*** Welcome to the Andrew Warde High School tribute website ... There are 46 issues of the Crimson Crier school newspaper from 1967 through 1976 available for download on this website ... Please visit the companion blog in the "Library" in the left-hand margin to access and download the Crimson Crier newspapers ... Please credit this website for any content, photos, or videos you share with others ... Paul Piorek is editor and publisher of the Andrew Warde High School tribute website and a proud member of the AWHS Class of 1976 ... Contact Paul at paulpiorek@gmail.com ...

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Sherri Steeneck: From Andrew Warde High School to the First Selectman's Office in Fairfield

The following article was written by Patricia A. Hines and appeared in the Fairfield Citizen, Friday, May 27, 2011. Sherri Steeneck is a 1977 graduate of Andrew Warde High School and the current first selectman of Fairfield.


Sherri Steeneck views her time as Fairfield's acting first selectman in terms of "40 days and 40 nights."

In fact, she has emblazoned those words as the scroll of her computer screensaver. The reference is of the biblical sense, not the movie of the same name, she said. In the Bible, transformations are described in periods of time of 40 days and 40 nights.

Steeneck, a 52-year-old Democrat, has been swept up in a whirlwind for the past two weeks since taking over as Fairfield's first selectman from Kenneth Flatto, who resigned to become the director of special revenue in Gov. Dannel Malloy's administration. On May 4, she stepped into the second-floor first selectman's office at Sullivan-Independence Hall and hasn't stopped -- even though her official status is as the town's "acting" chief executive.

After first sanitizing the office -- with no offense to the former first selectman, Steeneck is, after all, a former nurse -- and organizing it, she said the first few weeks have been "exhausting," as well as a "learning experience and sometimes fun."

"There is no typical day," Steeneck said. But, she added, she is "not just holding a place" and wants Fairfielders to know that if they have questions or concerns or need something looked into, they should call or email her. "I will be doing the job until the next person does the job."

In addition to handling the day-to-day business and weeding through and answering numerous emails, she has been out and about attending events, functions and meetings.

"I have met so many people," she said. "It's fun because I like people. I like that part of it. But I realized that if I were doing this full time, I probably wouldn't have a life."

She has attended sessions of the Coast Guard Auxiliary, Rotary Club and Kiwanis Club and went to the Westport Youth Film Festival at the Community Theatre in Fairfield, and has been to meetings of the Metropolitan Planning Organization, including lunch with the mayors of area towns, the Pension Board and her own Board of Selectmen. She's also cut ribbons at new Fairfield businesses.

She laughed when she recounted how she set off the security alarm the first time she was leaving the office late one night and how she and Chief Fiscal Officer Paul Hiller were inadvertently locked out of their offices by the cleaning crew. The last incident involved getting a friend to take her home to retrieve her spare keys, as everything she needed was behind closed doors at Sullivan-Independence Hall.

The job of first selectman, Steeneck said, "is not much different than what I thought it would be. ... It's an endurance race. It takes patience and listening."

Steeneck has taken a partial leave of absence from her realty agent's job at the Higgins Group. It's a partial leave because she is not taking on new clients until her stint as acting first selectman is over in mid-June, but she continues, with the help of others at Higgins, to service a few clients who were on board with her when she assumed her new role. She also manages a family business, Wash Tub Inc., which owns laundromat locations statewide.

She is being paid the same salary as Flatto, whose yearly wage in 2010-11 was $127,020, but Steeneck rejected the health benefits, which she already carries.

When Flatto told her that he was resigning to take the state post, Steeneck said she "didn't really think about" what it meant for her. But she also had a brush with serving as the acting first selectman a year ago when Flatto unsuccessfully ran for state comptroller.

Steeneck joined the Board of Selectmen in 2008 when she was appointed to fill the seat of Selectman Denise Dougiello, who died that year from cancer. She gets teary-eyed when she talks about her friend, but Steeneck acknowledged that Dougiello would be proud of her transitioning to the first selectman's office.

Under the town charter, Steeneck and Republican Selectman Jim Walsh are charged with appointing an interim first selectman, who will serve until the November municipal election, when Flatto's term would have ended. The Democratic Town Committee has backed Board of Finance member Mike Tetreau for the interim appointment, and he already has announced his intentions to run for the job in November.

