August 27, 2021

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The Greenwich Weekly Newspaper, Local, local, local.

August 27, 2021

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Your Briefing: Local News You Need to Know

September 11 Ceremonies Planned

Fazio Selected for 36th State Senate Seat Republican Ryan Fazio emerged victorious following Tuesday’s special election in the 36th state Senate district, and will be completing the remainder of Alex Kasser’s term through 2022. Fazio won New Canaan, lost in Stamford and carried Greenwich with 5,251 votes for Gevanter (D), 6,010 votes for Fazio (R), and 313 votes for Blankley (petition), with 28.15% voter turnout.

By Anne White

Face Mask Protocol Effective Aug. 20, First Selectman Camillo mandated a universal mask policy in Greenwich with enforcement beginning Aug. 23. Greenwich PD Car Show The Greenwich Police Departments 2021 Benefit Car Show has been rescheduled on its rain date of for August 29 at Town Hall in Greenwich from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission is free to spectators and will include classic, antique, custom, and exotic cars, motorcycles, vintage fire trucks, and military vehicles. The family-fun event will include a DJ, a 50/50 drawing, food trucks, and more. All proceeds will go towards the Greenwich PD Scholarship Fund. The rain date is August 29. Henri Hurricane/Tropical Storm Henri's path shifted east just before making landfall, sparing most of Connecticut from more than just heavy rain. Henri was on course to slam into Connecticut coastline as a Category 1 hurricane prompting emergency response planning from local and state first reponders and utility providers. Greenwich and most of the Connecticut coastline benefitted from a high pressure system pushed the storm east and from cold water which caused Henri to weaken rapidly before it made landfall. Greenwich Students Win Sailing Trophy Helena Borcherding and her sailing partner Reese-Bennett Clark, students at Greenwich

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The 20th anniversary of the attacks will be remembered in town at two ceremonies. The first ceremony will be held at 6 p.m. Sept. 10 at the Glenville Volunteer Fire Company station. A piece of steel from the World Trade Center ha s b e en t u r ne d into a memorial at the fire station. The ceremony will recognize the Greenwich citizens who were killed as well as all of the first responders. The second ceremony will be held at the memorial in Cos Cob Park beginning at 8:46 a.m. Sept. 11. Some family members of those who died in the attacks will attend as well as town and state elected officials, members of the military, the American Red Cross and local first responders. Attendees will place f lowers at the base of the memorial. The service will begin with a cannon shot and a ringing bell to mark the moment that the first hijacked jet hit the World

Kindness

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capture this in some kind of material form.’ The element of the glass towers was born out of that.” In contemplating the design, Hilton also remembered the impromptu memorials that went up near Ground Zero after the attacks. “There were these memorial walls with f lowers and people’s names and little notes stuck in, and little flags. All these little symbols were incorporated. So the towers we’ve designed, we draped them with a motif of an American flag, and the victims’ names from Greenwich in the flag.” As a setting for the towers, Hilton designed an abstraction of the World Trade Center Plaza— the black granite terrace—with two spiraling walkways leading up to it. If you were to see the walkways from above, their design would resemble the mathematically perfect curve of certain seashells; a Fibonacci ratio, also referred to as God’s fingerprint.

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EVENTS Editor@GreenwichSentinel.com

STORY IDEAS

Trade Center. Another bell will ring at 9:03 a.m., when another plane hit the second tower. It will ring again at 9:37 a.m., when a plane hit the Pentagon; at 10:03 a.m., for the plane crash in Shanksville, Pa.; and at 10:28 a.m. when the first tower collapsed. The names of the 33 victims tied to Greenwich will be read during the ceremony. In 2010 Charles Hilton Architects of Greenwich was selected to design the 9/11 Memorial. For h is desig n, H ilton d rew inspiration from the Towers of Light Memorial more than the Twin Towers themselves. “I remember, af ter Ground Zero was cleared, seeing those Towers of Light, and how ethereal they were,” Hilton says. “The towers were back, but they had this kind of ghost-y effect. They were kind of there and not there at the same time. For me, that was very powerful. And I thought, ‘I wonder if we could

Dan Warzoha, 1953-2021 We are sad to repor t that Dan Warzoha passed away last week unexpectedly at the age of 68. Born on December 31, 1953, Dan Warzoha was a local icon, a proud mem b er of t he f i rst responder com munit y, and a leader throughout the town of Greenwich. Below is the statement issued by the Glenville Volunteer Fire Company of which he was a member for 52 years, and which he led as its Chief for 10 years. First Selectman Fred Camillo directed all flags to be lowered to half staff until chief Warzoha’s internment. The Glenville Volunteer Fire Company wrote, "Dan will be remembered for all of his many notable, and dedicated services to the Town of Greenwich, including that of Past Fire Chief of the Town’s Department, and the Emergency Ma nagement D i re c tor. Da n’s selfless contributions and services to our Town will be graciously remembered for many years to come. His loss to our community, a n d a l l t h at h e p r ov i d e d , i s significant. Visitation will be Aug. 27, 4 to 8 p.m. at Coxe & Graziano with a funeral mass scheduled for Aug. 28, 10 a.m. at St. Roch’s Church.

