Old Lyme VNA Hands Out Around 3000 Masks to Lyme, Old Lyme Residents at Drive-Through Event

OLVNA volunteers gather for a photo during the mask distribution event held at Lyme-Old Lyme High School yesterday. All photos by Michellee Spiers.

OLD LYME — “I think that this was the Old Lyme Visiting Nurse Association’s (OLVNA) first drive-through event, so we were a little worried going in, but then it came off without a hitch.” That was how OLVNA coordinator Holly Lyman summed up yesterday’s face mask distribution, which the organization held at Lyme-Old Lyme High School.

Some 3000 masks and more than 500 LYSB Resource Cards were handed out at no charge to Lyme and Old Lyme residents.

Asked how many masks the volunteers had handed out, Lyman replied by email, “We have not yet done a count, but we think we gave away 2500 to 3000 masks along with about 500 to 600 of LYSB’s wonderful resource cards.  We think we had about 500 to 600 cars come through the event.”

Careful signage and directions from volunteers made the event go smoothly.

Saying that overall, “The event went very well,” she noted Lyme and Old Lyme residents had to show proof of residency to receive five free face masks per car. Drivers were directed by signage and volunteers to a pick-up station in the high school driveway curbside.

An Old Lyme Volunteer Nurse hands a package of masks to an appreciative driver.

Lyman commented, “It was really fun working with different groups in the community.  We got brilliant support from LYSB [Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau], which helped pay for the masks, and also from Ledge Light Health District, Old Lyme Emergency Management, Lyme Social Services, Lyme Emergency Management, Lyme-Old Lyme High School, Old Lyme Police and Rangers, and local representatives,” adding immediately, ” … and I hope I did not leave anyone out!”

Taking a few minutes out towards the end of their hectic day, these Old Lyme Volunteer Nurses were able to reflect on a job well done.

Responding to a question as to why the OLVNA had organized the event, Lyman said in her email, “As Connecticut reopens, face masks are one of the ways for people to keep themselves safe and help keep the community safe from the coronavirus.  We wanted to make these masks as generally available as possible.”

Editor’s Note: We thank sincerely all those who made yesterday’s event possible, especially the Old Lyme Visiting Nurse Association,  which serves both Lyme and Old Lyme.

See the Lyme-Old Lyme High School Class of 2020 Senior Slide Show!

The Class of 2019 celebrates its graduation with the traditional hat toss. File photo.

LYME/OLD LYME — We continue our celebration of the Lyme-Old Lyme High School (LOLHS) Class of 2020 today with a link to their Senior Slide Show, which was produced by Class Historian Chandler Munson.

The Class will celebrate their graduation this coming Friday, June 12, with a meticulously organized drive-up ceremony lasting from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. This will be followed by a parade through the town.

Although the graduation ceremony is strictly for the graduates and their families only, it is hoped that as many community members as possible will come out onto Town Woods Rd., Boston Post Rd., Lyme St. and McCurdy Rd. with signs and noise-makers to cheer the graduates as they drive by in their appropriately-decorated vehicles.

It is obviously requested that parade-goers observe social distancing.

Although the Governor decided late last week that outdoor graduation ceremonies could take place from July 6 and henceforward, Lyme-Old Lyme Schools retained their planned date of June 12 since another of the governor’s stipulations was that ceremonies could only be for up to  150 people including the graduates. Since LOLHS will be graduating 127 students, a single ceremony was not an option.

It has been a very strange year for these students since they have not been in school since March 13, so — as we said on Monday —  rather than wait until Friday, which would be our normal policy, we decided we would celebrate them in a variety of different ways throughout this week.

On Monday, we gave a link to a video, which features every single Class of 2020 graduate with their names. The video was made by Vicki Griffin and her son Tanner, who is a senior at LOLHS.

 

Old Lyme’s Moriarty Wins Patriot League’s 2019-20 Outstanding Leadership & Character Award.

Maegan Moriarty of Old Lyme has been named the Patriot League’s female recipient of the 2019-20 Outstanding Leadership and Character Award.

OLD LYME — Holy Cross senior women’s rower and Old Lyme resident Maegan Moriarty is the Patriot League’s female recipient of the 2019-20 Outstanding Leadership and Character Award. Moriarty was selected along with Loyola Maryland sophomore men’s swimmer Jimmy Hayburn in a vote by the Senior Woman Administrators (SWA) from each of the League’s member institutions.

The Patriot League established the Outstanding Leadership and Character Award to recognize and honor individuals who demonstrate excellence in leadership and service while participating in Patriot League athletics. One male and one female student-athlete have been recognized since the award’s inception in 2011-12.

Maegan Moriarty has rowed for all four of her years at Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass., serving twice as captain.

Moriarty is a two-time team captain of the Holy Cross women’s rowing program. As a freshman, she helped the Crusaders’ second varsity eight boat to a bronze medal at the 2017 Patriot League Championship. She has rowed with the program’s first varsity eight-boat since her sophomore season in Worcester.

But the two-time Patriot League Academic Honor Roll selection’s impact has not been limited to her time on the water.

“Moriarty was the lone senior on a team that suffered a horrendous tragedy right on the cusp of the women’s rowing season,” said Aaron Dashiell, Holy Cross’s Assistant Director of Athletics for Student-Athlete Development. “During the program’s annual preseason training trip to Florida this year, a beloved member of the Holy Cross community and rowing team was killed in a van collision. This accident occurred with half the team, including Maegan in the van.

Dashiell continued, “Upon returning to campus and attending a number of wakes, funerals and memorial for their fallen teammate, everyone looked for Maegan to be their rock and she was. Maegan, missing teeth due to the accident, was the first one to coordinate a team meeting with the counseling centers. She organized a weekly meeting for her and her teammates to meet with counseling. Recognizing the trauma her team had been through, she could be viewed as the team mom.

