Category Archives: Staples HS

Julia And Chai’s Olympic Story

The other day, “06880” reported that Julia Marino made the US Olympic snowboard team. In a few days, she heads to PyeongChang, South Korea.

Yet there’s more to the story than just excitement that a Westporter has a chance for international stardom.

A decade and a half ago, Julia and Chaihyun Kim met on the first day of Long Lots Elementary School kindergarten. Chai had just moved to the US, with her mother and 2 sisters. She did not speak a word of English.

But she and Julia became best friends. For the next 3 years, they were inseparable. Chai’s mother worked every Saturday at a dry cleaner, so Julia’s mother Elaine picked Chai up. They played in soccer and basketball leagues, and in their spare time did whatever little kids do.

Chai and Julia, age 6.

Chai moved to Wilton from age 9 to 11, but came back to attend Bedford Middle School and Staples High. She graduated in 2015, and is now a pre-med junior at Yale University.

Julia attended St. Joseph High School in Trumbull, and traveled far and wide on the snowboard tour. But the girls kept in touch.

In December 2016, Elaine ran into Chai. The proud mother mentioned that Julia might qualify for the Olympics.

Julia Marino heads to the Olympics

Chai said that her father still lives in Seoul. She said her family would be happy to help with Olympic planning.

They sure did. In May — through the Korean-resident lottery — they got Elaine’s family tickets to the opening ceremony and Julia’s events, a savings of at least $2,000.

Over the summer, Chai’s family traveled to PyeongChang to film several lodging options. The Marinos had worried it would be difficult to house their large group of relatives and friends in one location. The videos confirmed it.

So Chai’s father spoke with a friend who owns 2 vacation apartments in Gangneung. They’d never rented them to anyone — let alone to foreigners — but thanks to Mr. Kim, the Marinos are leasing both modern 3-bedroom, 2-bath apartments.

Chai Kim

They know what they look like too, because Chai filmed last summer, when she was in South Korea.

Mr. Kim drafted a rental agreement, and translated it into English. He also arranged all their transportation in South Korea.

The Marinos reimbursed him — and bought tickets for Chai and him to attend Julia’s events. “It’s the least we could do!” Elaine says.

So next month Elaine, 5 aunts, 3 uncles, 5 cousins and Julia’s sister Cece head to to the Olympics.

This may not qualify as one of NBC’s famous “Up Close and Personal” Olympic stories.

But for the Marino family, South Korea is a journey they could never make alone.

BONUS NEWSLast weekend at the X Games, Julia won a silver medal in slopestyle.

Justin Paul Gets His Grammy

Justin Paul has done it again!

The 2003 Staples High School graduate and his songwriting partner Benj Pasek snagged a Grammy today.

“Dear Evan Hansen” won for Best Musical Theater Album.

Most songwriters would consider that a career-capping coup.

But for Pasek and Paul — neither of them old enough yet to run for president — the Grammy is merely one more award in a year that’s been packed with them.

The duo have already won an Oscar (for “La La Land”) and a Tony (“Dear Evan Hansen”).

Justin Paul (left) and Benj Pasek, accepting their Tony Award last year.

If they receive an Emmy, they’ll not just have the exalted status of EGOT (Emmy, Grammy, Oscar Tony). They’ll be the youngest ever.

And the fastest.

Of the 12 EGOT performers, the youngest so far is composer Robert Lopez. He was 39 years old — and it took him 14 years.

The Vulture website says:

It’s possible that they could complete entertainment’s holy grail later this year if nominated for their work on Fox’s A Christmas Story Live!, which they wrote just as they did the original Broadway production it was based on. Say they don’t do it then? No matter: They can just ask their good friend Damien Chazelle to let them do the music for his new TV projects, or, really, just put their golden touch on anything televised.

Then again, Pasek and Paul might invent their own category: EGOTGG.

Earlier this month they earned a Golden Globe for “Best original song, motion picture” for “This Is Me,” from “The Greatest Showman.”

Move over, PT Barnum. Justin Paul and Benj Pasek may well be the greatest showmen ever.

