New Children’s Programs Starting at Old Lyme Library

A host of new programs for children from birth through those in Grade 5 is being offered at the Old Lyme-Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library in the New Year.  All the programs are free and open to the public. The Library is located at 2 Library Lane, off Lyme Street.  Winter hours at the Library are Monday and Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., Tuesday and Thursday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

For more information on any of the programs described below, call 860-434-1684 or visit www.oldlyme.lioninc.org.

Toddler Time

Come to the Library for stories, songs, and a themed craft

The Library will host a Toddler Time story hour every Monday from 10:30 to 11:15 a.m. and from 11:30 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. starting Jan. 6, 2014.  Two to five-year-olds will delight in listening to stories, singing songs, and making a themed craft.  All this free fun takes place in the Community Room.  Each program lasts approximately 30 minutes.  No need to register – just drop in.  (No class Martin Luther King Day, Jan. 20, 2014 or Presidents’ Day, Feb. 17, 2014).

Baby Time at the Old Lyme-Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library

Introduce your baby to the library and meet new people

The Library will host a Baby Time story hour every Thursday from 10:15 to 11 a.m.  Children ages birth through age two are welcome at this weekly story time.  Activities include: sharing books, singing songs and finger plays, playtime and exploration, and an optional simple craft.  Each program lasts approximately 30 minutes.  No need to register – just drop in.

 CrAfter School: Edible Snowpeople

Come to the Library and choose your craft

The Library will host an Edible Snowpeople craft activity on Monday, Jan. 6, 2014 from 3 to 4:30 p.m.  Using marshmallows, candy-coated chocolate pieces, chocolate chips, and licorice, we will create some delicious winter treats.  All materials will be provided.  Registration is required for material planning purposes.  This activity is best suited for kids in grades 3-5, but all are welcome.

Teddy Bear Story Time

Kids from two to five years of age can enjoy bedtime stories and songs at this special story time series

The Library will hold a Teddy Bear Story Time on Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2014 from 6:15-7 p.m.  Little ones 2-5 years of age can dress in their jammies and bring their teddy bear along for this special evening story time!  Enjoy bedtime stories, soothing songs, rhymes and fingerplays as we get ready for bed.  All are welcome to join us at this free, fun event. Registration is strongly encouraged.  Register online at www.oldlyme.lioninc.org under the “Children’s Program” tab or call the Library 860-434-1684.

Builders’ Adventure Club

Come to the Community Room and build a creation of your choosing out of stackable bricks

The Library offers a Builders’ Adventure Club on Thursday, Jan. 16, 2014 from 3:30-4:30 p.m.  Builders unite!  Come to the Community Room to play, imagine, and create using our stash of stackable bricks.  You can stick to our theme for the month (TBA) or design a model you choose yourself.  After we have finished, we will take your creations and put them on display in the Children’s Room.  Children in grades K-5 are welcome.  We will provide all materials.

Snowflake Mania

Take some snow home with you with Snowflake Mania

The Library will offer a drop-in winter craft on Thursday, Jan. 23, 2014 from 3:30-4:30 p.m.  Little ones will delight in constructing their own beautiful snowflakes out of tinfoil and construction paper.  Older kids can grab a pair of scissors and cut out unique and elaborate designs from printed patterns.  Bring a friend and come hang out.

Grades 3-5 Book Discussion Group

Stop by the Community Room and chat about your favorite books

The Library will hold a book discussion group for children in grades 3-5 on Thursday, Jan. 30, 2014 from 3:30-4:30 p.m.  Make new friends and share your love of reading at our new book discussion group especially for children in grades 3-5.  This group will meet in the Community Room.  Refreshments will be served.  Registration is required for planning purposes.  Register online at www.oldlyme.lioninc.org under the “Children’s Program” tab or call the Library 860-434-1684.

Letter From Paris: ‘French-Bashing’ Doesn’t Add Up If The Numbers Are Wrong

Nicole Prévost Logan

Nicole Prévost Logan

The latest round of “French bashing” has been circulating on the internet, touching a nerve among the French social networks .  On January 3rd, Newsweek journalist Janine di Giovanni  published on the magazine’s website (Newsweek has ceased to appear on news stands for around a year) an article titled, “Fall of France.”  She is a successful correspondent covering the war scene in the Middle East, but her only qualification to write about France is that she has been living in Paris for 10 years.  Two days later, the Newsweek editor reiterated its attack on France in another article, this time, “How a Cockerel Nation became an Ostrich.”  That article, in fact, repeated the recommendations addressed by the European Commission to the nine countries of the EU (European Union), France among them.

