was killed over France in 1918, age 25.

·(Another day, another Roundup filled with news you can use. If you appreciate this daily feature — or any other part of “06880” — please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Staples Students Share Shakespeare

It’s one thing for high school students to connect with Shakespeare.

Some do. An inspiring teacher or formative experience can help them understand the timeless appeal of The Bard’s explorations of life, love, death, revenge, grief, jealousy, murder, magic and mystery. 

It’s another thing entirely for third graders to get it.

But students at Edison Elementary School in Bridgeport are fortunate to have Chris Cormier as a teacher.

And Chris is fortunate to have connected with Diane Lowman.

Diane Lowman

For many years, Lowman — Westport’s first-ever poet laureate, who earned a master’s degree in Shakespeare studies through the University of Birmingham (in Stratford-upon-Avon) — has collaborated with “Mr. C,” and the Edison students.

She visits regularly, teaching them the ins and outs of the world’s most famous playwright. They are always eager to learn.

Earlier this year, Lowman contacted Staples Players directors David Roth and Kerry Long. Could the high school’s prestigious drama group help the Edison youngsters learn a bit more about Shakespeare?

Timing is everything, as we know from “Julius Caesar.”

Roth’s Theater III advanced acting class had been working on scenes from “Macbeth.”

So one morning this month, the Bridgeport boys and girls arrived excitedly at Staples.

They played a concentration game with Roth and the class. They talked about the Shakespeare plays they had studied.

Getting to know each other. Staples Players director David Roth is at left. Edison School teacher Chris Cormier is 6th from right.

They watched Roth’s class perform 2 “Macbeth” scenes. Afterward, the Edison children asked questions, about the play and theater in general.

A scene from “Macbeth,” with Cat Betit and Will McCrea.

Then — with everyone sitting on the Black Box floor — they enjoyed pizza and juice boxes.

A post-play treat.

Roth and Long were amazed at how much the youngsters knew, after just an hour a week with Cormier and Lowman.

“They asked great questions,” Long says. “They really understood what they were talking about, and raised questions about themes of the play.”

“It’s incredibly gratifying for this Shakespeare nerd to see the kids respond so positively, and make so many connections with The Bard,” Lowman adds.

“Having David, his students and Kerry bring this to life was such a treat. This is the beginning of a beautiful friendship and an annual tradition.”

Learning together: Mikey Winkler and 3rd graders.

Roth and Long asked Lowman if she could do something similar, for more classs. Cormier said he’d help.

As for Cormier himself: Edison Elementary School has no budget to support trips like the one to Staples.

The cost for a bus is not insignificant. Students sold ice cream at Friday lunches for $1 each, but that did not cover the entire transportation and food bill. Cormier made up the difference.

“I know that Westport could easily pitch in,” Long says.

She and Roth have created a GoFundMe page, for donations.

Whether you’re a Shakespeare fan, or just want to help a group of Bridgeport kids expand their horizons, click here.

Because, as we all know, “Fortune reigns in gifts of the world.”

Theatre III and Edison Park students, with their teachers. (All photos/Kerry Long)

 

[OPINION] Harrington: Small Block “S” Is A Big Deal

Robert Harrington is a member of the Board of Education. Last month he raised concerns about Staples High School’s replacement of the traditional handsome metal Block “S” award for student-athletes with a less expensive plaque. He writes:

I attempted to discuss the Block “S”  last month, but the rest of the board decided against adding it the agenda.

At the Board of Education meeting last week, a discussion finally took place.

I was pleased that chair Lee Goldstein agreed to add it to to the agenda. However, a motion that I proposed to require restoration of the 60-year old Block “S” tradition, and retroactively award trophies to fall and winter recipients of the MVP and Coaches’ Awards, failed on a 2-to-4 vote.

Only fellow board member Dorie Hordon backed my motion. The other members voted against the restoration. Abby Tolan was not present.

I was disappointed that Staples athletic director VJ Sarullo didn’t turn up to the Board of Education, to justify his decision or answer any questions.

The Block “S” award …

There is a sense that superintendent of schools Tom Scarice and the athletic director might ultimately resolve the issue, or come up with an acceptable alternative. This sounds like next school year’s business – not now. Additionally, there are no guarantees that we will see the Block “S” return.

I would like us to make this promise to our student-athletes today.

Several board members see this issue as a “systems problem,” not something for the Board of Education to get involved in. Others refer to tough choices that have been made elsewhere, such as with the elementary theater programs or eliminating middle school visits to Broadway.

I’m not really sure what any of that has to do with defending a well-established tradition for Staples athletics.

The superintendent warned the board during the meeting about making decisions based on social media outcry. I see it differently. I am making a decision because I think ending the Block “S” this was wrong. A solution should have been sought before any changes were made.

… and its replacement.

I also think it was wrong to attack and criticize a Staples captain’s parent and long standing Westport resident, Terry Brannigan. He had raised the issue on social media, and brought awareness to many community members and Staples alumni.

He had attempted to go through the “proper channels” (and is prepared to share all his email and call logs), but he did not hear back from anyone. I am glad Brannigan discussed this on social media.

I think there needs to be more urgency to fix this problem. I take a very different stance than some of my other board members. We have a voice. We have the ability to vote to support a program. I strongly think we should that voice and take action.

When current students are impacted by a decision from our administration, I don’t take kindly to being told it is not a board issue. In truth, I simply don’t think the tradition and true value in the Block “S” is fully understood by some of those making this decision.

In some respects this is such a small thing. It’s only a trophy, after all, and the student athletes are still awarded a $12.95 plaque.

However, in the words of A.A. Milne, “sometimes the smallest things take up the most room on your heart.”  I think this is actually a very big thing.

Robert Harrington

The Block “S” has been the highest award a Staples athlete can earn. Our Staples student athletes are strong like metal, so it’s fitting that for over 70 years the trophy would be a strong “S” made of metal.

It’s not only about awarding the best athletes. The Coaches’ Award is often presented to an individual who has made strong progress, or significant contributions to the team — including helping the team act like a team.

