
Bermuda Lagoon, from Covlee Beach (Photo/Patti Brill)

Bermuda Lagoon, from Covlee Beach (Photo/Patti Brill)
Comments Off on Pic Of The Day #1669
Posted in Beach, Pic of the Day
Tagged Bermuda Lagoon, Covlee Beach, Saugatuck Shores
If you’ve ever …
… then you’ll be amazed by this week’s Friday Flashback.

It shows a Saugatuck we can’t even imagine.
Long before I-95 slashed through; before the Italians made the community their own; before, even, the factories and wharves along the river hummed with activities, this was what Saugatuck looked like.
Maybe.
Postcards have been known to stretch the truth.
But this Saugatuck scene looks nice — wherever it was.
Meanwhile, if you think you can identify the spot where these cows grazed, click “Comments” below.
Or just add your own Saugatuck memory.

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On the heels of Veterans Day, Y’s Men member Jay Dirnberger has created a program about the Vietnam War for the Westport Library’s Oral History Project.
On November 23 (7 p.m., Westport Library) he and 3 other combat veterans — all now Westporters — will talk about their war experiences, reflect on its impact since leaving the military, then answer questions from the audience.
Captain Jay Dirnberger, US Army retired, came home from his last college final exam to find he’d been drafted. He missed his graduation to report to the Army. He completed helicopter flight training, was commissioned a Second Lieutenant and assigned to an assault helicopter battalion in Vietnam in 1968.
Also on the panel: Lieutenant JG Tucker Mays, US Navy retired. He served most of 2 9-month tours at Da Nang as a boat group commander,
Air Force Sergeant Bud Siegel was assigned to an air traffic control unit responsible for controlling fighter/bombers near the North Vietnam border.
The final member of the panel, Army Sergeant and Y’s Man Preston Koster, was first assigned to Vietnam as a combat engineer, then finished his tour of duty near Saigon.
Y’s Man John Brandt, a Vietnam era Naval Reservist, though not a combat veteran, will moderate the discussion.

Jay Dirnberger served with the 1st Cavalry Division in South Vietnam.
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Speaking of Veterans Day:
They’re years away from military service. But Boy Scout Troop 100 had the honor of accompanying and supporting veterans during yesterday’s ceremony at VFW Post 399.
Led by Scoutmaster Alexey Syomichev, the troop has dedicated this year to supporting local veterans, and the VFW post. Scouts have built relationships with VFW members, and are dedicating service hours, and leadership and Eagle projects, to benefit and support those who served.
Before yesterday’s festivities, Troop 100 cleaned and painted the VFW parking lot, provided fresh painted lines and arrows, and cleaned up the VFW grounds.”

Boy Scout Troop 100, at yesterday’s VFW Veterans Day ceremony.
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Speaking still of Veterans Day: Ed Simek spotted this former servicemember yesterday on the Post Road, near Stop & Shop.
He held an American flag — and wore roller skates.
There must be a back story. If you know it, click “Comments” below.

(Photo/Ed Simek)
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After Alec Baldwin shot and killed someone on a movie set with a prop gun, the industry has been reeling.
Among the first people to take action: Staples High School Class of 1985 graduate Alexi Hawley.
The showrunner for ABC’s “The Rookie” banned “live” guns. Instead, “air soft guns” — replicas, used in airsoft sports — will be mandatory.
Click here for the full story. (Hat tip: David Roth)

Alexi Hawley
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When is a dog a turkey?
When he’s the statue outside Winslow Park Animal Hospital, and he’s decorated for Thanksgiving.

(Photo/Molly Alger)
Check out the real thing when you’re stopped at the Post Road light by Playhouse Square.
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Speaking of the Playhouse: There’s no “doubt” that the current production of “Doubt: A Parable” — the first in-person play since the pandemic — is a hit.
It runs through November 21. Click on the trailer below. Then click here, for tickets and more information (including virtual tickets).
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Continuing our “Westport … Naturally” fall foliage series — as long as it lasts — we offer June Rose Whittaker’s shot of Longshore’s 5th hole.
She says, “my golf game was terrible. But the scenery was fantastic.”

