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The Running Man

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Joe Nicoletti believes he can win the city of Syracuse’s coming mayoral election for two reasons: He has an incredible amount and range of experience in governance and civic administration, and his age. At 69, he notes, he is younger than Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders.

“Hey, they all wanted to be president,” he reflects. “I just want to be mayor.” At his age, he observes, he doesn’t have the future to worry about. “I’ll be the mayor for now,” he projects, “and leave this city booming for the future.”

Approaching the Sept. 12 Democratic primary, he has the Working Families Party nomination, assuring him of a line on the Nov. 7 ballot. He is also billing himself as the real progressive in the race, with a campaign slogan of “We are as strong as what the least of us has.”

His relevant experience, he maintains, included tenure on the Common Council and state Assembly and a stint as an administrator at City Hall under former Republican Mayor Roy Bernardi. He has also logged extensive mayoral campaign experience, although not, he insists, the four previous shots The Post-Standard attributes. When cited as contemplating switching parties to run as a Republican in 2000, a move state Sen. John DeFrancisco is credited with crushing, Nicoletti says it wasn’t real. He says this time will be the fourth.

Joe Nicoletti: “A mayor must have relationships and a mayor must understand that it’s great to look to the past, but it’s more important to look to the future.” Michael Davis photo

What is your job description for Syracuse mayor?

I know this can be a better city. I could tell you that it is important to have a mayor who is a communicator, a consensus builder, a cooperator, a dreamer, someone that can deal with all the contested people, someone who can take themself out of the universal equation and do it not for themself but for the people they represent. The man or woman must be compassionate. He or she must be dedicated. But also a mayor must be experienced. A mayor must have relationships and a mayor must understand that it’s great to look to the past, but it’s more important to look to the future.

Should we metropolitanize the city and county governments?

If you’re talking about the model that’s been suggested to us, I don’t believe that model will work. And I say that respectfully. I believe that all good sharing of services doesn’t go from the top down, but rather comes from the bottom up. I’ve learned that, not only in the classrooms, but I’ve learned it through experience.

I also believe that if we’re going to talk about sharing services in a massive way, that the school district needs to be on the table. Unless we can deal with that, I don’t see us making much progress. I am one that believes that the first day in office that my conversations with the county executive will be, “How do we work together? How do we promote the dialogue? How do we work together to come up with solutions to benefit all our people?”

I think we get too hung up with these imaginary lines that exist between the city and the county or towns and villages and the county, and we have to understand that all our actions have a reaction across the county. And to suggest that some don’t really care, but you should care because what happens in the city has an impact on the county as well as what happens in the county has an impact on the city.

Should we consolidate the city schools with those in the county?

When I was a member of the New York State Assembly, my assembly district had a city parks and recreation, a county parks and recreation, the town of Geddes parks and recreation, and I think the village of Solvay had one. To me, that was symbolic when I sat in Albany as an example, but also looking at other issues of duplication of services. For example, the competition between the IDAs (industrial development agencies) has to be eliminated because the developer wins.

To get back to the school district, what I’m suggesting is we really need to get together a group of people with no expectations, but an expectation of “How do we make it better for all our children?” You start with a common denominator to make it better. That’s the way I operate. I’ve built a reputation on bringing people together, whether it was the famous Hotel Syracuse strike, whether it was among the councilors, whether it was private industry or the neighborhoods. You have to find common ground, you have to realize their differences and you have to build trust.

What should we do with Interstate 81?

I believe the road has to come down. Right now I favor the community grid. I am waiting anxiously for the final study, which by the way took place because of people like Senator DeFrancisco, and I give him credit, and Assemblyman Bill Magnarelli, who responded to their constituents across the board, who raised legitimate questions. I’m waiting for the new study to come out.

But more importantly than the new study, we have to be prepared as a city to meet this challenge. No one has an inkling of whether the community grid, or any other project, what’s the impact it’s going to have on the city. I know it.

Joe Nicoletti. Michael Davis photo

Even when we built Clinton Square, closing Erie Boulevard, the planning that needed to be done. We had the Labor Day storm and the mayor put me in charge of opening up this city which was closed from one end to the other, what we had to do to open up the traffic. So we have to plan for this. It’s going to be a tremendous impact.

I am for the grid because I want to remove the economic and racial barriers that separate this community. If we aren’t big enough to admit that that is a racial and economic barrier to this community, then we simply lost.

Secondly, we have to use this Interstate 81 project as a community benefit. If there are 500 or 1,000 jobs, I want to make a deal with the governor and with Department of Transportation Commissioner Matt Driscoll, that they allocate so many jobs. We need jobs for people who are unemployed. I want to take people from our poorest neighborhoods and train them to work in construction on that job. Why? Because we’re giving them a job.

What needs to be developed in the center city, who should be doing it and who should be paying for it?

First of all, we need to strengthen our economy. And how do we strengthen our economy? We do it by providing community benefits and jobs for everybody. We do it by stop having lawsuits, by negotiating across the table. We do it by making peace with Onondaga County. My reputation has been with organized labor, which I have never backed down from helping, and solving strikes, solving conflicts in neighborhoods and working with people.

I’m not the most glamorous candidate. I’m not going to get up and promise a lot of things. But this is about electing a mayor, and when you’re a mayor, you shed your political label. I know this better than anybody. You’re not a Democrat or Republican. You’re a public servant. You’re not a dictator. You’re not all righteous. You have to work for the people and reflect all of their views and learn to bring them together. That’s what this election is about.

Syracuse has the poorest communities of color in the country. As mayor, what could you do?

First of all, we should be ashamed of ourselves. We should be ashamed of ourselves. We count ourselves as leading in the arts and green technology, and thanks to County Executive Joanie Mahoney we are. But we have forgotten.

My dad, a very wise man who worked in a factory and helped put me through college, taught me a long time ago, “You judge your success by what the least of us have.” And that is going to be the slogan of this administration.

The post The Running Man appeared first on Syracuse New Times.


Fair Exchange

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Visitors at the 2016 New York State Fair walked through a new main gate, an enticing visual flashback to the arched carriage-gate style that welcomed turn-of-the-20th-century attendees.

The main gate was part of the fairgrounds’ $50 million cosmetic makeover, although some fairgoers expressed shock and awww about fondly remembered food stands that had to move elsewhere. And a number of perennial vendors were relocated from their familiar homes to new places on the grounds — but their loyal customers couldn’t find them, so the fair eventually resorted to signage that directed people to these businesses.

Nevertheless, the 2016 edition cracked the 1 million attendance mark over its 12 days, with Gov. Andrew Cuomo celebrating the momentous occasion on Labor Day. It’s a good bet that the guv may be back this Labor Day, Sept. 4, as that number could be reached this year, since the fair will be open 13 days starting Wednesday, Aug. 23.

Watch the birdie during the Hawk Creek show. Michael Davis photo

Fairgoers will experience more changes for the 2017 expo, so it’s a good idea when going through one of the entry gates to snag a fairgrounds map, which is more indispensible than ever before. And following the learning curve provided by the 2016 redo, fair officials are trying to make things easier. This year, for instance, vendors locations will be available on the fair’s new phone app.