As Dan Woog said in an earlier post, “Character, integrity, commitment, passion — all count for a Block ‘S.'”

Three of my children benefited during their time at Staples. It feels wrong to let many current Staples athletes leave our school system in a few weeks without the same honor and recognition.

The cost of the Block “S” trophies has risen to $15,000 for the year. That’s over $170 per trophy. There is a current shortfall of approximately $6,000 for this school year.

However, to make this change quietly, without any detailed consultation with Staples coaches was unfortunate.

Furthermore, to fail to discuss this ahead of time with any of the booster clubs seems like a real oversight. No one was given an opportunity to offer any solutions or alternatives.

The administration has stated that coaches were consulted and there was very little pushback. I have spoken to a handful of coaches who see it differently. I want to protect the anonymity of current coaches in the system, but the commentary is pretty clear:

Coach 1: “There is a total lack of respect for this award. To end it in this way is insulting to the entire coaching staff at Staples” 

Coach 2: “This is a slap in the face of every athlete who has won it for 70 years.”

Coach 3: “We simply were not consulted, whatever you are being told. The decision was already made.”

Coach 4: “This is just more drama in the athletics department. I’m shocked how this change occurred. I hope it is reversed quickly”

Coach 5: “We were told, not asked.”

At the end of the day, mistakes occur all the time in any system or organization. The Westport Public Schools is no exception. Finding a timely path forward and rectifying such mistakes is key.

This is an easy issue to fix.  It will require just an additional $6,000 of funding per year — and that assumes that no better sourcing is secured, and none of the larger booster clubs contribute to some of the expense. Both of these routes are possible outcomes, lowering future budget needs.

I hope future Staples athletes will see the Block “S” trophy awarded again — starting in the 2025-26 school year. To those current athletes who missed out: I hope you will be notified before the end of this school year that you will shortly be receiving a true Block “S” award.

Teens Tackle Identities, With Insights And Power

How do local teenagers think about their identities?

Poignantly, powerfully, painfully.

And very, very honestly.

TEAM Westport’s 12th annual Teen Diversity Essay Contest may have provided the most personal prompt ever.

It certainly drew some of the strongest, rawest responses in the dozen years the contest has asked young Westporters to reflect on their lives, and the world around them.

The prompt said:

In our community, each person’s unique identity — shaped by their race, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and other aspects of who they are — contributes to the character of Westport. In 1,000 words or less, we invite you to reflect on how your own identity shapes your perspective and the experiences you have in Westport. Please address the following considerations in your response:

  • Which aspects of your identity feel most central to how you wish to be understood and accepted?
  • How do aspects of your identity shape your daily school and community experiences, including both challenges and opportunities in expressing these parts of yourself?
  • What specific changes could our community make to decrease identity-based bias, bullying and hate?

Plans called for 3 prizes. The judges added a fourth, because of the impressive breadth and depth of the nearly 2 dozen submissions.

(And those judges are no slouches. Retired professor Dr. Judith Hamer headed a 6-person panel that included Shonda Rhimes.)

The 4 winning writers — announced last night at the Westport Library — addressed the subject differently. Two are Black; one is Indian, the other Chinese. All attend Staples High School.

Senior Annam Olasewere took first place, and won $1,000 for her essay “Understood. Connected. Valued.”

Sophomore Aanya Gandhi was second, earning $750 for “White Paint and Other Lies.” Junior Souleye Kebe took third place, worth $500, for “S-L-M,” while freshman Sienna Tzou was named honorable mention ($250) for “The Value of Identity From the Start.”

All 4 students express gratitude for their Westport experiences. None, however, has had an easy time.

From left: Annam Olasewere, Aanya Gandh, Sienna Tzou, Souleye Kebe.

The winning essays are below.

As you read them, reflect on their writers — and on all the other Westporters, of every age, they interact with every day.

Then remember those essays, and the young men and women behind them.

Not just the day after the diversity contest. But every day you are a Westporter.

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1st Place — ANNAM OLASEWERE: Understood, Connected. Valued.

Growing up in Westport, I quickly learned what it meant to stand out. In a school of hundreds, I can count on one hand the number of students who looked like me. More often than not, it was just me – in classes, walking the halls, or sitting at lunch as the only girl of color in the room. Those moments made me more aware of the gap between how I saw myself and how I was seen by others.

Westport prides itself on being a welcoming community, but belonging is not just about physically being in a space with others — it’s about being understood. It’s about being connected to your community. It’s about being valued. While I’ve never been directly told, “You don’t belong here,”  here,” I’ve felt it in a thousand quiet ways — the double takes when I say Westport is my hometown, the disbelief when I step into leadership roles or excel in AP courses, or the doubt people show when I pursue activities outside the norm for “someone like me.: It’s not outright hate; it’s something more subtle yet just as isolating-a quiet bias that makes me feel like I must constantly prove my worth.

Annam Olasewere

And nowhere have I felt this more than in my sport. Fairfield County’s athletic teams are known for their excellence — but not necessarily for their diversity. As a competitive swimmer, I step onto the pool deck knowing that, more often than not, I am the only brown-skinned girl in the water. Even when I succeed, the reaction isn’t admiration but disbelief — comments like, “How can you possibly balance everything? The academics, the athletics, the extracurriculars?” No one asks others who succeed in mulciple areas these questions. It’s as if my accomplishments are unexpected, as though they were not supposed to be possible for someone like me.

Yet, despite these challenges, my identity has also been my greatest source of strength. Being different has given me a deeper sense of determination and resilience. I don’t settle for less. I see the signs of bias now, and I don’t lee them define me. But here’s the thing — belonging isn’t just an internal issue. It’s also shaped by our structures and systems.

Westport wants to be a place where every student feels like they belong, but how can we when there are almost no role models and peers who look like us? Walking the halls, sitting in classes, and joining school activities, I rarely see faces that reflect my own. It’s not just a feeling — it’s a reality. African American students make up only 1.8% of the school district’s population, meaning that in a graduating class of 400-500, there are maybe seven of us. Seven.

