Category Archives: Staples HS

Roundup: 600 Bags Of Groceries, A Day With Staples Hoops …

The Super Bowl drive led by Westport Sunrise Rotary and the Westport Police Department at Stop & Shop  brought in 600 bags of groceries, and nearly $1,200 in donations.

The food will last for several months at Homes with Hope’s pantry.

Homes with Hope CEO Helen McAlinden thanks all who participated, on behalf of the many recipients.

Presenting a symbolic check at the recent Sunrise Rotary meeting (from left): Liz Wong, Sunrise Rotary president; Officer Craig Bergamo, Westport Police; Rob Hauck, Sunrise Rotary; Helen McAlinden, Homes with Hope CEO; Paris Looney, Homes with Hope vice president; Officer Scott Thompson, Westport Police.

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As the FCIAC (league) finalist Staples High boys basketball team prepares for the first round of the state tournament this week, they invite Westporters to the school gym today (Sunday, March 3).

From 9:45 to 11:30 this morning, the Wreckers’ practice is open to the public.

From 4 to 5:15 p.m., shooting coach Dave Hopla will offer one of his legendary clinics.

From 5:15 to 6 p.m., Staples coaches and booster club representatives will discuss the team’s program. Future Wreckers will have a chance to play games, and shoot with current varsity stars.

The cost is $50 per family (Venmo: @staplesboysbasketball). Youth players receive a Staples basketball March Madness t-shirt.

Meanwhile, the team’s silent auction continues through 8 p.m. tonight. Click here to bid on sports and Broadway tickets, Staples “fan experiences” and more.

Proceeds help fund program improvements, including a shooting machine, strength and conditioning program, game jerseys, etc.

Staples boys basketball team.

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Speaking of sports: Congratulations to the Staples girls hockey team.

The co-op squad (with Westhill and Stamford) upset #1 seed/defending champion Darien 2-0, in the state tournament semifinal yesterday.

They’ll face the New Canaan-East Catholic winner in the final at Quinnipiac University, this Wednesday (March 6, 7 p.m.).

The Staples-Westhill-Stamford co-op team celebrates their quarterfinal win.

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A small crowd honored the late Bill Vornkahl yesterday at VFW Joseph J. Clinton Post 399, at a heartfelt ceremony.

A Citation of Service was issued from the Connecticut General Assembly, Selectwomen’s office, and Lt. Governor Susan Bysiewicz.

Bill Vornkahl’s ceremony yesterday, at the VFW. (Photo/Andrew Colabella)

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Diners at Jeera Thai got an extra treat the other day.

Joining them at the popular downtown restaurant were members of Lyyra. The 6-woman ensemble pushes the boundaries of treble choral, jazz. pop and folk music, as they redefine the entire genre of treble music.

They’ll perform at Christ & Holy Trinity Church on April 21 (5 p.m.; click here for tickets), and the Westport Library April 23 (7 p.m.; click here for tickets). The Library performance is a partnership with local high schools, and feature a mass choir with all students singing alongside Lyyra, and plus a solo set for Lyyra.

Meanwhile, click here for a video of Lyyra entertaining the surprised, but grateful, diners at Jeera Thai.

Screenshot of Lyyra, at Jeera Thai. 

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Earthplace’s spring calendar is full of activities, for all ages.

Elementary school-age offerings include Animal Hall Adventures, Nature Art Club, Li’l Naturalists, and April Vacation Day Camp.

Middle and high schoolers can participate in Junior Staff and Teen Volunteer Club.

Adults can enjoy Environmental Learning Series, Bees and Blossoms ID, Tea Time Book Club, and Craft & Sip.

Family activities include Themed Campfires, Group Canoe Paddles, Nature Journaling and Woodland Egg Hunt.

Click here for details.

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Club 203 — Westport’s social club for adults with disabilities — never misses a holiday.

Up next: St. Patrick’s Day.

They’ll celebrate a wee bit early: March 13 (6:30 to 8 p.m., VFW Joseph J. Clinton Post 399).

The event includes “green-themed fun,” food and festivities — including a chance to learn Irish dancing with the Lenihan Dance Troupe.

Attendees are encouraged to wear green. Parents and guardians are welcome to stay at the VFW (cash bar available).

For more information, click here.

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Seen on Facebook: A man who placed a takeout order at Pink Sumo was told it was “under the Patagonia building.”

“May I have clearer instructions?” he asked.

Most people responded with reasonable directions: just past Spotted Horse on the left side of the one-way part of Church Lane.

But a couple of folks couldn’t help themselves.

“The basement level of Westport Bank & Trust,” one said.

“Directly across from the old YMCA,” another added.

What a bunch of comedians!

Does this help? (Photo/Betsy P. Kahn)

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Dogs and tennis balls go together like hot dogs and mustard.

Vuori — the downtown clothing store — knows that.

They put out a tennis ball-filled box at Winslow Park, near the drinking fountain.

Mark Mathias’ dog Loki was one of many who enjoyed a free sample.

(Photo/Mark Mathias)

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It was bath time the other day, at the Library Riverwalk (and now as our daily “Westport … Naturally” feature).

(Photo/Johanna Keyser Rossi)

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And finally … on this date in 1923, Time magazine published its first issue.

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Hezekiah Allen, Larry Yount, And The Rabbi Of Swat

Ron Berler is a 1967 Staples High School graduate, and a longtime magazine and newspaper writer.