Perhaps the most eye-catching new wrinkle will be the Broadway Skyliner chair-lift ride on the midway. It’s a permanent installation paid for by Wade Shows, running 1.400 feet in length and 34 feet high.

The New York State Trooper exhibit has moved to the former DEC Cabin and State Corrections Building. Meanwhile, a new State Police grappling/diving tower has been installed in front of the buildings.

In another relocation, the Taste of New York Marketplace will now take residence inside the Horticulture Building. The marketplace’s former space at Chevy Court is being converted to a backstage/dressing room area. It’s a sign of the times: The venue was designed long ago for performers along the lines of Anita Bryant and Rosemary Clooney, and not the mega-acts such as the Beach Boys and Earth, Wind and Fire that are now being booked there.

More newbies include: The West End area of the fair offers a new performance stage and other attractions, including the return of the Coronas Circus and the Hollywood Racing Pigs; a new entry arch will welcome visitors at the Pan-African Village; the MooU educational tours take place at the livestock buildings; and a new Turtle Mound dance and presentation area can be found at the Indian Village.

A host of new performers roaming about the grounds will include the Elbridge-based DownBeat Percussion, the official drumline of the Buffalo Bills pro football franchise. Also making its debut will be the Empire Experience Stage area, which will feature a Pride Day program on Friday, Aug. 25; a Hispanic/salsa fest sponsored by CNY Latino on Friday, Aug. 25, through Sunday, Aug. 27; a Family Fishing Day at the Empire Experience pond on Sunday, Aug. 27; and a batch of tribute bands throughout the fair’s run.

Hilby the Skinny German Juggler Boy entertains fairgoers. Michael Davis photo

Rumors abounded during last year’s fair that certain venues would not be around for 2017. Yet the Gianelli Sausage-Dinosaur Bar-B-Que’s spot near Chevy Court is secure, and so are the West End Sports Deck and the neighboring Alivero’s food stand. Getting demolished outside the Dairy Building, however, was the WSYR-Channel 9 Newscone, proud beacon of the Fourth Estate. Anchors Rod Wood, Christie Casciano and the rest will still host live newscasts at that same spot, while the infotainment show Bridge Street will have daily 10 a.m. broadcasts at Chevy Court.

Even Hilby the Skinny German Juggling Boy has been uprooted, moving from his former residence near Chevy Court (where he would dish out adlibs regarding the stage act) to a new area. Starting Monday, Aug. 28, at 1, 4 and 7 p,m., Hilby will take his act to a seated outside area near the Coliseum.

Yet there will be comfort from familiar attractions. Hawk Creek Wildlife Center, from East Aurora, returns with its popular “Birds of Prey” show featuring the winged creatures daily at 11 a.m., 1:30 and 4:30 p.m. at the New York State Park. The Art and Home Center, the location for often provocative displays, will offer an exhibit on the women’s suffragette centennial.

And the Dairy Bar will be back for 25-cent cups of white and chocolate milk. The moo juice may be a fine accompaniment to the chocolate-covered deep-fried crickets and grasshoppers available at the Fried Specialties food stand on Restaurant Row.

View Michael Davis’ photos from the New York State Fair press preview here.

The post Fair Exchange appeared first on Syracuse New Times.

Ronnie Leigh

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Local jazz legend Ronnie Leigh will be honored during the 16th annual Jazz-N-Caz festivities to be held this week in Cazenovia. On Friday, Sept. 15, Leigh’s legacy will be feted during the 7:30 p.m. program at Cazenovia College’s Catherine Cummings Theatre, 22 Lincklaen St., which will feature music by Soda Ash Six, Harry Allen and Nancy Kelly.

Not only is Leigh known for his stage presence and ability on the microphone, he also founded and serves as the artistic director for the summertime Jazz in the City series. The five-time Syracuse Area Music Award (Sammy) winner has performed from Seattle to Syracuse, and from New York City to Istanbul.

After four decades of performances, Leigh is still singing, playing and traveling. “I’m planning things and just trying to keep moving forward,” he says.

Despite the accolades, accomplishments, collaborations and commendations, Leigh still remains down to earth and thankful for his fans. And his musical beginnings are as endearing as they come.

Leigh was born in Albany, then moved to Syracuse when he was about 18 and got a job with the New York state canal system. During every Friday happy hour at the Thor Lounge on South Salina Street near the former Sears Roebuck building, Leigh listened to the house band week after week.

Ronnie Leigh entertains at Verona’s TS Steakhouse. Michael Davis photo

 

“Finally I worked up the nerve to ask if I could sing a song,” he recalls. “I talked to the bandleader, the drummer, and he said, ‘Sure, man! Come up here!’ I’ll never forget the first song I sang: ‘Misty.’ The audience appreciated it and the band loved it, so they said, ‘You wanna sing another song?’”

Leigh only knew a couple tunes, but after he sang “The Girl from Ipanema,” the band was impressed, despite the fact that he didn’t know what key he sang it in. “They asked me what key and I said, ‘Whatever’s on the jukebox.’” The band offered him a job on the spot and he made “a whole $25 a gig.”

From there, offers steadily rolled in, as Leigh became involved with several successful projects over the years, including Alliance and Atlas Linen Company. Singing with the band Sail brought him across the country, as the group worked with two booking agents, one in Chicago and another out of Rhode Island.

Yet it was never a conscious decision for Leigh to be a working musician. Rather, it was an urge that couldn’t be fought.

“I tried to quit once and I lasted two weeks,” he says. “The first week was heavenly and then the depression set in. I didn’t know what was going on with me. I thought I was losing my mind or something, for real. The following weekend, I went out and sang a few tunes with a band and felt so much better. Relief. I thought, ‘I think I have to do this.’ And that was that.”

The Atlas Linen Company with (clockwise from center) Ronnie Leigh, Ronnie France, Nick Russo, Ron DeAugustine, Frank Defonda, George Feltman, Keith Ronan, Stuart Heinrich, Don Allen and Larry Arlotta).

Despite his efforts to “conform” or live a “so-called normal life,” Leigh continued performing and following his art. “That helped me to be where I am today,” he says.

Leigh also grabbed opportunities that came his way. “A friend of mine, drummer Wilby Fletcher, happened to be in Istanbul working at a club there,” Leigh says. “I got a phone call from him one day. My September was packed, but Wilby said, ‘What are you doing?’ I said, ‘I’m pretty busy.’ And he said, ‘Well, would you come to Turkey?’”

Fletcher put the club owner on the phone with Leigh and a few minutes later he was organizing stateside replacements for himself. “It worked out nicely,” Leigh says. “I got folks I thought who would do a job as well as I would try to do and hopefully better, and I ended up in Istanbul.”

Fletcher left Istanbul a few days later, leaving Leigh to enjoy a new country surrounded by strangers. “The bass player and piano player were from Philly, the drummer was from Brazil, the trombone player from Sweden,” he recalls. “And it was a smokin’ hot band. It was great.”

Leigh stayed in Istanbul for a month and a half in 1998 and has continued traveling since. Every winter he tries to book performances in warmer weather locations, while continuing to perform with groups like Rochester’s Prime Time Funk.

