Old Lyme’s Hack Will Row at Rio! US Men’s Eight Wins Olympic Qualifying Race in Lucerne

Team USA with Old Lyme's Austin Hack stands with the second placed Polish team who also qualified for the Olympics on the podium at Lucerne. Italy cam third and missed qualifying by 0.56 seconds

Team USA (on left in white) with Old Lyme’s Austin Hack at right stands with the second-placed Polish team — who also qualified for the Olympics — on the podium at Lucerne. Italy came in third and missed qualifying by 0.36 of a second. Photo from worldrowing.com

The US Men’s Eight with Old Lyme’s Austin Hack as stroke was victorious in a thrilling Olympic qualifying race yesterday in Lucerne, Switzerland.  This win books the crew’s ticket to Rio — way to go, Austin and Team USA!

We reprint below a section of a report on today’s races from worldrowing.com.  Read the full report at this link.

Men’s Eight (M8+) – Final

In 2004 the United States won the Olympic men’s eight. In 2012 they finished fourth. Today they raced in the middle lane of this qualifying final. Only two boats would make it to the Rio Olympics and there were five boats in with a chance. At the first marker Poland was in the lead with Australia following in second. But there was really nothing between these two crews with the United States also getting away very quickly as just one and a half seconds covered the whole crew.

Then going through the 800m mark the United States did a piece and they got their nose in front. The United States stroke man Austin Hack was keeping the stroke rate up and following the motivational calls being fed out by coxswain Samuel Ojserkis. Then Poland moved up as the final sprint came into view. There was nothing in it. Less than two seconds separated the top four boats and there was just 500m left to row. Only Spain was off the pace. The United States hit 41 strokes per minute. Poland was also on 41. Italy hit 39. Italy had missed out by just 0.36 of a second. The United States and Poland have booked their spot in Rio. The US time was just 10 seconds outside of the World Best Time. Poland’s coxswain, Daniel Trojanowski then stood up in the boat applauding his crew. 

Rio Olympic Qualifiers: USA, POL

Austin Hack, United States of America – first
“We knew someone would shoot out right from the start, which happened indeed. But we trusted our middle 1000. We have a great base. At the halfway mark I had no clue where we were. Once we crossed the finish line, I still wasn’t sure if we qualified. It is still really surreal.“

Piotr Juszczak, Poland – second
“We had to change a lot of things from the first race because we were just giving too much energy. We stayed economical and calm today. Once we were in front, we were confident.” 

East Lyme Public Trust Invites Community to Celebrate Boardwalk Re-dedication

View_along_boardwalkOn Saturday, May 28, at 11 a.m., the East Lyme Public Trust Foundation, in co-operation with East Lyme Parks and Recreation Department, will sponsor A Dream Fulfilled, the official re-dedication of the East Lyme Boardwalk.  The re-dedication ceremony, which will be held on the Boardwalk, will feature keynote speaker, Sen. Paul Formica, former First Selectman of East Lyme.

Other speakers will include East Lyme First Selectman Mark Nickerson, Public Trust President Joe Legg, Public Trust Past-President Bob DeSanto, Public Trust Vice-President John Hoye, and Parks and Recreation Director Dave Putnam; all the speakers will recognize the many people who have helped made this dream a reality.

The East Lyme Public Trust Foundation would like to invite the general public to witness this historic occasion.  In addition, the members would especially like to encourage the participation of the 200 people who dedicated benches and the innumerable people who sponsored plaques.

They would also love to welcome all members of the Trust – past and present – and all those who originally helped make the Boardwalk a reality.

Participants should enter the Boardwalk at Hole-in-the Wall on Baptist Lane, Niantic.  Then, there will be a short walk to the area of the monument where the ceremony will take place.  At the entrance to Hole-in-the Wall, the Public Trust will have a display of historical information and memorabilia related to the construction and re-construction of the Boardwalk.  Public Trust members, Pat and Jack Lewis will be on hand to host the exhibit titled Before and After and to welcome participants.

After the ceremony, participants will have the opportunity to visit “their bench” and re-visit “their plaque.”  During and after the dedication, music will be provided by Trust member, Bill Rinoski, who is a “D.J. for all occasions.”  Rinoski will feature “Boardwalk-related” music and Oldies plus Top 40 selections.  This historic occasion will be videotaped as a public service by Mike Rydene of Media Potions of East Lyme.  High school volunteers will be on hand to greet participants and help with directions.

The organizing committee is chaired by Michelle Maitland.  Her committee consists of Joe Legg, President of the East Lyme Public Trust, Carol Marelli, Bob and Polly DeSanto, June Hoye, and Kathie Cassidy.

Visit Facebook – East Lyme Public Trust Foundation – for more information on the re-dedication ceremony. 

For more information on the Boardwalk, explore this website.

