Roundup: Galas Galore, Making Strides, Poet Laureate …

You can’t say there’s nothing to do in Westport.

Yesterday afternoon, a couple of thousand folks strolled and ate their way through Slice of Saugatuck, sponsored by the Westport Weston Chamber of Commerce.

Yesterday evening, Wakeman Town Farm’s Harvest Fest drew — as always — a capacity crowd.

The food stations were as spectacular as the views of the gardens, and the community vibe. It’s one of Westport’s best parties of the year (with a kick-ass band).

(Photos/Dan Woog

Yesterday, Westport Emergency Medical Services hosted their own fundraiser, at Cedar Point Yacht Club.

That event, called “Band Aid” — get it? — also had all the ingredients needed for success: food, drinks, music, and tons of people enjoying themselves.

(Photo/Jonathan Alloy)

And of course, the Westport Country Playhouse’s annual fundraising gala, featuring Kirstin Chinoweth, was a sold-sold, super-smash success.

But wait! There’s more!

Tonight, Peter Frampton comes alive at the Levitt Pavilion.

If you missed all the fun — or you had such a good time, you want more — get ready for next weekend.

Westoberfest — sponsored by the Westport Downtown Association — rocks Elm Street on Saturday (September 21, 2 to 5 p.m.).

Saturday afternoon and evening (3 to 7 p.m.), the Westport Rotary Club’s LobsterFest packs Compo Beach.

See you there!

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Felicia Sale invites “06880” readers to join Restore, in the fight against breast cancer.

As co-owner of the Post Road East wellness center offering cryotherapy, IV drips, infrared saunas and more, she has witnessed the profound impact the disease has on individuals and families.

Last year, her own life was forever changed when she was diagnosed with a non-invasive, early stage breast cancer confined to the milk ducts.

She was lucky. It turned out to be atypical/abnormal cells, but the journey to that discovery was very challenging.

Felicia underwent a bilateral mastectomy, a decision that was both physically and emotionally demanding.

She had not realized how many people in Westport had been affected by the disease until she went through it herself.

Felicia says, “I want to thank Pink Aid, and all the women in Westport who helped me navigate this journey. You know who you are. Your support was my strength, and I wouldn’t have been able to move forward without you.”

To pay it forward, she is forming a team for Making Strides Against Cancer, the October 20 walk-and-more at Sherwood Island State Park (9 a.m. to noon).

“This is a fantastic opportunity to come together as a community, have fun, and make a difference,” Felicia says.

Click here to join the Restore team, or make a donation.

As a special incentive, anyone donating $50 or more will receive a free core service at Restore. This includes a whole body cryo, infrared sauna session, red light therapy or compression therapy.

You’ll get a team t-shirt, too.

And the knowledge that you are “making strides” to make a difference, in the fight against breast cancer.

Felicia Sale

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Westport will soon have a new poet laureate.

Donna Disch succeeds Jessica Noyes McEntee, in the 2-year post. The public is invited to meet (and hear) the new laureate this Tuesday (September 17, 4 p.m., Westport Library).

The Westport Arts Committee and 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker will lead the event.

Disch is a 24-year Westport resident. She earned an MFA at Vermont College, and has participated in poetry workshops for more than 20 years.

Her poems have been published in the Aspen Anthology, Poetry East and Charleston Magazine, among others. A former high school English teacher, she  loves working with children. Disch looks forward to taking more poetry into our schools.

McEntee, her predecessor, worked closely with the Westport Public Art Collections Committee, adding poetry to artworks hanging in schools and Town Hall.

A poem of hers can been seen alongside the Passages sculpture recently installed at Pasacreta Park on the river. McEntee ran poetry workshops at Westport’s Center for Senior Activities, MoCA CT and the Library.

Donna Disch

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Luca Lombardo is perfect — 13-for-13 — as the extra points kicker for Boston College’s football team.

The 2022 Staples High School graduate is a 5-11, 174-pound junior, in his second year with the Eagles.

He kicked for Staples as a senior, after spending much of his youth as a soccer player. He was on Beachside’s MLS Next academy team, which prohibits members from playing high school soccer. (Hat tip: Dave Briggs)

Luca Lombardo

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Orange meets green on Saturday, October 5.

From 10:30 a.m. to noon that day, Westport Book Shop, Earthplace and the Westport Tree Board are sponsoring a kids’ “Paint Pumpkins on Jesup Green” event. There will be “special animal visits,” too.