But Leigh is hard-pressed to pick a favorite time period or show from his career. After all, his resume bulges with guest appearances alongside The Drifters, Pat Metheny, The Yellowjackets, David Benoit, Special EFX, Spyro Gyra, David Sanborn, Etta Jones, the Syracuse Symphony orchestra and more. Instead, he’s grateful that he can still do it at all.

“I’m the kind of person who thinks, ‘Thank God I can get up and do it again tomorrow,’” Leigh says. “It’s all been great stuff, all been fabulous. And thanks to the folks at Jazz-N-Caz for even considering me. I’m really grateful and really flipped out. I do what I do and I’m happy I can do what I do. I just hope people like it.

“And I hope folks around the Syracuse area can find a way to support the musicians and the music that’s here. I’ve had the opportunity to travel a lot of places, and this is pretty high-quality stuff here. There’s a spirit here that a lot of musicians have. Don’t let this place go by the wayside: There’s great talent and we need to support it.”[snt]

Advice from the Artist

“Get a day gig. (Laughs.) No! I just think they need to be true to their own spirit, to themselves. Be true. If you believe it, go do it. And learn something about the business. Find out how to do business. Get a book on small business, take a course, anything. It applies directly to what we do.”

Jazz-N-Caz Highlights

The 16th annual Jazz-N-Caz will offer musical performances in three Cazenovia venues. Dave Hanlon’s Funky Jazz Band will kick off the concert slate on Thursday, Sept. 14, 7:30 p.m., on the lawn of the Brae Loch Inn, 5 Albany St.

Soda Ash Six will take the stage on Friday, Sept. 15, 7:30 p.m., at the Catherine Cummings Theatre, 22 Lincklaen St., followed by an 8:30 p.m. set featuring Harry Allen with Nancy Kelly and her trio, featuring Dino Losito, Tom Brigandi and Jimmy Johns. Ronnie Leigh will be honored during this performance. The Seven Stone Steps at the Lincklaen House, 79 Albany St., will host a 10:30 p.m. Jazz After Hours session with Tom Witkowski, Jason Jeffers and Adam Fisher.

Performances featuring Peter Cincotti and the Jimmy Van Heusen Jazz Break will begin the music on Saturday, Sept. 16, 7:30 p.m., at the Catherine Cummings Theatre. The jazz continues at 8:30 p.m. at the theater with Evan Christopher’s Clarinet Road, featuring Jon-Erik Kellso, Mark Shane, Pat O’Leary and James Chirillo. A final Jazz After Hours event takes place at the Seven Stone Steps, with Witkowski, Jeffers and Fisher gigging at 10:30 p.m.

All Jazz-N-Caz events are free, but a $10 donation is suggested. For more information, contact Colleen Prossner, (315) 655-7238, or cprossner@cazenovia.edu.

The post Ronnie Leigh appeared first on Syracuse New Times.

Welcome To The Best of Syracuse 2017

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Best of Syracuse is a reader-generated poll trademarked by the Syracuse New Times. Since its 1997 inception we have asked our readers to nominate in a number of categories.

For the 21st anniversary edition, the categories include: Sports, Love and Sex, Arts and Culture, Music, Entertainment and Attractions, Health and Beauty, Local Celebrities, Food, Drink, Nightlife, Goods and Services, Around Town, Pets and Family, Fun and Games.

Your nominations are tallied, and the results bring out the top five in each category. We then turn it all over to you again for the final voting, and the Best of Syracuse emerges.

We are proud of the fact that Best of Syracuse is 100 percent reader-generated. If you have an award suggestion, email us at snt@syracusenewtimes.com. We want to hear from you.

Thanks to all the readers who took the time to nominate and vote for your favorite picks. It was another record-breaking year for nominating and voting for Best of Syracuse, and we couldn’t be more excited about the responses. Congratulations to this year’s nominees and winners!

Sports

Turning Stone Resort and Casino, best golf course. Michael Davis photo

Best Sports Venue: Carrier Dome, 900 Irving Ave. (315) 443-4634, carrierdome.com.

Best Gymnastics Program: YMCA of Greater Syracuse. syracuse.ymca.org.

Best Outdoor Trails: Green Lakes State Park, 7900 Green Lakes Road, Fayetteville. (315) 637-6111, parks.ny.gov/parks/172.

Best Golf Course: Turning Stone Resort and Casino, 5218 Patrick Road, Verona. (800) 771-7711, turningstone.com.

Best Place to Ski: Labrador Mountain, 6935 NY-91, Truxton. (607) 842-6204, skicny.com.

Best Place to Bike: Onondaga Lake Park, 106 Lake Drive, Liverpool. (315) 453-6712, onondagacountyparks.com/parks/onondaga-lake-park.

Best Organized Walk/Run: Paige’s Butterfly Run, 2911 Fargo Road, Baldwinsville. (315) 303-2578, pbrun.org.

Best Health Club: YMCA of Greater Syracuse. syracuse.ymca.org.

Best Yoga: Syracuse Yoga, 6181 Thompson Road, Suite 803. (315) 399-4333, cuseyoga.com.

Love and Sex

Best Date Night Location: Movie Tavern, 180 Township Blvd., Camillus. (315) 758-1678, movietavern.com/locations/syracuse.

Best Adult Club: Club Paradise Found, 134 Headson Drive. (315) 701-0931, clubparadisefound.com.

Best Wedding DJ: Black Tie Entertainment, 4683 Setting Sun Terrace. (315) 492-7985, btedj.com.

Best Wedding Venue: Marriott Syracuse Downtown, 100 E. Onondaga St. (315) 474-2424, marriottsyracusedowntown.com.

Arts and Culture

M&T Jazz Fest, best music festival. Michael Davis photo

Best Museum: The Milton J. Rubenstein Museum of Science & Technology, 500 S. Franklin St. (315) 425-9068, most.org.

Best Ethnic Festival: Irish Festival. syracuseirishfestival.com.

Best Food Festival: Taste of Syracuse. (315) 471-9597, tasteofsyracuse.com.

Best Music Festival: M&T Jazz Fest. syracusejazzfest.com.

Best Live Theater: Syracuse Stage, 820 E, Genesee St. (315) 443-3275. syracusestage.org.

Music

Ashley Cox, best female vocalist. David Armelino photo

Best Female Vocalist: Ashley Cox. facebook.com/ProfessionalVictims, professionalvictims.com.

Best Male Vocalist: Just Joe (Joe Altier). facebook.com/justjoesyracuse, justjoe.com.

Best Band: Under the Gun. facebook.com/UnderTheGunSyracuse, utgrocks.com.

Best Cover Band: Under the Gun. facebook.com/UnderTheGunSyracuse, utgrocks.com.

Best Club DJ: DJ Skeet (Brian Prietti). facebook.com/DJSKEET315.

Entertainment and Attractions

Midway Drive-In, best movie drive-in. Michael Davis photo

Best Movie Theater: Movie Tavern, 180 Township Blvd., Camillus. (315) 758-1678, movietavern.com/locations/syracuse.

