Quantcast
Channel: Central NY News: Top News
Viewing all 44833 articles
Browse latest View live

Police: Clay man accused of repeatedly raping victim he met online

$
0
0

Matthew Batovsky, of 99 Winchester Drive, Clay, was charged with second-degree rape and endangering the welfare of a child.

Parma, N.Y. -- A 33-year-old man has been charged with raping a female victim in Monroe County that he initially met online, the Monroe County Sheriff's Office said.

-fc8b0232370fc5ee.jpgMatthew Batovsky 

Matthew Batovsky, of 99 Winchester Drive, Clay, was charged with second-degree rape and endangering the welfare of a child.

The sheriff's office said that for the past year and a half Batovsky routinely traveled to the Monroe County town of Parma to meet a female victim he met online. The sheriff's office did not provide further details.

Investigators from Monroe County, with assistance from the Onondaga County Sheriff's Office, located Batovsky at his Clay home on Wednesday and arrested him.

Batovsky was arraigned in Parma Town Court and remanded to the Monroe County Jail in lieu of $20,000 bail or $40,000 bond.


Police: Man charged after sending threatening letters from Oneida County jail

$
0
0

Mark Thomas, of New York Mills, was charged with two counts of second-degree aggravated harassment.

New Hartford, N.Y. -- A 32-year-old man was charged Thursday after he sent threatening letters to people while he was in jail, New Hartford police said.

Mark Thomas, of New York Mills, was charged with two counts of second-degree aggravated harassment.

Police said Thomas sent letters to people from his past, threatening to harm them both financially and physically. Thomas sent the letters while he was being held at the Onieda County Jail on unrelated charges.

Thomas was arraigned in New Hartford Town Court on Thursday and remanded to the Oneida County Jail in lieu of $10,000 bail.

Police: Shoplifter gave officer phony ID, but officer already knew him from stolen check case

$
0
0

Marc J. Czternastek, 38, was charged with grand larceny, criminal possession of a forged instrument, petit larceny and false impersonation.

New Hartford, N.Y. -- A man accused of shoplifting is facing more charges after he gave an officer a phony I.D., even though the officer was already investigating the man in a stolen check case, New Hartford police said.

Marc J. Czternastek, 38, was charged with grand larceny, criminal possession of a forged instrument, petit larceny and false impersonation.

A police officer responded Wednesday at about 5 p.m. to a Sears department store for a report of a man shoplifting.

When the officer arrived at the store the shoplifting suspect -- later identified as Czternastek -- gave the officer a phony Connecticut driver's license with another person's name, police said.

But the officer knew who Czternastek was before he handed him the phony driver's license. The officer was investigating Czternastek on a separate case involving a stolen check.

Police said Czternastek stole a check from a business mailbox, signed the check and then cashed it at a Utica bank for more than $1,600.

Czternastek was arraigned in New York Mills Village Court and remanded to the Oneida County Jail in lieu of $5,000 bail.

Police said they are continuing to investigate and that more charges are possible.


Weather: High near 40 in Syracuse Friday, then frigid temperatures next week

$
0
0

Luckily the temperature will improve by next weekend and be back near 40.

Syracuse, N.Y. -- Friday in Syracuse and Central New York has the potential for a nice day. The temperature will approach 40 degrees, there won't be much in the way of snow and some sun might even peek through the clouds.

The weather, however, will begin to change over the weekend. The temperature will begin dropping and frigid lows close to zero are expected by Wednesday and Thursday.

AccuWeather is predicting as much as two inches of snow in some places Saturday. The National Weather Service said as much as four inches of snow could fall as a low pressure system moves through the Ohio Valley and spreads snow across Pennsylvania and parts of New York.

Then comes an arctic front that will push into the area by Monday, bringing with it that especially cold weather for the middle of the week.

Luckily the temperature is expected to be back in the low 40s by next Saturday.

Your forecast:

  • Friday: Cloudy with a high in the low 40s. About a 50/50 chance of some snow showers during the day. Chance of snow showers in the evening with a low in the mid 20s. Winds out of the southwest up to 15 mph.

  • Saturday: Cloudy with a 50/50 chance of snow throughout the day. Southwest winds up to 15 mph. High of 28 and a low of about 15.