Youngsters are encouraged to wear Halloween costumes.

Ready for painting. (Photo/June Rose Whittaker)

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It’s a “flying fingers folk fest.”

The Flying Fingers Jug Band returns to First Folk Sunday on October 6 (12:30 p.m., Saugatuck Rowing Club). They were hit last year, and are back by popular demand.

The FFJB will be joined by singer/guitarist/First Folk Sunday mastermind Suzanne Sheridan.

The band features an eclectic mix of instruments, including washboard, string bass, jug, dobro, mandolin, fiddle, banjo, kazoo, mouth harp and stove pipe.

They “fuse the energy of post-Prohibition revelry, the vocal harmonies of bluegrass, and the authenticity of a juke joint.” Former Westonite David Barron plays banjo and mandolin.

They have appeared in some of New York’s coolest taverns, and made their national TV debut on the Food Network’s “The Kitchen.”

Click here for tickets. The music cover charge is $15. Table service is available for brunch or lunch, along with cocktails and beverages.

For more information on First Folk Sunday, click here or call 203-984-7562.

Flying Fingers Jug Band

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Lou Weinberg sends along today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo — and a plea. He says:

“This rough-legged hawk was hunting a red squirrel in the Long Lots Preserve, surrounding the Westport Community Gardens.

“It moved so intently, disregarding my presence for the most part, and focused on the hunt. It was incredible to watch.

(Photo/Lou Weinberg)

“The variety of trees, shrubs and wildflowers in the Long Lots Preserve makes it possible for nature to do its thing.

“The base of the food chain there (plants, insects) is very strong, and supplies energy all the way up to top level predators like this hawk. A healthy population of top-level predators keeps our ecosystems in balance.

“This rich, green open space is incredibly important to keeping our environment healthy through carbon sequestering, water retention and recycling, oxygen generation, temperature cooling, nutrient cycling and habitat supply.

“It would be incredibly disappointing to compromise this open space, especially considering the rapid pace of development and lack of open space on this side of town.

“It provides a wonderful opportunity for residents to take a break, slow down and appreciate the healing qualities of nature. What is being created here provides a phenomenal opportunity for environmental education for our children.

“Over a dozen local businesses and organizations have donated in-kind services to create this preserve. Over 100 people have donated tens of thousands of dollars to make the Long Lots Preserve a reality.

“Protecting this open space will benefit the town for generations. In a world where the environment is falling apart at the seams, this is an absolute model of suburban open space environmental rehabilitation.”

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And finally … Cannonball Adderley, the famed saxophonist and bandleader, was born on this date in 1928. He died in 1975, age 46, following a stroke.

Mercy, mercy, mercy!

(“Mercy me!” I hear you say. “How can I support ‘06880’?” It’s easy! Just click here, to make a tax-deductible contribution. We thank you!)

 

 

 

Any Way You Slice It, Saugatuck Sizzled

What a difference a week makes.

Last Saturday was rainy and gray. The Slice of Saugatuck was postponed.

Yesterday’s late-summer weather was perfect. The sun shone, the air was warm, and a couple of thousand folks ate, drank, danced and bounce-housed their way up and down Riverside and Saugatuck Avenues, and around Railroad Place.

The annual Westport Weston Chamber of Commerce party has become an unofficial kickoff to fall.

And what better way to celebrate it than by strolling (with or without strollers), enjoying a few dozen restaurants, shops and booths, in one of Westport’s oldest — and coolest — neighborhoods.

Our excellent “06880” photographer Ryan Allen — a Staples High School sophomore — was at the Slice, to capture it all.

Like everyone else, he ate it up.

Admission is just $15 — and only $5 for kids. Westport Weston Chamber of Commerce volunteers sold tickets.

One helping per customer. An employee here checks a guest’s card. But the portions were great. And even though the Bridge at Saugatuck hasn’t opened yet, they served full burgers.

Smokey Bear, at the Saugatuck Fire Station.

Where to go next?

(All photos/Ryan Allen)

A Cub Scout Story, For Everyone

“06880” would not normally devote the main story of the day to an invitation to join Cub Scouts.

The focus is too narrow. Our lead story should appeal to a much broader segment of our very large audience.

