Showing posts with label greenwich high school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label greenwich high school. Show all posts

Monday, December 13, 2010

Greenwich Bowling Has Youth to Spare

My cousin Billy made it in the paper/online! I also learned his coach is Coach Gioffre, the nicest gym teacher I've had at GHS!
[Among those leading the Greenwich High School bowling team this year are, from left, captains Dan Feeney and Bill O'Connor.]
Coach: Wayne Gioffre, head coach

How long have you been coaching?

I have been coaching the bowling team for the past six years.

Who are the key bowlers you lost from last year's team?

Some of our key players lost from last year are Jack Zimmerman, Yuta Okazaki and Nick Longo.

Who is returning to the squad this year?

Some of our key players returning from last year are captains Billy O'Connor and Dan Feeney, Sara Rosenband, Packy Hanrahan, Matt Acosta and Andrew Feeney.

Who needs to have an impact year in order for you to be successful?

The impact players are O'Connor, Dan Feeney, Packy Hanrahan, Taiel Gookool and Dom Maniscalo.

What are your team's strengths and weaknesses?

Strengths: We have a great group of motivated players who love the sport, and we have great leadership.

Weakness: Some of our top players are young, with little varsity experience.

What are the key matchups this coming season?

Fairfield, Platt Tech, Notre Dame of Fairfield.

What is your overall season outlook?

If our young players can step up early, our season has tremendous potential. We always take our matches one at a time and never look ahead to our next opponent.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Community Mourns Loss of 'Joyous' GHS Sophomore

I'd like to know more about why this happened... People are saying it was suicide... She was apparently part of a loving family, father was a minister... I wonder what was so bad that she wanted to leave this world like that?

Greenwich teenager Josie Day commits suicide
Early Sunday morning eleven-year-old James Day walked into the garage of his backcountry Greenwich home and found his sixteen-year-old sister hanging from the ceiling with a towel covering her face.

Relatives believe sometime between Saturday night early Sunday morning, Josie Day committed suicide.

No one will ever know the real reason why the relatively happy teenager committed suicide, but the family believes Josie never fully got over her difficult childhood living in an orphanage in the Caribbean.

Eight years ago Rev. Randy Day and his wife, Emily, fell in love with a then 8-year-old Josie while visiting an orphanage in Haiti.

With three kids of their own, two from previous marriages, and James, whom they adopted also from Haiti at the age of one, the couple began the necessary paperwork to adopt little Josie.

Seven years ago, not speaking a word of English, Josie came to live with her new family in America.

With help from family and tutors, Josie quickly learned to speak English, but she found it difficult to acclimate in a classroom environment since it was the first time she had ever been to school.

Josie grew into a lovely teenager with lots of friends, but deep down she struggled with the abuse she had suffered while living in the orphanage in Haiti.

Friends said Josie was a talker, but she talked about everything other than her life in Haiti.

Sometime Saturday night or early Sunday morning, Josie, a sophomore at Greenwich High School, walked to the detached two-car garage of her backcountry home, placed a towel over her head and hung herself.

Since the teenager did not leave a suicide note, no one will ever know the real reason why Josie committed suicide.

A wake is scheduled for Wednesday afternoon at 4:00 p.m. at the Round Hill Church and funeral services are scheduled for Thursday afternoon, also at 4:00 p.m. at the Round Hill Community church.

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I think the house they live in is at 3 John Street, it's the white pages result when I searched for Emily Day, wife of the Reverend. Reverend himself has no home listings. 3 John Street is also very close to the church, so makes sense..

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Greenwich Time-After a massive earthquake struck her homeland of Haiti earlier this year, Greenwich High School sophomore Josie Day helped raise thousands of dollars to help with the extensive relief effort.


This week, members of the Greenwich community are mourning the loss of the smiling, friendly girl, a talented athlete who shared her culture in a town that was starkly different from where she grew up.

Jocelyne Gilles Day, 16, was born in Haiti and moved to the United States in 2005, after she was adopted by R. Randy Day, now pastor of the First Church of Round Hill, and his wife Emily. Josie, as she was known by friends and family, died Sunday.

"That's all she talked about, was going back to Haiti and helping her village," said Nicole Currivan, 15, also a sophomore and friend of Josie's.

Those who knew Josie were stunned by the loss. The Office of the Chief State's Medical Examiner in Farmington said her death was a suicide.

"We are heartbroken at the loss of our precious Josie," read a statement released by the Day family. "We appreciate the prayers and concerns of the community, and ask that our privacy be respected during this terrible time."

At Greenwich High School Tuesday, there was a moment of silence for Josie, and Superintendent of Schools Sidney Freund said the high school has convened the school crisis team to help students and staff deal with the loss. Counselors and school psychologists were available for grief counseling.

"There are no words that can adequately express the sorrow that is felt for the tragic loss of this young life," Freund said in a statement. "Our hearts go out to the student's family, friends and teachers and we offer our condolences and support."