Not in one classroom, not on one team — but in an entire grade. We aren’t just underrepresemed; we are scattered, spread so thin that it’s easy co feel invisible. And it’s not just among students. In a building with about 200 educators, I can count on one hand the number of teachers of color. Five — maybe fewer. In all my years of school, I’ve never had a teacher who shares my background, who understands — without explanation — what it’s like to walk into a room and immediately feel like an outsider. To be the only brown-skinned girl in a classroom, in an AP course, or on a team. To always feel like I have to prove that I belong.

Representation is not just a statistic. It’s about walking into a space and seeing proof that you can thrive there — that your ambitions are not anomalies, and that you don’t have to be the first or the only one to be excellent. When we don’t see ourselves reflected in leadership, in education, in success
stories, we are left to wonder — do we truly belong here?

This isn’t just an oversight; it’s a missed opportunity. Representation matters –not just in the classroom, but in the way students see their futures. When teachers of color stand at the front of a classroom, they aren’t just educators; they are proof that we belong in those spaces and that we can be scholars, leaders, and intellectuals.

Westport needs to hire more diverse staff — not just to tick a box, but to show that they truly value all students and their experiences. While representation is important, the attitudes of educators also help unlock the potential students see in themselves.

In my psychology class, I learned about implicit bias: how even well-intentioned people can unknowingly hold prejudices that affect their actions. Studies show that people can often — without realizing it — have lower expectations for students of color, are more likely to discipline them harshly or assume they need extra help. This is not because they are bad people, but because bias is deeply ingrained in all of us.

This is why all teachers need to take implicit bias tests, not as an accusation, but as a tool for self-awareness. They need to recognize their biases, educate themselves, and actively work to do better. It’s not enough to say, “I don’t see color.” Because the truth is, the world does. Pretending otherwise doesn’t erase the experiences of students like me-it erases the chance to change them.

For me, Westport has always been home and I will always love my home. But home should be a place where you don’t have to fight to fit in. It should be a place where no student ever questions whether they are out of place because of their identity. Where our differences are not just seen, but celebrated. Where the next girl of color walking into a classroom or diving into a pool doesn’t have to wonder if she’s the only one — because she won’t be.

Westport is not a place of hate. But it is a place of gaps — of blind spots, of unintentional marginalization, of well-meaning people who don’t truly understand ochers’ realities. By sharing my story, I hope we can stare closing chose gaps and creating a community where true belonging means being understood, valued, and connected to those around you.

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2nd Place — AANYA GANDHI: White Paint and Other Lies

I used to believe that identity was something you could package neatly, something that could be shaped to fit whatever mold was required of you. After all, I had done it myself — layering coats of white paint over a canvas splotched in black, covering the parts that didn’t seem to belong. A fresh coat each time the paint started to peel. A fresh performance each time the mask began to slip.

Moving to Westport was like stepping into a world that had already written its script. Individuality was celebrated, but only in its most polished form — never raw, never messy. There was a right way to be unique, a right way to be different.

I learned early on that there were two versions of myself: the one that fit and the one that didn’t. The one that could blend seamlessly into the rhythm of this town, and the one that pulsed just slightly offbeat.

Being a “hyphenated American” means existing in the space between the lines. It means translating parts of yourself depending on the audience, slipping between languages, between customs, between ways of thinking. It means carrying the weight of two histories at once, even when the world only asks for one.

Aanya Gandhi

In Westport, I have felt this duality in ways I never had before. My roots extend far beyond the pristine lawns and quiet affluence of this town, but here, those roots are invisible. The fast-paced, electrified streets of India live in my memories, the rhythmic clatter of rickshaws and the rich aroma of spice stalls feeling like echoes of another life.

But in Westport, there is no space for those echoes. Here, I am expected to exist in a singular dimension. To be American in a way that is digestible. Acceptable.

The challenge is not just being different — it’s being different in a way that others don’t quite understand. It’s the subtle mispronunciations of my name, the casual dismissal of my traditions as “exotic,” the assumption that my heritage is an accessory rather than an integral part of who I am. It’s the way my culture is celebrated when it’s convenien — Diwali as an aesthetic, Bollywood as a novelty –  -but dismissed when it challenges the narrative of what “American” should look like.

I have spent years walking the tightrope between belonging and erasure. I have become fluent in the language of masking — of saying “I’m fine” when I’m not, of laughing off moments that sting, of folding myself into smaller and smaller shapes to fit the space allotted to me. But even paint has its limits. Even masks begin to crack.

There was a moment when I realized that the burden of translation should not fall on me alone. That my identity is not something that needs to be repackaged or rebranded to be understood. That my presence — unfiltered, unpolished — is enough. The true challenge of identity is not just existing within it, but demanding that others see it for what it is, in all its complexity.

Westport has the privilege of being a town that welcomes diversity in theory, but struggles with it in practice. The change we need is not just more cultural festivals or acknowledgments in school assemblies. It’s deeper than that. It’s in the way we teach history — not as a singular narrative, but as a melting pot of perspectives. It’s in the way we talk about identity — not as a check box, but as an evolving story. It’s in the willingness to listen, not just to respond, but to understand.

I no longer wish to be understood in fragments. I refuse to be seen in halves. I am not just the parts of myself that are easy to digest, easy to praise, easy to fit into a pre-approved template. My identity is not something to be painted over, polished, or rebranded. It is vibrant, uncontainable, and wholly mine.

And for the first time, I am learning to stand in that truth — without apology, without translation, without another coat of paint.

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3rd Place: SOULEYE KEBE: S-L-M

Whenever a person asks you who you are, the natural response is to give your name. What else would suffice as a distinguisher? From birth, it is the go-to summary of a person’s identity. My name is Souleye, and for most of my life, I had no clue what my name meant. Turns out it’s derived from Sulayman, which is translated into English as Solomon. Since my family is West African, we use many variations of Abrahamic names like Solomon, names that would be considered “exotic” or “peculiar” in the United States. I always took pride in my clearly African name, however, seeing it as a stronger distinguisher than the numerous Johns or James here. I always knew that I was Souleye Kebe, an African.