He played Westport Little League baseball, then was cut during tryouts at Long Lots Junior High and Staples.

He writes frequently about the sport. Some years ago, he wrote a piece for Sports Illustrated on Mose Solomon, the “Rabbi of Swat.” The other day, he posted it here, on Medium.com.

With the approach of both the baseball season and Passover, Ron has written this for “06880”:

Last July — a month after graduating — Staples High School’s Hiro Wyatt was selected by the Kansas City Royals in the 3rd round of the Major League Baseball amateur draft.

The pitcher — who finished his Wrecker season 8-0, with an 0.51 ERA, 107 strikeouts and just 11 walks in 54 2/3 innings — was named Connecticut High School Coaches Association Player of the Year.

If he reaches the major leagues, he’ll be the second Westport native to do so. The first was Hezekiah Allen, in ’84.

1884, that is.

You might say Allen was a prodigy. He reached the big leagues at 21, the same age the Yankees’ Derek Jeter did. A sinewy 5-11, 160-pound catcher, Allen played just 1 game for the 1884 Philadelphia Quakers (now the Phillies), batting 3 times and smacking 2 singles, for a career average of .667.

The Philadelphia Quakers in 1884. Hezekiah Allen is probably not in this photo.

One might wonder: Given that his team would finish the season 39-73, with 1 tie, why wouldn’t manager Harry Wright offer him a second opportunity?

There’s good reason to believe Wright was just plain scared. Allen committed 3 passed balls in his 5 innings on the field, the equivalent of a rabbi dropping 3 matzoh balls in his lap before finishing his soup.

And yet honor him we must. To this day, Allen remains (as far as can be determined) our town’s sole, home-grown major leaguer. You can visit his grave in Willowbrook Cemetery.

And with the coming of the baseball season, it is time to pay tribute to a couple of the sport’s other very minor contributors. I’m thinking, for example, of Larry Yount, the older brother of Hall of Fame Milwaukee Brewers shortstop/ outfielder Robin Yount. Larry was a pitcher for the Houston Astros.

Well, not exactly. Near the end of the 1971 season, he was promoted to the big club. On September 15, with the team trailing the Atlanta Braves 4-1 in the 9th inning, Astros manager Harry “The Hat” Walker signaled for Larry to take the mound. It was the moment Larry had prepared for all his life.

He took the ball from Walker and threw several warmup pitches. Then suddenly, he stopped. His elbow, which had caused him minor pain while throwing in the bullpen, had suddenly grown worse. He called for the trainer and was removed from the game without having thrown a pitch.

And that was it for him. Though his arm soon healed, he never got another chance in the majors. Larry is quite possibly the only player to take the field in his one big league game and never actually play.

Mose Solomon

Which brings us, this Passover season, to Mose Solomon, who in September 1923 jumped from the low, low minors to the New York Giants.

Though the Giants were in first place at the time and would go on to win the National League pennant (they lost to the Yankees in the World Series, 4 games to 2 – the Yankees’ first championship), few fans were trekking to the Polo Grounds to see them play.

John McGraw, the Giants’ manager, blamed Babe Ruth, who would lead the majors that year with 41 home runs and further burnish his nickname, the Sultan of Swat.

Yet that season, Ruth was not the home run leader of all professional baseball. That title belonged to Solomon, a first baseman/right fielder for the Hutchinson (Kansas) Wheat Shockers of the financially unstable Southwestern League, who walloped 49 homers in 1923 against teams like the Salina Millers and the Coffeyville Refiners.

McGraw brought the slugger, who was Jewish, to New York and introduced him to the press, and to the city, as the Rabbi of Swat.

Great nickname. A name that promises the stuff of legend. And for the last month of the season, New York, which was 20 percent Jewish, went wild. As the newsboys from the Roaring ’20s would hawk, read all about it!

So as the 2024 baseball season nears, let’s not forget 20th-century players like Mose Solomon.

Or 19th-century ones like Hezekiah Allen. 

Play ball!

(“06880” is the only place you’ll read about Hezekiah Allen. Looking back is part of our mission. So is looking forward. If you enjoy this hyper-local blog, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Roundup: Anti-Racism Protest, Joanne Woodward, Linxweiler House …

A few dozen protesters stood quietly on North Avenue this morning, protesting reports of racial incidents at Staples High School across the street.

The crowd included students and adults. Some parents joined the crowd after dropping their youngsters off at school.

Many held signs. One summed up the feeling of the protesters: “Racism is unacceptable.”

(Photo/Ruby Kantor for Inklings)

(Photo/Ruby Kantor for Inklings)

(Photo/Kevin McLaughlin)

(Photo/Kevin McLaughlin)

(Photo/Kevin McLaughlin)

(Photo/Lily Rimm)

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Happy 94th birthday to a Westport icon: Joanne Woodward.

Over 60 years on stage and television she won an Academy Award, 3 Primetime Emmys, and 3 Golden Globes, and a Screen Actors Guild Award. She is one of the last surviving stars from the Golden Age of Hollywood, and the oldest living Best Actress Oscar-winner.

Just as importantly, she — and her husband, Paul Newman — contributed mightily to the civic life of Westport.

Whether helping save the Westport Country Playhouse or dishing up popcorn at the Westport Historical Society, Joanne Woodward made our town a better place.

Thank you, Joanne. Have a great day!

The happy couple, near their home.

