*** 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, November 27, 2017

Andrew Warde High School's Class of 1967 Held Successful 50-Year Reunion

The following letter and essay about the 50-year reunion of the Andrew Warde High School Class of 1967 was written by Dr. Eric Mazur, a good friend and a member of the AWHS Class of 1967.

Hi, Paul. As I’m sure you recall, you graciously posted notices of our AWHS 50th Reunion on your Blog last October. I had promised to provide you with a follow-up narrative which I am happy to append. I tried to include as many different names in as many different contexts as possible. But even in so doing, many of the attendees have been left out. I am also appending a full list of the attendees if you are interested in posting that along with the narrative. I am aware that Wayne Cotter is putting together a video picture compilation of the evening that should be available in a month or so and which we will forward on to you. Again, thank you for all that you do in keeping the spirit of the “old” Andrew Warde High School alive. Please stay in touch and have a wonderful Christmas and New Year’s Holiday season. Warm regards, Eric.

Almost exactly 50 years and 4 months after their high school graduation, the Andrew Warde High School Class of 1967 reassembled on October 14, 2017 at Vazzy’s in Fairfield to celebrate their half century reunion. Organized by Micka Zeman-Ellison, Stephanie Ostrofsky Owsiany, and Wayne Cotter, the Class continued its tradition of gathering every 5 years in Fairfield to celebrate their high school experience and get reacquainted with each other.

This landmark reunion drew classmates from all over the country and one, Carol Mercurio, from St. John in the US Virgin Islands. The long distance attendee award went to Linda Raichelson Gliner from San Francisco who at 2961 miles edged out Terri Shea from San Pedro, CA by a mere 95 miles. Other notable long distance travelers included Michael Brustein from Washington, DC, Tom Deluca from Anwatakee, AZ, George Kellis from Lakeland, FL, Bruce Kelley from Richmond, VA, Connie Kelley Sidberry from Garner, NC, Stephen Mate from Stow, OH, Stuart Silver from Delray Beach, FL, Reva Weiskoph Friedman from Lawrence, KS, and Cydney Arons Kasenetz from Alexandra, VA.

The least travelled award unquestionably goes to class president and former Rooster River Boy Jeff McHugh, who not only did not leave Fairfield, but also remained a part of the Fairfield Public School System for almost his entire career. Since 1984, and only after his superiors agreed that he need not ever wear a tie at work, Jeff has served as the Dean of Students at the Fairfield Woods Middle School, the same middle school that he and almost all the other class had attended. Others classmates continuing as residents of Fairfield include Melanie Correnti Kooris, Eileen Evarts McMahon, Seth Lewis, Doris Norwich, Stephanie Ostrofsky Owsiany, Linda Pistey, Barbara Postol Rifkin, Jay Ringelheim, and Fred Tippett.

Sixty classmates and 16 guests in total joined in the celebration including many former athletes and class leaders. The co-captain of Warde’s very successful basketball team, Rich Fekete, was joined by the co-captain of the less than successful (but no less spirited) football team, Eric Mazur. In fact, accompanied by Steve Silver, the three of them were the last to vacate Vazzy’s at evening’s end, and only after strong encouragement from the Vazzy’s staff. Steve Mate, cross country team captain, Michael Brustein, president of the Varsity Athletic Association, Fred Bogin, president of the School Council, Abe Brustein, President of the International Service Commission, and Seth Lewis, co-chairman of the Club Commission were also in attendance. Jay Ringelheim and Harold Shaw ably represented the Yearbook Committee and were distinguished by defying their age and looking most like they did in high school. Not to be outdone by the men, Cynthia Bernhard Rivers, Captain of the cheerleading squad joined her co-cheerleader Lynn Wesche Welsh in adding to the aesthetics and the festivities.

Classmates were certainly grayer (and many sported less hair) but most were easily recognizable despite the passage of so much time. However, lapel buttons with senior year high school photographs and printed names (now too small to read without generous magnification) helped bridge the gaps in time and memory. Classmates recalled lazy, hormone-fueled summer days at Jennings Beach and rowdy weekend evenings at Friendly’s, Ho-Jo’s, and the Dutchess. Those alums living in the Stratfield section of Fairfield shared remembrances of Mrs. Barske, the feisty old Russian woman who ran a candy store out of her Valley Road home. The thirty class members who had passed on were remembered fondly by all and were a poignant reminder that time is a limited and very valuable resource. The reunion was a great success with only congratulations and accolades for the organizers. The night ended far too early with promises to cherish both the memories and each other and, the firm commitment to gather again in five years for the 55th!