(Photo/June Rose Whittaker)
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And finally … happy birthday to Booker T. Jones. The pianist/saxophonist/ songwriter/producer/Grammy Award Lifetime Achievement winner is 77 years old.
Come for the morning coffee.
Return for a midday espresso, and sandwiches.
Go back for light bites at 4 p.m. Stay for drinks, and a sit-down dinner.
Or just pick up prepared foods, to bring home.
Allium Eatery’s menu is small. But there’s something for everyone at Westport’s newest restaurant,*
Allium has moved into the Railroad Place site previously occupied Romanacci (which relocated next door), and before that Cocoa Michelle.

Allium Eatery’s doors are open.
Owner/chef Michelle Greenfield eased in with a soft opening. Reviews have been raves, with plenty of repeat customers. Allium — Latin for bulbous herbs of the lily family. including onion, garlic, chive, leek and shallot — is now open Tuesday and Wednesday from breakfast through afternoon, adding dinner service Thursday through Saturday. It’s closed Sunday and Monday.
Greenfield — a Newtown native — worked in her first restaurant at 16. With a degree from the Culinary Institute of America, she headed to an Italian restaurant on Providence’s famed Federal Hill.
She returned to Connecticut to focus on French cooking, then catered in the Hudson Valley. After a stint at Jesup Hall with Bill Taibe, she led the team at the Schoolhouse at Cannondale. She had free rein there to hone her style: “modern American with French undertones, using playful, bold flavors.”
COVID closed that highly regarded restaurant. It also freed Greenfield to imagine her own place.
“I love fine dining, and boutique menus that change frequently,” she says.
“But how can you sustain a restaurant based on that, when the industry is changing so quickly?”

Fromage and more: part of Allium’s buvette (snacks and sip) service.
Her solution: a flexible eatery with sittings on weekends, but otherwise casual, with small plates and takeout items.
The train station location lends itself to grab-and-go meals. But with plenty of restaurants nearby, it’s considered a sit-down destination too.
Greenfield signed her lease last May. Since then she’s dealt with changing COVID mandates and construction delays, some caused by the broken supply chain.
Now she’s at the end of week 3. Breakfast sandwiches have been a surprise hit, with morning commuters coming in more frequently than she anticipated. They’re there to grab all-natural, free-range rotisserie chickens in the evening too.

Rotisserie chickens from Sport Hill Farm come with fingerling potatoes and orange cauliflower.
Diners love dinner items like Parisian gnocchi with smoked mushrooms, lardon, beet silk, Marconi almond pesto and lemon ricotta. Other dinner choices include braised short ribs, Sport Hill Farm squash and Pei mussels.
The menu will change frequently, with the weather and availability of fresh ingredients.
Buvette service — “snacks and sips,” starting at 4 p.m. — includes spiced nuts, crudite, duck riellette, fromage and saucisson.
Greenfield will also offer pre-orered Thanksgiving sides to go, holiday take- home meals, and events like wine tastings.
The restaurant industry is changing. So are Westport’s commuter habits. But it looks like Allium Eatery has already found a home by the train station.
Bon appétit!
*Along with Salsa Fresca, the fast-casual Mexican place, which opened on Monday at the former Qdoba, on Post Road East by the entrance to Playhouse Square.

Allium Eatery has completely designed the former Romanacci space.

Saugatuck River buoy (Photo/Lawrence Zlatkin)
“This is a special day in our house,” says Staples High School graduate, longtime Westporter — and Vietnam veteran — Carl Addison Swanson.
It should be a special day for every American.
It’s not. For many, it’s just another day at work or school.
To remind us of the importance of Veterans Day, Swanson shared a few photos with “06880.”
They span various years, and different branches of the US military.
They show Westporters, and other veterans Swanson knows and admires.
Look carefully at their faces. Wonder about their stories. Appreciate their service.
Most importantly, thank a veteran for his or her service today.
And every day.

12-year-old Kelly Spearen (right), with his father. After graduating from Staples High School, Kelly served a helicopter tour in Vietnam.

Col. John Glenn — a family friend of Carl Addison Swanson and his wife Joann — after orbiting the earth 3 times.

Marine Lt. Gen. Thomas H. Miller — Carl Addison Swanson’s father-in-law — in 1960.