Best Movie Drive-In: Midway Drive-In, 2475 state Route 48, Fulton. (315) 343-0211, midwaydrivein.com.

Best Ice Skating: Clinton Square Ice Rink, 2 S. Clinton St. (315) 423-0129, syrgov.net/parks/clintonsquarerink.html.

Best Haunted Attraction: Fright Nights at the Fair, New York State Fairgrounds, 581 State Fair Blvd. (315) 396-8390, thefrightnights.com.

Best Pumpkin Patch: Tim’s Pumpkin Patch, 2901 Rose Hill Road, Marietta. (315) 673-9209, timspumpkinpatch.com.

Best Apple Picking: Beak & Skiff Apple Orchard, 2708 Lords Hill Road, Lafayette. (315) 696-8683, beakandskiff.com.

Best Local Amusement or Water Park: Enchanted Forest Water Safari, 3183 state Route 28, Old Forge. (315) 369-6145, watersafari.com.

Best Go-Karts: RPM Raceway, Destiny USA, 9090 Destiny USA Drive. (315) 423-7223, rpmraceway.com.

Family, Fun and Games

Best Pre-School Program: Learn As You Grow Early Education Centers. learnasyougrowccc.com.

Best CNY Playground: Wegmans Playground, Onondaga Lake Park, 6763-6777 Onondaga Lake Parkway, Liverpool. (315) 453-6712, onondagacountyparks.com/parks/onondaga-lake-park/wegmans-playground.

Best After-School Program: YMCA of Greater Syracuse. syracuse.ymca.org.

Best Bowling Alley: Flamingo Bowl, 7239 Oswego Road, Liverpool. (315) 457-7470, flamingobowlcny.com.

Health and Beauty

Best Hair Salon: Innovations Beauty Spa Boutique, 3627 state Route 31, Liverpool. (315) 622-3005, innovationsdayspa.com.

Best Barbershop: Nick’s Barber Shop, 600 N. Main St. (315) 476-4257, facebook.com/nickscny.

Best Spa: Mirbeau Inn & Spa, 851 W. Genesee Street Road, Skaneateles. (877) 647-2328, mirbeau.com.

Best Massage: Mirbeau Inn & Spa, 851 W. Genesee Street Road, Skaneateles. (877) 647-2328, mirbeau.com.

Best Doctor: Dr. Karen Beckman, CNY Family Care, 4939 Brittonfield Parkway, East Syracuse. (315) 463-1600, cnyfamilycare.org.

Best Chiropractor: Sportelli Chiropractic Center, 112 Dewitt St. (315) 422-4712, syracusechiropractor.com.

Best Health Store: Natur-Tyme, 3160 Erie Blvd E. (315) 488-6300, natur-tyme.com.

Best Pediatrician: Pediatric Associates, pediatricassociatesny.com.

Best Dentist: Dr. Michael Fallon, Fallon and Fallon, 5109 W. Genesee St., Camillus. (315) 469-6871, facebook.com/Fallondentistry.

Local Celebrities

Wayne Mahar, best TV personality and best weather person. Michael Davis photo

Best Local Reporter: Brandon Roth, CNY Central. cnycentral.com/station/people/brandon-roth.

Best Radio Personality: Ted and Amy, WNTQ-FM 93.1 (93Q). 93q.com/tedandamy.

Best TV Personality: Wayne Mahar, CNY Central. cnycentral.com/station/people/wayne-mahar.

Best Bartender: Ryan Vendetti, Funk ‘N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. (315) 474-1060, funknwaffles.com.

Best Local Chef: Anthony Donofrio, Modern Malt, 325 S Clinton St. (315) 471-MALT, eatdrinkmalt.com.

Best Weather Person: Wayne Mahar, CNY Central. cnycentral.com/station/people/wayne-mahar.

Food

Best Mexican Restaurant: Alto Cinco, 526 Westcott St. (315) 422-6399, altocinco.net.

Best Asian/Hibachi Restaurant: Ichiban Japanese Steakhouse, 302 Old Liverpool Road, Liverpool. (315) 457-0000, ichibanjapanesesteakhouse.com.

Best Polish Restaurant: Eva’s European Sweets, 1305 Milton Ave. (315) 487-2722, evaspolish.com.

Best Burger: The Blarney Stone, 314 Avery Ave. (315) 487-9675, blarneystonesyr.com.

Best Sandwich Shop: Brooklyn Pickle. brooklynpickle.com.

Best Bakery: Harrison Bakery, 1306 W. Genesee St. (315) 422-1468, harrisonbakerysyracuse.com.

Best Family Restaurant: Tully’s Good Times. tullysgoodtimes.com.

Best New Restaurant: Finally Ours Diner, 3788 W, Seneca Turnpike. (315) 928-6857, finallyoursdiner.com.

Best Steakhouse: Delmonico’s Italian Steakhouse, 2950 Erie Blvd E. (315) 445-1111, delmonicositaliansteakhouse.com.

Best Barbecue: Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W. Willow St. (315) 476-4937, dinosaurbarbque.com.

Best Local Caterer: Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W. Willow St. (315) 476-4937, dinosaurbarbque.com.

Best Fish Fry/Seafood: Doug’s Fish Fry. dougsfishfry.com.

Best Middle Eastern Restaurant: King David’s Restaurant, 129 Marshall St. (315) 471-5000, kingdavids.com.

Best Food Truck/Food Stand: Toss ‘N’ Fire Wood Fired Pizza, 315 N Main St., North Syracuse. (315) 458-9380, tossnfirepizza.com.

Best Thai Restaurant: Lemon Grass Restaurant, 238 W Jefferson St. (315) 475-1111, lemongrasscny.com.

Original Italian Pizza, best wings. David Armelino photo

Best Wings: Original Italian Pizza (O.I.P.). myoip.com.

Best Place for Lunch: The Retreat, 302 Vine St., Liverpool. (315) 457-6358, retreatrestaurant.com.

Best Italian Restaurant: Francesca’s Cucina, 545 N. Salina St. (315) 425-1556, francescas-cucina.com.

Best Breakfast Spot: Stella’s Diner, 110 Wolf St. (315) 425-0353, stellasdinersyracuse.com.

Best Frozen Treats: Gannon’s Isle Ice Cream. gannonsicecream.com.

Best Indian Restaurant: Dosa Grill, 4467 E. Genesee St. (315) 445-5555, syracusedosagrill.com.

Best Pizza: Toss ‘N’ Fire Wood Fired Pizza, 315 N. Main St., North Syracuse. tossnfirepizza.com.

Best Sushi: Wegmans Food Markets. wegmans.com.

Best Birthday Cake: Wegmans Bakery. wegmans.com.

Best Cupcakes: Wegmans Bakery. wegmans.com.

Best Bagel: Bagelicious, 7608 Oswego Road, Liverpool. (315) 652-6007, bageliciousbagels.com.

Best Hot Dog: Heid’s of Liverpool. 305 Oswego St., Liverpool. (315) 451-0786, heidsofliverpool.com.

Best Doughnuts: Just Donuts, 219 County Route 57, Phoenix. (315) 695-1387, justdonutsnobagels.com.