(Hat tips: Beth Cody and Lyn Hogan)

Orphenians Down Under

From the 1960s through the ’90s, Staples’ Orphenians sang in the Virgin Islands, Austria, Italy, Poland, Belgium, Switzerland, Germany, the Netherlands, Romania, the UK and the Czech Republic.

Nearly 2 decades ago — after his freshman year of high school — Luke Rosenberg’s chorus traveled from Michigan to Europe. The month-long trip made an indelible impression — and sparked a desire to become a choral music teacher.

Today, Rosenberg directs Staples High School’s choral program. So when the Orphenians were invited to Australia, he seized the chance to take the elite a cappella group on its greatest adventure yet.

The 2018 Staples Orphenians

This summer, his singers will spend 4 days in Sydney. They’ll join ensembles from around the world — of all ages — rehearsing with Grammy winner Craig Hella Johnson, conductor of the famous Conspirare ensemble.

The capstone is a performance under Johnson at the Sydney Opera House. Orphenians will sing an eclectic assortment of choral music — including the world premiere of a piece by Jake Runestad.

The group then travels to Cairns. They’ll visit the Great Barrier Reef, a wildlife park and rain forest before returning to Westport.

“We get invitations regularly,” Rosenberg says of his ensemble. “But this one stands out. Craig Hella Johnson is one of the most highly respected and passionate choral composers, arrangers and conductors in the world. People say singing with him is a spiritual experience.”

Providing that experience — and all the others involved in a trip like this — is Rosenberg’s goal. He does not expect every student to have the same reaction he did, years ago in Europe — “they won’t all become music teachers,” he jokes — but he does hope they’ll learn a bit more about the world, and themselves, through music.

Choral director Luke Rosenberg. (Photo/Lynn U. Miller)

Of course, taking a group of teenagers to Australia is not cheap. Orphenians are sponsoring a cabaret with Broadway star/Westporter Kelli O’Hara, and Broadway star/Staples alum Adam Kaplan. It’s already sold out.

There’s also a GoFundMe page (click here).

“06880” is “where Westport meets the world.” This summer, Orphenians are where Staples meets the Sydney Opera House.

Look Who’s Taking The Haberstrohs’ Hot Pepper Challenge!

When word got out that Patty Haberstroh’s family was promoting a hot pepper challenge to raise funds for ALS research, some big names responded:

Shaquille O’Neal. Charles Barkley. Domonique Foxworth. Dan Le Batard. The Miami Heat.

Now the popular Department of Human Services’ program specialist’s fellow town employees have done the same.

Yesterday 1st Selectman Jim Marpe, Staples principal James D’Amico, assistant principals Jim Farnen and Rich Franzis, and former principal John Dodig gathered at Town Hall.  After a bit of banter, they all ate eye-tearing, sinus-clearing, unfathomably hot habaneros.

It was not easy. But they did it for Patty.

And when they were done, they challenged others to do the same.

D’Amico dared the Staples science department (whose chair grows his own peppers). Farnen challenged the Staples athletic department (which includes me, as Staples boys soccer coach — yikes!). Dodig named the guidance department.

Marpe topped them all. He dared the entire Board of Education — and superintendent of schools Colleen Palmer — to eat a habanero or jalapeño.

Videos will be posted soon.

But don’t laugh too hard. We may challenge you next.

(Click here for the Haberstrohs’ hot pepper challenge donation page. Video by Justin Nadal, Staples High School media lab instructor.)

BONUS VIDEO: Check out this new video. It features plenty of celebrities — and tons of Westporters too. And after you click on — please keep the ALS Pepper Challenge going!

Staples Students Fight Gun Violence

The other day, 2 students were killed — and 18 injured — in a Kentucky school shooting.

It barely registered as news.

We’ve grown so inured to the drumbeat of gun violence — 89 people are shot to death each day in America, including far too many young people — that it’s become almost a non-issue.

But “almost” means there’s still hope.

At Staples High School, students in Cathy Schager’s Contemporary World social studies class have formed a community action group.