Di Giovanni’s general message is that the decline of France has greatly accelerated under the Socialist government of François Hollande and that the “French model” of a providence state (the author calls it a “nannie state”) is not sustainable.  This is not an original point of view and the French themselves are frequently criticizing their own system and trying to modify it.  The American-born journalist has written an entertaining and clearly poorly researched article.  She backs her arguments with a mixture of true, false and, sometimes, outrageous information, which make the piece quite entertaining.

Challenges, a well-established French weekly magazine dealing with economy, and reliable web sites, such as Decodeurs.com, have gone to the trouble of analyzing point by point di Giovanni’s story.

The most glaring mistakes she makes concern the excessive taxes.  She writes: ” Since the arrival of the Socialist President François Holland in 2012, the income tax and social security have rocketed. The top rate is 75 percent and a great many pay in excess of 70percent.”  In  fact, in 2011 (that is under Nicolas Sarkozy) the top income tax bracket was 43.7 percent and today it is 45 percent.  The tax of 75 percent is only paid by the very rich with an income of over one million Euro.

By decision of the Conseil Constitutionnel, the tax of 75 percent  is not considered as a separate tax bracket.  It has only been paid by 11,960 households.  Furthermore, the tax is not paid by the individuals, but by the firm which employs them.   Finally the Newsweek journalist may have mixed up income tax with the amount paid by the employer  (including social benefits), which resulted in a doubling of the numbers.

Commentators had a field day with some hilarious statements made by di Giovanni.  There is no word for entrepreneur in French, she claims.  Apparently she forgot that the word entrepreneur is French!  Another is quoting the price of a liter of milk as being six euros when it is only 1.33.  An online reader commented that the author must shop at the most expensive gourmet Grande Epicerie of the luxury department store of Bon Marché.

From her bourgeois apartment near the Luxembourg garden in the 6th District – the most expensive in the capital – she has a strange perception of what real life is like for the working population.  Talking about nurseries, for instance, she writes that they are free, can be found in every neighborhood and provide free diapers.  In fact, only some 13 percent of the middle class can afford nurseries and they have to pay roughly 9 percent of their income for using them.

The French seem to regard such “bashing” as stimulating … and it certainly keeps them on their toes.

HeadshotAbout the author:  Nicole Prévost Logan divides her time between Essex and Paris, spending summers in the former and winters in the latter.  She will write a regular column for us from her Paris home where her topics will include politics, economy, social unrest — mostly in France — but also in other European countries.  She also will cover a variety of art exhibits and the performing arts in Europe.  Logan is the author of ‘Forever on the Road: A Franco-American Family’s Thirty Years in the Foreign Service,’ an autobiography of her life as the wife of an overseas diplomat, who lived in 10 foreign countries on three continents.  Her experiences during her foreign service life included being in Lebanon when civil war erupted, excavating a medieval city in Moscow and spending a week under house arrest in Guinea.

More Columns from Cammy

We are delighted to publish more columns from our wonderful teenage advice columnist today.  The column is designed for middle schoolers and is written by a girl, ‘Cammy’, who is middle school age, but opting to remain anonymous.  We apologize sincerely for the delay in publishing these new columns — it was entirely the editor’s fault, and most definitely not Cammy’s!

Cammy welcomes questions and concerns from all ages.  You can reach her at cammy12100@gmail.com and she is really looking forward to hearing from you.

Dear Cammy,

My friend borrowed $10 from me two months ago and still hasn’t gotten it back. I need the money for the holidays. What should I do?

Minus Ten Dollars

Dear Minus Ten Dollars,

Money problems are always a tough topic. You just need to find a kind of way to ask for the money. For example, you could say, “Hey __________________, I was just wondering if you had the $10 I lent you. I need it for the holidays, so if you could just get it to me as soon as possible, that would be great.” Always handle these situations in a calm, kind, and gentle fashion. Good luck!

Cammy

 

Dear Cammy,

My friend just got a new haircut and it doesn’t look very attractive, she keeps asking what I think. I don’t want to lie to her, but I also don’t want to hurt her feelings. What should I say? What should I do? Help!

Cut too Close

Dear Cut too Close,

Hair is something that you cannot change in an instant.  You don’t want to tell her that you hate it and have her walk around feeling bad about herself.  You should tell her that you like it.  Then when it grows out, tell her that you didn’t mind her haircut, but it wasn’t the one for her.  Maybe suggest a new cute haircut or going back to the way it was before.

Always be kind and considerate, especially when the person cannot change it.  If they can’t control it they will feel bad about themselves until it finally changes.

Good luck with the hairy issue!  Tee Hee!