Best Place for Sunday Brunch: Empire Brewing Company, 120 Walton St. (315) 475-2337, empirebrew.com.

Best Veggie/Vegan: CoreLife Eatery, 7265 Buckley Road. (315) 299-4451, corelifeeatery.com.

Best Local Food: Gianelli Sausage, 111 Gateway Park Drive, North Syracuse. (315) 471-9164, gianellisausage.com.

Drink

Beak & Skiff, best hard cider. Michael Davis photo

Best Hard Cider: Beak & Skiff Apple Orchard, 2708 Lords Hill Road, Lafayette. (315) 696-8683, beakandskiff.com.

Best Coffee: Café Kubal Coffee. cafekubal.com.

Best Brew: Empire Brewing Company, 120 Walton St. (315) 475-2337, empirebrew.com.

Best Beer Selection: World of Beer, Destiny USA, 306 Hiawatha Blvd. W. (315) 422-2330, worldofbeer.com.

Best Winery: Three Brothers Winery & Estates, 623 Lerch Road, Geneva. (315) 585-4432, 3brotherswinery.com.

Best Liquor Store: Liquor City, 6793 E. Genesee St., Fayetteville, (315) 449-1818, liquorcitywineandspirits.com.

Nightlife

Coleman’s Irish Pub, best bar and best trivia night. Michael Davis photo

Best Late-Night Munchie Spot: B’ville Diner, 18 E. Genesee St., Baldwinsville. (315) 635-3180, bvillediner.com.

Best Bar: Coleman’s Irish Pub, 100 S. Lowell Ave. (315) 476-1933, colemansirishpub.com.

Best Happy Hour: The Blarney Stone, 314 Avery Ave. (315) 487-9675, blarneystonesyr.com.

Best Dive Bar: Shifty’s Bar & Grill, 1401 Burnet Ave. (315) 474-0048, shiftysbar.com.

Best Sports Bar: Tully’s Good Times. tullysgoodtimes.com.

Best Trivia Night: Coleman’s Irish Pub, 100 S. Lowell Ave. (315) 476-1933, colemansirishpub.com.

Best Karaoke: Singers Karaoke Club, 1345 Milton Ave. (315) 484-7464, singerskaraokeclub.com.

Best LGBT Bar: Rain Lounge, 103 N. Geddes St. (315) 218-5951, facebook.com/RainLoungeSyracuse.

Best Dance Club: Lava Nightclub, 5218 Patrick Road, Verona. (315) 361-8177, turningstone.com/nightlife-lounges/lava-nightclub.

Goods and Services

Best Piercing/Tattoo Shop: Tymeless Tattoo, 36 Oswego St., Baldwinsville. (315) 635-5481, tymelesstattoo.com.

Best Florist: Sam Rao Florist, 104 Myron Road. (315) 488-3164, samraoflorist.com.

Best Place to Buy Music: The Sound Garden, 310 W. Jefferson St. (315) 473-4343, cdjoint.com/syracuse-store.cfm.

Best Auto Repair Shop: John’s Auto Care, 2045 Milton Ave. (315) 468-6880, johnsautocareandtire.com.

Best Dance Program: Ballet & Dance of Upstate NY, 932 Spencer St. (315) 487-4879, balletanddanceofupstateny.com.

Best Psychic/Medium: Michele Love. michele-love.com, healing-inspirations.com.

Best Car Dealership: Driver’s Village, 5885 Circle Drive E., Cicero. (877) 514-1748, driversvillage.com.

Around Town

Marriott Syracuse Downtown, best hotel and best wedding venue. Michael Davis photo

Best Used Bookstore: Books End, 2443 James St. (315) 437-2312, thebooksend.com.

Best Hotel: Marriott Syracuse Downtown, 100 E. Onondaga St. (315) 474-2424, marriottsyracusedowntown.com.

Best Radio Station: WNTQ-FM 93.1 (93Q). 93q.com.

Best Park: Onondaga Lake Park, 106 Lake Drive, Liverpool. (315) 453-6712, onondagacountyparks.com/parks/onondaga-lake-park.

Best Library: Onondaga Free Library, 4840 W. Seneca Turnpike. (315) 492-1727, oflibrary.org.

Best Not-For-Profit: Helping Hounds Dog Rescue, 6606 Kinne Road. (315) 446-5970, helpinghoundsdogrescue.org.

Best Car Wash: Delta Sonic. deltasoniccarwash.com.

Pets

Best Pet Daycare/Boarding: Carm’s Dog House. carmsdoghouse.com.

Best Veterinarian: Liverpool Village Animal Hospital, 6770 Onondaga Lake Parkway, Liverpool. (315) 451-5455, liverpoolvillagevets.com.

Best Animal/Pet Rescue: Helping Hounds Dog Rescue, 6606 Kinne Road. (315) 446-5970, helpinghoundsdogrescue.org.

Best Dog Park: Wegmans Good Dog Park at Onondaga Lake Park, 49 Cold Springs Trail, Liverpool. onondagacountyparks.com/parks/onondaga-lake-park/wegmans-good-dog-park.

Best Animal Whisperer: Jake Grenier, Dog Trainer at PetCo. petco.com.

The post Welcome To The Best of Syracuse 2017 appeared first on Syracuse New Times.

Nojaim’s No Más

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After almost a century, and three generations, of serving the grocery needs of the neighborhood known as the Near West Side, Nojaim Brothers Supermarket, 307 Gifford St., is closing its doors.

Originally a commercial district along a two-lane West Street provided a border with downtown Syracuse. Now the heavily Hispanic population has settled within Fayette, Geddes and West streets, some would argue the railroad tracks or the creek, with Onondaga Street on the South Side.

Activists in the neighborhood, however, see it as significantly more than just a store closing. Father James Mathews, of St. Lucy’s Church, 432 Gifford St., gathered 31 pages of signatures in support of a plea for help to community leaders. He called the closing devastating, a crippling blow plunging neighborhood residents even deeper into the throes of poverty which already ravage them. For Mathews, it is the death of an institution.

It was a different story even 50 years ago, when the neighborhood seemed to have a mom-and-pop store at every street corner. Over on Shonnard Street, Ward Bakery created special mini-loaves of Tip Top bread to distribute to lucky kids on field trips. Down on Gifford Street, shoppers wheeled their rickety carts across the wooden floors at Easy Bargain Center. International travelers had their passports created at Hawk Photo on Seymour Street. Paul Seymour, the former basketball great from the Syracuse Nationals, operated a bustling liquor store. Nojaim’s was at the center of this thriving retail mix.

An often behind-the-scenes activist himself, owner Paul Nojaim maintains a positive perspective as the shelves empty and store staff focus on where the jobs are next. Huntington Family Center two blocks down Gifford Street has taken an active role in the job search, and Rite Aid has sent staff to set up a table for conducting interviews.

“It’s up and down, like a funeral,” he says of the process. “One minute reflecting on happy memories, with a sad reflection the next. It’s like a funeral, and it is.”

What has been the grandest moment of the neighborhood so far?