Being born an African, I had to come to terms early on that people who look like me haven’t had a historically positive relationship with the United States. What made it easier was that I didn’t have to accept that by myself, because I lived in New York City where everybody came from diverse backgrounds, many of them having similarly complex relationships with the country we were born in.

Souleye Kebe

Coming to Westport was admittedly a culture shock, since I had never seen so many people with such relative conformity. The students here had the same clothes, same style of speaking, and same style of general being. They also shared the same statements: requests like “Can I touch your hair?” remarks such as “I don’t see color,” and “boasts” like “I had a Black friend in elementaiy school.” I thought that these words were nothing more than stories, and so I was astonished to hear people say them to my face. Through that, I remained Souleye Kebe, an African from New York City.

Despite me going to school here for three years, I still wouldn’t rush to ever call myself a Westporter. I value my outsider perspective too much to seemingly diminish it with that title. I’ve found many outlets here to express that perspective, such as with my position on the Board of Education allowing me to filter the opinions of students and to discern which pieces of feedback best represent us as a school. These outlets, however, are more representative of my identity as it relates to attending Staples High School, and not of my identity as a “Westporter.” These outlets make me Souleye Kebe, an African from New York City attending Staples High School.

When TEAM Westport asks students like me to propose specific changes to combat hatred and bias, I wonder why this burden of fixing systemic exclusion falls upon those already navigating its harms. The unabated truth is that it’s not my responsibility, nor the responsibility of any other kid, to act as Westport’s savior, driving it towards diversity and away from hatred. While I can and will support the town in any way I can towards that goal, it is incumbent upon the residents of Westport to seek that change for themselves.

Every person must look inward and examine their own potential predispositions and immediate judgements, determining for themselves whether they want to put the effort towards a more kind and tolerant Westport. We can mold students towards that mindset by implementing diverse thought processes in all parts of their education, showing them that the world they live in is a mere slice of true reality, and is not reflective of how diverse the world truly is. However, we can’t force them to make a positive step, it’s entirely on them.

Living here, I see my identity spread between the two continents of America and Africa. The distance between these two places has made me realize that I am in trnth a child of the world, as all people are. We often forget how we are all inhabitants of the same planet, being too caught up in the immediate to notice. We think and say disgusting things to others outside of our close proximity because the distance protects us. This is not a proper way to live.

I doubt that I would subscribe so fully to this realization had my identity not been spread as far as it has, had I not been afforded this perspective uncommon to the people of Westport. While I think this perspective is a strong impetus towards global thinking and away from prejudices and bias, it is incumbent upon the Westport community to carry that energy forward.

I will not tell this community the minutiae of every step they need to take to make Westport a more welcoming place, the town must first see for themselves the peace that can be made and that can exist by celebrating diversity and opposing hatred. ‘

Look at the names of the people of the world. My name as well as its many variations are all derived from the triliteral root S-L-M. We hear it in Salam and in Shalom and in Solomon and in Shlomo and in Sulayman and in Souleye. This root means peace, which is something we can all strive for. My name is Souleye Kebe, an African from New York City attending Staples High School, who is working to be an advocate of peace.

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4th Place: SIENNA TZOU: The Value of Identity From the Start

By the first hour of my first day of kindergarten, I had heard “Say ‘hi,’ Sienna” from my mom about a hundred times.

I stood behind my teacher when she introduced me to the class. I ducked my head, stared at my shining, coruscant ballet flats, and whispered as feebly as possible, “Hello.”

That was the only word I knew in English.

I saw that some of my classmates snickered and very audibly attempted to imitate how I spoke. Others whispered and pointed their fingers at me, as if my Asian “exoticism” was a foreign contaminant that could somehow infect the class.

For the next two years, I made a silent resolve to avoid socializing altogether. I didn’t want kids mimicking how I spoke, and it gave me the excuse to not be obligated to answer the unfiltered questions I knew everyone wanted to ask me.

By the third grade, groups of girls were impersonating me by blabbering gibberish as my Mandarin, and pulling at the corners of their eyes behind my back. Thus, I forced a stoic, protective facade over my true identity, shrinking back into a silent reticence of social evasion.

This does still linger with me to the present day, for I do have a more indrawn nature and very often prefer solitude over intimacy.

This is not to say that I am solely a victim of prejudice and acts of hate. There was once a very apprehensive, timid Black girl in my second grade class. Many times, when our teacher was not paying attention, a group of White girls would pour scorn on her for trivial matters.

Sienna Tzou

Knowing that I was quiet and docile as well, they told me to do the same. I did feel inclined to, because it was one of the few opportunities I had for societal acceptance. Yet, I knew that there was a fundamental insecurity that the girls were projecting onto the timid girl. I was young and didn’t exactly know what it was, but I knew that demoralization was wrong.

She was exactly like me. She never spoke a word, but I knew we had so much in common. We were both afraid to speak out because we were different. We feared that saying something would get us further rejected and criticized.

So, I decided to befriend her. What would it hurt? I didn’t have any other friends and, if anything, we could come out of our shells together.

In the end it didn’t matter, and our friendship didn’t last, because she didn’t last very long. She and her family subsequently left the town or moved schools — I don’t know where life took her. I don’t think I ever will.

Already, as a young child, I knew that the community had an ingrained difficulty accepting people like me of a minority race. With white being the majority race, it was an inexorable curiosity that the youth would eventually weigh up: Was there room for kids who were “different”? Did we even belong here?

Young children may just be curious, but they are much more susceptible to bias or oppose those from various ethnic backgrounds, or those that are visibly difforent from everyone else. Neutrality is not always in their disposition.
Although, I will say, hate, bullying, and prejudice happen to be much less prevalent in the higher grades.

The reason for this might be higher stakes that have been implemented to breaking rules of conduct against discrimination of race, religion, sexuality, etc.

However, we must not forget that growing our youth properly is vital for the flourishing of the individuals and young adults that we will become. From the start when a child feels out of place, it molds their personality and their perspectives on their individual lives difterently. Almost invariably, being shunned at a young age by peers can have a lasting residue on one’s dignity and inherent qualities.