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Among the items at the next Planning & Zoning Commission meeting (Monday, March 4, 7 p.m.; Zoom, and Optimum channel 79 and Frontier channel 6020): a request from First Selectwoman Jen Tooker to temporarily amend the lease at 655 Post Road East (the Linxweiler house, between McDonald’s and Fresh Market) to allow Gillespie Center clients to be housed and supported there temporarily, during renovation of the downtown homeless shelter.

Click here for the full agenda, and additional materials.

Linxweiler House, on Post Road East.

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Westport Volunteer Emergency Medical Service president Mike Burns gave an in-depth, eye-opening look at the most recent Y’s Women meeting.

Many members were surprised to learn that the 45-year-old non-profit relies entirely on donations. The 75 EMS volunteers — who respond in 7 minutes or less to everything from strokes, seizures and births to accidents on I-95 and the Merritt Parkway (and even incidents on Metro-North) pay for all their own supplies: heart monitors, gurneys ($70,000 each), and ambulances.

WVEMS’ 3 ambulances are 10 years old. The first of 2 new ones will arrive next year — at a cost of $450,000.

All donations are welcome (83% are less than $100); click here.

WVEMS president Mike Burns, at the Y’s Women meeting. (Photo/Jilda Manikas)

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Westport resident Tom Kretsch spent his career as a teacher in the Norwalk schools.

And for almost 40 years he’s been involved with that city’s partnership with Nagarote, Nicaragua. They’ve created and run a community development project that provides opportunities for young people and families to improve their economic and educational lives.

A benefit cabaret — “Spring Into Song” — is set for Sunday, March 24 (5:30 p.m., Westport Woman’s Club).

Attendees can bring food and drink to share at small tables before the music begins. Nine great vocalists — including Westporters Michelle Pauker, Bill Hall and Emily Hall Stevens, and Charlotte Roth of Weston — are donating their talents. They’ll sing tunes from Broadway shows, original music and other covers.

For more information and tickets ($50), email kretscht@yahoo.com.

Michelle Pauker (Photo/Brynn Owen)

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Trumpeter Andy Gravish plays the music of Hank Mobley and Lee Morgan — 2 iconic musicians of the “hard bop school” — at this Thursday’s Jazz at the Post (February 29; shows at 7:30 and 8:45 p.m.; dinner at 7 p.m.; $20 music cover charge, $15 for veterans and students).

Gravish performs at top international jazz festival, and has been the featured soloist with the Village Vanguard Orchestra, Toshiko Akiyoshi/Lew Tabackin Big Band, Paquito D’Rivera and many others.

Joining Gravish are pianist Michael Cochrane, bassist Essiet Essiet, drummer Steve Johns, and saxophonist Greg “The Jazz Rabbi” Wall.

Reservations are highly recommended: JazzatthePost@gmail.com.

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It’s been 15 years since the Staples High School Class of 1974 had a reunion.

Now they’re ready for their 50th. And members of adjacent classes — with friends among the ’74 graduates — are invited too.

It’s the weekend of October 18-20. There’s a Friday night social at the VFW, a Saturday night main event with dinner and dancing (and the class’ Mark Santella as DJ) at the Westport Woman’s Club, then Sunday at the Compo Beach Ned Dimes Marina.

Click here for details, and tickets.

Class of 1974 member Alix Land in Long Beach Peninsula, Washington. She lives in Portland, Oregon.

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Lost your license plate?

Someone found it, and propped it up against the post office flagpole:

(Photo/Dan Woog)

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Today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo comes from Kevin LaForce.

He writes: “I saw this beauty trot across the top of Hillspoint Road on Sunday. I tracked him/her to the back of Loretta Court. Pretty cool.”

(Photo/Kevin LaForce)

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And finally … sharing a birthday with Joanne Woodward (story above) is Josh Groban. Happy 43rd birthday, to the platinum-selling singer.

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Eric Freeman: Role Model Steps Up As “A Better Chance” President

We all know the saying: “If you want something done, ask a busy person.”

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

But when he was asked several years ago to head up A Better Chance of Westport’s mentor program, he jumped at the chance.

He had enjoyed several informal meetings with the scholars at Glendarcy House, the local home for the national program that provides educational opportunities to academically-gifted and highly motivated young men of color.

A Better Chance of Westport mentors and scholars met at a fire pit last fall.

As a person of color himself, he understood the need for the ABC scholars to see people who looked like them, understood them, and were at the same time part of the Westport community that the scholars are now part of too.

When he got the chance to head up ABC’s mentorship program, he agreed. He organized chats around his fire pit, lunch meetings, outings and email conversations.

“They’ve got great resources,” he says of Westport’s embrace of A Better Chance. “This was one more outlet. I wanted to make sure it was meaningful.”

Eric Freeman

Role models come “in many shapes and sizes,” Freeman emphasizes. The scholars “have many. But it’s important for them to see people with similar backgrounds, so they don’t feel alone.”

When the program’s interim president stepped down, no one else immediately stepped up. Despite his busy work and travel schedule, and commitments to his own family. Freeman volunteered.

“This is a worthy cause. I’m proud to be part of it,” he says simply.

His term began last month.

“The directors to a phenomenal job,” Freeman says, of Dale Mauldin and Daniele Dickerson, who live at Glendarcy House. “They create an environment conducive to learning, and growing as young men.”

Freeman’s job is to “provide resources for the success and longevity of the organization.” That includes a long-range financial plan, and a marketing effort so that more Westporters know about A Better Chance of Westport.