Impossible to say one. If you’re talking to my father in (January) 1966, we didn’t close during the blizzard. The residents of the neighborhood gathered and we opened this place up. The (1998) Labor Day storm, when this place was decimated and out of power for weeks at a time, we set this place up as a Red Cross center, but also every agency in the neighborhood worked out of the store because they didn’t have power and we brought generators in.

The best moments have been like that. We had a bad fire in the late 1970s and the neighbors heard all the fire trucks, they were everywhere and you could see the flames coming out the top of the place. All night long you could see people coming in and volunteering. We were open by morning, in some shape or form.

If you go to modern times, last summer was an awful tragedy in this neighborhood with the shooting. They were planning the Westside Initiative in partnership with CNY Works to really activate Skiddy Park and create a play station with mentors all summer long. That folded with a fear of backlash being too dangerous to do it. But the kids who work here did it. They ran the program and were proud of the neighborhood. They ran it again this year.

If you could wave a magic wand, and make the things happen that you see as needed in the neighborhood, what would you make happen?

There’s a saying in this country that “Where there’s a will, there’s a way.” That’s not true. There has to be a way to foster the will. In this neighborhood, what I have seen, all those things that were ingredients in the healthy neighborhood have diminished.

I’ve never had a kid come work for me who said, “Can you help me get in a gang?”

Never had someone say, “How do I get incarcerated?”

Never heard someone say, “Let’s be a mother of four by three different men by the time I’m 22 and living in public housing.”

A “Store Closing” sign found on a wall inside Nojaim’s. Michael Davis photo

So you do ask them what they want to be, and they want to be a lawyer, be a doctor, be a teacher, they want to be all the things that are the typical American dream. But it goes wrong. I believe it goes wrong because there’s nothing to move you through the social ladder and connect you to that.

That is poverty. It’s not just racism. It is concentrated poverty. When I was a kid this was a poor neighborhood, but we had people here who were connected, and they were able to be your friend and introduce you to other opportunities.

There’s another saying: “It’s not what you know, it’s who you know.” That one is true. What do you do if you’re living in public housing, you’re a single mom and your child wants to be something when you can’t even get him that first job, because you don’t have that networking ability. And God forbid if they want to be a lawyer or doctor, how would you even put them on that path?

It’s an unfair playing field. A magic wand? I would change the playing field by eradicating poverty.

You need, first of all, a mixed neighborhood. We’re diverse. Everybody admits that. But we’re also not diverse because everybody’s poor.

The other thing is you need opportunities in the neighborhood. I always thought that Nojaim’s Supermarket was one place where if they knew Nojaim’s, Nojaim’s could get them to know somebody else.

What happened?

It’s very simple. We looked at ourselves as a grocery store, but not a grocery store. We believed we could do other things as well. We believed that that should be the whole food industry. That that is how society formed 12,000 years ago, with Fertile Crescent, irrigation, domesticated animals, and the next thing you know you had something to start trading and bartering, and that was society.

For us, yes, we do trading and selling to our customers, but there is also something that makes society better. That is what we felt this place was. At the same token we’re operating in an industry that requires volume to pay the bills. The food business is very much tied to high volume and low margin. That equation has broken down for this store. We can no longer pay the bills.

If you don’t have the magic wand, what will the neighborhood be?

I’m not sure. I had great hopes for the programs and partnerships developing. Lots of great work has been done already. However, with (former Syracuse University Chancellor) Nancy Cantor gone, they have lost momentum. I’m hoping that can be rebuilt, that momentum.

As an institution, the store was significant to the Hispanic community. What is the impact of its closing to them?

One-third of the people in the neighborhood are Hispanic, and over 80 percent of that group is from Puerto Rico. There is a reason that this is where that population massed over time.

That goes back to two things. One, we were the first store to carry Hispanic food. In the 1960s, when we started getting the migration of folks from Puerto Rico and then from Cuba when the Communists took over, they wanted to find their culture and their languages.

My father found Goya Foods, a little company, and he met with the owner and we became the first store outside of metro New York City to carry Goya Foods. The Spanish Action League located here and became a magnet.

What are you going to do?

I have no idea. I have started to contemplate that. What do you do when you’ve never done a resume, you’ve never applied for a job? Right now I’m going to be getting jobs for the people who work here. Then I’m going to figure out how to get this weight of this building and this debt off of my family’s shoulder.

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Many Happy Returns

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You’ve probably seen Laurence Segal around town. He’s the guy who hauls those big, pink recycling bins around Central New York, including stops at the recent New York State Fair — all 13 days of it — and at Destiny USA.

Segal, who grew up and lives in DeWitt, is out collecting empty cans and bottles, much of the time retrieving them from recycling bins, to raise money for breast cancer research. It’s an arduous task, but it doesn’t deter the activist. “I hope it shows people that they can make a difference,” Segal said.

Segal will continue making a difference at Cans for Cancer, to be held at the pink parking lot at Destiny USA on Oct. 28, 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., as part of October’s Breast Cancer Awareness Month. The inaugural event, spearheaded by Segal, brings together the three main organizations he has donated to over the years: the Upstate Cancer Center, the American Cancer Society and the Carol M. Baldwin Breast Cancer Research Fund.

Segal hopes for a large turnout of donated bottles and cans. As an incentive, everyone who donates to the cause will receive a coupon book to use at various businesses in the mall.

After the large-scale Cans for Cancer drive has passed, Segal said he will go back to raising money by himself, hopefully with some newfound participants who were inspired by the event. “Breast cancer doesn’t just go away at the end of October,” Segal said. “It’s to encourage people to bring your bottles and cans throughout the year after this.”

How did you get started collecting bottles?

It’s because of my family’s history of breast cancer: my grandmother, my great-grandmother, my aunts; my great-aunt had colon cancer. Back in 1987, my mom decided to remove both of her breasts. She met with people in Washington, D.C., and in New York City, and, given her health risk for getting breast cancer, they guaranteed her that she would have it.

It was a difficult decision at the time. When my mom did it, people ostracized her and made fun of her. When Angelina Jolie did it (years later), Beth Baldwin (from the Carol M. Baldwin Breast Cancer Research Fund) looked at me and said, “They look at her like she’s a hero.” Then she went on a campaign to educate people about breast cancer research, early detection, awareness.

She had complications over the years from that. She’s had several stays at the hospital with almost literally near-death experiences — not from cancer but from her implants leaking.

So the bottle and can drive came out of that. When the Simone family was still at the Syracuse Chiefs, I began to notice around NBT Bank Stadium all of the bottles and cans being thrown in the garbage every night, and it upset me. I said to them, “Do you think we could raise some money for cancer research?” And they said, “Yeah, go for it.” We had a giant pink cart at the top of the stairs, which I ran every night with my friend Jon, and we raised a ton of money for cancer research.

Where do you store all of the bottles?

I have a bottle recycling room at Destiny, and I also keep my pink garbage cans in there. So we bring the bottles back there. My friend James (Ayers) owns Bottles End on Montrose Avenue in Solvay, and we come and pick them up, or sometimes I’ll put some in my truck and bring them down there. There have been times when it’s built up like crazy, then it takes five people to go empty out the room.

Where do you store them after local events?