US Men’s Eight with Old Lyme’s Hack as Stroke Wins First Olympic Qualifier in Lucerne, Switzerland; Next — and Critical — Race is Tuesday

The US Men's Eight in action with Austin Hack as stroke. Photo courtesy of usrowing.com

The US Men’s Eight in action with Austin Hack facing the camera as stroke. Photo by Ed Moran, courtesy of usrowing.org

Competition has begin in Lucerne, Switzerland, to determine final rowing qualifiers for the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. Austin Hack of Old Lyme is the stroke of the US Men’s Eight and in their first race of the contest earlier today to determine lane placement for Tuesday’s critical final, the US team boat achieved first place.

Quoting from a press release written by Allison Müller and published by USRowing.org, “Calm, flat water welcomed crews to the Rotsee racecourse on Sunday for the first day of the 2016 Final Olympic Qualification Regatta … The U.S. men’s eight won its preliminary race for lanes, holding off a charge from Italy to cross in 5:34.26.”  The US team “took the lead from Australia in the third quarter of the race. Italy sprinted from third place at the red buoys, but fell short, crossing 0.57 seconds behind the United States.”

Müller continues, ““It was good to get it going,” said Ojserkis. “The race went well, and we have some things to improve on. We’ll look to straighten them out for the final. It’s on to the next one, the one that counts.”

Australia finished third in 5:36.10, Poland fourth in 5:39.20 and Spain fifth in 5:44.80. The top two crews in Tuesday’s final earn Olympic qualification. Three rowers return from the 2015 U.S. eight including Hack, Karwoski and Dommer. Ochal and Kasprzyk return from the 2012 U.S. Olympic Team.”

The other members of the US Men’s Eight crew are coxswain Sam Ojserkis (Linwood, N.J.), Glenn Ochal (Philadelphia, Pa.), Rob Munn (Redmond, Wash.),Mike DiSanto (Boston, Mass.), Steve Kasprzyk (Cinnaminson, N.J.), Alex Karwoski (Hollis, N.H.), Hans Struzyna (Kirkland, Wash.) and Sam Dommer (Folsom, Calif.).

Hack was a member of the Lyme-Old Lyme High School Class of 2010 and went on to Stanford University, where he continued to excel in both academics and rowing.

Since graduating from Stanford in 2014 with a degree in political science, Hack has been training intensively with the US Rowing Training Center at Princeton in the hopes of achieving his Olympic dream.

Austin is the son of Dr. Gregory and Dr. Barbara Kelly Hack of Old Lyme, both of whom are in Lucerne to watch their son race.

For more information on Austin Hack’s extraordinary career to date, view his profile at this link. 

Good luck on Tuesday, Austin!  Everyone here in your hometown is rooting for you, the US Men’s Eight and the whole US team!

 

Dine at Flanders Fish Market Today, Help Lyme-Old Lyme HS Music Students Travel to Hawaii

signToo busy to cook?  Looking for a night out of the kitchen?  Here’s your chance to have a great meal and help Lyme-Old Lyme High School (LOLHS) music students at the same time.  Dine at Flanders Fish Restaurant in East Lyme on Monday, May 23, between 5 and 9 p.m., and Lyme-Old Lyme’s Friends of Music will receive a percentage of the proceeds.

For over 30 years, Flanders Fish restaurant has been serving up fresh seafood in its market and restaurant on Chesterfield Road in East Lyme, racking up accolades over the years such as the New London Day’s “Best Seafood”; the Connecticut Restaurant Association’s “Casual Restaurant of the Year”; and Connecticut magazine’s “Best Fish Market in the State.”

fish_dinnerThe menu offers classic New England seafood favorites as well as specialty dishes — and a large selection of non-seafood menu choices, including steaks, burgers, pasta, and pizza. For more information, visit flandersfish.com

The Flanders Fish Dine-in is one of several fundraisers that Friends of Music is conducting this year, in its effort to help defray the cost of sending LOLHS student musicians to represent Connecticut at Pearl Harbor commemoration ceremonies. On Dec. 7, 2016, high school bands and choruses from the United States and Japan will gather in Hawaii to perform at ceremonies marking the 75th anniversary of the bombing of Pearl Harbor and the beginning of United States involvement in World War II.

Among those school groups will be 105 members of the LOLHS Band and Chorus, the only school in Connecticut — and one of only two from New England — to be participating in the event.  LOLHS Chorus and Band members, along with Choral Director Kristine Pekar and Band Director Jacob Wilson, are busy preparing for this performance, which will demonstrate how cultures once opposed can come together to present a musical gift to the world.

There is a substantial cost for this trip, and Friends of Music is committed to raising funds to help cover these costs.  Other projects under way include ongoing sales of Stop & Shop “Cash for Causes” cards; a Mattress Sale (new, name-brand mattresses at steep discounts) on May 21; and the “Hawaii Five.0” 5K road race on July 30. Direct donations will also be gratefully accepted.