Josie's friends and teammates on the GHS spring track team remembered her as constantly smiling.

"I think a good word to describe her is very close to her name," said girls track coach Bill Mongovan. "She was a very joyous person."

Mongovan said Josie would openly talk about where she came from, even once sharing the raw sugar cane she brought, and showing her teammates the proper way to eat it.

"When the track season comes along, it's definitely going to be hard for everyone," said junior Claire D'Etiveaud, 16, who was part of a relay team with Josie. "We won't be used to running without her. She brought a lot to the team."

Nicole recalled that Josie loved being around her friends, and was quick with compliments.

"In school, the bell would ring for a class to have started (and) she would walk me to class, even if it meant her being late," Nicole said.

Fellow sophomore Rose Arezzini was in the school orchestra last year with Josie, who played violin.

Rose, 15, said when she first met Josie two years ago, Josie "gave me the biggest hug."

Josie had been working with Rose's older brother, Karl, who has autism, in the Little League Challenger Division, a baseball program for kids with special needs.

"She said, `I've been helping your brother play baseball,'" Rose recalled. "She was just very, very sweet, and she always had a glisten in her eye."

Hundreds have expressed their condolences and shared memories on a Facebook page created as a tribute to Josie.

Some friends said that while Josie seemed happy with her life in Greenwich, she talked about missing her relatives in Haiti. It was clear she had experienced hardship, having grown up in the mountains of Haiti with no electricity or running water, something R. Randy Day mentioned in an article he wrote for Greenwich Time last year.

Josie helped raise money to support the Greenwich teen chapter of Save the Children's Haiti Earthquake Relief Fund.

Nicole said the day she and other friends of Josie's found out about her death, they went online and designed a silicone wristband that said, "Remember Josie." They are thinking of selling them and donating the proceeds to Haiti as a tribute.

"She always wanted to help Haiti," Nicole said. "We wanted to finish what she started."

Aside from her parents, Josie is survived by four siblings, including a brother who was also adopted from Haiti.

Calling hours will be on Wednesday from 4 to 8 p.m. at the First Church of Round Hill, 464 Round Hill Road. A church service will be held on Thursday at 4 p.m. at the Round Hill Community Church, 395 Round Hill Road.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

GHS lacrosse Coach Burke Sentenced to Six Months for DUI

I knew him as a Social Studies teacher..

Stamford Advocate- A Greenwich High School lacrosse coach who was sentenced to six months in prison on drunken driving charges last week has resigned as a school employee.

Paul Burke, of New Canaan, has tendered his resignation as both a coach and a social studies teacher at GHS, effective June 30, according to the schools superintendent. Under the terms of his resignation, Burke will remain on the school system's payroll for the remainder of this school year, while he is incarcerated.

Burke has "paid a significant price for his actions, losing both his job and his freedom," Superintendent of Schools Sidney Freund said in a statement on Friday. "We hope and trust that Mr. Burke has learned from this difficult situation, and we wish him the best as he moves on with his life."

Burke's attorney, Brendan O'Rourke, said his client had a "stellar record" as a teacher and a coach who had a positive impact on the lives of his students and athletes.

The resignation "is a very unfortunate result for Paul Burke as well as the town, because he was a very valued fellow," O'Rourke said. He also called alcoholism "a disease" that Burke has been treating.

Burke legally could have challenged a potential termination by the district, but chose to resign for reasons that O'Rourke would not disclose, citing attorney-client privilege.

His voluntary resignation allows the district to post his teaching and coaching jobs immediately, Freund said.

"It was in the district's best interest to close this chapter and move on," he said.

In November 2009, Burke was found guilty of illegally operating a motor vehicle while under the intoxicating effects of liquor and driving with a blood-alcohol concentration elevated above the legal limit of 0.08 percent.

Burke also served 30 days in jail in 1999 after he was convicted of driving with a suspended license stemming from a prior DUI.

An investigation prior to his sentencing last month revealed that Burke had a third DUI conviction years ago that was wiped from his record because of a state law that clears the slate every 10 years.

During his recent trial, he was sentenced as a second-time offender because of this law.

Freund said he did not believe school officials were aware of the prior conviction when they hired Burke. "Not until we read it in the newspaper," said Freund, who took office as superintendent in July 2009.

Burke's August 2008 arrest came after an early-morning June crash in which Burke slammed his 2005 BMW into a stone wall on Middlesex Road in Darien.

Police said Burke had bloodshot, glassy eyes and had trouble keeping his balance. According to the arrest warrant, Burke had a blood-alcohol content of 0.29 percent -- more than triple the legal limit -- and was coming from Greenwich at the time of the crash. The lacrosse coach was arrested two months after the accident and charged with the offenses.

News of Burke's arrest became more widely known in March after the school district suspended the coach and history teacher just before the lacrosse season began.