However, Steeneck and Walsh have not yet agreed on an interim appointee, but must do so by Wednesday. If they can't agree, then the choice falls to 18 elected Democrats who have local offices, according to state law. They most likely would vote for Tetreau sometime between June 12 and 19 -- but that choice also could still be challenged in a special election.

A lot about the first selectman's job is not new to Steeneck. She has a long resume that includes numerous civic, professional and governmental positions or memberships. A graduate of Georgetown University, where she earned her bachelor of science degree in nursing, and Harvard University, from which she received a master's degree, she was a registered nurse in the 1980s. She became a licensed real estate agent after leaving the healthcare field and has been in real estate sales for more than 20 years.

In a sense, Steeneck followed the footsteps of her mother, Beatrice, now 80 and retired, whose own career path also was varied. The elder Steeneck was a teacher for 25 years and served on the executive boards of educational associations. She was a member of women's and church groups, was a Girl Scout leader, helped her husband with his scouting activities and was active in the American Association of University Women, among other organizations.

"I wish she had taught me the importance of balance," Sherri Steeneck said, "but I am not sure she knew it that well herself."
Getting involved in the community, Steeneck said, "was really a way of life. There was never a question about it."

Steeneck adds that her mother "never pushed politics until Watergate when my Republican father changed parties because he was so upset about Watergate."

Her mother's civic and political activities, much like her daughter's, include a stint as secretary of the Democratic Town Committee, when a lot of women were not involved early on; membership on the Democratic State Central Committee; and two terms as chairwoman of the Fairfield Housing Authority, specifically when it built Trefoil and Pine Tree courts elderly housing complexes.

"Barely a day goes by when someone doesn't ask about her, tell me what they worked on with her and ask me to say hello to her," Steeneck said.

Her mother also is responsible for getting Steeneck into the real estate business. Her mother asked her to join her in taking classes and the subsequent exam for a real estate license. They both qualified for their licenses in 1988.

"I have no idea why she wanted to do it," she said. "I never in my wildest dreams thought about selling real estate and I am sure I never would have done it if she didn't suggest it."

Influenced by her mother's example, Steeneck has served on the town's Zoning Board of Appeals, the Town Plan and Zoning Commission, the Representative Town Meeting, the Water Pollution Control Authority and the Human Services Commission. She is a member of the DTC and was its chairwoman from 1990 to 1995, when she wiped out a deficit and oversaw the party's campaign in a fiercely competitive battle for first selectman between Republican Paul Audley and Democrat Christine Niedermeier. Audley won, and Steeneck calls the period of time disappointing as the Democrats were close to regaining the office.

Reviewing some of things she did as party chairwoman, she remembered when it hosted its annual Century Club brunch and Richard Blumenthal, who was running for state attorney general at the time, was the guest speaker.

"I made him pay for his ticket," she said, with a laugh. "and he paid for it."

On her resume, she noteds that she "worked on, chaired, coordinated, cheered and cried over numerous political campaigns since I took Justice in America at Andrew Warde High School."

"As much as I like politics, you are at the pleasure of the people who are voting," she said. "If they don't want you there anymore, you have to take the message. And if they do, fine. And if you want it, you can try hard for it."

She also worked as the town's community and economic development director when Flatto first took office in 1997. She has been involved with Fairfield Community Services, the Fairfield Holocaust Commemoration Committee, Operation Hope, the Connecticut Dance School, the American Heart Association, the Fairfield Rotary Club, the Barnum Festival, the Fairfield Christmas Tree Festival and the Fairfield Theatre Company. She also shaved her head during a St. Baldrick's Foundation charity event for children's cancer research in 2009.

Asked if all she's done has helped her to prepare for her current role, Steeneck said, "I tend to think that most things that you do help you with everything you do."

But to maybe better explain her life changes, Steeneck turned to a revelation uncovered during an astrology reading she received while at a health spa with a friend some years ago. While not a horoscope follower, Steeneck said she took to heart what the astrologer told her. Because she had "five trines" -- various aspects in the movement of planets -- the reader said to her, "You must feel like you fall into things."

Steeneck agreed.

She will get a break from the stress of being the acting first selectman when she attends her college reunion in early June. With a smile and playful look on her face, she said, "Jim Walsh will be in charge for 2 1/2 days. Tell him not to mess it up."