“This town has abundant resources,” he notes. “People have worked hard in their careers. There is a certain privilege of living here, too. I hope we can get to them with our message.”

Eric Freeman and his wife Raquel.

Another long-range plan: an ABC House for young women, to augment the one that currently can support 8 young men.

As Freeman prepares for the organization’s biggest fundraiser of the year — the “Dream Event” on April 27 at the Westport Library — he has a simple message to Westporters.

“Please support us. These young men are phenomenal. Think about it: You’re a 14-year-old in New York or New Jersey or somewhere else, and suddenly you come to Westport to live with strangers. It takes a lot to do that.

The 2023-24 A Better Chance of Westport scholars.

“So please support us, financially or with your time, or both. We’re always looking for host families, drivers, and people who can inspire our young men. We need everyone.”

(To learn more about A Better Chance of Westport, click here. To learn more about the April 27 Dream Event, and purchase tickets, click here.)

 

Roundup: Staples & NBA Hoops, Velma Heller & PBS, DNR …

As the Staples High School boys basketball team prepares to take on Wilton in today’s FCIAC quarterfinals (Saturday, 4 p.m., Fairfield Warde High), there is no better way to get pumped than with Charlie Scott’s hype video.

The Staples senior has made a name for himself with his great reels, which he shoots and edits himself. (He is also a standout WWPT-FM sportscaster).

Click below. And then get ready to root the Wreckers on.

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Speaking of sports: Giannis Antetokounmpo is coming to Westport.

Well, a feature-length documentary about the Greek-Nigerian NBA star is, anyway.

On February 28 (6:30 p.m.), the Westport Library screens a new, feature-length documentary. “Giannis: The Marvelous Journey.”

Before the 2-time MVP led the Milwaukee Bucks to the championship in 2021 he lived on the margins of society in Athens. His parents immigrated there, in search of a better life.

The film includes interviews with his family, and basketball stars.

A talkback with director Kristen Lappas and ESPN analyst/former hoops star Jay Williams follows.

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Velma Heller had a long career in education. She spent 20 years on the Representative Town Meeting, including 4 as moderator.

Now, the 87-year-old has taken up landscape painting.

Her love of lifelong learning will be featured nationally. “Supercharge Your Brain: Maximizing Your Cognitive Abilities” debuts on PBS this month. It’s scheduled for New York’s Channel 13 next Saturday (March 2, 8 a.m. and 10:30 p.m.). Check local listings for other PBS stations.

The show was written and co-produced by former Westporter Andrew Ames. It explores lifelong learning plays a major role in brain health and improved cognitive function.

Velma Heller, in a screenshot from the new PBS documentary.

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Oh, doctor!

A week from tomorrow (Sunday, March 3, 3 p.m.), Saugatuck Congregational Church hosts DNR — Fairfield County’s (almost) all-physician rock band — in a free concert.

The local favorites — who are as talented as musicians as they are doctors — have been diagnosed as favoring danceable tunes from the ‘60s and ’70s, from artists like Bruce Springsteen, the Rolling Stones, Van Morrison and the Beatles (with an occasional 80s or ’90s song, and classic jazz standard).

The public is welcome.

DNR

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Among the upcoming events at MoCA Westport:

  • Connecticut Guitar Festival (March 1, 7 p.m.)
  • Open Mic Night (March 8, 6:30 p.m.)
  • Paddington Trio (March 20, 7 p.m.)
  • Frederic Chiu and David Gonzalez (March 23, 4 p.m.).

Click here for details.

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Sure, and it’s still more than 3 weeks till St. Patrick’s Day.

But the animals outside Winslow Park Animal Hospital are not wasting any time.

They’re wearing the green already. Say “Lá fhéile Pádraig sona dhuit!” — that’s “Happy St. Patrick’s Day” in Gaelic — the next time you’re stuck at the light by Playhouse Square.

(Photo/Molly Alger)

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Speaking of canines: Today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo shows the perfect downward dog.

(Photo/Becky Keeler)

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And finally … today is National Dance Day.

Well, don’t just sit there!

 (After all that dancing, take a break. But “06880” never rests. We’re here, with hyper-local news and information, 24/7/365. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

[OPINION] Staples Alum Stunned By Racism — And Alumni Reaction To It

Julie List, a licensed clinical social worker, is a graduate of Kings Highway Elementary, Bedford Junior and Staples High Schools (Class of 1974).

After Princeton University she earned a master’s in social work. A longtime clinician and psychotherapist, she now works at Montefiore Hospital, and is on the faculty of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine.

Julie still follows news from her hometown. She writes:

As a devoted Westporter and Staples graduate, I was extremely upset reading about the racism a Black family experienced in local schools.

The distraught parents, Dr. Carol Felder and Mr. Richard Anderson, recounted to the Board of Education their daughters’ experiences at Bedford Middle School and Staples High School.

I immediately posted the article on the Staples High School Alumni Facebook page, a group with about 6,000 members. I assumed everyone would want to know about it.

Julie List

Nearly a dozen people responded with the disappointment and outrage I imagined they would, and expressed shame about the town.

However, one of the site’s admins shut down comments, because he deemed it a “political post.”

When I objected privately he cited the rules of the group. Then, completely out of context, he posted a poll asking members if they wanted the site to include “political posts.” He did not say this was in reference to the horrible racist incidents occurring at Staples.

A large majority of the members who responded said “no.” In their comments they waxed rhapsodic about the good old days at Staples, preferring to hear about old friends, strolls on Compo Beach, or their former sports teams.

