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Celebrating Our Fall Athletic Teams: Hard Work, Unity, and Honoring God

December 02, 2025
By Katie Levis

Each season, as athletic director, I take time to step back and reflect — on our teams, our coaches, players, and the goals that were set. This fall, not only did every team rise to meet those goals, they exceeded them. 

At our Fall Awards Night, I shared a thought that has shaped much of my perspective this year:
“Learning to win is costly. Winning is hard. And once you’ve won, it becomes even harder to keep winning. Yet we continue to pursue victory because the reward is found in the journey — in honoring God with the gifts He’s given us, discovering what genuine teamwork looks like, facing adversity with courage, training both mind and body so we can trust the work we’ve invested, receiving faithful mentorship, and striving toward something greater than ourselves.”

This was our journey this fall…

Cross Country
The Boys Cross Country team capped off a strong season with a 3rd-place finish in the HVAL Invitational. Malachi Hayes earned First Team All-HVAL honors after placing 5th overall at the HVAL Championships.

Girls Soccer
Girls Soccer finished with an impressive 9–5–2 record, won their first-round HVAL playoff game, reached the semifinals, and returned to the NEPSAC Tournament for the first time since 2019.
Individual recognitions included:

  • First Team HVAL: Jemi Ndjadi, Laura Landru, Luiza Ribeiro, Grace Flowers
  • First Team All-NEPSAC: Jemi Ndjadi, Luiza Ribeiro
  • NEPSAC Honorable Mention: McKenna Haggerty, Laura Landru


Boys Soccer
Boys Soccer also finished 9–5–2, their best record since 2019. They reached the HVAL Semifinals and competed in the NEPSAC Tournament for the first time in six years.
Individual recognitions included:

  • First Team HVAL: Leighton Pelaccia, Esteban Sanclemente, Jack Allen, Eli Coburn
  • First Team All-NEPSAC: Leighton Pelaccia, Esteban Sanclement
  • NEPSAC Honorable Mention: Jack Allen, Eli Coburn


Girls Volleyball
Despite graduating many starters, Girls Volleyball returned with focus and determination, finishing 17–4, claiming their fifth straight HVAL Championship, and battling in a close five-set match in the NEPSAC Finals.
Individual recognitions included:

  • First Team HVAL: Emma Beers, Ava Austin
  • First Team All-NEPSAC: Emma Beers, Ava Austin
  • NEPSAC Honorable Mention: Cheyenne Petion, Ava Sheckfee


Fall Highlights

  • A Homecoming sweep over Wooster in Girls Soccer, Boys Soccer, and Volleyball
  • Girls Soccer, Boys Soccer, and Volleyball all qualified for the NEPSAC Tournament — the second time in school history and the first time since 2019

The CHS athletic teams had an outstanding fall season, with incredible determination, character and sportsmanship. We are looking forward to a great winter season of basketball! Go Kingsmen!


Coach Katie Levis is in her fourth year as the Athletic Director at CHS and also serves as the Varsity Girls Lacrosse Coach. Before taking on these roles, she spent four years as a classroom teacher and contributed to the volleyball and basketball programs as a coach. With coaching experience spanning middle school, high school, and college levels, Coach Levis has also worked in athletic departments at previous schools.

Student Reflections From Summer Internship

September 24, 2025
By Eli Coburn

My name is Eli Coburn and I am a Junior here at CHS. This past summer I had the opportunity to have a summer internship set up through our CHS Academic and College Counseling office at Medtronic. Medtronic is a global healthcare technology company that develops, manufactures, and distributes medical devices and therapies that is located in North Haven, CT.

During my internship at Medtronic, there were several challenges that I faced and different moments that taught me different traits about myself. I gained valuable exposure to working in a corporate setting, working on a team within a larger company, and more specific insights into the biomedical field. 

Throughout my internship, because the safety training would have taken up a significant portion of my time, I was not able to do as much hands-on work as I was expecting and hoping for the various tests that were being conducted at Medtronic. I did a lot of observing and asking questions rather than active work. It was still very interesting and educational to see how the tests were conducted and to have my questions answered about the reason and function of the tests. 

I was able to find ways to be helpful during various tests, especially one where another intern was dissecting arteries from sets of kidneys. I helped with the measuring and storing of the arteries, and it felt good to be able to help. I found my desire to be of assistance and my willingness to be flexible and adjustable to different tasks very useful during this internship. I think that these traits will be useful for me during my career, as well as eventually taking charge and doing more myself.

Secondly, as silly as it sounds, going to several meetings across the two weeks was very helpful for me. It was good for me to get some exposure to corporate life, which I’ve learned involves many meetings! Wherever I end up in the future, it is likely that I will have to go to meetings, so getting some early experience with them was very rewarding for me. 