But this piece is different. As you read it, you’ll learn about the back story behind James Delorey’s request that I post his piece. He writes:

My daughter Mireille just started kindergarten at Greens Farms Elementary School. She asked me to invitate all her classmates to join Westport Cub Scouts Pack 39.

Mireille says she wants her friends to “learn how to hike and make s’mores.” She is excited to be a Cub Scout, and I am excited about all the things our family will get to do with her.

Mireille Delorey, with s’mores.

Cub Scouts is open to all youth – boys and girls – in kindergarten through 5th grade. Every family is welcome.

Lion Cubs (kindergarteners) will learn the Cub Scout motto, “Do Your Best,” make new friends, and learn communication skills and problem-solving through fun, hands-on activities the whole family will enjoy.

Any kindergartener-5th Grader interested in joining Cub Scouts or learning more is very welcome to attend a Westport Cub Scouts event (see information at the end of this story).

A few things in Scouting have changed since I became a Scout as a kid. Now, every youth from every family is welcome. There is a priority on safety and responsibility.

I’m proud that Westport Cub Scouts Pack 39 was among the first in the country to welcome girls. Thousands of girls nationwide have completed Eagle Scout service projects and earned the rank of Eagle Scout, including Scouts from Westport’s Troop 139. Westport’s older Scouts in grades 6-12 do amazing things in Troop 36, 39, and 139.

We know you’re busy with soccer, music, dance, karate, hockey, baseball and life in general. Lions works around your and your child’s busy schedules. It is also a beautiful opportunity for parents to make lasting memories with their children. These experiences mean so much to my wife, Dr. Angela Ryan, and me.

You may have seen the bench and beautiful dogwood tree in the Greens Farms School playground dedicated to our son, Perrin Delorey. He died in an automobile accident in 2018, when he was 10.

Perrin was an all-around beautiful kid. He loved Westport Little League, basketball, hockey, skiing and piano.

He was also a Cub Scout in Westport Pack 39. He did amazing things thanks to doors opened by Scouting parents, like visiting the NBC Sports studios, getting up close to a priceless 1962 Ferrari GTO at Lime Rock, learning how to cast a fishing rod, racing Pinewood Derby cars, throwing tomahawks (safely!), hiking in Devil’s Den, learning how to say “Do Your Best” in sign language, singing songs for residents in a nursing home, skiing his first ski jumps, and camping for the first time.

Perrin Delorey, with his Eclipse Award in 2017. He earned it by showing visitors to the Westport Observatory how to safely view a partial eclipse.

I marvel at how much Perrin grew from the time he joined in 1st grade, to when he was introducing a skit in front of hundreds of Scouts at a campfire just a few years later. I am so excited that Mireille and her friends will be able to experience things like that.

Mireille and I hope to see you at an event. You and your families are welcome to attend. Siblings are welcome too.

Please check out WestportCubScouts.com. Feel free to mail me at jdelorey@gmail.com if you have any questions or suggestions for the coming year. It will be fun!

PS: If you’re not in Westport, you can find a Cub Scout pack by entering your zip code at BeAScout.org.

Mireille Delorey, hiking in Acadia National Park.

Upcoming events (all are welcome):

  • Cub Scout Open House, featuring Mad Science (Today, Sunday, September 15, 2:30 to 4 p.m., Green’s Farms Church)

Cubs will enjoy a fun and interactive science presentation, and adults can learn more about Pack 39 Sunday, September 15th, at 2:30-4:00 p.m.

  • Harvest Campfire (Friday, September 20, 5:30 to 7 p.m., Earthplace)

Cubs will do a short hike, learn how to have a fun and safe campfire, and have pizza and apple cider.

Among the activities planned for the upcoming year:

  • Scout Day at Lime Rock racetrack
  • Cub Scout safari and campout
  • Army football game at West Point
  • Hikes in Westport and nearby areas
  • Traditions Night
  • Pinewood Derby
  • Community service event at VFW Post 399
  • Bear Carnival (run by our 3rd grade Bear Cubs)
  • Snow tubing at Powder Ridge
  • “Blue & Gold” banquet
  • Westport Memorial Day parade
  • Bicycle rally
  • Beach party.

Pic Of The Day #2706

A different view of Burying Hill Beach (Photo/Wendy Levy)

Roundup: “Battle Of Sexes” Video, Daffodils, Football …

For some reason, the YouTube link to the Westport Library’s “Battle of the Sexes” — the subject of this morning’s lead story — did not come through for some readers.

