Longstanding Foundation Gives Almost Half a Million Dollars to College Students From Lyme, Old Lyme

The MacCurdy Salisbury Educational Foundation recently awarded grants to 26 students. Standing, left to right: Manu Geronimo, Caleb Todzia, Mason Freer, Simon Karpinski, Ryan Shapiro, Micah Bass, Chloe Datum, Thomas Kabel, Tabitha Colwell, Erin Durant, Lily Esposito, Samantha Fiske and Paige Phaneuf. Seated, left to right: Abigail Greene, Abby Griffith, Audrey Spiegel, Nola Slubowski and Ada LaConti. Award recipients not pictured:
Gloria Conley, Caeli Edmed, Grace Ferman, Christopher Gibbons, Lana Lopes, Elias Sahadi, Kelly Sheehan and Charlotte Tinniswood.

LYME/OLD LYME—On June 17, the MacCurdy Salisbury Educational Foundation honored 26 graduating seniors during a reception at the Lyme Art Association.

Foundation President Fred Behringer said there are 94 students from Lyme and Old Lyme currently receiving grants through the program. The awards continue for all four years of college, trade school, or other post-high school training, as long as GPA and Lyme-Old Lyme residency requirements are met.

Total awards amount to $448,500 for the 2025-26 academic year, according to Behringer.

Behringer said grants for this year’s graduating seniors come in at $118,100.

The grants are based on need.

Evelyn MacCurdy Salisbury established the foundation in 1893.

W.E.S. Griswold Award recipient Simon Karpinski, right, and Willis Umberger Award recipient Ryan Shapiro were honored June 17.

Three students also earned $500 special achievement awards.

Simon Karpinski, who will be attending Harvard University, received the W.E.S. Griswold Award. Incoming Columbia University student Ryan Shapiro received the Willis Umberger Award. Caeli Edmed was awarded the Rowland Ballek Leadership Scholarship for a student who has demonstrated leadership in the school and community by organizing, mobilizing or inspiring others. Edmed will attend Yale.

The special awards honor Bill Griswold, president of the foundation from 1965 to 1992; Willis Umberger, secretary/treasurer from 1966 to 1986; and Rowland Ballek, president for 20 years until he retired in 2022.

Lyme-Old Lyme MS ‘Eco Warriors’ Go Into Trenches at Food Share Garden

Members of the Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School Eco Warriors club visit the Lyme-Old Lyme Food Share Garden at Town Woods Park to learn more about the group that they help support through lessons learned in the middle school greenhouse.

LYME/OLD LYME–A partnership between the Lyme-Old Lyme Food Share Garden (LOLFSG) and Lyme-Old Lyme (LOL) Schools continued last week as a group of “Eco Warriors” descended on the garden at Town Woods Park in Old Lyme. 

Lyme-Old Lyme Food Share Garden Board Member Peter Hunt said the members of the LOL Middle School Eco Warriors club were given a tour of the food share and pollinator garden. They also helped roll up row cover in the cabbage patch to help prevent the cabbage from overheating and bolting during a hot spell as the plants enter their final weeks of maturation.

The visit stemmed from last year’s joint effort to restore the greenhouse at the middle school to benefit the schools and wider community. A fundraising push by the LOLFSG yielded $8,000 in donations from the community and the statewide SustainableCT initiative. 

Eco Warriors uncover cabbage in the Lyme-Old Lyme Food Share Garden at Town Woods Park.

The project included replacement of polycarbonate panels on the roof, sides and gable end of the greenhouse. Exhaust fans, shutters, and vents were added, along with an irrigation system and hydroponic tower. 

Hunt said the Eco Warriors were especially interested in where the crops go after harvesting. All produce is donated to local free food distribution programs in Old Lyme and New London County.

Local Students Make Dean’s Lists Across Country

We are pleased to publish news about local students who have achieved academic honors.  These announcements are sent to us by the various colleges and are not intended to represent a comprehensive list.

Please feel free to submit additional college news of local students to editor@LymeLine.com.

Congratulations to these students who made the spring 2025 Dean’s List at their respective colleges and universities: 

College of Charleston, South Carolina

Old Lyme

Stephanie Mauro 

Timothy O’Brien

College of William and Mary, Virginia

Old Lyme 

Will Larson

Margaret Rommel

Eastern Connecticut State University

Old Lyme

Francette Donato 

Keara Ward

Ciara Klimaszewski

Ryder Goss

Charlie Sahadi 

Megan Loflin

Abby Hale

Ashley Thompson

Fairfield University, Connecticut

Lyme

Angus Griffin

Old Lyme 

Alexa Aldi

Benjamin Kelly

Hofstra University, N.Y.