Throughout the internship, getting exposure to different aspects of having a job was one of the most rewarding parts of the summer seminar. In one of the team meetings that I attended, one of my colleagues was explaining to the team how she had been assigned to a project with very little prior information. There were several very expensive pieces of equipment with little records about them, no labels, and the person who had worked with this equipment previously had left the company. This showed me the importance of communication and documenting your research, as this project was lacking them and therefore very difficult to complete. It is very important to document what you do so that you or others can go back and look at your research at a later point. Good communication is crucial for a functioning company, as demonstrated here.

Although different from what I was expecting, the internship this past summer was a great experience for me. I am so grateful for the opportunity to be able to gain this experience and this exposure to work life. It has helped me a lot when thinking about my future and what type of job and field I may be interested in the future. I had a lot of fun and am very glad that I decided to do the summer seminar internship program offered through our Academic and College Counseling office this year.
 

 

Viva España! Our Journey Through Sun, Culture, and Learning with CHS

June 12, 2025
By Debbie DeBlasi

When the opportunity came up for our family to travel to Spain with CHS, we could not pass it up. It is our son’s senior year and a chance to travel with the CHS group was something we had been looking forward to for quite a while. We left school all excited about the journey ahead. We traveled overnight and arrived early in the morning in Madrid and hit the ground running.  We loaded up the vans and headed for Toledo, which is one of the oldest cities in Spain. While having some free time to grab lunch, we quickly realized that not a lot of people spoke English, so Google Translate and high school Spanish became our friends. It was exciting in many stores as they tried a few words in English, then we tried some words in Spanish and we had success. (Amazing how that works when you really want to shop or eat!)  It was so cool to see the students using their Spanish to communicate, try local cuisine and really immerse themselves in the beautiful Spanish culture. After lunch, our wonderful tour guide took us to a beautiful, gothic church with over 700 stained-glass windows.  We toured the Jewish section of town where, occasionally, you would see tiles in the cement walls and ground with Jewish symbols.  We rode a zip line called Fly Toledo which went over a large gorge after a lot of walking, enjoyed our first gelatos of the trip, had dinner, then some of us went to a local rooftop restaurant to watch the sunset. It was amazing looking over as the cathedrals and historic buildings there all started to light up. 

On Friday we were in Cordoba. We went into the Mosque-Cathedral of Cordoba, which was brimming with history. The cathedral is officially known as the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Assumption. We learned from our guide the history of Spain and how the building was originally a Mosque, but when the Christians took over Spain, a cathedral was built inside the Mosque. The outside walls are still the walls of the original Mosque, but the church was consecrated as a Christian cathedral so it can no longer be used as a Mosque. Cordoba is a beautiful town with stone walls and cobblestone streets.  In the evening, we attended a horse and flamenco show at The Caballerizas Reales (Royal Stables). As we left the show, we ran into one of the Holy Week processions with solemn music and a large float with statues of the crucifixion.  It was quite emotional to see this very large float with statues of the crucifixion moving slowly through the street with so many people silently watching.  These are moments that were completely unexpected and there were many of them. Even while strolling back to our hotel, we noticed a sweet smell in the air and we realized we were walking under trees with fragrant orange blossoms. It was a smell some of us immediately recognized because we had purchased this very scent while in one of the quaint little shops during the day.

Saturday we were off to Seville. As we drove through the beautiful countryside, we would see huge black metal cutouts of bulls on some of the hillsides. We googled it while on the ride and found out they were originally an advertisement for the Osborne Group in 1956. Now they have become a national symbol of Spain. Some are 14 meters tall; some are 7 meters tall and there are 92 of them on hilltops and roads throughout Spain.  We arrived in Seville, and then were off to a tour of another beautiful cathedral. The craftsmanship of these cathedrals is absolutely breathtaking. You could spend hours just looking at the beautiful level of detail in every part of the cathedral. Everywhere we looked we wanted to take a picture to try and capture the beauty. There were statues of soldiers carrying a coffin in this church. At first, I didn’t understand what significance that had. It is not something normally seen in a church setting like that. We were told the coffin contained the remains of Christopher Columbus. In each church there were so many stories about the history of Spain and how the specific cathedrals were impacted during the shifting times of control throughout history.

One evening, as we were waiting for our reservation for dinner, we sat overlooking the beautiful water and parrots started flying overhead and one landed in a nearby tree. It was like a scene out of the movie Rio and we could not believe we were seeing this in real life. Dinner was an open-air restaurant overlooking the water and part of the city. It was a beautiful place to watch the sunset while dining and discussing the adventures of the day. On the walk back to the hotel we had to stop for Churros of course. A sweet ending to the day!