It’s called Disarm Gun Violence: Educating the Public About Common Sense Gun Laws.

Ms. Schager’s class created a poster, and hung it near the Staples cafeteria. Each dot represents one child killed by a gun last year. This is a small section of the poster.

This Monday (January 29, 7 p.m., Staples library) they’re hosting an event. There are 2 goals: raising awareness, and encouraging a community conversation.

A short documentary will be followed by a panel. Speakers include Westport police chief Foti Koskinas, and Josh Koskoff, a Westport resident and attorney representing 10 Sandy Hook victims’ families, in a suit against Bushmaster Firearms.

The evening includes a raffle. Proceeds will go to Sandy Hook Promise and CT Against Gun Violence.

Because — far too often — this issue hits very close to home.

You Can’t Catch Will Landowne

Will Landowne is very fast.

The news about his record-setting race time is very slow.

But thanks to Inklings — the Staples newspaper — we now know that the Wrecker senior has run the fastest 3000 meters of any high school runner in the nation this winter.

Landowne roared to an 8:33.81 time last weekend, at the 36th annual Yale Classic indoor meet in New Haven.

Will Landowne in a cross country meet last fall. (Photo courtesy of HAN Network)

But that wasn’t all. The track captain — who runs up to 50 miles in training each week — also anchored Staples’ winning 4×800 relay team. Their time was 8:03.13.

The Wreckers are now racing toward the FCIAC, state LL, state open and New England championships. Landowne and his teammates vow to leave everyone else far behind.

(Click here for the full Inklings story.)

Stoked!

When people think of Fairfield County, they don’t think of a flourishing indie music scene, cool art galleries, and funky comic book shops.

They also don’t think of a store that sells smoking devices for anywhere from $10 to $10,000 — with many of the glass products hand-blown, on the premises.

Then again, when people think of Fairfield County, they don’t think of Black Rock. But that funky neighborhood — straddling the Fairfield/Bridgeport border by Ash Creek — is where Stoked thrives.

For the smoke shop’s owners — a pair of Staples High School graduates — Stoked is a dream come true. And they belie the laid-back image of their once-shady business by working as hard as any hedge fund titan or corporate lawyer at it.

At Staples, Charlie Ronemus played football and lacrosse. After graduating in 2001, he headed to Montana State University. He majored in Spanish, snowboarded, then spent more than a decade in the New York restaurant world.

Zac Weiner — one year younger — was a Staples wrestler. At 14, he worked in a fish market. He went on to Chef’s Table and Bobby Q’s, before managing several Starbucks locations.

They did not know each other in high school. But their paths crossed in the restaurant industry. Jointly, they had an idea: open a head shop.

“The stigma around cannabis is changing,” Ronemus says. “Utopia (in Norwalk) has sold glass pipes and paraphernalia for 30 years. We thought there’s an opportunity now for more players in the game.”

Zac Weiner (left) and Charlie Ronemus, in front of a mural in their store.

Black Rock was a natural location. Weiner — a longtime resident — loves its ethnic, culinary and socio-economic diversity.

“People here are passionate about everything,” he says. “And it’s neighborly. Everyone walks.”

The pair researched every head shop in Connecticut. They realized they had a chance to bring their hospitality background — high on service, professionalism, and creating a welcoming environment — to a market segment that has been marginalized for decades.

Weiner — an ardent fisherman — learned that a bait shop was moving. He and Ronemus snagged the space. Stoked opened in July of 2014.

Downstairs, there’s a large floor filled with smoking devices: hand pipes, water pipes, vaporizers and more.

A variety of smoking devices fill the ground floor of Stoked.

The owners are very careful about their products. “We sell pipes for legal purposes only,” Ronemus explains. For most people, that means smoking tobacco and herbs. Medical marijuana users who want to know how to use the devices must show their card.

For everyone, Stoked’s staff provides education missing in other head shops. They ask questions like: Will you use this at home, or is it portable? Do you want something artistic? And of course: What’s your price range?

Customers come “from all walks of life,” Weiner says. No one under 18 can enter the store. But every age is represented. “We have people using walkers,” he notes.