  • Sunday: Mostly cloudy. A 50/50 chance of snow showers during the day and evening. Highs around 30 and a low near 15.

  • Monday: Mostly cloudy with a small chance of snow during the day. Highs in the upper 20s and lows near 10.

  • Tuesday: Mostly cloudy. Good chance of snow showers in the evening. High around 15 and a low approaching zero.

You can also follow us on Facebook or visit http://www.syracuse.com/weather/ for more on the weather.

To send in weather info, or especially photos: Use the Twitter or Instagram hashtag: #cnyweather Also, please let us know where the images are located.

Update: Burglary case against former SU football player delayed until next week

$
0
0

Pierce-Brewster has acknowledged his involvement in the Feb. 23 burglary of a South Campus apartment in which a television, XBox gaming system and other electronics were stolen.

Update: The case against Markus Pierce-Brewster was adjourned today without an appearance. The former SU football player is now due in court next Wednesday. -- 9:15 a.m.

Earlier:

Syracuse, NY -- Former Syracuse University football player Markus Pierce-Brewster is due back in court for the second time this week after a burglary plea deal fell apart Monday.

Pierce-Brewster has acknowledged his involvement in the Feb. 23 burglary of a South Campus apartment in which a television, XBox gaming system and other electronics were stolen.

Another ex-football player, Davon Walls, admitted to being the one who entered the apartment and stole the items. Pierce-Brewster was charged as the "lookout" during the crime.

But just before pleading guilty Monday, Pierce-Brewster said he didn't go to the apartment intending to burglarize it, though he admitted helping afterwards.

State Supreme Court Justice John Brunetti stopped the plea process, saying that didn't amount to burglary.

The case was adjourned until today so the lawyers could figure out what to do next.

IMG_0585.JPGFormer SU football player Davon Walls leaves County Court with his lawyer, Scott Brenneck. 

Pierce-Brewster had been promised a plea deal that could have resulted in a conditional discharge if he had completed a year of probation. But that was contingent upon him admitting to burglary.

Both Pierce-Brewster, a junior defensive end, and Walls, a junior defensive tackle, were dismissed from the team by Coach Scott Shafer after the thefts.

Walls admitted to burglary and was given the same deal Pierce-Brewster was offered.

Slate Hill Road in Marcellus closed after collision

$
0
0

People were injured in the accident and transported to a hospital.

Syracuse, N.Y. -- Rockwell Road in Marcellus is closed between Seal and Slate roads following a motor vehicle collision that occurred at about 5:02 a.m.

The Onondaga County 911 center reported a person was injured in the accident and transported to a hospital.

Time Warner Cable News reported one person was transported via Mercy Flight helicopter to Upstate University Hospital.

You can contact James T. Mulder at jmulder@syracuse.com or (315) 470-2245.

New York state schools' financial ratings: Who are the 7 most stressed school districts?

$
0
0

The 7 most financially stressed school districts.

The state Office of Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli Thursday released the first-ever public ratings of the financial health of 674 school districts in the state.

We thought you might want to know who had the worst fiscal ratings in the state, who are the most financially stressed school districts:

The 7 worst
The list includes the school district, county and fiscal stress score, which comes from an analysis of financial indicators that include year-end fund balance, cash position and patterns of operating deficits, among other things.


  1. Watervliet City (Albany): 88.3%

  2. Lewiston-Porter (Niagara): 81.7%

  3. Niagara-Wheatfield (Niagara): 80.0%

  4. Kiryas Joel Village (Orange): 75.0%

  5. Bay Shore (Suffolk): 73.3%

  6. West Seneca (Erie): 73.3%

  7. Poughkeepsie City (Dutchess): 71.7%



The best

Well, that's hard to limit to seven. The ratings gave 183 districts the same 0 score, making them the least fiscally stressed districts.

Want to look up, compare all school districts? We've taken the fiscal ratings and created a database to let you look up, compare any district in the report.

The ratings are an extension of a "fiscal monitoring system" launched by DiNapoli's office. The comptroller already has released fiscal stress levels for more than 1,000 state's municipalities. Our data report that lets you look up, compare those municipalities.

The comptroller said most school districts found to be in fiscal stress are operating with low fund balances, operating deficits and limited cash on hand. They also have a much higher likelihood of using short-term borrowing to bridge cash flow gaps, the report said.

