Here are some of the stories and features in this week’s Wilton Bulletin, in mailboxes and on newsstands today:
• After two straight years of crazy weather, Halloween is ready to spook in Wilton.
• Friends, colleagues, and loved ones gather to remember Ginny Rico.
• Wilton Historical Society will put artisans on display.
• Wilton property owners are encouraged to open their land to deer hunters.
• Ned Greene looks back at more than 50 years of service in Wilton.
• Reel Mondays presents a double feature.
• The Norwalk River Valley Trail holds a Jeffersonian dinner.
• Nursing agency celebrates Autumn at the Aldrich.
• The Junior League puts on a tag sale.
• Students learn to play the stock market at Wilton Library.
• Warrior Words: What it means to be a Warrior.
• Music boosters sell pies and holiday greenery.
• Naked Greens gives back to Cider Mill School.
• Property taxes sit close to nearby towns’.
• Students give to storm-damaged school.
• A Better Chance has ‘Life Skills.’
• Wilton veteran makes pilgrimage to capital.
• Hospice volunteers sought.
• ‘Make a Difference’ with train station cleanup.
• Planning & Zoning hearing on Middlebrook School field lights has been moved to Cider Mill School.
• Nanny leaves child in car.
• Obituaries: Susan Borkowski-O’Mahony, Marc Anthony LaMonte, Francis E. Scott, Loren Findorak.
• Final voter registration session.
• ‘Marilyn’s Regulation’ broadens rules on adaptive-use properties.
• Town backs construction at wire mill in Georgetown.
• Board of Selectmen candidates Dick Dubow and James Saxe will run unopposed.
• River Ridge welcomes visitors with an open house this weekend.
• Wilton residents can listen to WWPT, 90.3 FM, during any time of emergency.
• Songs and s’mores.
• Rotary invites grant requests.
• Legislators review state’s woes.
• Editorials: Seeing the light?, Get spooked!
• Taxpayers may tour Keiser land in advance of vote.
• Letters: Easement vote, Keiser easement, Encore Club.
• A View from Glen Hill: Self-destructive government behavior here and abroad.
• Bullying Prevention Month: What you should know about the bully and mental health.
• From the Board of Selectman meeting: The On School Road pre-school program won’t reopen.
• No paint at hazardous waste collection.
• In field hockey, Wilton beats New Canaan.
• Look for the debut of the Wilton Warriors girls golf team, coming in the spring.
• On the pitch, the girls run their winning streak to 11.
• Boys soccer will be in the FCIAC playoffs.
• Hoops star Erica Meyer will attend Providence.
• Fairfield Warde runs past the Wilton football team.
• The girls finished third and the boys came in 10th at the FCIAC cross country championship.
• In volleyball, Wilton sweeps Bassick.
• Girls swimming is getting ready for the FCIACs.
• Arts & Leisure: Reddingite David Friedman has published a book and released two CDs; Robert Redford speaks very few words in All Is Lost, but this action-filled drama tells an amazing story and the Reel Dad foresees an Oscar nomination; test driver Steven Macoy says the new Mazda6 has plenty of power.