Occasionally, parents come with a smoking device they’ve found in their teenager’s room. Ronemus and Weiner explain what it is, and offer advice on how to talk to kids about it.

Upstairs is a glass-blowing studio. Nationally known artists give demonstrations. Stoked offers classes, and rents space to glass artists. They create smoking devices — but also objects like pendants and marbles that have nothing to do with smoking.

This hand-blown glass rainbow bear rig (enlargement shown on right) sold for $6,000.

The owners rely on guerrilla marketing. They hand out Stoked t-shirts, sweatshirts, hats, lighters, matches, coasters and stickers. They’re all over Instagram.

Ronemus and Weiner are passionate about Stoked. They love the service they provide downstairs, and their glass-blowing studio above.

They know their career paths are not typical for Staples students. But they want “06880” readers to know that’s fine.

“In high school I kept hearing about 4 years of college, then a master’s,” Ronemus says. “I wasn’t able to fall in line. But I’m really proud of what we’ve accomplished.”

It’s a ton of work — “7 days a week, for 4 years,” he says. “Still, I wake up every morning excited.”

In high school, Weiner collected glass art. However, he says, “people didn’t make me feel good about it.”

Now though, he’s made a career of glass. “I’m glad I didn’t stray from that,” he notes with satisfaction.

“If a kid in high school wants to do something with their life that’s not mainstream, or goes against what society says: Don’t be deterred,” Weiner advises.

Instead: Get stoked!

“Coach P” Leaves Staples

Marce Petroccio — one of the most successful coaches in Connecticut football history — made history today.

In a somber meeting, he told his Staples football team that he’s leaving. His new team is FCIAC rival Trumbull.

It’s also Petroccio’s alma mater. And, he says, Trumbull is the only school he’d leave Staples for.

Marce “Coach P” Petroccio

When “Coach P” arrived in Westport 25 years ago — at  31 years old — he took over a moribund program. Within 4 years the Wreckers won their first FCIAC title since Paul Lane’s in 1975. They also reached the state championship game.

Since then, Staples has appeared in 8 state finals. They won 3 titles — in 2002 (Class MM), 2004 and ’05 (Class L). They won 5 FCIAC titles in 7 appearances too.

Petroccio — also a popular physical education teacher at the high school — says he would not leave Westport for any other job. He calls Staples “a great community (with) a great administration and great kids.”

A search for a new head football coach will begin soon.

Haberstrohs’ Hot Pepper Challenge Picks Up Steam

Everyone in Westport knows Patty Haberstroh. The energetic, creative and deeply committed family programs specialist for the town’s Human Services Department ensures that our neediest neighbors get the resources they deserve — and that those of us with the ability to help get a chance to do so.

Patty Haberstroh

Patty’s husband Charlie is embedded in town too: He chairs the Parks and Recreation Commission. Patty’s sons starred on Staples High School sports teams, and retain strong ties to their hometown.

So when Patty was diagnosed 3 months ago with ALS, they did what the Haberstroh family always does: got together, and got to work.

The result is the #ALSPepperChallenge. It’s like the 2014 Ice Bucket Challenge — except much, much hotter.

The idea is to eat a hot pepper — habanero or jalapeno — on camera. You’re filmed making a pledge to  help find a cure. Then you nominate someone (or many others) to do the same.

A project like this needs a kick start. Patty’s son Tom — a longtime ESPN basketball writer — was just the man. His sports and media connections pushed the #ALSPepperChallenge into overdrive.

Since Christmas, Shaquille O’Neal and Charles Barkley have eaten peppers — and raised funds. So have Domonique Foxworth, Dan Le Batard and the Miami Heat.

Oh, yeah: The Staples boys basketball team is doing it too.

Media giants like USA Today and People magazine covered Patty’s #ALSPepperChallenge.

“I’d never eaten a habanero, and I never want to again. But I’ll eat it a thousand more times if it means my mother and others living with ALS can kick this horrible disease,” Tom told People.

“There is no effective treatment for ALS. There is no cure. Anything we can do to change that, we’re going to try.”