If you could not access it, try below. Let’s hope this works!

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Debra Kandrak is the woman behind the very successful “Paint the Town Yellow” project.

She writes: “On Friday, during my daily walk at Compo Beach, I came upon the memorial service for Max Harper — a young man taken tragically too soon.

“It was a beautiful tribute in his honor, with hundreds of people in attendance.

“So today I ask everyone to plant yellow daffodils in Max’s memory. (You may recall that the theme for ‘Paint the Town Yellow’ is to honor loved ones

“Let’s plant them all over town: around street signs, stop signs, mailbox posts, at the entrance to Staples and in front of the school.

“Let’s make this a community event. Email me (debra.kandrak@raveis.com) where you are going to plant, so I can post photos next spring for his family to see how much this community cares.

“I would like to see an explosion of yellow daffodils all around town in the spring, in honor of Max. This will be a beautiful tribute, and may give his family some peace.”

These daffodils line Debra Kandrak’s driveway.

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A large crowd packed Paul Lane Field last night, for the opening game of Staples’ football season.

(Photo/Luca Caniato)

The state champion Wreckers picked up right where they left off last fall, hammering non-league Hamden 48-7. Junior quarterback Nick Weil threw 5 touchdown passes.

Many attendees — including those not yet in Staples — wore “Play for Max” buttons.

(Photo/Bianca Jonas)

The buttons — honoring senior Max Harper, who died Wednesday in a dirt bike accident — were made Friday in the Staples library, by students.

(Photo/Mark Mathias)

On Thursday and Friday, therapy dogs were available at Staples, to help students cope with the tragedy.

The dogs have been welcome fixtures at Staples at other times of stress. As shown below, they are always happy to help.

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The Westport Sunrise Rotary Club welcomed back a popular speaker — Representative Jim Himes — yesterday.

The meeting was open to the public, and a large number of non-members headed to Green’s Farms Church to hear the 4th District congressman.

Congressman Jim Himes, at the Westport Sunrise Rotary meeting. (Photo/Katie Augustyn)

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The Matsiko World Orphan Choir — 24  gifted and spirited teenagers — wind up their 2024 American tour, singing and dancing to songs from their native Africa — with a free concert on September 19 (Bedford Middle School, 7:30 p.m.).

It’s a gift to Westport from an anonymous benefactor, intended to expand the audience’s musical and cultural horizons.

Matsiko means “hope” in Ugandan. The Choir performs to help thousands of children attain a brighter future. Proceeds from the tour and merchandise sales support the organization’s worldwide educational programs for orphans.

The Matsiko World Orphan Choir has performed at the White House, US Capitol, Disneyland, Mount Rushmore and the Rose Bowl.

After Westport they head to Yale University, then Jazz at Lincoln Center.

Click here for free tickets, and more information.

Matsiko World Orphan Choir.

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October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

On October 7 (Fire Engine Pizza Company, 768 Bridgeport Avenue, Shelton; 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.), the Westport Uniformed Firefighters Charitable Foundation sponsors an important event.

There’s fun, food, and valuable information, to support awareness and celebrate survivors.

Casting for Awareness — a non-profit that provides free fly-fishing wellness retreats for women with breast cancer — will receive up to 20% of the total sales at the restaurant that day.

Fire Engine Pizza Company is a great place. And there’s no better cause.

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Finally. At last!

The moment we’ve all been waiting for.

A gaping Westport need will soon be filled.

Not a moment too soon … a nail salon will open in town!

(Photo/Stephanie Mastocciolo)

I’m sure customers will flock there.

But where will they go on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday …?

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Personally, I think it’s too early for Halloween decorations.

Or even pumpkin spice latte.

But Costco thinks this is a fine time to roll out their Christmas goods.

(Photo/Dinkin Fotografix)

On second thought: Why not?

There are only 102 days left before Santa arrives.

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Well-known former Westporter Stephen Kaye died September 2. He was 86.

The Boston-area native, who graduated from Harvard Business School and MIT, and was a 1st lieutenant in the US Army Quartermaster Corps. lived in Westport for over 50 years. His family says he was known as “funny, smart, kind, caring, quirky and unique. Steve lived his life with energy and positivity. A passionate sailor, his boat ‘Forever Young’ expressed his outlook and vigor. Steve was an avid skier of groomed blue runs, a black belt in martial arts, always made new friends at the gym and was a ping-pong player with an overpowering serve.”