To prevent the silence of minority voices, we must raise them from the beginning. Children that enter kindergarten or new schools are often shy and unsure of themselves, which is a rational fear. Cliques start to be made after introductions — especially those who are inherently a bit more extroverted than others. Coming from someone who, as a child, just missed the train to be in any closely-knit clique, this is probably the most essential part about a kindergartener’s experience.

Bonding activities can be administered to implement more inclusivity. For instance, random pairing with a buddy, class matching activities for similarity, and writing notes to classmates that compliment their unique and likeable qualities can all build rapport over time.

Besides classroom engagement, primary schools can have guest speakers discuss the benefits of inclusivity and how to speak up from identity-based bullying or bias.

The community in general can also practice accepting unique qualities as special and welcome. This may contribute to more meaningful and sustainable connections, which is indispensable for our town’s youth.

Each person in this town deserves to get their voice heard. Those that have contrasting races, religions, or identity orientations are distinct, but not incompatible — we just need to be more accepting and see the different as people we can thrive and grow our youth with.

As I have grown into an adolescent, nevertheless, my morale has been augmented so that I can be the individual I am today. I take pride in the fact that I get to live with so many perspectives to ultimately mold me into an empathetic and discerning adult. I’m looking forward to the day where I can call myself that.

I am, of course, proud to be part of this community with exceptional education and boundless opportunities. I just do wish I could go back in time and adjust my younger self to be a more confident being.

I wish I could tell that girl with the shining, coruscant ballet flats and a dimpled, cheeky smile that everything you have to say is valued and the world is waiting for your worth to shine through.

From left: 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker, Westport Library director Bill Harmer, Annam Olasewere, Aanya Gandhi, Sienna Tzou, Souleye Kebe, Staples High principal Stafford Thomas, TEAM Westport chair Harold Bailey. (All photos/Dan Woog)

Roundup: Summer Stroll, SLOBs, STG …

Last year’s Soundview Summer Stroll was a smash.

All day Sunday, the Compo Beach exit road was closed to traffic. Kids enjoyed games, face painting, a balloon artist and more. Adults ambled, greeting old friends and making new ones.

Bands played. Old Mill Deli provided pizza and gelato. The vibe was Venice (California).

It’s back! This year’s 2nd annual Soundview Summer Stroll is July 27. There’s an extra hour: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Like last year, it’s a gift to the town from “06880” and the Compo Beach Improvement Association.

Mark your calendar. See you there!

Fun for all ages. (Photo/Benji Porosoff)

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If you saw a bunch of teenage boys picking up trash, weeding or doing other work this weekend, they were SLOBs.

As in: Staples Service League of Boys.

Every April, the high schoolers fan out around town, for their Earth Day Service Weekend.

That’s in addition to all the other work they do, all year long, for non-profits and other organizations.

The group below worked with the Westport Downtown Association, to help clean up Parker Harding Plaza.

(Photo/Lee Shufro)

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Also yesterday: VFW Post 399 commemorated its 105th anniversary, celebrating over a century of support to veterans and community.

Established on April 27, 1920, by 11 World War I veterans, the Joseph J. Clinton Veterans of Foreign War post has served Westport’s veteran community ever since.

Private Clinton was a Westporter who gave his life in France on November 7, 1918, just 4 days before the armistice.

“For 105 years, our Post has been more than a gathering place — it’s been a family,” says quartermaster, Phil Delgado.

“We honor Private Clinton’s sacrifice by serving today’s veterans, strengthening community ties, and preserving the memory of those who paved the way for our freedoms.”

VFW Post 399 hosts many events, from Memorial Day ceremonies to monthly community blood drives, plus Jazz at the Post every Thursday. It also partners with nonprofits to advance veterans’ causes.

Celebrating 105 years (from left): Al Strazza, Frank Veno, Phil Delgado, Dennis Rohrmoser.

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Jonathan Grayer has spent his career in education.

As CEO of Kaplan, the 1982 Staples High School and ’86 Harvard University graduate turned the test prep company into the 2nd largest online education provider in the world.

He retired in 2008, then started Imagine Learning. He now serves as CEO. Its digital curriculums make enormous differences in some of the largest and neediest public school districts in America.

Grayer is a philanthropist too. His main passions are cancer research and post-secondary schooling. His Kaplan Educational Foundation — “Rhodes Scholars for Community Colleges” — sends students from 2-year schools to Ivy League and other top universities.

But Grayer has not forgotten his Westport roots. And he knows that in this affluent community, plenty of families cannot afford the enormous (and skyrocketing) cost of college.

In 2022 he jump-started a Staples Tuition Grants award, from the Class of 1982. It’s become a shining example of how SHS alums can give back to their school and community, long after they graduated.

To learn more about Staples Tuition Grants — and/or contribute — click here.

To watch an interview of Grayer, at the ASU+GSV summit — where over 10,000 educators, workforce leaders and innovators discussed the future education (and how to ensure access to it) — click below.

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Tickets are selling fast for a variety of upcoming Westport Country Playhouse events. They include:

“The Wizard of Oz” (June 21, 1 and 4 p.m.; all tickets $30). From the same company that brought “Pinkalicious The Musical” to the WCP stage.

“Karma Kabaret” (June 21, 8 p.m.; all tickets $20): A creative celebration of life — described as “Robin Williams meets Streisand meets TED Talks meets Einstein meets Buddha meets Broadway meets creator M. Zavidow.

Rosanne Cash with John Leventhal (July 16, 8 p.m.; tickets $125, $115, $98).

Click here for more information, tickets, and details of many other upcoming events.

Rosanne Cash and her husband John Leventhal.

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1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker and ROAN Ventures’ Rodrigo Real are part of the annual “Real Estate Outlook” panel. The event is May 20 (8:30 a.m., SoNo Collection M&T Bank, Norwalk).

The theme is “Breaking New Ground: The Projects That Will Impact Fairfield County.” The moderator is Eric Bernheim. He heads up the real estate and land use practice at Westport’s FLB Law, which co-sponsors the event. Click here to register, and for more information.