Dr. Eric Mazur

Friday, November 24, 2017

Warde Continues Thanksgiving Day Football Dominance Over Ludlowe

The domination continues. The Fairfield Warde Mustangs' football team cruised to an easy 55-22 victory over the host Fairfield Ludlowe Falcons in the 13th renewal of the modern-day Thanksgiving Day rivalry yesterday at Taft Field. As the "voice" of Ludlowe football for the last six years, I had the pleasure of serving as the public address announcer for the third time in the last five years.


Warde has won seven of the last eight Thanksgiving Day contests overall. Cumulatively, the Andrew Warde/Fairfield Warde Crimson Eagles/Mustangs lead the Roger Ludlowe/Fairfield Ludlowe Flying Tigers/Falcons on Turkey Day, 16 games to seven, dating back to the original Thanksgiving Day series, which lasted from 1975 through 1984.


Warde has outscored Ludlowe by a 202 to 89 margin over the last five games and now leads the modern-day Thanksgiving Day series, nine games to four. The Mustangs' victory tied the longest winning streak in the history of the Thanksgiving Day rivalry, which dates back to the last five games of the original series when Andrew Warde won every Thanksgiving Day game against Roger Ludlowe from 1980 through 1984.


Even more impressive is the fact that Warde is 23-7 in Thanksgiving Day games dating back to a 7-0 record against Kolbe High School of Bridgeport.

Thanksgiving Day football games between Warde & Ludlowe:

Andrew Warde Crimson Eagles vs. Roger Ludlowe Flying Tigers
1975 to 1984
(Series: Warde 7 wins, Ludlowe 3 wins)
1975: Warde Eagles 28, Ludlowe Tigers 6
1976: Warde Eagles 20, Ludlowe Tigers 13
1977: Ludlowe Tigers 20, Warde Eagles 13
1978: Ludlowe Tigers 35, Warde Eagles 6
1979: Ludlowe Tigers 41, Warde Eagles 25
1980: Warde Eagles 17, Ludlowe Tigers 14
1981: Warde Eagles 14, Ludlowe Tigers 8
1982: Warde Eagles 23, Ludlowe Tigers 0
1983: Warde Eagles 26, Ludlowe Tigers 6
1984: Warde Eagles 16, Ludlowe Tigers 13

Fairfield Warde Mustangs vs. Fairfield Ludlowe Falcons
2005 to 2017
(Series: Warde 9 wins, Ludlowe 4 wins)
2005: Ludlowe Falcons 20, Warde Mustangs 14
2006: Warde Mustangs 21, Ludlowe Falcons 12
2007: Warde Mustangs 28, Ludlowe Falcons 0
2008: Ludlowe Falcons 10, Warde Mustangs 8
2009: Ludlowe Falcons 24, Warde Mustangs 14
2010: Warde Mustangs 21, Ludlowe Falcons 16
2011: Warde Mustangs 52, Ludlowe Falcons 13
2012: Ludlowe Falcons 31, Warde Mustangs 13
2013: Warde Mustangs 44, Ludlowe Falcons 21
2014: Warde Mustangs 27, Ludlowe Falcons 12
2015: Warde Mustangs 35, Ludlowe Falcons 14
2016: Warde Mustangs 41, Ludlowe Falcons 20
2017: Warde Mustangs 55, Ludlowe Falcons 22

Cumulative record: Warde 16 wins, Ludlowe 7 wins

Paul

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Behind the Microphone at Thanksgiving Day Football Rivalry

The 13th renewal of the modern-day Thanksgiving Day football series between Fairfield's two public high schools takes place tomorrow morning at the home of the Falcons on Unquowa Road. To many of us from a previous generation, the schools will always be known as Andrew Warde and Roger Ludlowe, and the rivalry pits the Crimson Eagles against the Flying Tigers.

However, this is a new era and a new generation. The Fairfield Warde Mustangs will be bidding for their fifth straight Thanksgiving Day victory, which would equal the longest streak previously established by the Crimson Eagles between 1980 and 1984.

I've attended every Thanksgiving Day game during the modern series. In fact, this will be my third game as the public address announcer (2013, 2015, 2017), all at Ludlowe. I was the master of ceremonies at halftime of the 2006 game at Warde when the football field was dedicated in honor of Fern Tetreau and Bill Davis. I've enjoyed every minute of it.

Even though I have been announcing Ludlowe's home football games for the last six years, my heart will always be with Andrew (Fairfield) Warde High School. Once a Crimson Eagle, always a Mustang.

Paul

Monday, November 20, 2017

Remembering Warde's First Thanksgiving Day Rivalry

Fairfield Warde High School will travel to Fairfield Ludlowe High School this Thursday morning for the 13th annual Turkey Day football game between the two schools since the rivalry was resurrected in 2005.

However, 49 years ago this month, Warde began a short-lived and all-but-forgotten Thanksgiving Day rivalry against a small private school in Bridgeport. Prior to the opening of Andrew Warde High School in 1956, cross-town rival Roger Ludlowe High School had an established Turkey Day football game against Bassick in Bridgeport.