Monday, May 23, 2011

Crimson Eagles Used Four Pitchers to Defeat McMahon in Slugfest & Rhubarb at Warde on This Date in 1963

Andrew Warde High School's baseball team virtually locked up first place and the FCIAC Eastern Division championship for the second straight year by defeating Brien McMahon High School, 11-9, in eight innings on this date, Thursday, May 23, 1963.

First baseman Gary DuBoys assured the Warde triumph when he smashed a two-run home run with none out in the first extra inning, following a leadoff single by hard-hitting Al Englander, to break open a high-scoring battle which was played under protest by the Senators after a second-inning rhubarb at the Eagles' diamond. The Senators charged that the umpire changed his ruling from a foul to fair ball on a pop up which was turned into an inning-ending double play by Warde catcher Doug Goodfellow.

Coach Bob Jackson used four pitchers for the Eagles. The hosts blew an early 6-0 lead, but they staged a three-run comeback rally in the sixth inning to deadlock the game at 9-9 after McMahon surged ahead by scoring nine runs in the fifth and sixth frames at the expense of Bill Binkiwitz and Pat McDonough. Barry Turlish ended a four-run splurge by the Senators in the sixth, and southpaw Larry Mischik pitched two scoreless innings to gain credit for the hard-fought win.

It was the ninth conference victory in 13 contests for the Eagles, moving them two-and-a-half games ahead of Stamford Catholic (6-6) in the Eastern division standings, with only three games remaining on the regular-season schedule. The defeat dropped Brien McMahon to third place in the division with a 6-7 record.

A walk to Mischik, John Nemeth's single, a two-run triple by Englander, and Pete Jankovsky's sacrifice fly produced the three sixth-inning runs which pulled Warde into a 9-9 tie and sent the twilight game into extra innings.

Paul

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Andrew Warde's Never-Say-Die Baseball Team Captured State Championship With Dramatic Comeback Victory 30 Years Ago This Spring

Andrew Warde High School's rich sports history includes some memorable games, matches, and individual performances. Perhaps the most unforgettable sports memory happened exactly 30 years ago this Spring. The Crimson Eagles' 1981 baseball state championship has to be considered among the top three sports events in school history.

Andrew Warde edged Rockville, 9-8, in 13 innings for its first state baseball championship that year. The game took four hours and 50 minutes to play. What made the game memorable was the dramatic finish for Warde, which entered the ninth inning trailing, 8-5.

However, Greg Cantwell's two-run triple closed the gap to one run, and Cantwell stole home with two outs and two strikes to tie the game and send it into extra innings. Take a look at this vintage sports report from channel 8 in New Haven:


Andrew Warde High School State Baseball... by PaulWXman

The Eagles ultimately won the game in the 13th inning at 12:20 the following morning at Quigley Stadium in West Haven. Cantwell stole third base and scored when the errant throw sailed into left field. The ballpark was home to the Double-A West Haven Yankees at the time, adding luster to the scholastic championship.

One year later, the Eagles advanced to the state championship game again, only to fall to North Haven at Penders Field in Stratford. Warde came within one victory of claiming back-to-back state baseball championships.

Thirty years ago this Spring, the Warde Crimson Eagles' baseball team won a state championship which will never be forgotten.

Paul

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Lefty Larry Mischik Pitched Warde Over Green Wave at Norwalk on This Date in 1963

The Andrew Warde High School baseball team backed the four-hit pitching of southpaw Larry Mischik with a 10-hit attack which included a booming home run by first baseman Gary DuBoys to defeat Norwalk, 4-2, in an FCIAC game on the Green Wave diamond on this date, Friday, May 17, 1963.

Mischik was thwarted in his bid for a third straight shutout when Norwalk bunched three hits with an error in the fourth inning for its only runs. Singles by Ty Yoshitani and Bill Granata were wrapped around a double by Milt Peckham during the lone Green Wave uprising.

The two Norwalk runs ended a string of 18 consecutive scoreless innings pitched by Mischik, who fanned eight and walked only one in earning his fifth victory against two losses.

The visiting Eagles clipped losing pitcher Bob Sommer for three runs in the top of the fourth and added their final marker on the solo round-tripper by DuBoys over the centerfield fence in the sixth inning. Warde's fourth inning splurge included an infield hit by Al Englander, a sacrifice bunt, singles by Pete Jankovsky and Bob Ryan, and two Norwalk errors.

