*** 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, June 23, 2013

Warde Students Recognized by Easter Seal Rehabilitation Center 42 Years Ago This Week


The Easter Seal Rehabilitation Center of Eastern Fairfield County paid special tribute to the students of Andrew Warde High School "who have shown the greatest effort among all participating area high schools in their response to the needs of their fellow man in 1970 and 1971." That's according to a newspaper story which appeared in The Bridgeport Post, Wednesday, June 23, 1971.

Warde students raised $3,304 under the chairmanship of Miss Karen Medve (pictured above left) and Miss Nancy Whiteman. Mrs. Jay Kaner, vice president of the Rehabilitation Center's board of directors, presented a plaque to be displayed at the school to Miss Medve and Mr. Kenneth Petersen, headmaster.

Paul

Friday, June 21, 2013

Andrew Warde High School's Class of 1968 to Hold 45-Year Reunion Saturday, July 27, at Tashua Knolls Restaurant in Trumbull


Andrew Warde High School's Class of 1968 will hold its 45-year reunion this year. That's the word from Donna Green, a member of the Class of '68 and current secretary to headmaster James Coyne at Fairfield Warde High School. The reunion will take place Saturday, July 27, 2013, at Tashua Knolls Restaurant, 45 Tashua Knolls Lane, Trumbull.

The cost is $45 and includes antipasto, pasta salad, hot hor d'oeuvres passed butler style, a pasta station featuring penne a la vodka and shrimp scampi, carving station featuring filet mignon and roasted turkey, coffee, and dessert. Please RSVP by July 1. Please make checks payable to Jacquelyn Skultety, 415 Goldenrod Avenue, Bridgeport, CT, 06606.


If there is enough interest, a golf tournament for classmates will take place Saturday afternoon at the Tashua Glen nine-hole golf course. The $28 fee includes a cart. If interested, contact Diane Fekete Vieira at DI4850@aol.com.


Paul

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Andrew Warde High School's Class of 1963 Planning 50-Year Reunion

The Andrew Warde High School Class of 1963 has begun planning its 50-year reunion. The event will take place in October or November. Please click the image below to access the class Facebook page for more information and updates.


Paul

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

AWHS Class of 1983 to Hold 30-Year Reunion This October


The Andrew Warde High School Class of 1983 is planning its 30-year reunion. The event is planned for Saturday, October 19, 2013, at the Gaelic-American Club, 74 Beach Road, in Fairfield. For more information, click the image above to access the class Web site.

Paul

Friday, June 14, 2013

Warde Product Announces First Annual Guest Artist Day at St. Emery Church

Andrew Warde 1976 classmate Anthony Procaccini, Music Director of Saint Emery Church, Fairfield, has announced that the parish will hold its first annual Guest Artist Day on Sunday, June 23, at their regular 9:00 AM mass.

"The day is set aside for all to thank the choir for their season, which ends on that day, and to add an outstanding talent to the mix, too. I'm ecstatic that soprano Elizabeth Knauer (pictured to the left) accepted our invitation," Procaccini notes.

Musical selections will include, among others, Mozart's "Ave Verum" (choir), and the Bach-Gounod version of "Ave Maria" by Ms. Knauer.

Elizabeth Knauer's musical training includes an advanced degree from the Peabody Conservatory of Music of Johns Hopkins University, a Rotary Graduate Scholarship to the Mozarteum in Salzburg, Austria and an Artist's Residency at the Banff Centre for the Arts in Alberta, Canada.


Elizabeth has performed and recorded opera, oratorio, contemporary and improvisatory music throughout the U.S. and abroad. She is currently performing, teaching and conducting in New York City and New Jersey as a free-lance musician.

Anthony Procaccini, pictured below at the organ of St. Monica's Cathedral in New York City, graduated summa cum laude from the University of Bridgeport Music Department, and has been organist or music director in a number of churches in New York City and Fairfield County.


He also plays piano, string bass and bass guitar, is a Frank Sinatra historian, a veteran of ten years with Benny Rae, and, in addition to playing liturgical music, performs Jazz, opera, and classical music.

The public is cordially invited. A free "coffee and" reception, provided by the parish council and volunteers, will follow the mass.

The church address is 838 Kings Highway East. Street parking only is available, and arriving early is recommended.