They kept referring me elsewhere, where people were “allowed” to write about current Westport events.

They did not want to hear about the pain the Black parents were feeling about the freedom some students feel they have to use the “n”-word, and other offensive interactions.

Racism is not something that can be whitewashed or ignored. Once it takes root, the entire system breeds more race-related discrimination.

Many Facebook users wrote that what happened was merely “bullying,” perhaps not understanding the enormous difference. They wanted the post and any allusions to current happenings at Bedford or Staples removed from their sweet memories.

Carol Felder spoke at a Board of Education meeting earlier this month. Her husband, Richard Anderson stood by her side. 

Westport has always been a primarily white town. My mother, a Westport News and  Fairpress journalist, used to tell my sister and me, “you should know this is not real life. Living here among mostly white people is not how the world works.”

When I went through the school system from 1st through 12th grade, maybe 4 Black families sent their kids to the public schools. Perhaps this lulled white students into thinking racism was not a problem.

One person  wrote: “We put too much emphasis on race, religion and national origin… When we grew up in Westport I don’t think that really mattered (emphasis mine). But [what’s going on now] is part of an agenda that is being pushed down our throats.”

The underbelly of the so-called liberal or progressive town was openly revealed in these posts by people who had no interest in the extreme pain the Felder-Anderson family expressed at the Board of Ed meeting.

As a white person who has studied and taught anti-racism in mental health clinics and in a medical school for several decades, I have learned that the fact that many white people don’t want to talk about racism is because they think they don’t have to. Systemic, structural and institutional racism permeate our culture on all levels.

Here we have parents who asked for help to improve the school system to protect their daughters and other Black families in town. It’s fine if alumni don’t want to get involved with looking for solutions. But if they can’t even read about it and have a dialogue, there is something genuinely amiss.

I don’t care if this post is on the Staples High School Alumni Facebook site. I do care how speedily it was dismissed, and deemed “inappropriate” for alumni to read.

Going forward, how are those of us who are eager to brainstorm with the school system to educate and train teachers, administrators and students going to help?

I believe we all have to take some responsibility for what happened to the Felder-Anderson children. The children who acted in a racist manner should not just be scolded or grounded, nor should they  be castigated for “bullying.” This is a much bigger and deeper problem.

“The most difficult thing” she has ever done, Dr. Felder said, “is to raise Black children in Westport, Connecticut.”

Roundup: Dunville’s, Rebel & Rose, Staples Swimmers …

Dunville’s closed suddenly last Thursday.

There is no sign on the restaurant/bar, a Saugatuck mainstay for over 40 years.

Owner Steve Carpentieri did not reply to a request for comment.

Dunville’s

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Rebel & Rose Tattoo Studio celebrates its second anniversary March 2 (noon to 6 p.m., 155 Post Road East).

Women vendors — Mica Blaise, Candle Caboodle, Hemma Kitchen, Jeweled Coquette and Rebel Daughter Cookies — will be featured. Light bites, tarot cards and more, too.

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“06880” has partnered with the Drew Friedman Community Arts Center to help the next generation of artists develop their talents.

They’re offering $5,000 worth of scholarships. But the deadline is soon: February 29.

The grants will go to current high school seniors with financial need who want to pursue an arts education at any level — university, community college or an arts school. All Westport 12th graders are eligible, no matter where they currently attend school.

The DFCAC is funding the scholarships. It was founded by Friedman — the downtown property owner, restauranteur (Onion Alley, Cobb’s Mill Inn, Stonehenge Inn) and philanthropist whose first wife Bobbie was an accomplished artist.

Students who currently participate in art classes or art activities should send up to 8 digital images (JPEGs) of their work. It can be any medium — photography, painting, sculpture, drawing, digital art, or other.

Applicants should also submit a statement of up to 300 words describing the value of art in their life, and the world at large.

Send images and the statement (or any questions) to info@DrewFriedmanCommunityArtsCenter.org (subject line: “2024 Scholarship”).

Submissions will be evaluated by an independent panel of professional artists. Awards will be announced by the end of March, with the winners’ work posted on “06880.”

Drew Friedman Community Arts Center representatives Miggs Burroughs and Nick Visconti (far right) and then-1st Selectman Jim Marpe congratulate previous arts scholarship winners.

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Every year, the Staples High School boys swim and dive team hosts a Swim-a-thon. Members swim lengths of the pool; they ask relatives, friends, neighbors and businesses to pledge money per lap, or make a flat donation.

Funds go toward transportation, equipment, and the team banquet.

This year’s event is March 1 (3 to 5 p.m.). Click here to pledge or donate.

Staples High School swim and dive team members.

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Trumpeter Frank London headlines this week’s Jazz at the Post (Thursday, February 22, VFW Joseph J. Clinton Post 399; shows at 7:30 and 8:45 p.m.; dinner begins at 7 p.m.; $20 music cover, $15 for students and veterans).

Jazz at the Post Rounder Greg “The Jazz Rabbi” Wall says London “tears down the walls of parochial practices of old and new jazz, swing, bop, klezmer, gypsy, Baltic, Cuban, West African and many other musical genres. He creates community across the globe.”

Wall and London were partners in Hasidic New Wave, which combined traditional Jewish celebratory music with downtown jazz, funk and “improvised mayhem.” They currently play together in Zion80, which mixes avant jazz and Afro beat.

London and Wall will be joined by pianist Roberta Piket, bassist Hilliard Greene and drummer Greg Borrows.