That left the Crimson Eagles searching for a Thanksgiving Day opponent. So, how and why did the series with Kolbe eventually start? "We both needed a Turkey Day game, so a friendly, competitive situation developed," explained former Warde coaching legend Fern Tetreau. "Both teams played hard."

The Kolbe Friars, who didn't even have a field of their own, were Warde's opponents on Thanksgiving Day from 1968 through 1974. The only question prior to each of Warde's first five games with Kolbe wasn't who would win but, rather, by how much would Warde win.

Warde dominated the series from 1968 through 1972, winning two of the five games in shutout fashion and never allowing more than eight points in any game. Overall, Warde won all seven games in the series and outscored Kolbe, 214-44.

"The best part about our clash with Kolbe was that we never had a terrible turkey dinner," Tom Davis, a member of the Eagles' squads from 1970 through 1972, told me via email. "It was always enjoyable. We went into the game knowing that we were going to win. They may have thought that they were a better team but we knew that we would win."

The Crimson Eagles won the first meeting between the schools, 32-8, in 1968. One year later, Warde blasted Kolbe, 40-6. Quarterback Chico Rodriguez threw five touchdown passes to lead the Eagles. Steve DuBoys caught scoring strikes of 70, eight, and 87 yards to help Warde to a 20-0 lead after one quarter.

Rodriguez led the winners on a 76-yard drive to open the second quarter, culminating with a 21-yard touchdown pass to Al Cassidy. Mike Skalski caught an 87-yard touchdown pass in the third quarter, and the Eagles closed the scoring in the fourth quarter when Jack Rozgonyi scampered five yards to paydirt.

The Eagles made it three in a row in 1970 when they posted a 20-6 victory in Fairfield. Warde traveled to Hedges Stadium in Bridgeport and earned its first of two straight shutout victories in 1971 (34-0). Quarterback Glen Hlavaty riddled the Friar secondary by passing for four touchdowns, leaving many wondering whether the Friars would ever win a game in the series, much less be competitive. However, even a new Kolbe coach couldn't change the Thanksgiving Day outcome in 1972.


According to the November 19, 1972 issue of the Bridgeport Sunday Post, "Kolbe High School football coach Paul Janosko is faced with a difficult assignment. In his first year as the Friars' mentor, he will try to lead his charges to their initial Thanksgiving Day triumph. With two fine performances in recent weeks, including a 40-18 triumph over Bullard Havens for their only victory, the Friars figure to give Warde a run for its money."

However, that was not to be as the Crimson Eagles buried Kolbe, 40-0. Warde finished the season at 3-6-1. Dividing the quarterback chores were Hlavaty and Davis. Running back Jim DelVecchio and placekicker Harry Caston were the scoring threats for Warde. Neil Karker and Frank Markoya were the sure-handed receivers for the Eagles.

"The '72 game was a really good game for us as we pounded them pretty good, and we all played a pretty good game," wrote Tom Davis, the younger brother of head coach Bill Davis. He noted that the games against Kolbe carried added significance for him and his brother.

"The Thanksgiving Day games were the only games my Dad saw me play as he owned his own business and worked on Saturdays, so those days were special for me." Overall, Warde outscored Kolbe, 166-20, after the first five games.

One year later, in 1973, the Kolbe gridders were a confident group heading into the Thanksgiving Day showdown with their Fairfield neighbors. According to the Bridgeport Sunday Post of November 18, 1973, "In five previous attempts, the Kolbe High School football team has failed in its quest to defeat Warde on Thanksgiving Day. That could all change as the Friars venture to the Crimson Eagles' gridiron in Fairfield for their sixth annual confrontation.

"Coach Paul Janosko's Friar combine has enjoyed a very successful season, posting a 4-5 MBIAC record. In two of the setbacks, the Friars led Harding, 14-0, at intermission before bowing, and lost in the final minute to St. Joseph, 14-12. Having already won more games than any other Kolbe eleven, Janosko has his troops primed for their first .500 season."

Once again, though, Warde prevailed. Senior halfback Ken Aiello exploded for 115 yards and two touchdowns in the second half to lead the Eagles to a 28-18 come-from-behind victory over the Friars in the 1973 Thanksgiving Day tussle. Aiello's fourth-quarter scoring runs of 11 and 54 yards erased an 18-14 Friar lead as the losers frittered away an opportunity to notch their first win in this Turkey Day series.

Aiello, who finished with 155 yards on the ground, was awarded the Most Valuable Player for Warde, while Kolbe halfback Ken Iassogna, who churned up 120 yards in 18 carries and scored a touchdown, was the Frairs' recipient.