It was the sixth win in ten outings for the Eagles and enabled them to remain in first place in the FCIAC Eastern Division.

Paul

Monday, May 16, 2011

Warde Alumnus Hosts "Due Artisti" This Evening on Centanni Broadcasting Network

Andrew Warde High School 1976 alumnus and 2006 reunion chairman Tony Procaccini returns to the airwaves today to host "Due Artisti," an Internet radio show emanating from New York City. Today's broadcast starts at 5:00 PM EST, and ends one hour later.

This show features Italian music and Italian-American and Italian singers. Tony, pictured below right, intends to add some unique items from his CD collection, including "Rat Pack" snippets (Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin) and music from Fausto Chiappinelli, a tenor from Bovino, Italy, the hometown of Tony's parents' families.


The broadcast can be heard live (and later archived) on http://www.centannibroadcasting.com/.

Procaccini, a professional musician who plays four instruments, was Benny's Rae's long-time accompanist and is presently Music Director of Saint Patrick's Church in Bridgeport, CT. He guest-hosted "Lounging with Lombardi" on March 30 of this year, interviewing author Lou Miano (pictured above left) about the life and career of Louis Prima.

Shortly thereafter, on April 27, Tony was the guest of the show's host, John Lombardi, in the first of a three-part series on Frank Sinatra. The second segment of that series is scheduled for Wednesday, May 25, also at 5:00 PM EST.

Crimson Eagles Won Eighth Straight by Posting 7-3 Decision Over McMahon on This Date in 1962

Andrew Warde High School's baseball team tightened its grip on first place in the FCIAC Eastern Division with a come-from-behind 7-3 decision over Brien McMahon High School on this date, Wednesday, May 16, 1962.

The win was Warde's eighth straight after two losses to open the season and gave the Eagles a two-game lead over McMahon.

Jim Lippman and Larry Mischik singled to highlight a five-run Crismon Eagle rally in the sixth inning which provided the margin of victory. Hank Bahe hurled a one-hitter for the winners, striking out nine batters and walking eight.

Paul

Friday, May 13, 2011

Warde's Bicentennial Class of 1976 to Hold 35-Year Reunion in Fairfield on Saturday August 6

Andrew Warde High School's Class of 1976 will hold its 35-year reunion Saturday, August 6, 2011. The venue will most likely be in Fairfield, according to reunion committee member Tony Procaccini.

More details will follow at the appropriate times, both by email and on the class Web, wrote Procaccini in an email sent to classmates. A listing of hotels in or near Fairfield will be posted on the Web soon. Classmates are encouraged to help find students on the "Looking For..." page and to contact the reunion committee. Visit the class Web page by clicking the homepage below.


Classmates are also encouraged to visit and join the Facebook page (pictured below). We look forward to seeing you in less than three months!


Paul

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Crimson Eagles Shocked Flying Tigers in Come-From-Behind Upset Victory at Ludlowe Field 35 Years Ago Today

The memories of what happened on the Roger Ludlowe High School baseball field 35 years ago today are as vivid to the players as if the dramatic game between Andrew Warde High School and the host Flying Tigers happened yesterday. Many of the former Crimson Eagles recall their at-bats pitch-by-pitch, even remembering what kind of pitch they hit.

Sean Gormely greeted relief pitcher Paul Klecko with a two-run single to highlight Warde's four-run seventh-inning rally as the Eagles defeated the arch-rival Tigers, 4-2, in an FCIAC baseball clash on this date, May 12, 1976.

Ludlowe entered the game as the heavy favorite on its march toward a state tournament berth in 1976. However, as cliche as it sounds, whenever Warde and Ludlowe met on the playing field, it was time to throw the record books out the window. In fact, Warde's Tony Procaccini said the players felt upbeat on the bus ride to Ludlowe.

"The collective attitude was very positive," he wrote via email. "We had suffered through a disastrous start to the season, to be followed by greatly improved fielding and pitching as the season moved into the warmer and more comfortable playing weather. We defeated three teams much stronger than us: Wilton, Trumbull and finally Ludlowe."