Reservations are strongly suggested: JazzatthePost@gmail.com.

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A red-tailed hawk, silhouetted against white snow on Compo Road South, stars in today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature:

(Photo/Elisabeth Levey)

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And finally … on this date in 1877, Tchaikovsky’s ballet Swan Lake premiered at the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow.

(From Dunville’s and a tattoo shop, to jazz and the Bolshoi, “06880” is where Westport meets the world. If you enjoy “06880,” please support us by clicking here. Thank you!)

Westport Rotary: 100 Years Of “Service Above Self”

On March 26, 1924, 98 people gathered in a raging snowstorm to celebrate the founding of the 1,658th Rotary Club in the world.

A hundred years later — after raising millions of dollars for charities here, and in Africa and Asia; donating the Compo Beach playground and South Beach grills, and countless more good works — the Westport Rotary Club is poised to celebrate its centennial.

Much has changed. There are now over 46,000 clubs in Rotary International. Meetings are no longer mandatory (or male only). Membership is not restricted to one person per occupation. In Westport, lobster has replaced roast beef as the main fundraiser.

No Rotarian is alive to remember that first dinner, at the Westport (now Birchwood) Country Club. But the organization is excited to honor its century of service.

A gala dinner is set for March 7 — 100 years to the day since the Westport Rotary Club received its charter.

The Inn at Longshore event includes entertainment, and a multimedia look at Westport Rotary’s first century. All attendees will receive a commemorative book, written by Ron Henkoff.

Anson Leary

It’s packed with history, starting with 33-year-old Anson Leary’s dream of starting a Rotary Club. The World War I veteran had come to Westport a year earlier, to help open the fledgling YMCA.

He envisioned a men’s counterpart to the Westport Town Improvement Association (now the Westport Woman’s Club). Charter members included Leonard Gault (son of Gault Company founder Robert), mattress factory owner Austin Wakeman, Charles Kemper (whose tannery had not yet been turned into the Westport Country Playhouse), and ice dealer Edward Nash.

Rotary International was “serious and strict,” for “men from various vocations to exchange ideas and form meaningful friendships.” Meetings rotated between members’ offices (hence the name “Rotary”), and were guided by founder Paul Harris’ motto: “Service above self.”

Westport’s Rotary met every Tuesday for lunch. Attendance was mandatory. Members traveling for business or on vacation were required to attend a local meeting there — and show proof.

Westport meetings included patriotic and popular songs. There was a Rotary band. For gala dances, men wore tuxes. (Their wives, dressed in evening gowns, were called “Rotary-Annes.”)

The Westport Rotary Club’s 1928 band.

The Westport club’s first project — begun in June 1924, just 3 months after their founding — was building a playground behind then-new Bedford Elementary School (now Town Hall). Members cleared and leveled the ground, and installed equipment.

In those early years they raised money for the town’s first ambulance, paid for surgery to save a boy’s eyesight, donated funds to disabled children, equipped the Bedford Junior High fife and drum corps, sponsored twilight baseball, and started a college fund.

Their 10th anniversary celebration in 1934 was at the Open Door Inn on Jesup Road. The party lasted until 1:30 a.m.

In the summer of 1940, the Westport Rotary Orchestra played at the New York World’s Fair. After war broke out the next year members sold war bonds, and raised money for families whose members were fighting overseas. Founder Anson Leary, age 51, served in the Air Force Reserves in the Pacific. Closer to home, founding member Howard Gault was on the town’s Ration Board.

In 1994, Rick Benson gave the first Community Service Awards to Ed Mitchell (standing) and Howard Gault.

Over the years, Rotary evolved. Meetings were held in a variety of restaurants: the Mansion House, Compo Pavilion, Hidden Door, Josie’s Nook, The Townly, La Normandie, New Englander, Andy and Mary Barna’s, 3 Bears, Canterbury, The Inn at Longshore and Bertucci’s.

Most recently they met at Christ & Holy Trinity Church, and now Green’s Farms Church. One thing never changed, though: They’re still on Tuesdays.

President Ed Mitchell — founder of the  eponymous clothing store — initiated Roast Beef Dinners as a fundraiser. Those paid for the Compo grills, a pavilion at Camp Mahackeno, a pool at Easton’s Camp Aspetuck, dugouts at Gault Field, and the education of Sam Luciano’s 3 children, after the police chief died suddenly.

Rotary’s 50th anniversary celebration drew 95 members. Founding Rotarian Chot Kemper was still alive. Fifth-year member Bruce Knowles was there too — and remained a Rotarian for another 45 years.

Chot Kemper (left) and Bruce Knowles were both 50-year Westport Rotary Club members.

A 7-0 Supreme Court ruling in 1987 opened the Rotary door to female members across the US. A straw poll at the Westport club showed 24 in favor — but 32 against.

Five months later, Pat Harrington and Carol Way became the local organization’s first women Rotarians. Five men quit in protest.

The 1989 Westport Rotary Club photo included just 5 female members.

But by 1995 superintendent of schools Judy Rovins was chosen as the first female Westport Rotary president. The story of women in Westport Rotary ever since has been one of tremendous numbers, and tremendous contributions.

Meanwhile, past president Lou Weinstein supported the idea of a second Rotary Club here, for people who could not attend lunch meetings.

Some members opposed the idea — they thought it would be confusing, and make it harder to raise funds — but the Sunrise Rotary Club was chartered on November 22, 1988.