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Paddy Donovan is one of the best young goalkeepers in the country.
He’s earned national renown for his play with the Beachside Soccer Club MLS Next academy program. Yesterday, he became Clemson University’s first recruit of the season to sign a letter of intent.
Under Coach Mike Noonan, the Tigers are one of the top teams in the US. That makes Donovan’s signing especially sweet: Noonan won a state championship at Staples High School in 1978, where he played soccer with Donovan’s late uncle Doug.
Donovan’s father Dan was a state champ himself, captaining the Wreckers in 1981.
Signing any blue-chip recruit is a major coup. But Noonan put a personal spin on the announcement, posting on Instagram:
“Patrick is an outstanding prospect who has a very high soccer IQ. He has been developed in one of the best youth clubs in the country, and attended the best high school in the country.”

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This week, “06880” has reported 2 ways to support Staples Players. You can buy tickets to “Grease,” the fall musical. You can also purchase 3 special flavors of gelato, at Cold Fusion.
Now there’s a third way to support the nationally renowned theatrical troupe: a silent auction.
It’s online before the show, and in person during the show’s opening weekend (tomorrow, Saturday and Sunday).
Auction items include theater tickets; gift cards and baskets from local restaurants, specialty food stores and other local retailers; sports swag, artwork and more. Click here to see them all.
Bidding is open now. It closes Wednesday, November 17.
In more “Grease” news, due to booming ticket sales, Staples Players is adding another performance. The additional date is Thursday, November 18 (7 p.m.). Click here to purchase, and for more information.

Among the items in Staples Players’ silent auction: 2 tickets to next September’s Tony Awards.
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Yesterday’s Roundup story about this Saturday’s Police Department food drive neglected to mention an important detail: It takes place at Stop & Shop. Here’s the story again — with apologies:
The Westport Police Department and TEAM Westport are sponsoring a Thanksgiving food drive this Saturday (November 13, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.. Stop & Shop). All donations support Homes with Hope’s Gillespie Center and food pantry, and Westports Human Services Department.
Westport Police officers and volunteers will collect non-perishable food items and cash. Suggested items include canned meats, tuna, salmon, Spam, canned cranberries, boxed stuffing, canned yams, canned corn, canned gravy, pasta, and sauces, chili, hot and cold cereal, canned fruit, canned and dry soups, peanut butter, jelly, mac and cheese, rice, granola bars, pancake mix, syrup and mayonnaise.

Earlier this year, after another drive, Westport Police and Homes with Hope volunteers delivered food to the Gillespie Center, across from police headquarters.
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This morning’s feature story on new 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker notes that she’ll be sworn in this coming Monday — along with other town boards and commissions — and that the Representative Town Meeting swearing-in would be the following day.
Late last night, it was decided that the entire swearing-in ceremony — including RTM — will take place on Monday. Mark your calendar: November 15, 7:30 p.m., Town Hall auditorium). The public is invited.
(For officials who cannot make the Monday evening event, there will be brief swearing-in ceremonies on Monday and Tuesday, both at 4:30 p.m. on the Town Hall steps.)

Jen Tooker (left) and Andrea Moore, Westport’s new selectwomen, will be sworn in — along with all town boards, commissions and RTM members — on Monday night.
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June Rose Whittaker and Karen Weingarten are frequent contributors to “06880”‘s Saturday morning online art gallery. Readers love their photography.
So do the Y’s Men. They recently awarded prizes to the duo, in the annual Y’s Men’s Camera Club hoto Contest.
Weingarten earned 1st and 2nd place honors. Whittaker snagged a second.
All photos are on display at the Senior Center. Congratulations to all!

June Rose Whittaker’s photo.
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Westporter Janet LaReau died suddenly on Tuesday at Yale New Haven Hospital. She was 58 years old.
The Bridgeport native enjoyed spending time with her grandchildren, walks on the beach with her husband Edward Luciano, and Sunday dinners with her family. They describe her as selfless, loving, and someone who always went out of her way to help others.
In addition to her husband, survivors include her mother, Antoinette LaReau of Stratford; son Robert Battey of Phoenix; daughters Janet Dziekonski (Thomas) of Westport, Rebecca Sampieri (Kenneth) of Shelton, LeAnn Battey of Westport, Michele Caggiano (Amanda) of Stamford, Rita Luettger (Cody) of Arlington, Virginia, and Laura Battey of Stratford; brothers David LaReau and Jeffrey LaReau, both of Stratford; sister Nancy Tomasco of Stratford, CT and grandchildren Santino, Jayen, Daniel and Abigail.
A funeral is set for Saturday (November 13, 11 a.m., Assumption Church) for a Mass of Christian Burial. Interment will follow in Willowbrook Cemetery. The family will receive friends in the Harding Funeral Home on Friday from 4 to 8 p.m.
Click here to leave online condolences. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital (501 St. Jude Place Memphis, TN 38105).