Here's also our coverage on the new ratings:

Nearly a quarter of Central New York school districts are in 'fiscal stress,' comptroller says

NYS schools' financial ratings: What should taxpayers take away from them?

NY Minute: Donald Trump says he has $200 million for governor's race

$
0
0

Support for mixed-martial arts is growing, Cuomo's staff is working to keep Alcoa in the North Country, and is that a Trader Joe's in DeWitt?

SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- Friday, it's a pleasure to see you. The snow's falling lightly and the week's end is in sight. Hope your holiday weekend is safe and fun.

U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand will speak at 2:30 p.m. today at Syracuse University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs about more equitable pay for women in the workforce. Gov. Andrew Cuomo is in New York City today. Mayor Stephanie Miner's public inauguration is Saturday at Clinton Square; her fundraising ball is Saturday night at Hancock International Airport.

Here are your headlines:

Donald Trump told the Buffalo News he could put as much as $200 million of his own money into challenging Cuomo, who has $33 million in campaign funds. Then, the mogul compared his potential success at the gubernatorial race to his famous television show. "If I ran, it's a race that absolutely could be won," Trump said. "When I started 'The Apprentice' - 10 years ago now - everybody said no. It became the No. 1 show on television."

Forty-five percent of Cuomo's $7 million haul in the last six months came from just 242 donors, according to the New York Public Interest Research Group.

Wal-Mart donates $75,000 to Republican senators after tax credits for employers paying low-wage workers became part of last year's minimum wage increase.

SU Arena update: In case you missed it, Syracuse University has a feasibility study -- half of which was paid for by the Syracuse Visitor and Convention Bureau -- on the proposed project that it isn't sharing with Mayor Stephanie Miner. SU's consultant on the project met with Miner at city hall Thursday, but her questions remain.

Cuomo's staff says if Alcoa does, in fact, leave New York the aluminum producer will owe taxpayers for failing to live up to employment numbers in exchange for a deal for cheaper energy.

While sales tax revenues are soaring Downstate, Broome and Tioga counties are seeing deep declines.

Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli released a report this week on schools' finances. Bottom line: scores of districts are in trouble.

Public support for mixed-martial arts is growing.

Cuomo still has no plans to call for special elections to fill 11 empty legislative seats before this fall's elections.

New York's Department of Transportation opened an Interstate 81 office in Syracuse.

Wegmans drops to 12th best place to work, down from No. 5.

And look out Wegmans -- is that Trader Joe's coming to DeWitt?

Out of $1.1 trillion, what does Central New York get? This.

Tweet of the Day



What's open, closed on Martin Luther King Jr. Day

$
0
0

Monday is Martin Luther King, Jr. day. Here's what's open, closed.

Here's a list of what will be open and closed today for Martin Luther King Jr. day.

Banks: Closed.

Financial markets: Closed.

Government offices: City, county, state and federal offices are closed.

Libraries: The county's central library and all city branches are closed. Call suburban branches for schedules.

Mail: Post offices are closed.

Parking: Parking at city meters is free.

Shopping malls: Carousel Center, Great Northern Mall and ShoppingTown Mall will be open regular hours.

Trash collection: City trash pickup will be a day late. Other municipal and private haulers may work on a different schedule.

Centro: Will operate on a regular schedule. For information, call 442-3400

Australian soldier Paul McKay's death on NY mountain peak ruled a suicide

$
0
0

The body of the army captain was found Wednesday on Scarface Mountain, two weeks after he went missing New Year's Eve.

Australian army Capt. Paul J. McKay, missing since New Year's Eve in the Adirondacks, died by suicide on the mountain where his body was found Wednesday, the Essex County coroner determined.

-94b4239a0806b361.jpgPaul McKay 
Coroner Francis Whitelaw made the suicide ruling after an autopsy Thursday that determined that McKay died from arrhythmia -- irregular heartbeat -- due to hypothermia, the Plattsburgh Press-Republican reported.

Forest rangers found McKay's body Wednesday near the top of Scarface Mountain, a 3,088-foot peak about 3 miles southwest of Lake Placid, state police said in a news release.

Saranac Lake Police Chief Bruce Nason said the remains were between 400 feet and 500 feet off the trail. McKay had no shelter equipment with him, Nason said.