Today, both clubs flourish. There are about 140 members overall. Nearly half are women.

In fact, Westport has more Rotarians per capita than any other town in Zone 32 (encompassing 9 states, parts of Canada, and Bermuda).

1988 also was the year that Westport Rotary led a project to build a playground at Compo Beach. It was led by Jim Bennet. Rick Benson, whose name turns up often over the club’s past 40 years, provided strong support. Benson also worked with Paul Spiekermann to get Westport Rotary involved in overseas projects, in underserved areas of Africa and Asia.

Paul Spiekermann (left) and Rick Benson

The local club now allocates 25% of its funds to international projects. They’ve aided victims of Cambodian land mines, helped battle dengue fever in Indonesia, and contributed to projects in Lithuania, Haiti, Benin, Swaziland, Tanzania and Thailand. Westport Rotary has donated to 27 countries overall.

Rick Benson, Lyla Steenbergen and Leslie Roberts, with local officials, at the dedication of a hospital ICU unit in Uganda.

In 1994, when Connecticut welcomed the World Special Olympics Games, Rotarianns hosted athletes from Cameroon and Panama. They outfitted one athlete with a prosthetic leg.

Five years later, for their 75th anniversary, Westport Rotary led an $82,000 effort to restore the Compo Beach cannons. They also joined with other organizations to give the Westport Fire Department a mobile classroom, to teach children about safety.

The LobsterFest fundraiser began in 2012, under president Julia Broder. (An earlier clambake ended when the price of seafood soared.) Last year’s event brought in $280,000. Overall, LobsterFest has raised over $1.5 million, for local projects like scholarships, meals at the Gillespie Center and Habitat for Humanity houses in Bridgeport, and many more overseas.

(Save the date: LobsterFest 2024 is September 21!)

LobsterFest: One of the best parties in town.

That’s just the first 100 years. As Westport Rotary looks to the next 100, they’ve earmarked $100,000 to join with the Westport Young Woman’s League in renovating the Compo playground they helped build in 1989.

Though no one is alive to remember, it hearkens back to that very first project, in 1924: the Bedford Elementary School playground.

The more things change, the more they remain the same.

Happy 100th birthday, Westport Rotary Club. Here’s to 100 more, helping Westport — and the world.

(Tickets to Westport Rotary’s March 7 centennial gala are $100. (Venmo @Thomas-Carey-73046, or mail checks to Westport Rotary PO Box 743, Westport, CT 06881). Email: rsvp.WestportRotary@gmail.com.)

FUN WESTPORT ROTARY CLUB FACTS: 8 Westport Rotarians have served as 1st selectperson: E.C. Nash, Austin Wakeman, Herb Baldwin, Bill Seiden, Joe Arcudi, Dianne Farrell, Gordon Joseloff, Jim Marpe and Jen Tooker (Sunrise Rotary member).

(“06880” is nowhere near 100 years old. But we’re part of Westport too. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Roundup: Youth Sports, Levitt Pavilion, Library Trustees …

As pressure mounts on young athletes to be more competitive than ever, Sebastian Little says: Enough!

The leadership coach — who works with clients in MLB, the NBA and NHL, and is in his 3rd year as Yale University football’s performance coach — will speak on a Westport Public Schools and Westport Together panel called “For the Love of the Game: How Parents Can Promote Successful Athletes on and Off the Field.”

The session — for parents and coaches — will offer insights and strategies into “balancing competition with compassion and growth with enjoyment.”

The event is March 5 (7 p.m., Bedford Middle School auditorium). Click here to register.

Go team! (Photo/Leslie Flinn)

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2024 Levitt Pavilion memberships are on sale now.

Members enjoy pre-sales, discounts and more for specially ticketed events. Shows announced so far include

  • May 25: Pigeons Playing Ping Pong | Andy Frasco & The UN | Dogs in a Pile
  • June 1: Couch (free)
  • June 8: Keb’ Mo’
  • June 16: The Wood Brothers
  • July 5: : moe. Best. Summer. Ever. With Daniel Donato’s Cosmic Country and Neighbor
  • August 17: Andrew Bird, with Amadou & Mariam.

Memberships help subsidize over 50 free shows, all season long. Click here for more information, and membership registration.

Levitt Pavilion (Photo/JC Martin)

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The Westport Library and Representative Town Meeting are looking for candidates to fill vacancies on the Library Board of Trustees.

Candidates must be Westport residents. Skills in management, planning, marketing, finance and law are valued. Candidates with a track record in fundraising and connections within the community are encouraged to apply. Knowledge of public funding, and service on other boards is advantageous.

Trustee appointments typically span 4 years, beginning July 1. Interested candidates should email a resume and letter of interest to  rpowell@westportlibrary.org by March 15. Click on the Library’s Strategic Plan  and also here for more information.

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Westport Police made 2 custodial arrests between February 7 and 14.

A man was arrested for larceny, after video surveillance showed him stealing $137.94 worth of laundry detergent from Stop & Shop.

A man was arrested for evading responsibility (hit and run) and failure to remove a vehicle from a highway, following investigation into a 1-car accident on Easton Road January 6. He hit a telephone pole during a snowstorm, then left while his car remained in the travel portion of the road.

