Old Lyme Basketball: Boys Win, Girls Lose

LYME-OLD LYME — In Monday evening’s games, the boys beat Coginchaug 80-39 in a Shoreline Conference game at Old Lyme.  The girls meanwhile traveled to Durham where they lost to Coginchaug 58-31.
Leading Old Lyme scoring for the boys was Aedan Using with 25 points, six assists, and eight rebounds.  Ray Doll scored 10 points and Brady Sheffield added eight points and seven assists.
Justin Penney and Chris Onofrio scored eight points each for Coginchaug.
The Old Lyme boys current record is 10-1.

Meanwhile, the girls coach Don Bugbee commented after his team’s loss, “We ran into a very good Coginchaug team on a night when we didn’t perform to our ability. We were overmatched from the start, but will learn from it and get better as a result of it.” He noted that the Wildvat’s top scorer was Emily DeRoehn with 14 points.  The girls current record is 7-4.

Bugbee added that a highlight of the evening was the Old Lyme Junior Varsity (JV) girls winning their game against Coginchaug 30-28. in a thrilling finish, Alexis Fenton made two foul shots with three seconds left to give the ‘Cats the win.

Hayley Cann finished with12 points. The current JV record is 9-1.

Upcoming games for both teams are :

Thursday, Jan. 30:  OL girls at East Hampton

Friday, Jan. 31: OL Boys v. East Hampton at home

Saturday,  Feb. 1:  OL girls  at North Branford

Tuesday, Feb. 4: OL Boys v. Westbrook at home

There’s Not Just One ‘2019 Old Lyme Citizen of the Year,’ But All Five Members of the OLHS ‘Tuesday Morning Work Crew’!

The 2019 Old Lyme Citizens of the Year stand in the front row in this photo: from left to right: C. Ellis Jewett, Ted Freeman, Stephen Joncus, Kevin Cole, and Skip Beebe. Celebrating with them and standing in the back row are the Old Lyme Board of Selectmen; from left to right, Selectwoman Mary Jo Nosal, Selectman Chris Kerr, and First Selectman Tim Griswold. Photo by Michele Dickey.

OLD LYME — Congratulations to the five members of the Old Lyme Historical Society’s OLHS ‘Tuesday Morning Work Crew,’ who this evening were collectively named the 2019 Old Lyme Citizen of the Year!  First Selectman Tim Griswold made the announcement on behalf of the board of selectmen at the Annual Town Meeting held in the Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School auditorium.

Photo by Doris Coleman.

Full story to follow.

 

Old Lyme Annual Town Meeting is Tonight; Citizen of the Year to be Announced, Vote on Ethics Commission Ordinance Scheduled

OLD LYME — At their Jan. 6 Regular Meeting, the Old Lyme Board of Selectmen passed a motion to schedule an Annual Town Meeting for Monday, Jan. 27. The meeting will start at 7:30 p.m. and be held in the auditorium of the Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School, 53 Lyme Street, Old Lyme.

The agenda for the meeting will be:

1. To accept the Annual Town Report for the fiscal year July 1, 2018 to June 30, 2019, as submitted by the Board of Finance.

2. A request by the Board of Selectmen to appropriate $8,750 as a grant to a non-profit (Lyme Academy of Fine Arts).

3. To consider and vote on the following proposed Ordinance amendments:

BE IT ORDAINED BY THE TOWN OF OLD LYME, CONNECTICUT THAT §§ 43-7(A) and 43-7(A)(2) OF THE OLD LYME CODE OF ORDINANCES SHALL BE AMENDED AS FOLLOWS:

43-7(A). Creation and composition of Ethics Commission. There shall be a municipal Ethics Commission composed of five electors of the Town of Old Lyme and at no time shall more than three members be of the same political party.