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Crimson Eagles' Nine Defeated Milford in Opening Round of CIAC Class A Championship 52 Years Ago Today

Andrew Warde High School's well-balanced baseball team finished runnerup to Norwalk for the Fairfield County Interscholastic Conference baseball championship in 1961. However, the Crimson Eagles were victorious while Norwalk was eliminated in the opening round of the CIAC Class A championship tournament on this date 52 years ago.

Coach Bob Jackson's Warde squad advanced to the tourney semi-finals with an impressive 2-0 victory over Milford's higher-rated Metropolitan Bridgeport Conference champions as Dick Bernard, who remained unbeaten since the baseball season opened, hurled a two-hit shutout to earn his ninth straight victory in a pitching duel with the Indians' Ricky Grich at Quigley Stadium in West Haven.

The Crimson Eagles, ranked seventh among the eight teams which qualified for the Class A title competition, backed Bernard with a nine-hit attack and tallied single runs in the fourth and sixth innings to defeat the third-ranked Milford team. It was the 17th victory in 21 games for the Fairfield squad, and just the fourth setback in 19 contests for Coach Ray Stoviak's Indians.

Outfielders Mike Siavrakas and Larry Gill connected for two hits each to lead Warde's attack against the veteran Grich, but it was rightfielder Tom Dardina and third baseman Frank Chimelewski who drove in the two runs for the Eagles with extra base hits in the June 12, 1961 contest.

It was a scoreless game until the fourth inning. Grich walked Gill with one out and when Chimelewski hit a grounder down the third base line, both runners were safe when the throw to second base for the attempted force out was too late. One out later, Dardina smacked a double down the left field line to score Gill with Warde's first run.

Tom Cody, Milford's rightfielder, made a fine catch of a long drive by Joe Magdon to open Warde's sxith inning, but Gill singled and Chimelewski bounced a triple off the fence in left-centerfield to bring home the Eagles' second run.

Both of Milford's hits off Bernard were bloop singles by third baseman Art Bungerford in the first and sixth innings. Although both hits were preceded by walks to Vic Nelson, the Indians were unable to capitalize. Warde's second baseman Hank Bahe made a poor throw following Hungarford's first single, but catcher Joe Vige threw out Nelson trying to advance to third base. In the sixth inning, both Nelson and Hungarford were picked off first base on throws by Vige and Bernard.

Paul

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Longtime Andrew Warde Coach Ed Bengermino Inducted into FCIAC Hall of Fame

Ed Bengermino, the long-time Andrew Warde High School baseball, basketball, and volleyball coach, was inducted into the Fairfield County Interscholastic Athletic Conference Hall of Fame this evening in a ceremony attended by over 300 people at the Chatham Manor in Norwalk.


Dave Schulz, the current Fairfield Ludlowe High School athletic director, FCIAC president, and a 2010 inductee into the Hall of Fame, introduced Bengermino, who was accompanied by current Fairfield Warde High School athletic director Chris Manfredonia.

Bengermino served as a basketball, volleyball, and baseball coach in the Fairfield High School system at Andrew Warde High School and Fairfield High School. His basketball teams won two FCIAC Eastern Division championships, and he coached the volleyball team to 10 division championships, seven FIAC championships, and four state championship appearances from 1974 to 1997.

Click the image below to read the sports story in the Crimson Crier about his basketball team from February, 1973.


He was named Outstanding Girls Volleyball Coach by the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference and was inducted into the Girls Volleyball Hall of Fame in 2005.


Bengermino coached his baseball teams to three FCIAC Eastern Division championships, two Western Division titles, and a CIAC Class LL state championship in 1981. The following year, his Crimson Eagles advanced to the state championship game once again.

He was the creator and director of the Connecticut High School Boys Club Volleyball League, which was a predecessor to the league becoming a sanctioned CIAC varsity sport.

Paul

Saturday, June 08, 2013

Fairfield Board of Ed Initiated Action to Replace Washington & Lincoln Schools 51 Years Ago Today

Many students who attended Andrew Warde High School in the late 1950s and early 1960s were products of two of the town's oldest elementary schools, Washington and Lincoln. However, the aging schools were termed "obsolete" by the Fairfield Board of Education by the Spring of 1962.

As a result, 51 years ago this evening --- Friday, June 8, 1962 --- the board initiated action for the construction of a 20-to-24 room elementary school in the North Stratfield area to meet classroom needs and to replace Washington and Lincoln schools.