The real estate outlook for Fairfield County includes The Hamlet at Saugatuck project. 

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Westport author Meg Serino’s debut novel “Annapurna” will be published May 6.

In it, a woman returns to the base camp of the famous Nepalese mountain to confront events leading to her best friend’s tragic death there 20 years earlier. She explores the nature of their friendship, the meaning of love, and the unexpected consequences of what is spoken — and what is not. Click here for more information.

Meg Serino

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“Cheese Fries & Chili Dips” — Weston native Chris Fuller’s one-man “hilarious and heartfelt story of a pro golfer’s bipolar journey to wellness” — is set for 2 performances at Greenfield Hill Congregational Church (May 16 and 17).

A 6:30 party precedes the 7:30 p.m. show.

Tickets are $10. Call 203-259-5596 to purchase.

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Spring foliage continues to fill us with joy and wonder.

Today’s “Westport … Naturally” image comes from the ever-changing Riverwalk, outside the Library.

(Photo/Wendy Levy)

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And finally … in honor of an upcoming show at the Westport Country Playhouse (story above):

(It doesn’t take courage, or a brain or heart, to support “06880,” your hyper-local blog. All you have to do is click here. Like Dorothy, you know how important home is.)

Roundup: Rizzuto’s Cops, ABC’s Scholars, Sherwood Island’s Thieves …

What do Westport police officers do on their time off?

They help the waiters and bussers at Rizzuto’s.

No, they’re not earning extra cash. At least, not for themselves.

For 4 hours Friday night, Westport’s finest welcomed diners, took orders and served meals. The “Tip-A-Cop” event was a fundraiser for Special Olympics Connecticut.

Customers were encouraged to leave extra tips — and boy, did they. The WPD raised a whopping $11,000.

“Rizzuto’s was an amazing host, and their guests were very generous,” says Lieutenant Eric Woods.

A tip of the “06880” hat to all!

Westport Police and Rizzuto’s staff. 

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With passion, insights, humor and love, scholars present and past honored A Better Chance of Westport last night.

The highlight of the annual Dream Event fundraising gala for the program that provides educational and enrichment opportunities to students of color from less advantaged communities was — as always — speeches by soon-to-be graduates, and a returning alum.

Seniors Michael Loya and Brian Lu traced their journeys from freshmen in an entirely new environment (Westport seemed like “a forest”), to their proud achievements in the classroom, and beyond.

They offered profuse thanks to the many volunteer host families, drivers, tutors, executive directors and board members who helped them on their journey.

Brian Lu and Michael Loya.

In the COVID year of 2020, Yoel Hooper-Antunez never gave his senior speech. He made up for it this year, with an inspiring tale of his 4 years at ABC’s Glendarcy House, his career at Grinnell College, and his work now for a gaming company in Las Vegas.

Yoel too acknowledged the cultural change he navigated, coming here. Growing up next to John Wayne Airport in Orange County, California, the first thing he noticed about Westport was the quiet.

It was a joyful, heartfelt night. Westport does much for our ABC scholars.

But they give us much more in return.

Yoel Hooper-Antunez

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Also last night: Club203’s monthly party.

The Westport Weston Family YMCA hosted members of Westport’s social club for adults with disabilities.

They swam, played sports, rocked out to great music, made wind chimes, and enjoyed healthy snacks.

Club 203 thanks Brian Marazzi, the lifeguards, Staples’ Service League of Boys (SLOBs), Calise Deli & Market, and MoCA CT.

Club203 and SLOBs, at the Y. 

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A reader writes, “While I was walking with a friend at Sherwood Island State Park Friday around noon, her credit card, debit card, $50 in cash and a blank check were stolen from her purse. It was camouflaged (she thought), but sitting in the console of her car. She thinks she locked her car, but isn’t positive since no windows were broken.

“A few minutes after we finished our walk, she started getting fraud alerts from her credit card company. The thieves had already been to Staples in Fairfield, trying to charge over $1,000 in merchandise.”

Sherwood Island has always seemed like a safe, secure refuge. Of course, no place always is. Always lock your car, everywhere — and double-check to make sure!

A beautiful spot for a walk. But lock your car doors!

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Sandy Cooper — the always helpful, all-knowing and much loved owner of Cooper’s Auto Parts had major heart surgery a year ago.

It has not slowed him down at all. He opens his door (across from Stop & Shop) at 7 a.m. every day. All day long, he solves problems, soothes customers, and saves them money.

This Tuesday (April 29), Sandy turns 77. John Karrel — one of his many fans and friends — urges every customer to stop by, with a birthday card.

John notes that the best ones will have “the sort of ironic sentiment one finds on the many signs in his shop.”

Sandy Cooper, in his timeless store.

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Mother’s Day is 2 weeks from today! (You knew that, right?)

And Wreathing for Community believes that moms should be celebrated in a big way.

The group collects donations from community members and businesses. then creates beautiful wreaths, centerpieces and other home decor items.

Some are donated to non-profit organizations for their fundraising efforts. Others are given as gifts to grouops, volunteers and community members.

Faith Sargent says: “If you’d like to honor your mom this Mother’s Day, please email WhimsicalRedheadCrafts@gmail.com. Tell us what makes her so special.

“One wonderful mom will be chosen to receive the whimsical butterfly wreath (below).”

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Bill Shakos’ fifth “What Do I Know?” podcast is particularly compelling.

The in-depth interview with State Senator Ceci Maher focuses on mental health.

Powerfully and honestly, she discusses her husband’s struggles with PTSD and alcoholism, in the wake of September 11.

Shakos’ next podcast — featuring Homes with Hope — drops tomorrow.

Click here for links to listen.

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A great annual Staples High School baseball tradition is welcoming Little League players. This year’s Little League Day takes place Friday (May 2, 4:15 p.m.).

Youngsters will be invited onto the field for the lineup, and to run the bases on prior to the first pitch.

They’ll then cheer on the Wreckers against Wilton, and enjoy free pizza from the Colony truck.