Old Lyme

Grady Lacourciere

Quinnipiac University, Connecticut

Old Lyme

Patrick Flanagan
 Lillian Herrera
 Regan Kaye

Stonehill College, Massachusetts

Old Lyme

Emmerson Kaye

Southern Connecticut State University

Old Lyme

Jenna Schauder

Katie Curylo

Caleigh O’Neil

Ryan Zbierski

University of Alabama

Old Lyme

Kelly Walsh

University of Hartford

Lyme

Leslie Farrell

Old Lyme

Grace Phaneuf

University of Rhode Island

Old Lyme

Emily Almada

John Almy

Ava Brinkerhoff 

Lily Grow

Bella Hine

Ali Kelley

Sophia Marinelli 

Bella Orlando

TOP STORY: Old Lyme’s Chase Gilbert Wins 1600 Meters at New England Track Championship

Chase Gilbert of Old Lyme proudly holds her 1600 meters first place award at Saturday’s New England Track and Field Championship. Photo by A. Mercaldi.

NEW BRITAIN— On Saturday, Lyme-Old Lyme High School (LOLHS) Junior Chase Gilbert took first place in the 1600 meters at the New England Outdoor Track and Field Championship with a time of 4:48:33.

The event was held at Veteran’s Stadium at Willowbrook Park in New Britain.

Next Friday, June 20, Gilbert will run the 1600 meters again in the New Balance National Championship being held at University of Pennsylvania (UPenn) in Philadelphia. 

Lyme-Old Lyme High School Senior Zoe Eastman-Grossel will be running the 200 meters at the same championship.

Chase and Eastman-Grossel will be joined by two additional LOLHS athletes—Tabitha Colwell and Serena Mazzi—at the UPenn championship. Together the four girls comprise the LOLHS Sprint Medley team, which is currently ranked 14th in the nation.

Many congratulations to Chase.on her win yesterday and good luck to all four competing on Friday at UPenn.

TOP STORY-UPDATED: Ninety-Six ‘Beginner-Level Adults’ From Lyme-Old Lyme High School Begin the Rest of Their Lives

The 96 graduates of the Class of 2025 threw their caps in the air on June 12 at the culmination of Lyme-Old Lyme High School’s graduation ceremony.

OLD LYME–UPDATED—MANY NEW PHOTOS ADDED. At Lyme-Old Lyme High School’s 52nd Annual Commencement Ceremony on Thursday, 96 “beginner level adults” were prepared to be unleashed on the world.

Class valedictorian Simon Karpinski directed his speech toward the parents arrayed in hundreds of folding chairs in front of a dais filled with Region 18 District dignitaries.

He invoked the message delivered not more than 10 minutes earlier by Principal James Wygonik, who had warned the graduates just how knowledgeable their parents would prove to be in the next phase of their lives. 

Longtime Lyme-Old Lyme High School Principal James Wygonik suggested to the students that they would soon see their parents wisdom level in a different light. Photo by LOL Schools.

“Mr. Wygonik said you’re all going to seem smart in a couple years,” Karpinski told the parents. “Let’s see if I can help you with that.” 

In addition to tips on how to use the iPhone’s FaceTime function and a reminder about the importance of always having dinner leftovers available when their children come home from college or work, the Harvard-bound government major reminded parents that their kids will still need them. 

“Look, we’ve leeched off of you for two decades now, and let’s agree that there’s no need to do anything rash or change overnight just because we’re headed off into the real world, whatever that means,” he said. “Parents, we still need you and everything that comes with you. We may be adults, but we’re like beginner-level adults.” 

He asked them to be accepting of new ideas that their children will bring home as they try to make sense of the wider world around them.

That means making room for their children’s voices, according to Karpinski – and allowing them to fail.

“As we learn, we are bound to be imperfect,” he said. “Warn us when we need it, tell us ‘I told you so’ after we insist we know better. Parents, give us a chance to fall down and get back up.”

Class valedictorian Simon Karpinski kept the crowd’s attention with his advice for parents.

Class President and Honor Essayist Kaela Hoss recalled being a military kid from Cape Elizabeth, Maine when she arrived at Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School in seventh grade. She said she didn’t know then that Old Lyme would become the place she’d always want to come back to. 