"He was laying there, and he had a blanket on himself," Nason told the Adirondack Daily Enterprise. "He had winter clothes on, a couple layers of jackets and snowpants. He must have just laid down, went to sleep and froze. That's what it looks like."

Temperatures dove into the single digits overnight on New Year's Eve, the Daily Enterprise said.

The discovery concluded a two-week search for McKay, who was reported missing on Jan. 3 by his father.

"His disappearance ended tragically, and at this time we continue our investigation. This is not the outcome we had hoped for," Nason said in a prepared statement.

McKay, 31, was a veteran of the war in Afghanistan and suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, The Australian reported. The Canberra, Australia, resident was on leave from the army at the time he disappeared.

He was last seen alive about noon on Dec. 31, walking on railroad tracks in Ray Brook, a large backpack on his shoulders, The Sydney Morning Herald said. That was one day after McKay sent an email to his father leaving his possessions to him. The soldier's family had not known he had gone to the United States.

While searchers sought McKay in the Adirondacks, officials monitored airports in New Jersey and Los Angeles in case he decided to fly back to Australia, news.com.au said.

Tea party favorite Doug Hoffman endorses Elise Stefanik in North Country race for Congress

$
0
0

Hoffman won't launch a third campaign for Congress in 2014.

WASHINGTON -- Doug Hoffman, the mild-mannered accountant who helped ignite the national tea party movement, ended speculation today that he might seek the Republican nomination for the North Country congressional seat being vacated by Rep. Bill Owens, D-Plattsburgh.

Hoffman, of Saranac Lake, instead endorsed Elise Stefanik, 29, a former aide to President George W. Bush and Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wisc., who has emerged as the early Republican establishment pick for the designation. Ryan endorsed Stefanik on Wednesday.

"I am proud to support Elise and strongly believe she has the work ethic and conservative values to fight in Washington on behalf of the 21st Congressional District," Hoffman said in a statement. "She will bring new ideas, new leadership and fresh energy to representing us in Congress, and I believe she can unify voters in the North Country."

-16f809abcfbfe047.jpgView full sizeElise Stefanik 

Hoffman, who ran for the seat in 2009 and 2010, said he will introduce Stefanik at the Conservative Party Political Action Conference later this month in Albany.

Hoffman rose to rock star status among tea party and conservative voters when he ran as a third-party candidate in the 2009 special election to fill the seat left open when nine-term Rep. John McHugh, R-Pierrepont Manor, resigned to become secretary of the Army.

In a bitter election that attracted national attention, Hoffman, a lifelong Republican, ran on the Conservative Party line because he believed the GOP nominee, former Assemblywoman Dede Scozzafava, was too liberal. Hoffman criticized Scozzafava for her support of abortion rights and same-sex marriage.

Trailing in the polls, Scozzafava shocked the political world when she resigned on the Saturday before the election and endorsed Owens, the Democrat, who squeaked out a victory by about 3,600 votes.

After the election, Hoffman continued to rise in national prominence and received the Charlton Heston "Courage Under Fire" award at the national Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington.

But Hoffman's second bid for the congressional seat fell flat in 2010 when he lost a Republican primary to Matt Doheny, and failed to gain traction as the Conservative Party candidate as Owens was re-elected.

Stefanik praised Hoffman today and said she looks forward to meeting with conservatives.

"The endorsement and support of Doug Hoffman means a great deal to me," Stefanik said. "He's a true common sense conservative Republican in the North Country. He's been in these fights before and knows exactly what's at stake in this election. I look forward to speaking at the Conservative Party conference in Albany, and will continue working hard to earn the support of voters throughout the North Country."

Stefanik, of Essex County, is among three Republicans who have declared their candidacy in the 12-county North Country district. The others are Michael Ring, a computer consultant from Jefferson County, and Joseph Gilbert, a tea party activist who is the former St. Lawrence County emergency services director.

Contact Mark Weiner at mweiner@syracuse.com or 571-970-3751. Follow him on Twitter @MarkWeinerDC

How do you spell preparation? CNY students to compete in first round of regional spelling bee

$
0
0

Winners will be announced on syracuse.com Saturday afternoon.

Syracuse, NY -- More than 100 students selected from 63 Central New York schools will compete Saturday morning in the first round of The Post-Standard/WCNY Regional Spelling Bee at Onondaga Community College.

