Tag Archives: Linda Hall

[OPINION] Remembering Dr. Joe Lieberman

Westport native and 1987 Staples High School graduate Linda Hall has written for the New Republic, New York, Daily Beast and other publications. 

She recently learned of the death a couple of years ago of a very impactful teacher. Linda writes:

In my freshman year at Sarah Lawrence, I studied with a professor I’d read about in “Lisa Birnbach’s College Book.”

It said of Dale Harris: “High expectations, won’t take any sh*t, and writing and editing skills are superior.”

Harris, an Englishman, seemed unimpressed with education in this country. When he deemed me “better prepared in grammar and syntax than most students nowadays,” a number of Westport teachers deserved credit.

At Hillspoint there was Joanne Gage, who taught me in 5th grade what many of my undergraduate classmates had never learned from anyone. At Long Lots there was Evelyn Burack and her outside reader of our papers, a young Brown alum named Dan Woog.

At Staples there were too many to mention — but only one on whom, that first semester of college, I wrote an entire essay: Joe Lieberman.

Dr. Joe Lieberman (right) with another revered English Department colleague, Karl Decker.

Not Senator Lieberman of Connecticut, but Dr. Lieberman of New York. He commuted to Westport by train with his dog. Man and pooch his name was Kidwere both small and preternaturally alert. Kid watched Dr. Lieberman; Dr. Lieberman, in a way that suggested his eyes could do the work of most of his senses, watched everything.

On day one he told us that he had never missed the first train out of Grand Central, and if we were late, he would avail himself of his right as a faculty member to impose “academic consequences.” It was one of many ways in which Dr. Lieberman was fearsome. Yet I was never exactly intimidated by him, not even when he wrote “AWFUL” next to a passage, or tore off my final paragraph.

Linda Hall has kept Dr. Lieberman’s comment, for all these years.

What intimidated me was Westport. I wouldn’t have said it then, and it still sounds odd.

Let me try another way. Until it was demolished in 2024, there was a 695-square-foot cottage on Hillspoint Road facing the Sound. I visited it as a child, because a friend of my parents’ — another employee of the Westport schools — lived there.

A house overlooking the water in Westport: consider how that sounds to the outside world. But even decades ago it was dwarfed by the castles that were starting to go up. I can easily imagine what it would be like these days for a kid living someplace similar to ride the bus with classmates coming from homes 10 times bigger. (Westporters, what is in all your rooms?)

My own house was an ordinary postwar ranch, yet I was often made aware that it didn’t measure up. So were others. “There aren’t enough levels,” a friend advised our math teacher. A French teacher went around the class posing this question: Combien de pièces y a-t-il dans votre maison?

Cinq,” I said. The teacher replied in English: “Five rooms? Small house!”

It astonished me that a small house could seem so remarkable to those who didn’t live in one, and by the time I got to Staples, I had some ideas for essays that Dr. Lieberman would have called cultural criticism.

When we weren’t analyzing literature, he let me write them. He was open to anything I wanted to say. Probably I was also emboldened by his own joyful irreverence. He introduced us to the phrase “the one percent” (it was years before I heard it again), chortled when a student described most Westporters as “just middle class,” and drew stares when he informed us that he spent only one evening a year in town: back-to-school night, as mandated by his contract.

A 1993 Staples yearbook poll.

I first had Dr. Lieberman as a sophomore. I was determined to take him again as a senior, but the only appropriate course conflicted with orchestra.

I quit orchestra. This earned me a visit from the administrator in charge of the arts, and left my guidance counselor aghast. How would my quitting look to Sarah Lawrence, where I was applying early decision?

Partly because I knew that the college recognized the importance of life-altering teachers, and partly because Dr. Lieberman, who had written my recommendation, had also bolstered my confidence, I didn’t care.

In 1987, the year I graduated from Staples, Dr. Lieberman published a book, “We Can Always Call Them Bulgarians: The Emergence of Lesbians and Gay Men on the American Stage” — but under the pseudonym Kaier Curtin.

I learned this in a social media post about his death. Some in Westport have recently argued that gay educators should stay silent about their personal lives — after all, don’t straight educators?

A social media post, announcing Dr. Joe Lieberman’s death. 

I thought at once not only of Staples journalism about straight teachers’ love stories, but of the fact that I wasn’t able to congratulate Dr. Lieberman on even a professional milestone.

My timing at Staples was lucky; Dr. Lieberman’s spirited jabs at affluence likely wouldn’t be tolerated today.

Of his own timing, what would Joe Lieberman say? He was hired the year before Stonewall, when it was easy to be fired for being gay, and retired in the early 1990s.

I do remember hearing that he later came out. In any case, of the many things I wish I could tell him, the first is this: His book is in the library of the college where I teach.

I just borrowed it.

Joe Lieberman’s book. Curtin was his mother’s maiden name.