"The Kolbe effort should rank as one of its strongest in this series as the Friars were in full command until the Crimson Eagles mounted a ferocious running attack in the second half to overpower the opposition," the newspaper article stated. Jim DelVecchio ran for a 74-yard touchdown in the third quarter for the victorious Eagles.

The final Thanksgiving Day matchup between the two rivals happened in 1974. The Eagles finished the seven-game sweep of Kolbe by posting a 20-6 victory in front of an estimated 4,000 fans in Fairfield. Warde linebacker Phil Cerrone came up with the big play as he killed a Kolbe scoring bid with a pass interception and an 82-yard return to set up an important insurance touchdown for Warde.

Cerrone, who gained the Most Valuable Player award for his crucial theft, intercepted Jamsey Codrington's pass in the right flat as Kolbe was driving toward the Warde goal line. Cerrone stepped in front of intended receiver Ira Thomas at the 10, picked off the pass, and rambled 82 yards to the Friars' eight. Two plays later, Harold Savage scored a touchdown from nine yards out, staking the Crimson Eagles to a 12-0 lead with 3:30 left in the game.


Warde put the finishing touches on its second victory of the season and final Thanksgiving Day win against Kolbe on its next series as an unsuccessful Kolbe onside kick gave the Eagles the ball at midfield, setting up Greg Aiello's 37-yard scoring gallop with 1:03 showing.

The following year, Andrew Warde High School's Crimson Eagles began a Thanksgiving Day football tradition against Roger Ludlowe High School. In fact, Warde defeated Ludlowe twice during the 1975 campaign, marking the only time in the long and storied history of the Fairfield football rivalry that one school swept two games in the same year against the other. As for Kolbe, it no longer fields a high school football team.

Paul

Thursday, November 16, 2017

Warde Looks to Extend Winning Streak Against Rival Ludlowe in Annual Thanksgiving Day Football Game

The Thanksgiving Day football rivalry game between the Warde Mustangs and Ludlowe Falcons has become a one-sided affair. Warde ran its Turkey Day winning streak to four games and has claimed six of the last seven contests against its crosstown rival after a convincing 41-20 victory last year at the Mustangs' gridiron. The game wasn't even that close after Warde jumped to a 34-0 lead in the second half.

Warde will travel cross-town and visit Fairfield Ludlowe High School one week from today at Taft Field. The host Falcons are in the midst of an abysmal season, and the visitors from Melville Avenue are hoping to capitalize once again.


Warde has outscored Ludlowe by a 147 to 67 margin over the last four games and now leads the modern-day series, eight games to four. The longest winning streak in the history of the rivalry dates back to the last five games of the original series when Andrew Warde won every Thanksgiving Day game against Roger Ludlowe from 1980 through 1984.

Cumulatively, Andrew Warde/Fairfield Warde owns a 15-7 cushion against Roger Ludlowe/Fairfield Ludlowe. Even more impressive is the fact that Warde is 22-7 in Thanksgiving Day games dating back to a 7-0 record against Kolbe High School of Bridgeport.

Andrew Warde Crimson Eagles vs. Roger Ludlowe Flying Tigers
1975 to 1984
(Series: Warde 7 wins, Ludlowe 3 wins)
1975: Warde Eagles 28, Ludlowe Tigers 6
1976: Warde Eagles 20, Ludlowe Tigers 13
1977: Ludlowe Tigers 20, Warde Eagles 13
1978: Ludlowe Tigers 35, Warde Eagles 6
1979: Ludlowe Tigers 41, Warde Eagles 25
1980: Warde Eagles 17, Ludlowe Tigers 14
1981: Warde Eagles 14, Ludlowe Tigers 8
1982: Warde Eagles 23, Ludlowe Tigers 0
1983: Warde Eagles 26, Ludlowe Tigers 6
1984: Warde Eagles 16, Ludlowe Tigers 13

Fairfield Warde Mustangs vs. Fairfield Ludlowe Falcons
2005 to 2016
(Series: Warde 8 wins, Ludlowe 4 wins)
2005: Ludlowe Falcons 20, Warde Mustangs 14
2006: Warde Mustangs 21, Ludlowe Falcons 12
2007: Warde Mustangs 28, Ludlowe Falcons 0
2008: Ludlowe Falcons 10, Warde Mustangs 8
2009: Ludlowe Falcons 24, Warde Mustangs 14
2010: Warde Mustangs 21, Ludlowe Falcons 16
2011: Warde Mustangs 52, Ludlowe Falcons 13
2012: Ludlowe Falcons 31, Warde Mustangs 13
2013: Warde Mustangs 44, Ludlowe Falcons 21
2014: Warde Mustangs 27, Ludlowe Falcons 12
2015: Warde Mustangs 35, Ludlowe Falcons 14
2016: Warde Mustangs 41, Ludlowe Falcons 20

Cumulative record: Warde 15 wins, Ludlowe 7 wins

Paul