The students were selected by their schools or school districts. The first round of the regional spelling bee is a written test. The students will hear 40 words read by a spelling bee pronouncer from WCNY.

The top 35 scorers on the test will move on to compete in the oral round, which will be televised on WCNY on Feb. 1. The winner of the oral round will compete in the Scripps National Spelling Bee in June.

Here's a look at the 112 participants:

Online Database by Caspio
Click here to load this Caspio Online Database.

Winners will be announced on syracuse.com Saturday afternoon.

Contact Sarah Moses at smoses@syracuse.com or 470-2298. Follow @SarahMoses315

Hiroo Onoda, Japanese WWII soldier who hid 29 years rather than surrender, dies at Tokyo hospital

$
0
0

The intelligence officer held out in a Philippines island jungle until 1974, after his former commander personally ordered him to surrender.

TOKYO -- Hiroo Onoda, the last Japanese imperial soldier to emerge from hiding in a jungle in the Philippines and surrender, 29 years after the end of World War II, has died. He was 91.

Hiroo OnodaHiroo Onoda, center, salutes after handing over his military sword on Lubang Island, Philippines, when he comes out of hiding in the jungle in March 1974. Onoda died Thursday at age 91 at a Tokyo hospital. 

Onoda died Thursday at a Tokyo hospital after a brief stay there. Chief government spokesman Yoshihide Suga on Friday expressed his condolences, praising Onoda for his strong will to live and indomitable spirit.

"After World War II, Mr. Onoda lived in the jungle for many years and when he returned to Japan, I felt that finally, the war was finished. That's how I felt," Suga said.

Onoda was an intelligence officer who came out of hiding, erect but emaciated, in fatigues patched many times over, on Lubang island in the Philippines in March 1974, on his 52nd birthday. He surrendered only when his former commander flew there to reverse his 1945 orders to stay behind and spy on American troops.

Onoda and another World War II holdout, Sgt. Shoichi Yokoi, who emerged from the jungle in 1972, received massive heroes' welcomes upon returning home.

Before and during the war, Japanese were taught absolute loyalty to the nation and the emperor. Soldiers in the Imperial Army observed a code that said death was preferable to surrender.

Onoda refused to give up, despite at least four searches during which family members appealed to him over loudspeakers and flights dropped leaflets urging him to surrender.

In his formal surrender to Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos, Onoda wore his 30-year-old imperial army uniform, cap and sword, all still in good condition.

After the initial sensation of his return home wore off, Onoda bought a ranch in Brazil. He later was head of a children's nature school in northern Japan.

"I don't consider those 30 years a waste of time," Onoda said in a 1995 interview with The Associated Press. "Without that experience, I wouldn't have my life today."

Still, he showed a great zeal for making up for years lost.

"I do everything twice as fast so I can make up for the 30 years," Onoda said. "I wish someone could eat and sleep for me so I can work 24 hours a day."

The son of a teacher, Onoda worked for a Japanese trading firm in Shanghai after finishing high school in 1939. Three years later, he was drafted and trained at a military academy.

In December 1944, he was sent to Lubang, about 150 kilometers (90 miles) southwest of Manila. Most other Japanese soldiers surrendered when U.S. troops landed on Lubang in February 1945, though hundreds remained missing for years after the war.

As he struggled to feed himself, Onoda's mission became one of survival. He stole rice and bananas from local people down the hill and shot their cows to make dried beef, triggering occasional skirmishes.

The turning point came on Feb. 20, 1974, when he met a young globe-trotter, Norio Suzuki, who ventured to Lubang in pursuit of Onoda.

Suzuki quietly pitched camp in lonely jungle clearings and waited. "Oi," Onoda eventually called out, and eventually began speaking with him.

Suzuki returned to Japan and contacted the government, which located Onoda's superior -- Maj. Yoshimi Taniguchi -- and flew him to Lubang to deliver his surrender order in person.

SUNY Oswego receives $7.5 million donation

$
0
0

Donation is the largest single gift the college has ever received.

-e6b1b93175be01cd.jpgNunzio "Nick" C. and Lorraine E. Marano left $7.5 million from their estate to the State University of New York at Oswego. The gift is the largest single donation in the history of the college. 