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Roundup: Taste Of Westport, Saugatuck Rowing, Bridge Rally …

It’s a bit early, but save the date — for the event, and for ticket sales. They always sell out.

It’s “Taste of Westport, ” CLASP Homes’ annual (and very tasty) fundraiser.

This year’s event is June 5 (6 p.m., The Inn at Longshore). As always, there will be a spectacular array of food and drinks. This year’s theme is “A Night at Studio 54.”

100% of the proceeds fund CLASP’s mission: to care, support and inspire people with autism and developmental disabilities.

Tickets go on sale April 14 at TasteofWestport.com.

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The Saugatuck Rowing Club’s junior women’s team is heading to the Henley.

This summer’s Royal Regattas is one of the most prestigious in the world. “We promise to make Westport proud,” says rower Charlotte Seymout.

Click below (or here) to see their video, meet the athletes, and help with fundraising.

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A rally is planned for April 5 (11 a.m.), on the Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Brdige.

The theme is “Hands Off.” According to one of the organizers, Bean Corcoran, that refers to many things: “Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, our bodies, etc.”

A sign from the Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge rally earlier this month.

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Easter comes a day early, to the Weston History & Culture Center.

On April 12 (2 p.m.), they host a concert-reading of the play “An Easter on Mulberry Street.”

The bittersweet comedy is about an Italian-American family preparing for the holiday on the home front during World War II. The reading is followed by a talkback with the writer/director and cast.

Advance tickets are $15 for members, $20 for non-members. The price at the door is $25. Click here to reserve, and for more information.

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Linda Hall — a 1987 Staples High School graduate, and associate professor of English at Skidmore College — has written a fascinating article in New York magazine, on Cynthia Ozick. The writer turns 97 next month.

Fred Cantor — who sent along the piece — says, “The starting point is the publication of a 700+-page collection of Ozick’s stories and essays. But the piece is so much more. It covers a lot of ground with respect to her life and work, including Hall’s own interactions with the legendary writer over the years.

The piece includes another Staples connection. Noted writer Cathleen Schine — a 1971 grad — calls Ozick’s “Puttermesser Papers” perhaps “the best book about (New York City) since Robert Caro’s ‘The Power Broker.’”

Click here for Linda Hall’s article.

Linda Hall

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Many of our “Westport … Naturally” photos are visually appealing.

But this one you can almost smell.

Spring is indeed in the air!

(Photo/Lyne Kiedaisch)

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And finally … in honor of CLASP Homes’ “Taste of Westport” gala, coming soon (story above) — whose theme this year is “Studio 54”:

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Roundup: Sweetgreen, Saugatuck River Caffe, Roadway Cracks …

Welcome, Sweetgreen!

The national salad chain opens today, in the Compo Acres Shopping Center space formerly occupied by Organic Krush.

They’re doing a special meal match with Food Rescue US.

From 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. today, Blossom + Stem has created over 100 bud vases filled with local flowers for customers. There’s also iced coffee and cookies, and Sweetgreen swag.

Westporters who know Sweetgreen are excited. Let’s hope the hype is true.

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More restaurant openings. And this one took a lot less time than the 2 years from when Sweetgreen first applied for an exterior sign, to today.

Saugatuck River Caffe — a self-described “Italian deli” — has moved into the space vacated by Winfield Street Deli. They opened yesterday.

The new owners are very familiar with the property: They own Arezzo restaurant, around the corner.

That means patrons can use Arezzo’s patio — one of Westport’s premier riverfront dining spots.

The menu features hot and cold sandwiches, wraps, salads, paninis — and of course, coffee.

Saugatuck River Caffe is open from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Click here for the website, with the menu and more information.

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The 49th straight monthly Red Cross Blood Drive at VFW Joseph J. Clinton Post 399 is tomorrow (Wednesday, July 31, 1 to 6 p.m. Veteran blood donors — and first-timers — are welcome.

Click here to make an appointment. Use sponsor code VFWWESTPORT. You can also call 800-733-2767.

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The Public Works Department’s annual roadway crack seal program begins today.

Work will take about a week, on 12-15 miles of town streets.

Alternating one-way traffic flow will be used. Keep your eyes open — and drive carefully.

Attention will be paid.

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Staples High School Class of 1987 graduate Linda Hall’s latest piece — “What Alice Munro Knew” — has been posted on The New Republic’s website.

The subtitle reads: “After news of Munro’s betrayal of her daughter, its hard not to see a preoccupation with guilt and secrets in her later work.”

Hall is an associate professor of English at Skidmore. (Hat tip: Fred Cantor)

Linda Hall

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“Westport … Naturally” photographer Johanna Keyser Rossi snapped this great close-up of a butterfly, at the Library Riverwalk:

(Photo/Johanna Keyser Rossi)

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And finally: On this date in 1975, Teamsters leader Jimmy Hoffa disappeared from the parking lot of a Michigan restaurant. He was never seen again.

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