Four Little Leaguers at Staples in 2019. Three are now varsity baseball players; the other calls Wrecker games on WWPT-FM. From left: current Staples varsity players Will Allott, Mark Kelly and Connor Brill, and WWPT-FM announcer Charlie Curran.

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Sure, you can honk at traffic.

Or you can fly above it — and do your honking there. Just like in today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo, courtesy of Carol Anne Ances.

(Photo/Carol Anne Ances)

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And finally … on this date in 1791, Samuel F.B. Morse was born.

He was not the only one to invent the primary language of telegraphy. But he’s the one whose name is on it.

(Besides the tip in the item at top, here’s another one: If you click here, your tax-deductible contribution helps support “06880.” We rely on our readers, so thank you!)

[OPINION] Staples Graduation Ticket Limit Poses Problem

Graduation is a time of joy and celebration. After 13 years of school, seniors don gowns and put on headgear they wouldn’t be caught dead in otherwise, to celebrate their achievements with family members who helped get them there.

If, that is, they’re lucky enough to score a ticket.

The Staples High School graduating class of 2025 is about 425 strong. (Very strong, even if a couple of them are scrambling to get to the finish line.)

Each graduate gets 4 tickets to the June ceremony at Paul Lane Field (the outdoor stadium). With parents, siblings, grandparents, uncles and aunts, that seldom covers everyone.

A concerned “06880” reader writes:

My nephew is one of the many seniors to graduate this year.

My family and I are exceptionally proud of his accomplishments and achievements, and so excited for his transition to college, and eventually “real life.”

Throughout his four years at Staples he has studied diligently, held a part-time job, completed an internship, and was accepted at nearly all the universities he applied to. In addition, he won a Student of the Month Award.

I was very disappointed to learn over spring break that only 4 tickets will be granted per family — including parents. This seems unreasonably restrictive to me.

Graduation, 2024.

When my siblings and I graduated from Staples, the ceremony was in the fieldhouse, rain or shine. More relatives were accommodated.

I wrote to “06880” expressing my frustration about this decision on behalf of my family, who will not all be able to participate in this milestone event in a young adult’s life .

Dan Woog reached out to principal Stafford Thomas, and received this reply:

Actually there were more seats in the fieldhouse than there are in the stadium. A family used to get 5-6 tickets, but with a graduating class of ~425 students and about 1,850 available bleacher seats/spaces if shoehorned in, even giving 5 tickets would clearly not work. Hence the 4 tickets.

It is true that more people have attended the recent outside graduations than they did in the fieldhouse due to the crowds on the hill and the standing room crowd around the perimeter of the stadium.

Unfortunately, the bleachers were built to hold the expected capacity of a much smaller school population at Staples (about 30/40 years ago). If they were built today, based on our current population trends, we’d easily be able to accommodate at least 6-7 tickets per family.

Bleachers are full, at Staples’ 2023 graduation. 

The ceremony does not have to be held outside. If more people can fit in the fieldhouse, why not host it there? What if it rains? You’d have to move it there anyway.

I understand that Staples can’t accommodate every family member. But they could at least offer an additional 2 tickets. I respectfully ask that you reconsider this decision. Perhaps you could allow more people with tickets to stand along the perimeter.

In the fieldhouse, parents jostled for photos as graduates marched in.

This may be the first time anyone asked for graduation to be moved back into the fieldhouse. The ceremony was moved there (from outdoors) after it was built in the early 1980s. Each year there were complaints about how hot and uncomfortable the fieldhouse was; how hard it was to hear and see, and how brutal the competition was to get good seats.

Graduation moved back outdoors in 2021 (following the COVID-related “drive-by” ceremony the previous year). Attendees liked being outside; being able to see and hear — and not having to battle for seats.

There are ways to watch without tickets. As Principal Thomas noted, some people without tickets stand on the hill by Bedford Middle School. It’s not a great view, but it’s before the ticket checkpoint.

The only way to stand closer, around the perimeter, is with a ticket.

The event is livestreamed, for all those without tickets. Viewers follow the processional and speeches, and watch each senior receive a diploma.

For over 140 years, Staples has held graduation ceremonies. Each one has had challenges. If you’ve got a memory of your Staples graduation — or a relative’s — click Comments below. And if you faced a ticket challenge, add that story too. 

The Class of 2024 celebrates.

“06880” And Tommy Greenwald Team Up For Youth Sports Panel

If your child is a pretty good athlete — or you think they are — odds are they (and you) are part of the “youth sports industrial complex.”

The phrase sounds satirical.

It isn’t.

As any parent with a young travel/elite player knows, the days of kids of varying ages meeting in the backyard, choosing teams, then playing on their own until dinnertime (all while making and enforcing their own rules), has gone the way of wooden bats and $20 soccer shoes.

Blast from the past.

Youth sports is a big business. And in a town like Westport — where personal hitting coaches, shooting coaches and fitness trainers are a dime a dozen (though exponentially more expensive) — there is an expectation that all that time and money will yield a substantial ROI.

Yet — besides rueful comments on the sidelines about yet another trip to yet another “showcase” tournament at yet another faraway place to play yet another game against a team from Wilton — how much do we really talk about this?

Next month, Westport youth sports parents will get a chance to do just that.

“06880” has partnered with Tommy Greenwald to present a special panel. “Fair Play and Foul Behavior: Issues Facing Youth Sports in Today’s World” is set for May 14 (7 p.m., Staples High School cafeteria).

Topics will include the achievement/pressure balance, referee abuse, sport specialization, cost, the “academy” syndrome, myths and realities of college recruiting, and more.

Training, competing — and competing for spots — begins at an early age.

Greenwald is a young adult author, specializing in youth sports. His latest book, “The Right Call” — a companion novel to his previous “Game Changer” —explores the growing pressures young athletes face, and the lengths some parents go to make sure their kid comes out on top. Greenwald will give away some copies of his book at the event.

The 1979 Staples High School state champion co-captain’s 3 sons were also Staples athletes and captains.