Sunday, we attended part of a Palm Sunday mass at a small but gorgeous local church. It was so beautiful to see the processional of palms as the congregation walked around the outside of the building. We then went to the Royal Alcazar Palace which had beautiful gardens to stroll through with ponds, fountains, and flowers. Then it was off to a theatre to see a Flamenco Dance Show. After the show, I immediately looked up how many calories you burn doing flamenco for future reference – not enough for more gelato… too bad. Seville was very crowded because of Holy Week celebrations and parade processions. Getting around was a challenge but we were all up for it! It was awe inspiring to see the huge, somber processionals with thousands of people walking dressed in traditional dress from the medieval times. The tradition is a form of Penitence and include small children to older adults.  They are called the Nazarenes of Spain. There were huge religious statues on floats with people solemnly carrying them through the city with incense as they went along. There were many people in traditional costumes carrying huge crucifixes through the procession. The processionals go on for many hours and people carry the floats for 7-8 or even 13 hours through winding streets with thousands and thousands of people in the crowds along the streets. Some floats have over 100 people carrying them. They are that big and heavy.  

Monday we were off to El Caminito Del Rey for a hike along very high cliffs with narrow wooden walkways actually pinned to the steep walls of a narrow gorge in El Chorro. There were some regular hiking trails that led to the wooden mountain walkways. The views were spectacular but a little intimidating. There is a suspension bridge that goes across the gorge that we walked over and then like a beautiful mirage, stairs leading us back to the regular earthbound trails! Whew, we made it! That evening the adults stayed at a hotel overlooking the mountains and the water. The rooms were built into stone relics.  It was a very quaint place to stay. The area was very rural with the beautiful mountains and the water flowing below. The students and some chaperones stayed about a mile or so away at a B and B and the boys all got to stay in a yurt on the property.

Tuesday, the students had a full day of horseback riding and electric mountain biking. The adults headed off to Málaga to check into the B & B and have some free time. 

Wednesday, we were up early to meet for a 7-mile bike tour along the coast in Málaga. It was beautiful and thankfully flat ground to bike on! Especially after the student’s busy day the day before. Later we had a tour of a fortress and then a cathedral tour where we hiked up a tower and got to take pictures of the beautiful city and then watch a virtual reality show of the cathedral in old times. We had some free time and then we went on a beautiful sunset cruise. What a beautiful way to end the day. 

Thursday, we headed back to Madrid. It was about a 5-hour ride which gave everyone time to talk, catch up, play trivia games, sleep or sing, depending on which van you were in! We arrived in Madrid, checked into our hotel and met for our final dinner of our wonderful journey. 

Friday, we met for breakfast and headed to the airport for our trip home having built deeper friendships and reflecting on so many special memories. 

This trip went by so fast. It was a great experience for many reasons.  We saw a lot and really got to experience many parts of Spanish culture. We certainly saw a different view of Holy Week then we see here in the United States. Some people commented that it changed their view of Holy Week forever. I know that it changed mine. It has always been a special time of reflection for me. Seeing the rituals that have been followed for hundreds of years, the reverence the Spanish culture has for Holy Week, really touched my heart and my celebrations of Holy Week will likely be different going forward. 

I have to thank John Naeher and Paula Greer for planning this trip. The amount of work, heart and talent that it takes to have so many moving pieces is a gargantuan undertaking.  They never missed a beat. Mr. Naeher is a combination of everyone’s favorite Uncle and Willy Wonka. How many times did I turn around to see him with Cliff bars for the kids/adults to snack on, bags of Tootsie Roll Pops, Twizzlers, Frozen Treats when it was a hot day. Then he would have fun awards at some of the dinners with prizes. Cowboy hats for all the students to wear to the horse show. As someone who is usually the planner of the family trip, I had a deep appreciation for what went into it. The other special part of this trip was really getting to know some of the other parents and students better. Students we had seen at school for years, in plays, playing sports, passing in the hallways at school, but had never really gotten to know. We got to have many conversations about all different topics, we laughed, enjoyed meals together, had GELATO and more GELATO,  and were sure in our knowledge that if we were ever on the Amazing Race show, trying to navigate Seville during Holy Week was really great training.

 

Debbie DeBlasi, PTL President

CHS Service Projects: Inspiring Change and Transforming Lives Through Service

May 15, 2025
By John Naeher

CHS encourages service to the community and particularly to the most vulnerable.

In the spirit of James 1:26-27 “look after orphans and widows in their distress” and Philippians 2:3-4 “look not only to your own interests, but also to the interests of others.”

We work to reinforce in our students' servant leadership and a desire to think of, serve and help others.

CHS has been sending students out on projects for many years in groups as large as 40 and as small as 5.  Projects have included a wide range of work; those as simple as yard clean-ups and assisting a non-profit with organizing supplies etc., to a full “mini-home makeover,” including construction of a handicap ramp, roof repair, painting and landscaping.  