Cammy

Letter to the Editor: Sale of Drug Paraphernalia in Old Lyme Continues Despite Objections by CASFY, Customers

Drug paraphernalia (File photo)

Drug paraphernalia (File photo)

To the Editor:

The CASFY Coalition (Community Action for Substance Free Youth) wants citizens of Old Lyme to know that the owner of the Bestway gas station at 281 Shore Road is selling drug paraphernalia.

We have sent the owner two letters asking him to remove his large display of paraphernalia from his store.  We have followed up with visits and phone calls.  The owner has repeatedly said “no” to us, and also to customers who asked him to stop selling these items, even after telling him they will not buy products from his business until he does.

The Bestway gas station has a vast collection of drug paraphernalia in two large glass cases displaying bongs, glass pipes, scales, and other items for smoking or inhaling drugs, grinders (for marijuana and other substances), “hides”(items used to conceal drugs), and many other items used to consume or prepare illegal drugs.

Here are four reasons to prevent the sale of drug paraphernalia in Old Lyme.

  1. Youth who see it in a store conclude that drug use is normal and acceptable. It is not.
  2. Drug paraphernalia attracts customers who are drug users, drug addicts, or drug dealers.
  3. Availability of drug paraphernalia is a contributing factor to substance abuse in our community.
  4. People who are in recovery from a substance use disorder could be “triggered” to use when they see paraphernalia.  A gas station should be a place where someone can reasonably expect to avoid being triggered by seeing drug paraphernalia.

We value local business, but not at the expense of the health and well being of our children.  Protecting our children from drugs and harm is something we take very seriously and we believe our community shares this principle.

We encourage the citizens of Old Lyme to let the owner of Bestway know how you feel about this issue.

Sincerely,

Karen Fischer and Mary Seidner

Editor’s Note: The authors are respectively the CASFY Prevention Coordinator and the Director of Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau.

Lyme Academy College Offers High-Quality Continuing Education & Pre-College Spring Program

Hard at work in a figure painting class.

Hard at work in a figure painting class at Lyme Academy College.

Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts has announced their Spring 2014 Continuing Education and Pre-College Program with five courses intended to keep the creative winter fires burning.  Open to all, the courses are suitable for all levels of artistic experience and also, competitively priced.

For the Pre-College student who is thinking of pursuing a college education in the visual arts, there is Digital Painting (Thursdays from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., Feb. 6 – March 6) and Seasonal Landscape Painting (Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Feb. 8 – March 22.)  Programs, such as Photoshop, will be used in Digital Painting to aid students as they learn to interpret the fundamental relationships of ‘real’ painting in the digital realm.  Seasonal Landscape Painting is designed to expose students to the beauty of Old Lyme and the surrounding area as they create paintings from observation, photographs, and collage.  Each class is $225 for the full program.

No matter the skill-set, anyone over the age of 14 with an interest in art is eligible for our Continuing Education courses.  Presently, one sculpture and two painting classes are scheduled.  In the Figure Painting class (Thursdays from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., Feb. 6 – March 6, $300), students will paint the figure from observation in a series of three-hour poses.  Emphasis will be placed on using effective drawing, color, value, and paint application in order to create a convincing sense of three dimensional, sculptural forms.

The Pastel Painting class (Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Feb. 8 – March 22, $225), is an introduction to the basic concepts, methods and materials of dry pastel and painting.  Students will work from still life arrangements to examine the affect of light on form, creating multiple small works throughout the course of the class.

In the week-long Introduction to Figure Sculpture class (Feb. 3 through Feb. 7, 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., $300), students will experience an abbreviated, in-depth course of study of figurative sculpture in the ¼ scale and sculpt an 18″ figure from observation.

For those who would like to use the College’s studio space to pursue the art of drawing, a monitored Open Studio Figure Drawing Class will be held on Saturdays, Jan. 11 through April 5 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Each session is $15 ($10 for alumni) or $50 for the first five sessions if paid in advance of the first class.

To register or to obtain more information about class descriptions, dates, times, and pricing information, visit www.lymeacademy.edu or contact Continuing Education Director Adam Nowakowski at 860.434.3571 ext. 127.

About the College: Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts continues the academic tradition of figurative and representational fine art while preparing students for a lifetime of contemporary creative practice.  The College offers the Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Drawing, Illustration, Painting, and Sculpture (full- and part-time study); Certificates in Painting and Sculpture, a Post-Baccalaureate program; Continuing Education for adults; and a Pre-College Program for students aged 15-18.  The College is accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges, the National Association of the Schools of Art and Design, and the Connecticut Department of Higher Education.  The College is located at 84 Lyme Street, Old Lyme CT 06371.

For more information about the College, call 860-434-5232 or visit www.lymeacademy.edu.