Janet LaReau
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Today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo shows our town at its absolute best.
If anyone ever asks why we live here, just show Wendy Crowther’s image — shot yesterday — of Winslow Park.

(Photo/Wendy Crowther)
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And finally … today is Veterans Day. Please take time to think of every man and woman who has ever served this country. We would not be the nation we are, without them!
Posted in Arts, Entertainment, Obituaries, Police, Sports, Staples HS, Teenagers
Tagged Janet LaReau, June Rose Whittaker, Karen Weingarten, Mike Noonan, Paddy Donovan, Staples Players, Y's Men
In 2008, Gen Re transferred Jen and Mo Tooker from the London office to their Stamford headquarters. The couple hunted for homes throughout Fairfield County.
On a February day, a realtor drove them around the corner to Compo Beach.
It was cold. The marina was empty. But, Tooker said, “We’re done!”
They had not seen any houses here yet. It did not matter. The Tookers soon found one.
Westport has been their home ever since.
Tooker soon became part of her new community. She joined the Conservation Commission; served on the Boards of Education and Finance, and was elected 2nd Selectwoman.
On Monday night at Town Hall, she’ll be sworn in for a new post: 1st Selectwoman. She and running mate Andrea Moore were elected last week to the town’s top 2 spots.

Jen Tooker (left) and Andrea Moore, Westport’s new selectwomen.
Though Tooker’s first attraction to Westport was its water, what’s kept her here are Westporters.
“The people here are fabulous,” she says. “They love living here. They get involved. They make things happen.”
Tooker has done more than her share of that. Knowing that this would be “home” for many years, within weeks of unpacking she sought ways to help.
With professional knowledge at Gen Re of flooding, wetlands and property maps, she was appointed to the Conservation Commission.
In 2011 — urged by people who said her skillset was a good fit for the Board of Education — she ran for, and won, a seat.
Democratic chair Don O’Day and Republican vice chair Jim Marpe led a “rock solid, bipartisan” board, Tooker says.
Two years later, she was asked to run for the Board of Finance. She retired from Gen Re, to devote time to public service and raising 3 children.

Jen Tooker, during the 2017 campaign.
In 2017, when Avi Kaner decided not to run for a second term as 2nd selectman, Marpe asked her to join him. She had a front run seat for all that the job entails — all the departmental collaboration, public meetings, budget deliberations, decision-making on issues like masks, weather-related disasters and more — plus the behind-the-scenes work that few people ever see.
Her skills, experience and goals suited her well for the top job. When Marpe announced he would not run for a 3rd term, Tooker was ready.
She and Moore jumped into campaigning. “Westporters are savvy,” Tooker says. “They want to know their elected officials. This was my 4th townwide race. Every time I’m amazed at how much people want to meet candidates, and ask tough questions.”
The questions came via Facebook, Instagram, texts and calls. They came in person too. Tooker and Moore held a number of public meetings — including the porch at The Porch — to answer the questions.
And to listen.
Tooker learned that “by and large, people are really happy to be here. They feel blessed, connected, and invested in the community. They’re super proud of Westport. Whether they’re new or been here for 45 years, that gives them pride.”
She and Moore “had a message, and it ran all through the campaign. We were very focused on local issues, to ensure that Westport remains the best place in the region to live, work and play.”
The ticket won, she believes, because “we had a message that resonated with a sophisticated electorate. Westporters wanted to know us, and vet our message.”
In addition, Tooker says, “We ran a positive campaign. Westporters care deeply about that.”
Though hard work does not always guarantee a win, “we were out there every day, for 7 months. That was critical for people to meet us, and ask the questions they needed to ask.”

Second selectman Jennifer Tooker sported a “Be Bold” shirt at a meeting featuring Westport businesswomen.
Twelve hours after next Monday’s swearing in, Tooker heads back to Town Hall. Her first task, she says, is to meet with department heads. She’ll hear their priorities, talk about collaboration and communication, and make plans for the immediate future.
“It’s important to be a good manager,” she says. “Employees need o feel supported, to go out and do a good job for residents.”
Every 1st selectperson brings a different style to Town Hall. Though she worked closely with Marpe, Tooker says, “in certain situations I may be less patient than Jim. I don’t fly off the handle, but I may push a process or strive for an outcome a little more quickly.”
She calls Marpe “an excellent listener. He processes information by listening to people. That’s an excellent quality in a leader. In this line of work, where we are here to ensure that democracy prevails, it’s crucial to hear every voice. I hope I can be as good a listener as Jim is.”