After working for Procter & Gamble, Gillette and other advertising, packaging and consulting firms, he founded Steve Kaye New Products in 1977. He built it into a successful firm, working with Fortune 500 as well as entrepreneurial companies.

He helped create Huggies diapers, the “Got Milk” campaign, chocolate-covered Oreos and other products of the 1980s and ’90s.

For the past 11 years Steve was an adjunct professor of marketing and sales at Sacred Heart University and Housatonic Community College.

Steve is survived by his life partner of over 30 years, Linda Arenson of Westport; son Bruce (Misael Rodriguez) of Milford; daughter Joan Garbow (Ralph) of Ridgefield; son Peter Kaye (Andrea Mazur) of Chevy Chase, Maryland; grandchildren Ben and Julia Garbow and Sally and Margot Kaye; sister and brother-in-law Barbara and Kenny Wexler of Brookline, Massachusetts, and cousins Stanley and Enid Shulman of Brookline.

Donations in Steve’s honor can be made to Congregation Shir Shalom of Westchester and Fairfield Counties, 46 Peaceable St., Ridgefield, CT 06877.

Steve Kaye

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Staples High School Class of 1971 graduate Dave Kingsley died September 4, from complications of lymphoma.

He and his wife Kathy settled in Newtown in 1986, where they raised 2 daughters.

Dave’s love for fishing, boating and sailing where cultivate during his youth on Long Island Sound. He particularly enjoyed bone-fishing in the Bahamas.

Dave played basketball, baseball and softball into adulthood. He found great joy in watching his daughters play sports, coaching several of their youth basketball teams.

He was a voracious reader, full of knowledge gained through his life as a builder, designer, contractor and business owner. He designed, built and remodeled homes and businesses in Connecticut and New York, including his own home.

One of his proudest achievements was the renovation of an old building on the Fairfield Hills campus, transforming a staff dining room and library at the former psychiatric hospital into a brewery.

Dave is survived by his wife Kathy; daughters Emma of Portsmouth, New Hampshire and Caroline of Sausalito, California; sisters Karen of Wallingford,  Patricia of San Diego, Mary Ann of Severna Park, Maryland, plus nieces and nephews.

A celebration of his life is set for tomorrow (Sunday, September 15, 3 p.m., at his brewery), followed by a funeral Monday (September 16, 10:30 a.m., Saint Rose of Lima Church, Newtown).

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Newtown Youth & Family Services.

Dave Kingsley

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Today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature introduces its first-ever black crown night heron.

Ta da!

(Photo/Sunil Hirani)

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And finally … in honor of Costco’s very early marketing campaign (story above):

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Online Art Gallery #231

As summer fades, submissions to our online art gallery pick up once again.

Of course, the wide of range of subjects and styles continues.

No matter what subject you choose — and whether you’re a first-timer or old-timer — we welcome your submissions. Watercolors, oils, charcoal, pen-and-ink, acrylics, digital, lithographs, collages, macramé, jewelry, sculpture, decoupage, needlepoint — we want whatever you’ve got.

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

Email a jpeg to 06880blog@gmail.com. And remember: Please include the medium you’re working in — art lovers want to know.

Untitled — paper collage (Tom Doran)

“Compo Baby Shoes” (Scott Smith)

“The End of Summer: Black-Eyed Susies” — impasto/acrylic (Dorothy Robertshaw)

“Sealia” (Patricia McMahon)

Untitled (Kathleen Burke)

Untitled (Duane Cohen)

“Misty Morning, Lake Placid, New York” (Laurie Sorensen)

“Everything for a Purpose” (Peter Barlow)

“Fallen Branches” (Karen Weingarten)

“Raucous Red Blabbermouth and Sky Blue Peekaboo” (Mike Hibbard)

“A Eurasian Blue Tit” — pencil and watercolor. Artist Steve Stein explains, “This tiny songbird weighs about 1/2 an ounce, with a wing span of less than 2 inches!”

“Reclining Nude” (Lawrence Weisman)

Untitled (Martin Ripchick)

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

“Battle Of The Sexes” Waged In Westport

The biggest “Booked for the Evening” crowd in its 25-year history loved Thursday’s event.