At the State Fair, for example, people saw (Segal’s recycling story) on the news, and they brought their bottles and cans from home into the fair, and we’d bag them. I’d keep them at the booth stacked high at the Center of Progress Building. In addition, we also pull off all of the pop tabs on every can and I donate all of the pop tabs to the Ronald McDonald House every week. The aluminum in the can has value in it.

Laurence Segal: “I’ve made people aware of early detection, we’ve raised awareness for breast cancer and for all of cancer. I think it’s been effective. I know we’ve certainly helped the environment.” Michael Davis photo

You started out exchanging the bottles at Wegmans.

I still sometimes go there if I have tons of bottles. Typically, 99 percent of the bottles now go to Bottles End just because it makes my life easier. I just really like how James is as a human being. He’s had people in his family who have had cancer. I also use my friends at Bodow Recycling on Park Street and Hiawatha Boulevard. Bodow Recycling and Bottles End have just been faithful, loyal and really good.

How did you get involved with the Carol M. Baldwin Breast Cancer Research Fund?

Carol Baldwin and my mom founded the local chapter of the Susan G. Komen Foundation years ago. They’re the ones that started the original walk-run in Shoppingtown. They’re the ones who went to Washington, D.C., to meet with Congress back in late 1989 to 1990, with the idea of helping women and men who were facing breast cancer. Now everybody knows about it, but back then it wasn’t spoken about.

When Carol Baldwin started her own fund around 1996, I sort of became directly involved with that. She calls me her fifth son. I’m close to all of the family members. I like that the money that’s raised stays locally. Their motto is “Together We’ll Find A Cure,” and I think that’s how you have to do it. It’s a collaborative effort with all of New York state, all of Central New York. It requires people to contribute every day and to be aware.

How much have you raised as of now?

We have donated more than $50,000 to the Carol Baldwin Breast Cancer Research Fund. Last year I did another $14,500 for the American Cancer Society, and right now we’ve done more than $5,000 from my Real Men Wear Pink campaign. It’s basically a group of men in the community saying they understand that not only (women) can get breast cancer.

How do you decide which cause to donate to?

I donate to Carol Baldwin and American Cancer Society. We’ve also donated some to the St. Baldrick’s Foundation (a fundraiser for children with cancer). We’ve looked at charities that will keep the money locally. A lot of it goes to Upstate Cancer Center. That’s important. I like the work that they’re doing there.

Whom have you met on this journey?

I met a woman named Rose Fazio out in Chittenango, who literally is disabled, and she was on her hands and knees, crawling. But she saved bottles for a year out there at her house. She called me again this year and said, “It’s Rose Fazio. Do you remember me?” She’s had tragedy in her family; her daughter has been sick. Yet selflessly, she donated a whole garage (of cans and bottles).

I remember people that I’ve met at the fair who are going through breast cancer who were so sick. I’ve met people at Wegmans who donated their (bottle return) slips. People would come up to me and hand me a $5 bill when I was (collecting bottles) at Delta Sonic car wash in the middle of the cold. I’ve met amazing people who understand what I’m doing and who have selflessly donated and have not bragged to anybody else what they’ve done. It’s not about me, it’s about them caring enough to care about other people.

How are you able to devote so much time to raising money for cancer research?

I worked on The Price Is Right (as a production assistant) with Bob Barker and announcer Rod Roddy for several years (in the 1990s and early 2000s) in Los Angeles. When Rod passed away from cancer, he left me a good amount of money. So I invested it wisely, and I pretty much devote my whole life now to raising funds for cancer research.

I was on that stage every day for years during the tapings. I was involved with writing scripts, picking contestants, everything. Behind the scenes, I stood next to Rod on stage every day. In April 2001, he started having pain during a show. I said, “Are you OK? Do you want me to call an ambulance?” And he said, “Absolutely not. I want to finish the show.”

He went to the hospital after the show and discovered he was anemic, and they started running tests. On Sept. 10, 2001, they did a colonoscopy and discovered he had metastatic colon cancer, and he had emergency surgery on the 9/11 for seven and a half hours. A doctor from the John Wayne Cancer Institute saved his life that day on Sept. 11. He had radiation and chemo following that and another surgery on Sept. 20, 2002. Then he was diagnosed with primary male breast cancer on March 14, 2003.

The summer of 2003 was brutal. I stayed with him the whole time in the hospital in addition to working on The Price Is Right. I went to chemo, I went to radiation, I stayed with him right until the day he died. It was a life-changing experience. He was my best friend, a wonderful person. He promoted early detection at the end of his life: mammograms, colonoscopies. I learned all about that from him.

I had already had breast cancer impact my life. Nobody else was willing to really go to chemo and radiation with him, and I said, “I’ll go with you.” He died on Oct. 27, 2003, at 3:45 in the afternoon; I was with him. It’ll be 14 years (this month) when I turn 40.

I miss him every day. I regret that he wasn’t diagnosed properly and early. The colon cancer, certainly. He put off having a colonoscopy for 13 years. The breast cancer came out of left field and just showed up. He also had prostate cancer that he had been diagnosed with early in 2001, but he hadn’t told anybody.

Part of this bottle drive and raising funds for cancer research is to honor him. I just think it’s a waste of a life, as are all (cancer-related deaths). It shouldn’t happen in 2017. We need more early detection. People always say to me, “Well, why do we need cans and bottles? There’s enough dollars for research.” And I always say, “Obviously not.” Cancer doesn’t discriminate: Black or white, rich or poor, young or old, it’s a horrible disease.

You herniated some discs in your back a couple of months ago. How is your back doing?

I saw a great physical therapist, and I’ve had some acupuncture done. I was in very bad shape. It’s better now, but I still have pain every day. I’ve gone back to collecting bottles — slowly. I’m very careful in the way I reach into the cans and careful how I bend my knees. I’m not leaning over.

What kinds of bottles do you see the most?

People always say that the economy stinks, and I always laugh. I can tell you that Coca-Cola is not going out of business, neither is Pepsi, neither is Budweiser. To be honest, I see water bottles the most. Ever since the water bottle bill went into effect in 2008, I see a ton of Wegmans bottles, Aldi bottles, Price Chopper bottles.

Sadly, I also see a lot of beer cans. I say sadly because I always hear there’s no money for cancer research, yet people have all this money to buy premium alcohol, which costs all of this money. So if they have money for alcohol, they probably have money to donate to cancer research. I see tons of Budweiser cans, Coors Lite, Miller Lite.

A better bottle bill needs to be passed for all of New York state. It’s silly to throw one type of bottle in the garbage and recycle another type. I say to New York state, Why are only certain cans recyclable? They say, “Oh, because it’s carbonated and this one’s not.” It doesn’t make a difference. A bottle is a bottle, plastic is plastic, a can is a can.

I see a lot of 1911 (cider), AriZona (iced tea), Monster (energy drink), and I see a ton of Gatorade and Powerade, too, which is why a better bottle bill needs to be passed.

What do you do with the bottles that aren’t recyclable?