Westport Police also issued these citations:

  • Traveling unreasonably fast: 5 citations
  • Operating a motor vehicle without a license: 3
  • Failure to obey stop sign: 3
  • Passing a standing school bus: 2
  • Failure to obey traffic control signals: 2
  • Evading responsbility: 1
  • Speeding: 1
  • Traveling at unreasonable speed: 1
  • Traveling at unreasonable speed for conditions: 1
  • Following too closely: 1
  • Failure to grant right of way: 1
  • Failure to remove ice/snow from roof: 1
  • Illegal use of a handheld device: 1
  • Operating a motor vehicle under suspension: 1
  • Operating an unregistered motor vehicle: 1
  • Operating a motor vehicle without minimum insurance: 1.

It’s the law: Connecticut residents must remove snow and ice from car roofs!

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Staples High School’s February Students of the Month are seniors Chelsey Oliva and Michael Belpedio, juniors Anna Berrod Cassimatis and Zachary Pardon, sophomores Landon Alswanger and Claire Harris, and freshmen Makayla Hein and Ari Sklar.

Students of the Month “help make Staples High School a welcoming place for their peers and teachers alike. They are the ‘glue’ of the Staples community — the type of kind, cheerful, hard-working, trustworthy students that keep the high school together, making it the special place that it is.”

“Students of the month are nominated by their teachers, who are asked to think of those students who come to school regularly, are friendly to the staff and to fellow students, and make positive contributions in class as well as the Staples community. In short, these students are all-around good citizens of our school.”

February Students of the Month (from left): Anna Berrod Cassimatis, Claire Harris, Chelsey Oliva, Michael Belpedio, Landon Alswanger, Ari Sklar,  Zachary Pardon. Missing: Makayla Hein. 

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Before rising temperatures take their toll, here’s a snowman shot from Cross Highway. near Main Street.

“You’re never too old for joy!” says photographer Claudia Sherwood Servidio.

(Photo/Claudia Sherwood Servidio)

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As the snow fell on Tuesday, this red-shouldered hawk found a way to escape the flakes — and at the same time, pose for our “Westport … Naturally” feature.

(Photo/Melissa Chang)

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And finally … on this date in 1965,a  new red-and-white maple leaf design was adopted as the flag of Canada. It replaced the red ensign banner.

(O Canada! O6880! This blog is where Westport meets the world. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Wynston Asks Nina: “Would You Be My Valentine?”

Wynston Browne has won Westport’s heart.

The Staples High School junior has non-speaking autism. But over the past 2 years — thanks to a communication device, a communication specialist, and the strong advocacy of his parents — he has found his voice.

His brilliant mind — locked away for years, when he was presumed to have an intellectual disability — is on display in many ways, thanks to his keyboard.

His kind, loving spirit will be seen soon in a film by Cynthia Gibb and Jill Johnson Mann. He stars in “Presumed Incompetent,” about a nonspeaking autistic teenager whose life mirrors his own.

Apraxia causes Wynston’s body to move erratically. He appear agitated and unfocused, though he is not. But he hears and absorbs everything. 

Wynston Browne, during a break from the filming of “Presumed Incompetent.”

At last, he is able to express his intelligence. He wants to be challenged in school — not presumed to be stupid or incompetent, because he can’t speak out loud.

He wants to have friends. He wants to sit in the cafeteria and laugh with them, not be laughed at.

Nina Meehan is another one of the 30 million or so non-speaking autistic people in the world.

She is 18. It took her until last year to find a way to communicate. Now — through the Nina Foundation she started — she is on a mission to prove that autism is not a cognitive disability.

It is actually a motor skill disability. There is a disconnect between the brain, the mouth and jaw, and fine motor skills like writing with a pencil or typing easily on a computer.

The brain/body disconnect makes many movements for those affected by apraxia to appear erratic. It is difficult for them to have their brain make purposeful movement.

Nina lives in Fairfield. She and Wynston know each other.

On Sunday — Super Bowl morning — she asked her older sister Natalia (a trained communication partner) if she could see Wynston later that day.

Nina Meehan, with her sister.

Her father picked Wynston up in Westport. The teenagers hung out for a couple of hours, as Natalia assisted their conversations.

When Wynston’s father David arrived to pick him up, Wynston made it clear — gently, but forcefully — that he’d prefer not to go.

David said that dinner (and the Super Bowl) were waiting. He asked if Wynston wanted to say anything else before leaving.

Natalia raised the letter board. Wynston decisively and precisely poked at the letters.

“Would you be my valentine?” he asked.

Nina grinned from ear to ear, and rocked back and forth on the couch.

Natalia brought over the spelling board. Nina poked at the letters: “I would love to.”

Wynston Browne and Nina Meehan, on Sunday.

Wynston then made clear to his father that he really did not want to go. But he would.

Nina’s mother Raquel asked the teenagers if they wanted to FaceTime on Wednesday. Their body language made their delight emphatically clear.

Happy Valentine’s Day, Wynston and Nina!

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Wynston’s mother, Lynda Kommel-Browne, adds: “As we have heard from Wynston, we realize how important it is for autistics to have friendships, love and companionship.

“This is another aspect of autism that we must concede we all got wrong.

“Human beings are social beings. Even though non-speakers’ socialization may look different than neuro-typical socialization, that doesn’t mean they don’t enjoy and crave friendship, companionship and love.

“Many families with non-speakers feel like their children have a 6th, 7th and 8th sense. Wynston is so gentle and loving most of the time.

“It makes me feel so sad that he and his cohorts have spent such a big part of their lives largely segregated from communities. I hope this shows that non-speaking autistics indeed want very much to be part of the community.”