Oswego, NY -- The State University of New York at Oswego received a $7.5 million donation from an Oswego woman's estate.

SUNY Oswego President Deborah F. Stanley said the donation is the largest single gift the college has ever received in its 153-year history.

Lorraine E. Marano, was described as an education enthusiast. Her gift establishes the Nunzio "Nick" C. and Lorraine E. Marano Endowment, which will be used primarily to fund scholarships for students with financial need, especially those who are first-generation college students.

"Lorraine Marano's profound understanding of the transformative powers of public higher education is affirmed by this extraordinarily generous gift," Stanley said in a news release. "Her gift will help put a college education within reach for many students, fulfilling their hopes and dreams and investing in a better future for all of us, as our graduates forge productive lives in their communities. We are deeply honored by her confidence in establishing the Marano family legacy at SUNY Oswego. It will live on for generations."

Lorraine Marano died on Oct. 1, 2013. She was 67.

"A highly educated woman, Lorraine believed in the value of education and considered this a gift to the entire community," said Theresa A. Sugar Scanlon, a close friend of Lorraine. "Her confidence in President Stanley's leadership and the extraordinary opportunities that the college provided to its students were instrumental to her decision. She hoped to help keep a college education affordable for all students, especially those who are the first in their families to attend college."

Nunzio "Nick" Marano, who died in 2002, owned Marano Vacuum Cooling and Sales Inc. in Scriba and held a seat on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Lorraine Marano, who was originally from Philadelphia, worked many years as a librarian at Cherry Hill High School East in New Jersey, and then worked for Resorts International and Tropicana Casinos in Atlantic City.

Joan Carroll, associate professor of accounting and faculty assembly chair at SUNY Oswego, said the gift will have a direct impact on the education that unfolds within the classroom.

"The Marano Scholars will no doubt work hard and deeply engage in learning to honor this bequest," said Carroll in a news release. "Receiving a gift of this magnitude signifies to the entire campus that we are making a difference, that our work is worthy of such an investment."

Contact Sarah Moses at smoses@syracuse.com or 470-2298. Follow @SarahMoses315

Deputies say snowmobile driver killed in Cayuga County crash was intoxicated

$
0
0

Deputies say snowmobile driver had a blood alcohol count of .11.

Locke, N.Y. -- A Dutchess County man killed Jan. 4 when his snowmobile collided with a farm tractor in Locke was legally intoxicated at the time of the accident, the Cayuga County Sheriff's Office announced today.

The office said its investigation shows Frederick W. Kussin III, 55, of Stormsville, had a blood alcohol count of .11. Kussin also owned two homes on Hoag Avenue in Locke.

The investigation showed that just before the accident, the tractor operator exited a field and parked his tractor and manure spreader on Cloverleaf Drive, blocking the road. James Ball, the tractor operator, had gotten off the tractor and was in the process of closing a gate when Kussin came along on a 2005 Yamaha snowmobile and hit the tractor.

Kussin was pronounced dead on arrival at Cortland Regional Medical Center.

Ball, 58, of Locke, was issued tickets for having inadequate lighting and for parking on a public highway.

You can contact James T. Mulder at jmulder@syracuse.com or (315) 470-2245.


Last original female Munchkin Ruth Robinson Duccini most proud of her work as a riveter

$
0
0

Ruth Robinson Duccini, who died Thursday at 95, was proud of her work as a Munchkin, but often talked about her role as a riveter during World War II.

While she cherished her role as a Munchkin in the classic movie "The Wizard of Oz", Ruth Robinson Duccini was most proud of her work as a riveter during World War II.

"I remember her saying being in the movie was wonderful, but what gave her the most pride was being able to work as a riveter during the war,'' said Colleen Zimmer, one of the organizers of the annual Chittenango OzFest.

Ruth Robinson Duccini, 95, one of the two surviving Munchkins from the 1939 legendary film, died Thursday in Las Vegas.

John Fricke, an Oz historian who has written books about the movie and about star Judy Garland, knew 95-year-old Duccini well. He said she contracted a stomach virus three weeks ago, and was hospitalized. She went to hospice care on Saturday, and died five days later.

Duccini's last public appearance was Sept. 15, when she appeared at the star-studded IMAX 3D showing of "The Wizard of Oz" in Hollywood, Fricke said. Although in a wheelchair, she walked onstage to join Fricke, who was hosting the event.