43-7(A)(2). Appointment/Removal. The initial Ethics Commission shall be appointed by the unanimous vote of the Ethics Formation Committee. The Ethics Formation Committee will conduct an open solicitation of community-minded individuals and create a pool of candidates based upon their citizenship, political affiliations if any, and business, professional and personal history. Subject to the requirements of this subsection, the Ethics Formation Committee will randomly select and thereafter appoint the above five electors as the Ethics Commission. Thereafter, Commission members shall be appointed and/or vacancies filled by a two-thirds vote of the existing Ethics Commission (appointing authority). Removal from said Commission shall only be by two-thirds vote of the appointing authority or by unanimous vote of the Board of Selectmen. Of the five members of the Ethics Commission initially appointed, three members shall be appointed for the term commencing June 2008 and ending January 31, 2011, and two members shall be appointed for the term commencing June 2008 and ending January 31, 2012. After the stated expiration date of those initial terms, the term of office of  all members shall be two years, with two members to be appointed for a term to begin and end on January 31 of the even-numbered years, and three members to be appointed for a term to begin and end on January 31 of the odd-numbered years, provided that each person occupying the position of member of the Ethics Commission on the effective date of this Ordinance amendment and each member appointed thereafter shall continue in office for the term for which she/he was appointed and until her/his successor is duly appointed and qualifies. If a vacancy occurs, the appointing authority will appoint a member to the Commission to complete the unexpired term. Commission members may serve without limitations on the number of terms served.

[Amended 7-1-2008]

This ordinance amendment shall become effective fifteen (15) days after the date of publication of notice of its passage, per Connecticut General Statutes § 7-157 (a).

(Copies of these proposed amendments showing the proposed deletions from and additions to the existing Ethics Ordinance are available in the office of the Town Clerk and for download here.)

4. To announce the recipient of the Board of Selectmen’s Citizen of the Year for 2019.

 

CT Chapter of the Sierra Club Hosts ‘Forum on the Environment’ in Old LymeThis Evening; All Welcome

Photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash

OLD LYME — Will Connecticut take the steps needed now to address climate change?

The Connecticut Chapter of the Sierra Club hosts a meeting Monday, Jan. 27, from 7 to 9 p.m., in the Old Lyme Town Hall Meeting Room to gather together all those who are interested in the topic and ready to learn, share and take action.

The publicity flyer for the event states, “Climate change is happening faster than predicted. Here in Connecticut, people are being impacted by rising temperatures, coastal and inland flooding, tornadoes and other unusual weather.” The Sierra Club believes urgent and bold action is necessary and that Connecticut lawmakers can do much more in 2020 to reduce climate-destroying emissions in our state, and put us on a path to a clean and renewable future.

Come together to learn and discuss what the state can do on climate and other environmental issues, and how you can make a difference.

For more information and to RSVP, visit this link.

The Old Lyme Town Hall is at 52 Lyme Street.

Lyme-Old Lyme HS Students Achieve Multiple Honors at 2020 Scholastic Art Awards

Lyme-Old Lyme High School (LOLHS) senior Sarah Conley won three major honors at this year’s Scholastic Art Awards. The painting above, ‘Itchy,’ was included in her portfolio.  All of the images in this article show award-winning artwork by other LOLHS students at the same event. All images submitted.

HARTFORD /LYME-OLD LYME — In keeping with a long tradition of success at the Connecticut Scholastic Art Awards, 10 Lyme-Old Lyme High School (LOLHS) students are being recognized at the event this year. The Awards Celebration is scheduled for this afternoon, Jan. 26, at 2 p.m. in the Hartford Art School’s Lincoln Theater. Visit this link for a full listing of all award winners.

Lyme-Old Lyme High School senior Sarah Conley not only received Gold Keys in both Painting and Printmaking, but also the Connecticut Art Administrators Association prestigious award for Best in Printmaking.

‘Voyeur’ by junior Connie Pan.

Juniors Connie Pan, Aidan Powers and Marina Melluzo received Gold Keys in Painting, Digital Art and Drawing respectively, while another junior, Jack Conley, received a Silver Key in Drawing.

Honorable Mentions included seniors Summer Siefken and Sam Dushin for Drawing, junior Olivia Bartlett in Mixed Media, junior Sonia Bair in Drawing, and sophomore Olivia Shaedler in both Drawing and Ceramics.

This triptych titled, ‘Pilot’ is by junior Aidan Powers.