“Sure, everybody’s parents look at the safety of an area, investigate the real estate market across the state, or even prioritize finding a ‘private school experience in a public school setting’ as we say around here,” she said. “But one cannot understand the dynamic of a town or city without truly living there.”

Class President and Honor Essayist Kaela Hoss joined Lyme-Old Lyme Schools in seventh grade, never realizing Old Lyme would become the place to which she would always want to return. Photo by LOL Schools.

She described some things as constant in shoreline towns, like beaches and ice cream stands. But she said there is “something truly special” about Old Lyme. 

Her experience wouldn’t have been the same in Old Saybrook or Waterford, according to Hoss. And she wouldn’t be the same person, either. 

She credited English teacher Jennifer Burke with summing it up something like this: “The small, measurable differences between each distinct town in this area make an immeasurable impact on the lives of the people within.” 

Lyme-Old Lyme High School’s combined choirs, led by choral director Kristine Pekar, sing “The Times They Are A-Changin'” as the graduates’ class song.

Salutatorian Ryan Shapiro said he’ll be taking with him hard-won lessons about not being in such a rush to become an adult. 

“Now that I’ve grown up—though my parents might disagree—I realize I could have experienced more in each moment before they passed me by,” he said. 

He said he’s been focused for years on a concept he once read about that emphasized “inward lights”: A series of personal goals to motivate him to get up each morning and work hard. 

Now, he said he’s learned life is as much about looking around as it is about looking inward. 

He cited memories he’ll take with him like going to the prom, taking trips to Europe, and the whole class getting sunburned at Misquamicut Beach. 

Ninety-six seniors listened to fellow students and educators before receiving their diplomas.

“So yes, work hard in college, and at your jobs, or wherever you go when we soon part ways,” he said. “But, whenever you can, stop to look around you. See the world and appreciate the beauty it holds. Be unique and interesting. Learn constantly, find what you’re good at, and rebel against the wrong you see in the world. Say yes whenever you can, because by the time you realize you have regrets, the moment may have already passed.”

Commencement Speaker Brett Eckhart stold the graduates, “This place is special.” Photo by LOL Schools.

Commencement Speaker Brett Eckhart, a social studies teacher, said he hoped the students would hold onto the memories forged in the tight-knit community filled with unique personalities. 

He referenced quirks among his colleagues including business teacher Leslie Traver’s “Crocs for every occasion” and social studies teacher Aron D’Aquila’s “unwavering affinity for Abraham Lincoln.” He recalled the spray and spatter blood patterns that showed up in the science wing thanks to teacher Dawn Kelley. 

Confetti flies through the air as members of the Class of 2025 receive their diplomas.

He said all people, like all teachers, are different. It’s how the graduates see and react to those differences that will continue to shape the world and the way they experience it. 

“I’ve worked in other places, and this place is special,” he said. 

Math teacher Emma Cox was honored by the graduating class with the Mildred Sanford Outstanding Educator Award. Photo by LOL Schools.

Diplomas were presented amid cheers, the occasional drumroll from the band section, two explosions of confetti in the crowd, some posing among graduates, and one shout of “Free Palestine.” When the newly minted graduates had all turned the tassel on their caps to the left and the sun continued its descent toward the horizon, Assistant Principal Jeanne Manfredi stood up for a farewell address. 

The ceremony capped 34 years in public education for the teacher, including 30 in the Lyme-Old Lyme District. 

Assistant Principal Jeanne Manfredi , who is retiring after some 30 years in Lyme-Old Lyme Schools, addressed the students for the final time. Photo by LOL Schools.

“At first glance, graduation and retirement might seem like opposites: one at the start of a career, the other at its close,” Manfredi said. “But standing here tonight, I see something more meaningful. We’re both turning pages. We’re both closing chapters we’ve cherished and we are stepping into a future that is unwritten.” 

She emphasized the foundational lessons learned in the Lyme-Old Lyme school district don’t end with a diploma – or a retirement.

The expert advised the beginner-level adults to be bold, curious and kind as they make their way in the world. 

“And know that even as you move on, you are never far from home,” she said.

Proud families cheered on their children, some of whom were featured in big head cutouts like this one, as they received their diplomas.
A mother greets her graduate after the ceremony.
Family and friends celebrate the new graduates.
The Class of 2025 is on its way.

Editor’s Notes: i) The full list of graduates comprising the Lyme-Old Lyme High School Class of 2025 is below.
ii) The spelling of Leslie Traver’s name has been corrected.