"She was on fire that day,'' Fricke said. "We chatted for a couple minutes onstage, and the roof went off the place with people cheering. William Shatner, Rico Rodriquez, Marcia Gay Harden were among the celebrities there. It was a very special event for her. She wasn't the type of person who went to all the Oz events she was invited to. She was selective."

Duccini, who lived in Las Vegas, had a son and daughter, and numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Her husband died in 1993, Fricke said.

Born in Rush City, Minn., Duccini traveled to California with a troupe of little people, and was cast in the movie. She was 4 feet tall.

She was recently quoted by Stephen Cox, author of "The Munchkins of Oz" saying of that time: "It was long hours and heavy costumes. We didn't have much time for ourselves. It was all new to me then, and I loved being a part of what is now a classic," she said.

After the movie, she worked as a "Rosie the Riveter" at Douglas Aircraft in Santa Monica, Calif., during World War II, Fricke said. Her small size allowed her access to the nose cone and wings of the aircrafts. "I've been told the pilots were really excited when they learned she'd worked on their planes," Fricke said.

Although she had a part in the 1981 Oz-themed comedy film "Under the Rainbow" with Chevy Chase and Carrie Fisher, "she thought it was ridiculous,'' Fricke said.

Duccini was an independent woman who wasn't afraid to speak her mind, Fricke said. "If she thought the Munchkins were asked to do too much at a festival, she wouldn't go back there again," he said.

Duccini came to the Oz celebration in Chittenango numerous times, but it's been almost a decade since she was there, Fricke said.

"She was very pleasant but guarded until you got to know her,'' Fricke said. "She parceled herself out carefully until she got to know you."

The only surviving original Munchkin is Jerry Maren, 93, of Los Angeles, who portrayed a member of the Lollipop Guild. Margaret Pellegrini, another original Munchkin, died at 89 in August 2013.


Obama calls for end of NSA's control of phone data

$
0
0

Seeking to calm a furor over U.S. surveillance, President Barack Obama on Friday called for ending the government's control of phone data from hundreds of millions of Americans and immediately ordered intelligence agencies to get a secretive court's permission before accessing such records.

WASHINGTON -- Seeking to calm a furor over U.S. surveillance, President Barack Obama on Friday called for ending the government's control of phone data from hundreds of millions of Americans and immediately ordered intelligence agencies to get a secretive court's permission before accessing such records.

The president also directed America's intelligence agencies to stop spying on friendly international leaders and called for extending some privacy protections to foreign citizens whose communications are scooped up by the U.S.

Still, Obama defended the American surveillance program as a whole, saying that it has made the country more secure and that a months-long White House review of the procedures had revealed no abuse. However, he said the U.S. had a "special obligation" to re-examine its intelligence capabilities because of the potential for trampling on civil liberties.

"This debate will make us stronger," Obama said during a highly anticipated speech at the Justice Department. "In this time of change, the United States of America will have to lead."

Obama's announcements capped the review that followed former National Security Agency analyst Edward Snowden's leaks about secret surveillance programs. If fully implemented, the president's proposals would lead to significant changes to the NSA's bulk collection of phone records, which is authorized under Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act.

Even with Obama's decisions, key questions about the future of the surveillance apparatus remain. While Obama wants to strip the NSA of its ability to store the phone records, he offered no recommendation for where the data should be moved. Instead, he gave the intelligence community and the attorney general 60 days to study options, including proposals from a presidential review board that recommended the telephone companies or an unspecified third party.

Privacy advocates say moving the data outside the government's control could minimize the risk of unauthorized or overly broad searches by the NSA. However, the phone companies have balked at changes that would put them back in control of the records, citing liability concerns if hackers or others were able to gain unauthorized access.

There appeared to be some initial confusion about Congress' role in authorizing any changes. An administration official said Obama could codify the data transfer through an executive order, while some congressional aides said legislation would be required.

Congress would have to approve another proposal from the president that would establish a panel of outside attorneys who would consult with the secretive Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court on new legal issues that arise. The White House says the panel would advocate for privacy and civil liberties as the court weighed requests for accessing the phone records.

The moves are more sweeping than many U.S. officials had been anticipating. People close to the White House review process say Obama was still grappling with the key decisions on the phone record collections in the days leading up to Friday's speech.

