*** 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 ...

Monday, May 30, 2016

Andrew Warde Alumnus Announces Fundraising Concert at St. Emery Parish This Sunday, June 5

Andrew Warde High School Class of 1976 product Anthony Procaccini invites the public to a fundraising concert at St. Emery Parish in Fairfield this coming Sunday, June 5, at 3 p.m. The concert features Phantom of the Opera star Frank Mastrone, the St. Emery Festival Choir (pictured below from the 2015 concert fundraiser), and Procaccini, the parish music director (at the far left).


Music of Irving Berlin, from Rodgers and Hammerstein's Oklahoma, and by J. S. Bach, Zoltan Kodaly, Franz Liszt, and others will be performed.

Broadway star Mastrone, pictured at the left, holds a B. F. A. in acting and directing, and performed over 4,000 times in Phantom over 25 years.

The St. Emery Festival Choir consists of volunteers from the parish and frequent "friends" from outside the parish. Procaccini graduated summa cum laude in Music from the University of Bridgeport.

The suggested donation is $10 per person, and children under 12 will be admitted free. A limited number of tickets will be available, and advance purchase is suggested.

For tickets, call the parish office at 203-334-0312 Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. or Barbara Chuga at 203-268-4535.

Paul

Saturday, May 21, 2016

Warde Nine Topped McMahon to Lock Up FCIAC East Division Title 53 Years Ago This Week

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, 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

Friday, May 13, 2016

AWHS Alumnus Announces Fourth Annual Guest Artist Day at St. Emery Parish

Andrew Warde 1976 classmate Tony Procaccini announces that the St. Emery Festival Choir welcomes alto Kristin Butler (pictured at the left) to the annual Guest Artist Day this Sunday, May 22, during the 9:00 a.m. Mass.

Choral selections will include "Come With Rejoicing" by Robert Leaf, and the choir will be accompanied by flute, clarinet, and string bass. The bassist will be none other than our classmate Stephan Lang. Ms. Butler will sing "Wayfaring Stranger," an Appalachian folk song.

All are invited to a "coffee and" reception in the hall immediately following Mass, courtesy of parish council members and volunteers, to thank the choir members for their efforts.



"We are very happy to have such an outstanding talent, alto Kristin Butler, with us this year," said Procaccini, music director at St. Emery. "She has great experience in liturgical and modern music, plus other genres. She is also a superb teacher." 

Procaccini added, ""This day is set aside near the end of the choir season to thank them for their efforts. This is our fourth Annual Guest Artist Day, and they are always well-attended and appreciated by all."

Ms. Butler received her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Musical Theatre and her Vocal Certificate from Shenandoah Conservatory in Virginia. She continued graduate work in Music Education at the Cali School of Music at Montclair State University in New Jersey. 

Kristin was part of the Grammy-award winning Shenandoah Conservatory Choir, which sang at The Kennedy Center, Notre Dame Cathedral, Chartre Cathedral, and at the Vatican high altar.

She debuted several different roles in original musicals at the Spirit of Broadway Theatre. Her contemporary vocal work includes instrumentalists associated with The Rolling Stones, Johnny Winter, The Eagles, and Cher.

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Today Marks 40-Year Anniversary of Warde's Dramatic Last-Inning Comeback Victory at Arch-Rival Ludlowe

Sean Gormely greeted relief pitcher Paul Klecko with a two-run single to highlight Andrew Warde High School's four-run seventh-inning rally as the Crimson Eagles defeated arch-rival Roger Ludlowe, 4-2, in an FCIAC baseball clash 40 years ago today.

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 AWHS Class of 1976 30-year reunion ten 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

Monday, May 09, 2016

Mustangs Defeat Falcons, 7-6, to Win Baseball Battle at Harbor Yard

Forty years after graduating from Andrew Warde High School, I still feel a strong connection to the school. Warde athletic director Seth Fry asked me if I would be the public address announcer for this evening's baseball battle between the host Warde Mustangs and the Fairfield Ludlowe Falcons at The Ballpark at Harbor Yard in Bridgeport. Naturally, I jumped at the opportunity.

This is the third straight year I have announced the town rivalry game at the home of the minor league's Bridgeport Bluefish. The HAN network broadcast the game. Please click the video below to watch the game.

It was quite a thrill!

Paul

Monday, May 02, 2016

Crimson Crier Memories from 42 Years Ago

Take a trip back in time and read the Crimson Crier newspaper from 42 years ago today, May 2, 1974. Please click here.