Senior lefthander Bob Henry, making only his second start of the season, teased the Flying Tigers with a three-hitter. He struck out seven in going the distance for the winning Eagles. "I told coach Bob Jackson, 'I want the ball,' for that game against our arch-rival Ludlowe," admitted Henry.

"I was very upset when Ludlowe's Jim Barletto hit a seeing eye two-run single off me that left us trailing, 2-0. My Dad was never prouder of me after the team came back to win that game," he added. Henry is pictured below pitching during a 1975 home game with centerfielder Jeff Hannon in the background.

Tigers' righthander Brian Lee, 1-2, was pitching a three-hit shutout entering the last inning when the Crimson Eagles rallied, sending 10 players to the plate. Scott Thornton opened the top of the seventh with a walk, one of four free passes issued by Ludlowe hurlers in the fatal frame.

Procaccini stepped to the plate next. "This at-bat is still crystal-clear in my mind," he wrote. "I was facing Brian Lee, a solid right-handed pitcher and multi-sport player, against whom I would eventually have much good fortune," added Procaccini, who had three hits against him in one Senior Babe Ruth game played that summer.

"The count went to three and two, and I fouled off about three or four pitches, battling Lee all the way," he remembered. "I recall concentrating on not falling behind the pitches; his fastball was quick, and I could have easily been whiffed. Then, I sliced a fastball on the outside part of the plate into left-center field, a solid line-drive single, advancing the runner to second."

Pinch-hitter Paul Rossitto laid down a perfect bunt along the third base line for a hit, loading the bases with nobody out. The pressure then fell squarely upon the shoulders of pinch hitter John Zadrovitz to keep the rally going. "I started the scoring by hitting a deep sac fly to the left field fence with the bases loaded in the seventh," pointed out Zadrovitz. His fly ball cut the deficit in half, 2-1.

"I was down, 0-2, on the count, and Brian Lee threw me a knuckleball that didn't do squat. He had thrown me a curve ball the previous pitch, and I was in a hole. I guess he was cocky, so he figured he would mess with me. Unfortunately, I had only warning-track power, but I still got us on the scoreboard. The rest is history."

Ludlowe coach Jack Mullady then brought in Klecko, and Gormely belted a 1-1 offering to centerfield, plating two more runs and giving Warde a 3-2 advantage. Frank Fekete walked with the bases loaded, allowing the fourth run to score.

Henry set down the Tigers in order in the last of the seventh inning, his fourth perfect inning of the game. He said his Dad had the game clippings, including a story from the Fairfield Citizen-News seen below, plastered all over the walls at the family gas station, Wells Rest Texaco, on Stratfield Road, until he finished managing the station in 1978.


Procaccini caught the last out, and he still has the baseball to this day. "I was absolutely ecstatic," he remembered. "Bob Henry, my close friend since grammar school, had pitched a great game, and we had defeated our cross-town enemies, in an otherwise dismal season."

He appeared with the baseball on News 12 Connecticut's Education Notebook program to promote the 30-year reunion five years ago, and he even brought the ball to the class reunion in August of 2006. "Having caught the last out, I decided to keep that ball forever," Procaccini admitted.

"It has remained with me ever since, along with the glove with which I caught it, and my cap, which sports a white italic-style W against the crimson color of our school. "TONY PRO," my nickname in high school, is still on the under-bill."


It was just the third league win in 10 outings for Warde, while Ludlowe's FCIAC record dropped to 6-5. Overall, the Crimson Eagles improved to 3-9 and the Tigers dropped to 9-5. Ultimately, the Eagles finished the season with a 6-12 record, while Ludlowe made the state tournament.

"Coach Ed Bengermino told me he remembers that game vividly," Procaccini pointed out. "Bob Jackson was the varsity coach in 1976, and Bengermino was JV baseball coach. But 'Bengie' came to our games when the JV games ended. Defeating our crosstown rivals in those circumstances was extremely satisfying, and meant much to us. We had decisively won 'bragging rights' which, for the seniors, means we keep it forever."

Paul

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Crimson Eagles Blasted Crusaders, 12-7, at Stamford Catholic on This Date in 1962 to Extend FCIAC Winning Streak to Six Games

Andrew Warde High School's baseball team shelled three Stamford Catholic pitchers for 12 hits, including two triples and a two-run home run by Andy Bowman, to register a 12-7 victory over the Crusaders on this date, Friday, May 11, 1962. The impressive road victory extended Warde's FCIAC winning streak to six games.