Joe O'Brien, a 1976 graduate of Andrew Warde High School, was a member of the last kindergarten class at Lincoln School in 1963-64. "I believe it was a tall structure, maybe three stories high, similar to the original Stratfield School before all the additions," wrote O'Brien, whose three older siblings also attended kindergarten at Lincoln School.

"The front door was between the two pine trees on Fairmount. The trees are still there, I think, and were used as goal posts for our pick-up football games later. George O'Brien (older than us and no relation) practiced his field goal kicking there. He was the place kicker for Warde at one time."

O"Brien remembered having Miss Davidson as his kindergarten teacher during half-day sessions which were split between morning and afternoon. After the school closed its doors for the last time, "I believe most of the students ended up at Stratfield or Assumption, or both like me," he recalled. "Assumption had no kindergarten at the time, however."

He added, "Once the school was closed and being prepared for demolition, my brother and I would go down there to smash the windows out with stones. (It was) great fun."


According to the newspaper story 51 years ago, the school board voted to request the Representative Town Meeting to appoint a building committee for the new school, acting on a recommendation by Dr. William J. Edgar, superintendent of schools.

Dr. Edgar said the proposed school in North Stratfield would be located on a 10-acre tract of land purchased by the town seven years earlier off Putting Green and Harvester roads.

He reported that the new school was needed to relieve the "pressures" on Stratfield and Fairfield Woods schools. In addition, it would allow for the closing of Lincoln School on Jackman Avenue and Washington School on Villa Avenue, both of which are old structures and had been earmarked for abandonment as "inefficient for the school program."

Upon completion of the new school in North Stratfield, students living in the southwestern section of the Lincoln School district would attend Stratfield School on Melville Avenue, and students in the North and East sections would attend the new school.

Pupils in the Washington School district would be shifted to Stratfield School, according to Dr. Edgar. Pupils in the North Stratfield area, who were attending either Fairfield Woods or Stratfield schools, would be assigned to the new school.

Dr. Edgar said the target date for the school opening was September in 1964. He pointed out that in order to meet the date, ground would have to be broken by the Summer of 1963.

The necessary machinery for getting a building committee, the appointment of an architect, and preparation of plans would require nearly a year, according to Dr. Edgar.

Truman Chase, director of transportation, assisted in outlining details of the school districts and the location of the school site.

Paul

The photos above show the sixth-grade classes at Lincoln and Washington schools in 1952. Many of the students graduated from Andrew Warde High School six years later.

Monday, June 03, 2013

Two Warde Students Participated in Kiwanis Club Luncheon to Discuss Establishment of Drug Information Center 43 Years Ago Today

A discussion about the establishment of a drug information center by two Andrew Warde High School students and Mr. Charles Abraham, administrative assistant for instruction, took place at the Fairfield Kiwanis Club luncheon meeting in the Fairfield Motor Inn 43 years ago today, Wednesday, June 3, 1970.

The work done at Andrew Warde High School in launching a drive against the use of dangerous drugs and the plans for the drug information center, which was set up in a house on Sanford Street on a 13-week experimental basis, was explained by Mr. Abraham and the two Warde students, Jeannie Tatangelo and Judd Magilnick.

"The Talmud (Jewish book of law and wisdom) says that it takes 40 years to understand something," Magilnick told me by email recently. "My memory of the luncheon is how gracious and friendly our adult hosts were."

Magilnick, who graduated from Yale University in 1974 and is married to Denise Kurtzman Magilnick, added, "I had expected something more like the evil-businessman type I'd seen in the James Bond films. I believe they served some kind of ground beef pie. It tasted good."

At the luncheon 43 years ago, it was emphasized that the aim of the program was not directed at eliminating the pusher, but drying up the demand. Magilnick and Tatangelo said the drive in the schools, including talks to junior high school students, has been focused against the use of heroin and LSD.

They stressed that they want to impress on students that it is not the "in thing" to use drugs, and that it is a social stigma to use drugs. They said they did not condone the use of marijuana or other drugs.

Tartangelo said students begin using drugs for several reasons. "A girl falls in love with a boy who is a user, and she becomes one, too," she said. "Some take drugs because they want to be friends with others who are addicted to the drug habit. Some take it to feel high, and others (use drugs) out of curiosity."

Magilnick had the opportunity to browse this Web site and wrote, "This is a great project you are doing here, particularly because it gives us a chance to honor great teachers and mentors like Coach Tetreau, and to think about simpler times. Thank you and congratulations."

Paul