Share + Nov 13, 2009 2:05 pm US/Eastern Reporting Don Dahler SOUTHPORT, Conn. The Connecticut fertility doctor who admitted he inseminated a woman with the wrong man's sperm is now under investigation by the state's attorney general.
By TAMELA J. RITTERHour CorrespondentOn Nov. 8 at 5 p.m. at Trinity Church in Southport, Music for Youth will present a benefit concert featuring 16 musicians between the ages of 8 and 15 from all over Fairfield County."This is an opportunity for the community to hear outstanding local .
As cases of Alzheimer's disease continue to soar in the United States, with as many as 16 million Americans expected to be diagnosed by 2015, according to the Alzheimer's Association, more and more youths are faced with the grim reality that one day, grandma or grandpa may forget who they are.
Authorities will close I-95 in both directions at about 7:45 a.m. today between Exits 18 and 21 for about two hours so that cleanup operations can take place for an early-morning tanker truck fire.
A tanker truck carrying methanol, also known as wood alcohol, caught fire while traveling northbound on Interstate 95 through Westport at about 4:20 a.m., resulting in the complete closure of the highway for a time in both directions.
Marcus Russi, 14, of Westport and Cormac Cummiskey, 14 of Redding rehearse Darius Milhaud's "Scaramouche" for the Music for Youth benefit concert and dinner party at Southport's Trinity Church Sunday at 5 p.m. The benefit funds the free concerts and master classes for students held monthly at Pequot Library.
The 2009 Music for Youth Benefit for the Free Young Persons' Concert series and the School Residency program in the Bridgeport public schools will feature prize-winning pianist Alex Beyer and 15 other young musicians, all of whom have starred in Music for Youth master classes.
Chris Lennon and Peter Stephens, design specialists of Southport-based Elegant Effects, worked today to prepare for Monday's Westport Country Playhouse gala.
The Connecticut Department of Transportation said that it would be adding more temporary stripes to the Post Road on Thursday and starting the final paving process this Sunday night, a week earlier than previously scheduled.
Q: In terms of school maintenance, where do we stand? Are we back on track? A: Yes -- pretty much, provided the current proposals before by the Representative Town Meeting are approved and implemented.
Despite the slow economy, there is movement in the commercial real estate market as tenants seek opportunities; two of them have found homes at a Fairfield office building.
Rising over downtown New Haven, the 14-story glass-and-stone tower houses what will be one of the world's most advanced cancer research and treatment centers.