John Mingori, a junior righthander, pitched seven innings to pick up the victory, although he had trouble keeping the hosts in check. Mingori yielded eight hits, including a three-run homer by starting pitcher Bobo Hickey in the first inning and a two-run circuit clout by Crusader shortstop Jerry Esposito in the third inning.

The Crimson Eagles tallied two runs in the first inning when Jim Lippman smashed a triple to deep centerfield following a walk, a single by Mike Gorlo, and a fielder's choice.

After the Crusaders struck back for three runs on two singles and Hickey's homer in the home half of the opening frame, the Fairfield squad regained the lead, 5-3, with a three-run rally that included singles by Bill Pekar, Al Englander, and Larry Mischik, along with two SCHS errors and two run-producing walks.

Although the Crusaders went ahead, 6-5, with three runs in the third inning, the Eagles scored seven runs in the last four innings against two Stamford Catholic relief pitchers to nail down the victory. Gorlo, Bowman, Lippman, and Englander paced the Warde offense with two hits apiece.

Paul

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Billy Mulligan Pitched Warde Over Ludlowe, 6-2, at Eagles' Field 40 Years Ago Today

Billy Mulligan tossed a two-hitter and Warde scored two runs in the second inning and two more in the sixth inning as the Crimson Eagles downed cross-town rival Ludlowe, 6-2, at the winners' field 40 years ago today, Monday, May 10, 1971.

The victory lifted the Eagles' mark to 5-7 in the FCIAC East I Division and ended a four-game losing streak. The setback dropped the Flying Tigers to 5-7 in the FCIAC East II Division and snapped a modest two-game winning streak.

The hosts scored one run in the first inning and plated a pair of runs in the second frame. Jack Rozgonyi started the second inning rally with a lead-off walk, Pete Paolini singled, and Rick Seres walked to load the bases for Bill Carr, who ripped a single to score two runs.

Warde scored two more runs in the sixth inning. Paolini doubled to start the rally, Mulligan walked, and both advanced on an infield out. A wild pitch by losing pitcher Jim Cali brought in Paolini, and John Favale's single scored Mulligan.

Ludlowe scored two runs in the third inning to narrow the gap to 3-2. Tony Coppola and Mike Donnelly, who had the only two hits for the Tigers, scored with the help of two errors and a passed ball.

Mulligan's win ended a personal three-game losing streak, while Cali, who yielded eight hits, dropped to 1-1.

Paul

Monday, May 09, 2011

Hamilton Pitches Crimson Eagles over St. Mary's on This Date in 1958

Andrew Warde's Crimson Eagles backed Dave Hamilton's effective pitching with a 10-hit attack in downing St. Mary's on this date, Friday, May 9, 1958.

The crafty lefthander allowed six hits and walked one in gaining his second win in three decisions. St. Mary's tallied its only run in the third inning when Bill Feighery and pitcher John Dillon connected for a pair of doubles.

Warde ripped Dillon for four doubles and six singles to score at least one run in the third through sixth innings. Howie Ratner slammed a pair of two-baggers in three at-bats for the Eagles. Rudy Takacs and co-captain John Lashar each contributed a double and a single to the Warde attack.

Paul

Friday, May 06, 2011

Warde Alum Sherri Steeneck Sworn-In as Fairfield's First Selectman This Week

Sherri Steeneck has been involved in politics since she was 13 years old. The 1977 Andrew Warde High School graduate told me that she started out "stuffing envelopes" when she was in junior high school and, 17 years later, she was named chairman of the Fairfield Democratic Town Committee.

Her political career was punctuated this week when she was sworn in as the town's first selectman Wednesday morning in a small ceremony that she wanted to have for her mother. Steeneck is pictured below flanked by Selectman James Walsh (left) and former First Selectman Ken Flatto (right).


Town Clerk Betsy Browne swore Steeneck into her new job in the first selectman's office in Sullivan-Independence Hall. Steeneck took over as first selectman at midnight due to the resignation of Flatto, who accepted a job in Gov. Dannel Malloy's administration. Flatto served as the town's chief executive from 1997-1999 and 2001-2011.