Panelists include:

  • VJ Sarullo, Staples athletic director
  • Dave Smith, father of 4 athletes who writes frequently on youth sports topics
  • Caleb Smith, former Staples quarterback and lacrosse star, now playing football at the University of Connecticut
  • Heather Talbott, PAL girls lacrosse co-president and basketball organizer; former lacrosse player at Lehigh University
  • Mark Pressman, longtime football and softball official
  • And of course Tommy Greenwald himself.

Moderator Dan Woog was the Staples boys soccer head coach for 19 years, and a youth coach for nearly 30 years before that. He is a co-founder of the Westport Soccer Association, and writes nationally on youth sports topics.

The event will include time for audience participation.

“06880” Podcast: Eric Freeman

Eric Freeman is a partner in a real estate investment firm. He and his wife are raising young sons. A former viola player, he sits on the board of the Norwalk Symphony Orchestra.

But his most important role may be as president of the board of A Better Chance of Westport.

That’s the organization that, for over 20 years, has provided educational opportunities — and much more — to young men of color, from communities less advantaged than Westport. It’s one of our town’s crown (and underpublicized) jewels.

A few days before ABC’s big fundraiser, the Dream Event — it’s Saturday, April 26 — Eric and I chatted for the “06880” podcast. Click below to learn more.

Roundup: Israeli Flag, Opossum Rescue, Compo Beach Art, Memorial & Oysters …

Just a few days after Passover, the Israeli flag that hung outside Mark Scheck’s house was torn down .

All that remains of the flag.

Mark says 2 new flags will go back up. Along with a security camera.

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Another day, another rescue by Peter Reid.

Julie Loparo sends this latest story, about Westport’s animal control officer:

“At a time when local wildlife are dealing with the effect of habitat destruction due to rampant and unchecked clear cutting of trees and demolition of green space, it is not surprising that our wildlife mothers need to think outside of the box for safe lodging.

“Last week Peter (who wears another hat as intake director for Wildlife in Crisis) received a call from a resident. She calmly said there was an opossum residing in her home.

“Officer Reid responded quickly. He found the opossum — a mother with a full pouch of babies — taking a respite in the home owner’s cat tree.

“Officer Reid safely and humanely moved entire cat tree outside, and placed water and opossum nutrition near it.

“By the next morning, the mother opossum had found a new — hopefully safe — spot for shelter.

“We thank the local resident for not panicking, and instead of calling a ‘pest control’ service, contacting Animal Control Officer Reid. We also thank him too, for once again providing another wildlife rescue.

“Of course, we would be remiss not to thank our friend the opossum, who single-handedly (or single-pawedly) can devour 5,000 ticks a year, while acting as a natural pest controller in our yarda.

“Like mother opossum, we humans have to think outside the box sometimes, to live peacefully and humanely with our wildlife friends.”

Safe opossum. (Photo courtesy of Julie Loparo)

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Two follow-ups to yesterday’s Roundup item on the striking art print recently posted on the Compo Beach lifeguard shack.

Stacy Bass reports that the artist is Julie Headland.

It’s part of the Westporter’s “I’m Fine” project. Julie explains on her website:

“In early 2020 the world was succumbing to a pandemic, and my husband was diagnosed with a terminal illness. Friends and neighbors continually checked in and kindly asked: ‘How are you?’

“I was numb, and typically answered: ‘I’m fine.”

“One day as the words left my mouth, I had an epiphany. My world was collapsing, but the brave little girl inside knew she must overcome and survive.

“Thus, the I’M FINE Project was born. The little girl in each piece inspires us to take heart and overcome the world.

“In time these playful parodies gave rise to both public and private comments by strangers expressing their own personal struggles. That is when I realized the I’M FINE Project was also a way to amuse and encourage others who were suffering.

“I am deeply aware of the pain and struggle in the world, and I do not wish to make light of suffering. But I have an optimistic aesthetic, which I am keen to convey with as much wit and whimsy as I can muster.”

Meanwhile, evidence that Headland’s work is truly Westport-based comes from a close-up photo, of the larger work.

Matt Murray’s image shows clearly something many viewers may have missed:

(Photo/Matt Murray)

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Speaking of Compo Beach: A new memorial there honors Max Harper. The Staples High School senior died in September.

Visitors to the stone — located near the cannons, not far from where a memorial service drew hundreds of classmates and friends last fall — have left rocks, flowers, a baseball hat and more, as tributes.

(Photo/Pam Docters)

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Speaking still of Compo: There are plenty of less permanent sights on and offshore, too.

You might see a proposal or wedding. A pop-up water polo practice. Rupert Murdoch’s old yacht.

And, this past weekend, a guy shucking oysters for 2 women, at a working bar.

(Photo/Sunil Hirani)

Just another day at the beach …

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Lynda Bluestein’s legendary life has been captured in a documentary.

“Other Side” tells the story of the last months of her life. The longtime Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Westport member won a landmark legal case allowing her, as an out-of-state resident to take advantage of Vermont’s medical aid in dying law.

The film will be shown at the Westport Library on June 29 (1:30 p.m.). Seating is limited. Click here to register.

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Birchwood Country Club’s Easter brunch drew 160 people. Among them: a number of children, who participated in an Easter egg hunt.

Golfers were happy to cede their tee times for the special event.

Birchwood general manager Danny Jones explains the rules.

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Pam Docters offers today’s “Westport … Naturally” image from Compo Road South, near Longshore, and writes: “While big bursts of color from the cherry trees, dogwoods and forsythias grab all the attention, I love the smaller flowers in all their glory.”

(Photo/Pam Docters)

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And finally … I had never heard of Mac Gayden before yesterday.

But the musician — who died on Wednesday in Nashville at 83, from complications of Parkinson’s — had an intriguing resume.

He co-wrote “Everlasting Love” — a Top 40 hit in 4 straight decades — and played guitar on Bob Dylan’s “Absolutely Sweet Marie.” Click here for his obituary.

(Please click here to support “06880” with a tax-deductible contribution. You’ll absolutely have our everlasting love. Thank you!)