Tennis star and human rights icon Billie Jean King was honored by the Westport Library. ESPN journalist (and Westport resident) Chris McKendry and Chris Evert shared the stage, for an illuminating and insightful hour of conversation.

The program began with a compelling video by Westporter Doug Tirola. It traced King’s life and legacy, in a way that surprised and delighted even her.

But the Library produced another video too. It did not get as many views as Tirola’s.

It sure deserves too.

In recognition of King’s “Battle of the Sexes” — the 1973 exhibition in which she defeated Bobby Riggs in 3 straight sets — Library digital strategist Ashley Hyde, and her social media cohort Kerri Gawreluk, collaborated on a recreation.

This one was 2024-style. And the setting was not the Houston Astrodome, but the Westport Library.

Kerri — a lifelong Billie Jean fan, feminist and activist — was cast as King. Ashley played Riggs. (Both certainly looked the part.)

On the right: Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs, 51 years ago. Left: Bobby and Billie Jean, in 2024.

Game on!

With Kerri taking the concept to its library extreme, the pair engaged in 4 competitions: speed shelving, reserve book rally, reading under pressure, and chess-nis.

Kerri and Ashley took turns shooting, while also acting. (“Thank goodness for tripods,” Ashley says.) Ashley made the final edits.

You can probably guess who won.

But be sure to watch the quick video below for a surprise ending.

It’s a Grand Slam.

(All day, every day, “06880” brings you the news: serious, important, and fun. If you enjoy our work, please click here to support us. Thank you!)

Pic Of The Day #2705

The Staples High School football team opened their state championship defense tonight. A large crowd was on hand to watch the Wreckers host Hamden High. In the 3rd quarter, the hosts were ahead, 28-7. (Photo/Mark Mathias)

Meet Safiya Kay: Coleytown El’s New Principal

Coleytown Elementary School has a new principal: Safiya Key.

Her appointment comes after a rigorous search process, involving multiple rounds of interviews with the school staff, parents, administrators and the Board of Education.

Key has had extensive leadership experiences in the Greenwich Public Schools, including assistant principal at Riverside School. She previously served in leadership roles as a speech and language pathologist, including nearly 20 years with the Norwalk Public Schools.

Safiya Key

She currently serves as an assistant principal at the International School at Dundee, a magnet school in Greenwich that follows the International Baccalaureate Primary Years Programme.

Before Greenwich, Key was a public affairs coordinator with Nickelodeon. She enjoyed the work, but it sparked her desire to become an educator who can have a direct impact supporting student needs.

Key earned a bachelor of science degree in speech communication from Syracuse University, and a master’s of science in communication disorders from Southern
Connecticut State University.

She studied leadership at the University of Bridgeport.

One colleague noted, “In addition to her professional accomplishments, Ms. Key is a collaborative and compassionate team member who consistently goes above and beyond to support her colleagues, students and families.”

Another said, “Any school or district would be lucky to have her as part of their team.”

Superintendent of Schools Thomas Scarice added, “Safiya brings a strong record of experienced leadership. I have complete confidence that Safiya is the perfect leader to build on the years of success students and families have experienced at Coleytown Elementary School.”

Friday Flashback #416

This fascinating photo of Bill’s Smoke Shop shows its original kiosk location on the southeast corner of Main and Elm Streets — where the condos next to Vineyard Vines are now.

(Photo courtesy of Christopher Maroc, via Facebook)

It subsequently moved across Main Street, to what later became Westport Pizzeria, then ultimately to Brooks Corner, on the ground floor next to the stairs.

For those under a certain age who never heard the term, a “smoke shop” offered — along with cigarettes and cigars — candy, sodas, ice cream, newspapers, magazines and the like.

As the sign says, this one also sold hot dogs.

When Bill’s expanded into its final location, there was a full lunch counter — and arcade games and pinball machines in the basement.

Carmine’s was another popular smoke shop. It was located on Post Road East, not far from Main Street — between the Fine Arts movie theater (now Barnes & Noble) and Colgan’s (later Thompson’s) Drug Store (today, Tiffany).

Is Westport better or worse without a smoke shop today? Click “Comments” below.

(Friday Flashback is one of “06880”‘s many regular features. If you enjoy this — or anything else on our website — please consider a tax-deductible contribution. Just click here. Thank you!)