"I think I am the first Warde alumnus to be first selectman, now that you mention it," Steeneck told me. "I hadn't considered that before." As for the ceremony, Steeneck said there was "no big fanfare. Just a little, simple swearing-in." She is pictured below with her Mother (seated) and Browne during the official ceremony.


Steeneck's political resume in Fairfield is quite impressive. "I started my involvement with town politics when I was 27 years old," she said. "I had returned to Fairfield from the Boston area and was appointed a ZBA alternate, replacing another member who had passed away. I was later appointed to the Human Services Commission and the Water Pollution Control Authority. I was elected to the RTM by District 2, three or four times, and was a member of the Finance and Health and Safety subcommittees of the RTM.

"Later, I was elected townwide to the TPZ, two or three times, and three years ago I was appointed Selectman when Denise Dougiello became ill and needed to step down," she continued. "Currently I am the acting first selectman, until we choose the interim first selectman. In between, in the late 90s, I was Director of Community and Economic Development for the Town of Fairfield and staff for the Economic Development Commission and Affordable Housing Committee."

Steeneck is supposed to name someone who will serve as first selectman in her stead should she be away or ill, but she said Wednesday afternoon that she hadn't done that yet. So, how does it feel to be the town's top official? "At the moment, it feels tiring as I had two late night budget hearing RTM meetings the nights before my first day, which culminated in a Board of Selectman meeting, and the Holocaust Commemoration."

Steeneck said she's not interested in keeping the position long-term. "I have a few loyal real estate clients hanging in with me, and I have my family's business to keep running; hence, why I don't want the position for a lengthy period, even though it is an honor and I will do it to the best of my abilities for the time being," she admitted. "It appears that will be for approximately the next 40 days based on the need for Jim Walsh, the other Selectman, and I to agree on an interim candidate for first selectman."

Steeneck proposed that Michael Tetreau, son of Fern Tetreau, the former Assistant Principal at Fairfield Woods Junior High (now middle school) and former football coach at Andrew Warde, be named the interim first selectman, but that choice has been met with opposition from the GOP. "The Republicans are worried that Mike will be a formidable candidate and don't want to take our party's selection as a result," she told me, "so the process continues for another 30 days."

Good luck, Sherri. We are proud of all your accomplishments and wish you well as Fairfield's First Selectman.

Paul

Wednesday, May 04, 2011

Coach Jackson's Eagles Trimmed Rival Staples, 3-2, to Extend Winning Streak on This Date in 1962

Andrew Warde High School's resurgent baseball team extended its winning streak to four games with a 3-2 triumph over Staples in Westport on this date, Friday, May 4, 1962.

Coach Bob Jackson's Crimson Eagles broke a 1-1 tie with two runs in the seventh inning. Mike Gorlo's double, two errors, and a walk  produced the two runs. The hosts from Westport countered with a single run in their half of the inning as Phil Koda slammed his third hit of the game. However, Warde pitcher Hank Bahe bore down in time to preserve the narrow victory.

Bahe tossed a six-hit complete game victory. He struck out six, walked three, and yielded one earned run. The Eagles managed just five hits in the game and scored one run in the third inning after Staples opened the scoring with a run in the first frame.

Paul

Monday, May 02, 2011

Warde Capitalizes on Walks and Errors to Defeat Tigers, 8-6, at Sturges Park on This Date in 1958

Although they were outhit, 11 to 7, Andrew Warde High School's Crimson Eagles took advantage of bases on balls and three Ludlowe errors to defeat the Tigers, 8-6, in a loosely played game at Sturges Park on this date, Friday, May 2, 1958, opening the second annual baseball series between the two new Fairfield rivals.

Coach Bob Jackson's Eagles were held scoreless in only the first and last innings by three Ludlowe pitchers as they gained their third straight victory following a season-opening loss to St. Basil's Prep in Stamford. It was the third setback in four games for the Ludlowe lads, who had recently scored a 2-0 shutout triumph over Harding.

Ed Reilly was the starter and loser for the Tigers, while Joe Skubas and Johnny Chickos relieved him. Reilly yielded eight walks and four hits during his four-plus innings of work.

Al Neigher was the starting pitcher and winner for Warde. He picked up his second straight victory after allowing five hits and three runs. Ludlowe rallied for three runs in the sixth inning, but the Eagles hung on for the win.

Paul