Jen and Mo Tooker with their children: Jack, Riley and Nicole.
She has always worked — professionally and as a volunteer — so that won’t be new. But 1st selectwoman is a full-time, 24/7/365 job. Tooker had many conversations with her family before deciding to run. They understand the demands of the job.
Her husband Mo, and their children — 20-year-old Jack (a junior at Santa Clara University), 18-year-old Riley (taking a gap year before Southern Methodist University) and Nicole, an 8th grader — are “fully supportive” of her, Tooker says.
Also supportive: Tooker’s parents. They moved here to be with their daughter and her family during the pandemic. Her father, 87-year-old Bob “Pops” Salmon, lives in the Tookers’ home. Her mother is in the memory care unit at The Residence.

Jen and Mo Tooker with her father, Bob “Pops” Salmon.
All are “incredibly proud” of her. And most will be on hand at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Town Hall, to see Jen Tooker sworn is as Westport’s next 1st selectwoman.
(Monday’s ceremony will also include the swearing in of all boards and commissioners. RTM members will be sworn in the next night, Tuesday, also at 7:30 p.m.)
FUN FACT: After 12 years in the public eye, there is little that Westporters don’t know about Tooker. They may be surprised though to find out that she is an ardent fan of Chelsea, the English Premier League soccer powerhouse.
Posted in Local politics
Tagged 1st Selectman Jim Marpe, Board of Education, Board of Finance, Jen Tooker

Sherwood Island tree (Photo/Rowene Weems Photography)
Alert “06880” reader Adam Vengrow has an Unsung Heroes nomination that will make your head spin.
Or at least your legs. He writes:
Rhodie Lorenz and Mackenzie Pretty are part of the spirit and soul behind JoyRide. The local cycling studio is a special place.
COVID has been devastating and sad for many reasons. However, one little piece of the last year and a half has resonated with just about everyone.
People got a reminder of things that are truly important in life. Cellphones, meetings, train rides and crazy schedules took a back seat. People rode bikes; they walked, they appreciated their neighborhood and thecommunity. It was a small reminder of simpler and better times, without the hustle and bustle that takes everybody’s focus off what is really important in life.

JoyRide, during the pandemic.
JoyRide offers that special feeling bottled up in every 50 minute block of time spent with them. Unlike most everything in the world today, you enter a 50 minute journey with Rhodie or Mackenzie or one of the other incredible spin leaders. The only person you compare yourself to is yourself.
There are no video screens or numbers telling you what somebody else is doing. You get 50 minutes of inspiring words, stories and music, with a simple turn of the resistance wheel to see where you can push yourself to go.
Nobody knows how or what you do. You can close your eyes and go for the most peaceful yet arduous fitness journey made for the absolute beginner, at any age and any athletic level.
Maybe, like the field of dreams, you can take yourself back 25 years to riding a bike with friends, or 25 years from now in your greatest fitness journey.
Rhodie, Mackenzie and all the instructors take you out of the craziness of the world. For 50 minutes you go to your happy place, where only you spend time on an internal journey. You may feel a little boost of spirit from a loved one gone. or someone here but not with you at the moment. It is a blend of meditation and fitness that takes your day to a level you cannot find any other way.
In addition to this personal greatness, JoyRide, Rhodie, Mackenzie, Amy Hochhauser and many others have brought every single great charitable cause to their studio. There are rides to raise money for so many community needs. When a cause comes around, they are the first to say, Yes we will.
From Pink Aid and cancer awareness to kids in need or our veterans — any need at all — you can always count on JoyRide.
It is not a bed of roses, unfortunately. COVID has been brutal on indoor spinning.
It is great that they have been able to fight through and keep going, because the community needs JoyRide/ Every person in town should try a spin. Just leave your crazy scheduled life at the door. Take yourself on a journey. You will learn a lot about yourself — and get fit along the way.
Congratulations, Rhodie, Mackenzie and the entire crew at JoyRide. You are this week’s Unsung Heroes!
Do you know a hero? Email dwoog@optonline.net.
Posted in Categories