Iron Girl Syracuse 2014 is sold out

$
0
0

The total number of participants for 2014 is 1,500.

Syracuse, NY -- Iron Girl Syracuse 2014 is sold out, according the Iron Girl Syracuse Facebook page.

The total number of participants for 2014 is 1,500.

The female only triathlon, which includes a 600 meter swim, 30K bike ride and 5K run, will take place on Aug. 3 at Oneida Shores Park in Brewerton.

This is the sixth year of the event, which has grown in popularity. For more information, visit Iron Girl's website.

Contact Sarah Moses at smoses@syracuse.com or 470-2298. Follow @SarahMoses315

U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand delivers policy speech today at Syracuse University

$
0
0

New York senator will discuss five-point plan to help women in the workplace.

WASHINGTON -- U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., will deliver a policy speech at Syracuse University today that expands on her five-point initiative to help middle-class women in the workplace.

Gillibrand is due to speak at 2:30 p.m. at SU's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. She plans to discuss her American Opportunity Agenda that she proposed in September in Washington, D.C.

The initiative calls for ensuring equal pay for women, expanding paid family medical leave, increasing the minimum wage, providing universal pre-K and making child care accessible and affordable.

Gillibrand wants to help more middle-class women workers earn financial security by modernizing what she views as outdated workplace policies. She says those policies failed to keep pace with the demands of a modern workforce with more dual income households.

The Center for American Progress, a liberal think tank in Washington, D.C., issued a report in September that noted that women working in the United States are paid 77 cents for every dollar a man is paid.

Contact Mark Weiner at mweiner@syracuse.com or 571-970-3751. Follow him on Twitter @MarkWeinerDC

Foster parents for refugee children needed in Central New York

$
0
0

Central New York seeing increase in number of immigrant children from Central America

SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- Facing a surge of child immigrants to the United States, local agencies that help them need foster parents.

The message was emphasized Thursday night at a talk by two national immigration leaders at the Onondaga Historical Association.

Wendy Young, president of Kids in Need of Defense (KIND) in Washington D.C., and her husband, Juan Osuna, head of the country's immigration court system, spoke about different aspects of U.S. immigration policy. Osuna reviewed the history of immigration reform and the current state of immigration legislation. Young spoke about her agency, which trains lawyers to work with children in the immigration court system. The lawyers do the work for free.

In a question and answer session after their talk, Sharon Ames, a Syracuse immigration attorney who works with the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement, in Syracuse, said "we're always looking for more foster homes. We get our kids from all over the world, but we have seen increasing numbers of kids from Central and South America."

Kassidy Hertel, a foster parent manager with Toomey Residential and Community Services, an affiliate of Catholic Charities, echoed the need. To contact Toomey click here.

"Not all homes fit every child's needs so we're always looking to increase our pool of foster homes," said Hertel.

Both Ames and Hertel spoke about the foster parent success of Barbara and Robert Rogers, of Marietta, who raised six "Lost Boys" from Southern Sudan. Among the Rogers' foster children was was Lopez Lemong, the middle distance runner who carried the U.S. team flag during opening ceremonies at the Beijing Olympics.

Young said the number of children coming to the U.S. unaccompanied by an adult has grown dramatically in recent years, especially from Central America where children are fleeing endemic gang violence in their home countries. Under current immigration and refugee policy, their fleeing gang violence does not qualify them as refugees.

Five years ago the number of unaccompanied children coming to the U.S. ranged between 6,500 and 8,000 a year, Young said. Last year 24,000 unaccompanied children entered the U.S. illegally. Immigration officials project there could be as many as 65,000 this year.

Young said her agency has proposed changes in the immigration reform bill what would require the U.S. to appoint attorneys to represent children in immigration proceedings if they don't have representation.

"We're seeing a huge increase in the number of kids coming in under age 12," said Young. "Families are pushing their kids out to the U.S. because they can't protect their children from recruitment by gangs. It's becoming more than an immigration problem. It's a refugee problem."

Young cited a report released this week by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops on Unaccompanied Children from Central America. The report can be read here.

Unaccompanied Children from Central America

Contact Dave Tobin at 470-3277, dtobin@syracuse.com or via Twitter: @dttobin


Viewing all 44833 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>