The Lord has allowed us to participate in the lives of several special and sweet families over the last 15 years with this program.  Beginning with Donna in Lake Wales, Florida, who was a single mom raising her severely handicapped daughter, Laurie, 20 yrs old, was in a wheelchair and non-verbal, requiring full 24-hr care.  Our senior class could not relieve this care burden. However, they were able to take care of the many things around the house that Donna had been forced to let go.  The seniors painted, landscaped and in 10 hrs completed a beautiful makeover.  At the end of the day, we took a photo of the class with Donna and her daughter in front of the newly beautified house. We presented a copy to Donna before we left, just as a little reminder of the kids who wanted to bless her.  I needed to stop back at the house a few days later to finish some minor details.  Donna invited me into the house for some water, at which time I saw the 8 x 10 photo of our seniors with Donna on the living room wall in the center of many family photos on display. Donna had immediately added our photo to her wall of special family photos. We had become “family.”

Leaving Donna’s home, I was struck by the impact our kids could have on someone’s life with even a small investment of care and love in action through tangible work that they would likely not be able to do or afford to have done.

This began a 15-year-running investment in families' lives.  I’ve been so grateful to the families that the Lord has brought onto our path and the manner in which our students have answered the call and challenge.  

All of our projects have been special and meaningful, but possibly the most impacting project came when we had the chance to meet a relatively young family in Florida.  Garrett and his wife were in the midst of life raising two teenage children when illness struck Garrett, leaving him blind and wheelchair-bound.  This illness causes significant hardship and financial strain, as we can only imagine.  When I met this couple, their small house was in major disrepair and the yard had been severely neglected.  I found out later that they had been praying for help and were at a point of heavy depression and not having any idea of how to take care of their home.  As I began to let them know what we wanted to do, Christine just began to weep and thank us even before a paintbrush had been applied or a shovel put on the ground.  The idea that they were remembered and thought of was overwhelming to her. At the end of a long day of work, on a variety of levels throughout the yard and house, we finished and wanted to say a quick goodbye.  When offered some encouragement to the family, Garrett grabbed me to say, “Of course, you know that I’m blind, and I cannot see the work that your group has done. However, I can feel the joy it has brought my wife and children and I want to say thank you to your kids.”  Naturally, I brought the class over, assembled them in front of him while he sat in his wheelchair on the deck that we had just built, let him know they were there so he could say whatever he had in mind.  He touched my arm and said no, “Please have them come to me one at a time so that I can hold their hand and thank them individually”. Well, you can only imagine that as the 35 of us went through this heartfelt act of appreciation there was not a dry eye in the group.  A special day and moment in time that I’m sure none of us will forget!

This spring we had the blessing of being able to send multiple groups out to encourage and provide support.  We had a group go to the Hopeline Pregnancy Center, provide clean-up work at Twin Brooks Park, worked on prep for an historic school house project, sent a small group to Mrs. Simon’s (our Marketing Director) mom's house to help with work on her porch, returned to a widow in Stratford who we helped last year for follow-up work and sent two large groups of kids to two local families in Seymour, both of whom are facing very difficult challenges.

For the first family, we did a mini-home makeover for an 87 yr.old widow who lost her husband 6 months ago and is living in a house that they had built together 60 years ago.  The kids were able to paint, landscape, restore a small garden fountain area and provide her with a renewed pride in her home and property.  She kept walking around the house saying “I can’t believe this, nothing like this ever happens for me”. The neighbors came out to admire the work and express their support. Just a great day!

In the case of the second family, the mom is facing chemotherapy and sadly lost her husband two years ago to cancer and is now raising their teenage twins on her own.  When I met with her, she could not have been more positive and sweet in spite of the overwhelming challenges she's facing.  In our discussion she mentioned she loved to garden and really enjoyed flowers.  She believed we were just coming to help clean up her yard and cut back brush, but while she was away (she was actually getting chemotherapy treatment) the kids with a few adults built a beautiful garden with a sitting and potting spot for her.  Her daughter arrived home first and sent her a text, “Mom, you are going to love what they have done.” She texted me after she got home to express her overwhelming joy at what was created…she could not believe it. She kept saying, “it’s so beautiful”. We pray that as she and her kids sit out there and enjoy this space that it not only brings them joy but that it reminds them of the love of the Lord and His care of them.

 

John Naeher is the Director of Student Life & Operations.  He started at CHS in the fall of 1981 and began his 43rd yr in the fall of 2023.  His daughters, Amanda 06', Alyssa 06' and Abigail 10' attended CHS from K-12.  John has had the privilege of coaching several teams, sponsoring many Senior Classes and been a part of building community at CHS throughout his career.  “CHS has been a rich part of my family for which I will always be grateful.”

Recent Posts

1/28/26 - By Necie Allen
12/9/25 - By Stephanie Simon
12/2/25 - By Katie Levis
11/20/25 - By Beth Maree
11/3/25 - By John Naeher

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