Moriarty told LymeLine by email, “I feel incredibly flattered to be selected as the female winner of this yearly award.  It is an honor to represent Holy Cross!  I am confident that support from my family, teammates, friends, professors and administrators at the college, especially after the accident, made this award possible.”
Asked about her plans after graduation, Moriarty responded, “This coming August I will start as a National Sales Analyst at PepsiCo headquarters in Westchester, NY.  I am thrilled to return to the company after my internship in eCommerce there this past summer.”
Moriarty received a bachelor of arts degree Cum Laude from College of the Holy Cross on May 22, 2020.

Because of the ongoing pandemic, Holy Cross hosted a virtual celebration for its Class of 2020, featuring a special message from Holy Cross alumnus Dr. Anthony Fauci ’62, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Moriarty was among 707 students who received electronic diplomas as part of the event.

The virtual celebrations will be followed by an in-person commencement ceremony for the class of 2020 to be held in spring 2021.

Moriarty is the second Crusaders’ student-athlete to be recognized, joining 2018-19 honoree Declan Cronin (baseball), while Hayburn is the first Loyola Maryland student-athlete to collect the Patriot League’s Outstanding Leadership and Character Award.

Provided the minimum conduct standards are met, any Patriot League student-athlete and/or team is eligible for the award.

The definition of leadership and character for the purposes of this award includes but is not limited to any of the following ideals: demonstrated Leadership on the “field” of competition and within the campus community; promotes a leadership vision for the betterment of one’s team or teammates; mentorship of teammates; role model on campus; active participation in on-campus and/or community service projects; perseverance in overcoming hardships; demonstration of trustworthiness, respect, responsibility, fairness, caring and citizenship.

Maegan is the daughter of John and Brenda Moriarty of Old Lyme.

 

Lyme Senior Siblings Stay Together Through Refugee Journey, Find New Community (from The Day)

LYME — For Lyme-Old Lyme High School seniors Kamber and Darin Hamou, the last four years have been a lesson about the importance of family both at home and within a community.

Having grown up in Aleppo, Syria, the siblings escaped the country as refugees in 2013 with their parents, Hani and Yadiz, as well as their younger brother, Mohammad, who is now 15, after the Syrian civil war broke out.

Before arriving in Lyme in May 2016, the family endured and fled from bombing attacks in their neighborhood, crossed the Syrian-Turkish border while …

Visit this link to read the full article by Mary Biekert and published June 9 on TheDay.com.

A la Carte: A Princess Calls it ‘Filthy, Sexy Mush’ … So Much More Exotic Than ‘Zucchini Pasta Sauce’!

Lee White

Oh, my, it was a long-overdue restaurant week and perhaps it will never be a forever restaurant week. But those restaurants lucky enough to have an outdoor space may now see our faces, and we theirs. Yes, it is still distancing and wearing masks and will be so until there is a vaccine that works and is available for everyone.

But last week was wonderful. Last Wednesday I met my friends Nancy and Andy at Captain Scott’s and we sat six feet apart on a big metal table and ate our lobster rolls and fries. I bought a bottle of chilled white wine called Imagery, a California Chardonnay they said was delicious. It was almost my birthday and they gave me a beach towel covered with images of lobster and a card saying that, when we can, we will have a lobster dinner at Ford’s in Noank.

The next day I drove with Linda Guica (masks on and all windows open) to Metro Bis. We had lunch with owners Chris Prosperi and Courtney Febbroriello, at a big table and talked for three hours. I had not sat on a table with anyone for 10 weeks. I didn’t realize how much I had missed my friends.

Yesterday, on the couch, I read The Day and The New York Times, read my book (the fifth book of the Quinn Colson novel by Ace Atkins) and watched three hours of the second year of Ozark.

I also saw a recipe created by Meghan Markle, whose husband is Harry, the royal son of Prince Charles. She supposedly calls it her Filthy, Sexy Mush pasta. I drove to the supermarket and bought the only ingredient I did not have–zucchini.

It can be made in a slow cooker, on the slow cooker part of the Instant Pot or on a big pot on the stovetop. I added a few other ingredients from a recipe from Kitchn, online, and made it. It does take four hours, but all you have to do is remember it is there and stir it a few times.

It is beyond delicious and is vegetarian and almost vegan.

Filthy Sexy Mush, aka Zucchini Pasta Sauce

Yield: at least 4 servings

2 tablespoons olive oil
6 small zucchini, bottom and top sliced and cut into cubes
½ small onion, diced
½ cup water
1 vegetable bouillon (I used chicken bouillon)
Zest of one lemon
½ teaspoon red pepper flakes
Salt and pepper, to taste
3 tablespoons butter
1 cup freshly grated Parmesan, divided
1 pound pasta (from angel hair up to rigatoni)
Chopped fresh parsley (optional)

Place oil in a large pot and heat. Add zucchini and allow to caramelize, stirring (about 10 minutes). Add onions and saute until onions are translucent. Add lemon zest, a bouillon cube, pepper flakes and half a cup of water. Bring to a boil, then turn heat to a simmer and cover. Cook for four hours, stirring when you think about it  When it is done, add half the Parmesan and butter.

About half an hour before it is done, heat a big pot of water and add the pasta. Cook according to the box of pasta. Drain and add half the mush and stir. Put into four warmed bowls and top with grated Parmesan and chopped parsley.

About the author: Former Old Lyme resident Lee White has been writing about restaurants and cooking since 1976 and has been extensively published in the Worcester (Mass.) Magazine, The Day, Norwich Bulletin, and Hartford Courant.  She currently writes a cooking column called A La Carte for LymeLine.com and also for the Shore Publishing and Times newspapers, both of which are owned by The Day.