Donovan Mitchell's Basketball Camp

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Town Icon, Dan Warzoha, Dies at 68, Services Set

By Jill S. Woolworth, LMFT Kindness is the most important character t r a it o f a l l . It c a n n o t b e put on l i ke a sh i r t for a specia l occasion because it develops through repeated daily decisions to think and act kindly. Kindness is a key quality to look for in all relationships, especially in a mate. Pay attention to how yo u a n d o t h e r s t r e a t the less power f u l or socially awkward—the needy friend, the elderly grandparent, waitstaff, rambunctious children, grumpy customers, and bad drivers—just to name a few. These oftenoverlo oke d sit uat ion s can reveal and help us

measure kindness both in others and in ourselves. When Sa sha wa s in c o l l e g e , h e r b oy f r i e n d came to the house where she was babysitting to help her care for two little kids. As she bathed the older girl in the bathroom, she overheard his kind, playful voice as he fed dinner to the one-year-old in his high chair. She remembers thinking that she wanted this man to be the father of her children. He is. Greenwich resident , Jill Woolworth is author of the book, The Waterwheel, which is available locally at Diane's Books (203-8691515) or info@dianesbooks. com) or at Amazon.

CONTENTS

Royal Ballet Student Aidan Buss in His Final Year, Page 2 The Imaginative Doors Travel Can Open For Us, Page 4 Restaurant Review: Townhouse, Page 4 Book Review: Spies Versus Masters, Page 4 Where Cristina Buccieri’s Passion For Birds Is Leading Her, Page 5 Editorial Page, Page 6 Special Election in Review, Page 7 Columns Real Estate, Page 12, 13 Section B Community Calendar Obituaries Puzzle Pages Astrology Worship Calendar Calvin & Hobbes and more!

By Christian Baldwin Earlier this month NBA Star, Donovan Mitchell, held his annual basketball sk ills camp at the Greenwich Country Day School (GCDS). Campers ranging from grades 5 to 12 had the opportunity to play the game, learn from special guests, and interact with Mitchell himself. Campers were also given an opportunity to take individual pictures with Mitchell, Adidas backpacks f illed with various items, and a pair of D.O.N. Issue 3’s, the third iteration of Mitchell’s shoe line. This is the third time Mitchell has held his camp in Greenwich and each year it has provided the campers with lessons on and off the court that will last them a lifetime. The first session started at 9 in the morning and the last session ended at 8:30 at night. One of the camp directors mentioned he had worked at various NBA stars’ camps, but Mitchell was the only one to be present hours before it began and hours after it ended. Mitchell is very passionate about giving back to the communities that supported him, which is the

reason he chooses to hold the camp at GCDS every year. “Being able to give back to kids not just in Greenwich, but in the Connecticut area as a whole, New York, New Jersey’”. Mitchell is known as one of the most charitable players i n t he N BA c om mu n it y a nd loves to show it every chance he gets. “Going back to my roots and giving opportunities to kids just like me is very important”. Mitchell says he recognizes how special it is to spend time with one of your favorite athletes, and has a deeper understanding sprouting from his childhood. Growing up, Mitchell looked up to many athletes and was lucky enough to be able to interact with some of them regularly. His father worked for the New York Mets, so Mitchell had many opportunities to be around the players and always felt welcomed. “They were so great to me as a kid and that feeling was just incredible. I loved that feeling, so now that the roles are reversed, being able to give kids that same feeling means the world to me”. Mitchell credits his time being around the Mets as a large part of truly understanding what it means to a kid to be able

to connect with their role models. When asked what the biggest pieces of advice he’d want his campers to walk away with, he responded “Stay in school and be able to not put limits on yourself’’. He went on to talk about how not only in sports but in life, anything is attainable through hard work. He had been doubted at every turn of his life, and his success now is a testament to even the wildest of dreams being met. Inspiring the youth, especially those in similar situations to what he was growing up, is one of his favorite parts of being an NBA player and will always be a priority throughout his career.


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