All Scholastic Art Award accepted works are on display at the Hartford Art School’s Silpe Gallery through Jan. 31. Gold Key works will also go on to be juried at the national level.

Year after year, students from Lyme-Old Lyme High School bring home major awards from this contest so, one must ask, why is the art program at LOLHS so successful?

‘Self-portrait’ by junior Jack Conley.

Adam Raiti, who teaches digital and three-dimensional art at LOLHS, suggests there are a number of reasons. First and foremost, he believes that the fact, “Lyme-Old Lyme Schools hire teachers who are artists” represents a major difference over many other high school art programs. Apart from being a teacher, Raiti, who is a graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), is an extremely successful freelance illustrator and designer.

Similarly, LOLHS Art Department Head William Allik, a Wesleyan University graduate, is a highly respected artist, whose work has been featured in numerous exhibitions around the country. Raiti explains, “We can both bring our real world experiences to the table,” noting that sometimes he sets tasks for his students drawn from work commissioned by his business clients.

‘Turning Out The Light’ by junior Sonia Bair.

Both teachers are classically-trained artists, but Allik, in keeping with the trends of those times, focused on abstract painting during his undergraduate years. After graduation, he continued his art career on the West coast of the US and, in his words, soon “figured out I didn’t want to be an abstract painter.” He returned to the East and was admitted to the élite New York Academy, where his studies included anatomy and cast-drawing.

Allik thus learned what were then perceived as the old-fashioned and outdated skills of the Renaissance Great Masters, which he describes as having been “flushed out in the 70s” with the meteoric rise of modern art. He developed a passion for realism and representational art, which were not then in vogue, but ultimately have stood the test of time, and enabled him to teach his students – in the simplest of terms –“to draw well.”

‘Containment’ by junior Maria Melluzo.

Allik points out that all the top art schools in the country are now looking again for the “traditional skills” and the fact that every year LOLHS graduates are being admitted to schools like RISD, Pratt Institute, Savannah School of Art and Design (SCAD), Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA), and Parsons is testament to his focus on teaching students, in his words, “to learn to speak the language of drawing.”

Allik still insists his students take mechanical drawing working by hand with a T-square and triangle on a drafting board, rather than, as would happen in most high schools, using a computer. He emphasizes that, “being able to draw well is a very versatile talent,” citing the professions of architecture, interior and industrial design, and engineering as examples in which, “drawing is the language millions use in their daily lives.”

‘Reflecting the Light’ by junior Olivia Bartlett.

Apart from the tremendous length, depth and breadth of experience of the faculty, Raiti notes another reason the Art Department thrives at Lyme-Old Lyme is the “phenomenal support from the administration and the community.” He comments that the department is “treated with respect” in a community with a history rooted in the arts, asking rhetorically, “Where else can you be [at high school] within walking distance of a remarkable art college [Lyme Academy], the oldest art association in the country [Lyme Art Association] and a nationally-acclaimed art gallery {Florence Griswold Museum]?

‘Portait #3’ by senior Summer Siefken.

Rick Lacey, who graduated from LOLHS in 2007, went on to receive a BFA from Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts, and is now an instructor at the college, has nothing but praise for both Allik (Lacey graduated before Raiti joined the high school) and the program at his high school. Now an acclaimed artist himself, Lacey says, “The program at the high school is truly unique in the state and perhaps even the country. Will [Allik] shows that the teaching of classical drawing methods is still extremely important … he finds ways for students to begin to understand the concepts of perspective, proportion, and composition … he really has had many years of great success at all levels.”

‘Coil Pot’ by sophomore Olivia Schaedler.

Lacey recalls that when Allik joined the high school, “There were only six of us in the whole program,” but now Allik has “Full classes all day long,” noting enthusiastically, “He is really on to something and the students pick up on that.” Lacey describes Allik as, “… an incredible teacher that can work with any student,” adding on a personal note, while simultaneously giving a resounding endorsement of the art program at LOLHS, “I’m so proud I went there.”

‘Driveway’ by senior Sam Dushin.

Editor’s Note: Parts of this article were previously published in the summer 2019 edition of ‘The Day Education Guide.’