Information on each of these projects, as well as a direct donation portal, can be found on the Friends of Music website, www.friendsofmusiclol.org. Or e-mail friendsofmusiclol@gmail.com for more information.  As a registered 501(c)3 nonprofit organization, Friends of Music can accept matching funds from employers.

Letter From Paris: The Grand Palais in Paris to Old Lyme — CT Impressionist Exhibits Both Sides of ‘The Pond’

Nicole Prévost Logan

Nicole Prévost Logan

Talking with Jan Dilenschneider is entering a beautiful world of marshes, rushes swaying in the breeze, ponds reflecting the sky,  and clusters of trees taking on the many hues from the painter’s palette contrasting with the softness of the wild flowers.

Dilenschneider is a Darien artist who has recently been making inroads on the Paris art scene. She was one of only a very few artists to participate in the “Art Paris Art Fair” held in March 2016 at the Grand Palais and, in a switch of continents, she will have a solo exhibition at the Sill House Gallery of the Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts in October of this year. For an artist, whose work so closely resembles Impressionism, to exhibit her paintings in the same year both in Paris and in Old Lyme – the home of the American Impressionism –  is a remarkable and very special event.

A classic work by Jan Dilenschneider.

A classic work by Jan Dilenschneider.

For the past three years, Dilenschneider has shown her work in Paris at the upscale Galerie Pierre-Alain Challier in the Marais district, close to the Picasso Museum. I was treated to a private showing of Jan’s paintings by the gallery’s owner, who knows her well.  Then I had the pleasure of meeting Jan personally at the Grand Palais.  Thanks to the badge Challier obtained for me, I was able to enter the giant steel and glass 1900 structure through the cavernous entrance reserved for the exhibitors. 

The Paris artistic calendar is overcrowded and art professionals are scrambling to find a time slot.  The “Journal des Arts” describes the artistic events taking place in the spring as a “galaxy in fusion.”  The last weekend in March is particularly in demand.  It was therefore a real breakthrough for “Art Paris Art Fair” to be able to establish itself under the nave of the Grand Palais at that time.  The Fair has a special format — only galleries can participate, not individual artists.  This year, 143 major galleries from from 22 countries around the world showed their collections.  All media are allowed, including sculpture, design, photographs or digital art.

"Trees with broken color" by Jan Dilenschneider

“Trees with broken color #2,” oil on canvas, 36″ x 36″, by Jan Dilenschneider.

As I approached the Challier space, several potential buyers were looking at the gallery’s collection.  A striking blonde woman was standing in front of one of her paintings – an icy white and blue landscape – being interviewed by a French television team from the Canal Sat network channel “Luxe.”  It transpired the woman was Dilenschneider and after the TV crew left, she and I started chatting and did so for a long time.  I immediately liked her as a person and was attracted to her sunny personality.  Her passion for nature was contagious.

“Any work starts from the abstract, and the abstract is never far under the painting,” she explained, adding, “Each artist makes a contribution to art history.”  In one of the handsome catalogues the Galerie Pierre-Alain Challier has published relating to her exhibits, she writes, “If I were to have lunch with four artists, I would choose Wolf Kahn, Henri Matisse, Franz Kline and Michelangelo.”

In a video series named “Nec plus ultra,” produced by the “Magazine de l’art de vivre” of TV 5 Monde, Dilenschneider is shown caught in the throes of her creating process.  She paints with gusto, happily digging into the colors lying heavily on her palette.  She uses spatulas, all sizes of brushes, and even squeegees to diversify her technique.

Painting is her way of meditating, which she says she can do eight hours a day.  Even when she is not painting, she is taking photographs from trains, at airports … wherever she is, to be used in her future work.   

Dilenschneider has a remarkable way with words and writes, “I become the water, I become the trees, I become the birds and reeds — but I don’t need to tell you [that] — my paintings already do.  Living on Long Island Sound, the beauty of the world is my inspiration.”

She wants to make people enjoy the beauty of nature and is happy to use her privileged situation to make an impact.  With the help of her influential husband, whose communications counseling company is based on the 57th floor of the Chrysler building in New York City, she has created the “Janet Hennessey Dilenschneider Scholar Rescue Award in the Arts.”  This year she rescued a Syrian artist, her husband and two sons.

Although she has been painting since the age of 17, she has not exhibited her work until recently.  Thus, she has long been a hidden treasure, which now finally all can enjoy.

Editor’s Note (i): Dilenschneider’s exhibition at Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts opens Friday, Oct. 7.

Editor’s Note (ii): This is the opinion of Nicole Prévost Logan.

Nicole LoganAbout the author: Nicole Prévost Logan divides her time between Essex and Paris, spending summers in the former and winters in the latter. She writes 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 covers 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.