(If you’re wondering: Why hot peppers? There are few things that make you feel more alive than eating one.)

Patty has been buoyed by support from friends, her sons’ and daughter’s friends, and complete strangers.

The average life span after diagnosis is 3 to 5 years. “I’m fighting against time here,” Patty said.

“I pray that these hot pepper eaters are raising enough money to find a cure for me and others before it’s too late.”

Anyone who knows Patty Haberstroh — and in Westport, that’s all of us — knows she is not sitting back, feeling sorry for herself.

She told People: “The adage to live each day fully has never rung more true to me. I’m saying to people that I’m lucky in that you often wish in a memorial service that the person who has passed away could hear the wonderful things being said about them. I am reading and seeing those things said while I’m very much here!”

The accolades will continue.

As will the hot pepper-eating, video-making and fundraising — in Westport, and around the world.

(For more information — and the donation page — click here.)

Suzanne Sherman: Sing Daily!

Suzanne Sherman Propp loves to sing.

At Staples High School, the 1981 graduate sang in the Orphenians and choir. (She also played violin in the chamber orchestra, acted in Players, and was a cheerleader. She does not realize there are only 24 hours in a day.)

At Colgate University — where she majored in music and English — Suzanne led the a cappella Swinging ‘Gates group (and continued to play violin).

She then spent a year in Utah, working at an Alta ski lodge in the bar, at the front desk, and playing music.

Back in Westport, she accompanied herself on guitar at coffeehouses like Grassroots.

Suzanne went on to earn an MBA at Columbia University — and leveraged it to work in the music industry. She worked in new business development for a record label, and for Mark Spector — a Westport resident who was Joan Baez’s manager.

A casual conversation with 3 of her former Staples teachers — Dave Harrison, Dick Leonard and Phil Woodruff — at a Christmas carol sing (!) inspired her to change careers. They wondered why she wasn’t teaching.

Suzanne was certified in 1998. The next year she was hired to be Greens Farms Elementary School’s (surprise!) music teacher. She’s been there ever since.

Suzanne Sherman Propp

Suzanne’s more-than-24-hour days — which included raising 2 children — leave her plenty of time to spend on her newest project: Sing Daily!

Every day, Suzanne picks a song. She posts it on her website, and emails it to subscribers. After (hopefully) warming up their voices, everyone is invited to sing her Song of the Day.

“Singing makes you feel better,” Suzanne explains. “It livens your spirit. I see it every day in school. It’s been proven by studies. Everybody should sing every day!”

Suzanne Sherman Propp (center, in back wearing a hat) with young singers.

But — the morning shower aside — we don’t really know what or where to sing. And — lacking Suzanne’s beautiful voice — most of us are intimidated belting out a tune.

So Suzanne helps us along. She’s curated a varied list. There’s “Home on the Range,” and the Black Eyed Peas’ “Where is the Love?”

Every genre is represented. There are songs by Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong, Pete Townshend, the Indigo Girls, Herman’s Hermits, Billy Joel and (of course) Joan Baez. She includes a few original songs too, but downplays their importance. “I’m not trying to sell anything,” Suzanne notes.

Sometimes there are obvious tie-ins. On her husband Peter’s birthday, Suzanne wrote a special song for him. (Of course — why not?! — she also created an accompanying YouTube video).

She’ll celebrate holidays and special occasions. But sometimes, they’ll be secret. For example, the Greens Farms principal loves “Bridge Over Troubled Water.” That will be the Song of the Day on his birthday — though no one will know why.

Suzanne welcomes suggestions. “There are 365 days in a year. That’s a lot of songs!” she says.

She launched her project without a lot of publicity. Still, it’s found plenty of fans. One is her mother, Ruth Sherman. “She’s not a singer,” Suzanne says. “But she loves it!”

That’s the whole idea. You don’t have to be a singer. You just have to sing.

Actually, I’m wrong.

“Everyone is a singer!” Suzanne insists. “Try it. Your life will change!”

(Click here for Suzanne Sherman Propp’s Sing Daily! website.)