I’ll bring them down to James. There’s a company that picks them up from him. But essentially there can’t be a donation made at that point for research. He gets a small amount from the recycling company to take those bottles. So are they getting recycled somewhere or another? Yes. But there should be a better bottle law, and it should cover everything. They do it in Maine, California, Hawaii. It’s non-excusable that it doesn’t happen here.

I’ve met with people in Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s office and we’re going to have to go back and lobby some more, but I’m willing to do it. You just have to convince Democrats and Republicans to come together (laughs), that it’s for the betterment of the state and to pass the law. We’re closer than we were before, and they understand.

Have you accomplished what you initially set out to?

I’ve made people aware of early detection, we’ve raised awareness for breast cancer and for all of cancer. I think it’s been effective. I know we’ve certainly helped the environment.

The bottles and cans don’t really mean anything to me. It just represents another 6 cents for cancer research. I hope, if anything, they represent hope and inspiration.

People always go, “Why bottles and cans?” Well, it’s just to show people how much money is thrown away in Syracuse every day. I see it every day, no matter what gas station I go to, whether it’s vacuumed up at Delta Sonic every day, or it’s thrown away in the garbage. All of that money could go to cancer research. So I hope that point gets through to people.

How long will you continue to do this?

I’m going to go for as long as my health allows me to, and after that, I think I have a significant amount of people now, like almost my own little army, that will go out there and fight for it. I know people who will donate their time, no matter what.

My goal doesn’t necessarily have to be with bottles and cans. If some business wants to come forward and make a big donation to cancer research, I’d love it. Delta Sonic did that last year; they made a $10,000 donation to Carol Baldwin in my name. So if a business thinks cancer research is worthwhile, and they want to make a tax-deductible donation and say, “Hey, I like what Laurence is doing,” I’m all for it. I want it to happen around the country.

There’s plenty of money for cancer research because it exists. I encourage people, don’t throw money in the garbage. I just think that’s crazy.

The post Many Happy Returns appeared first on Syracuse New Times.

Orange Holds The Tigers

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“God Luv Ya.”

That was one of legendary Syracuse University football coach Dick MacPherson’s favorite “Macisms,” and that’s what he would have likely said to current coach Dino Babers after the 21-point-underdog Orange stunned second-ranked Clemson 27-24 Oct. 13 before a raucous crowd of 42,475 at the Carrier Dome.

Sadly, Coach Mac died in August at 86. His passing and the 30th anniversary of his undefeated 1987 team raised more questions than usual this year about whether Syracuse could ever reach those lofty heights again.

For MacPherson, the watershed moment occurred during his third season in 1984, when the Orange upset No. 1 Nebraska 17-9 at the Carrier Dome. Three years later, Syracuse went 11-0-1 and finished fourth in the nation — its highest ranking since winning the national championship in 1959. The 1987 season started a 15-year run under MacPherson and Paul Pasqualoni that included a 127-49-4 record, a 9-2-1 record in bowl games, and nine Associated Press top-25 finishes.

Tight End Ravian Pierce secured four catches for 66 yards in the bout against Clemson. Dylan Suttles photo

Those days seemed long gone, but now Babers and the Orange have given SU fans hope that Syracuse is not destined to be a middling Atlantic Coast Conference team that will never challenge the likes of Clemson, Florida State and Miami.

“This is big. Capital B, capital I, capital G. Full caps, exclamation, exclamation (Translation: BIG!!),” said SU athletics director John Wildhack. “I’m so proud of coach, our staff, our team and thankful to our fans. Coach and his staff put together a great game plan, the team executed it, and the fans were huge. They made a difference. The 12th man was there, the 12th man was impactful. There’s no question.

“Tonight’s a big, big step forward,” added Wildhack, who was a high-level ESPN executive before moving to SU in July 2016. “Now we’ve got to figure out how we get better, right? The fact that it was on national television — ESPN, prime time, the only college football game — it’s a great showcase for the program and a great showcase for the university and our community.”

Babers promised big things at his introductory news conference in December 2015 and for the most part he has delivered. On paper, last year’s team wasn’t any better than the 2015 squad under Coach Scott Shafer (both teams went 4-8), but the 2016 Orange did notch a signature win over No. 17 Virginia Tech at the Carrier Dome. That victory and Babers’ epic “Whose house? Our house!” post-game locker room speech that was captured by ESPN probably gave the program more national exposure than it had received in the previous 11 years combined under coaches Greg Robinson, Doug Marrone and Shafer.

ESPN also captured Babers’ post-game speech following the Clemson game. And while it was more “He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother,” than last year’s “Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show,” the speech shows a coach who clearly cares about his players and emphasizes respect, family and academics as much as football.

“The thing about the locker room is that you get to look into those young people’s eyes. And when you’re looking at them, and they’re looking back, there are certain things you know they will never forget,” Babers said. “How would you like to do something positive that somebody would never forget for the rest of their lives? They’re going to see more days than I’m going to see, and (it’s great) to know I put a mark in time and on 124 people’s lives. They’re going to live a heck of a lot longer than me, I can promise you that, so that’s really special. That’s what coaching is all about.”

But getting his players to believe and “buy in” was still only half the battle for Babers and the Orange. In the end, Syracuse had to outplay a 6-0 Clemson team that had the nation’s longest winning streak at 11 games and one of the nation’s top defenses, and appeared headed for a national championship rematch with No. 1 Alabama.

And this was a Syracuse team that lost at Clemson 54-0 last year, lost its final four games of 2016 (albeit with starting quarterback Eric Dungey sidelined by injury), and lost to Middle Tennessee — Middle Tennessee!!! — just five weeks ago. The Orange did play well on the road in losses to No. 25 LSU and North Carolina State, but as Dungey asked after the Clemson game, raise your hand if you thought Syracuse had a prayer to cover the 21-point spread against the Tigers, let alone win the game.

“Show of hands: Who thought we were going to win today?” Dungey asked the media as one hand was raised. “Like I was saying (in the locker room), nobody believes in us except us, and that’s fine. At the end of the day, this feels good.”

Wildhack wasn’t sitting with the media at the time, but his hand went up, too.

Wide receiver Devin C. Butler reels in a pass against Clemson last Friday. Dylan Suttles photo

“Yes, I did,” he said when asked if he honestly thought the Orange had a chance. “I’ve seen the growth of the program in the 14 months I’ve been here, I have the privilege to work with Dino and his staff and see the development of the kids, and you see them come together as a team. You see the culture of the program change. So yeah, tall order? Absolutely. But I never for a second thought we could not win. We’d have to play really, really well and we did.”

The signs were there from the start, as the Orange scored a touchdown on the game’s opening drive and never trailed, although Clemson did tie the score at 7, 14, 17 and 24. Dungey was the difference as he completed 20 of 32 passes for 278 yards and three touchdowns and rushed for 61 yards against a Tigers defense that had allowed only 264.3 yards and 11.3 points per game.

In fact, the Orange scored more touchdowns in the first three quarters (three) than Clemson had allowed in the first three quarters ALL SEASON. And with the game on the line in the fourth quarter, Dungey sealed the win with a 15-yard completion to wide receiver Steve Ishmael on a 3rd-and-11 play from the Orange 49-yard line and a gutsy 8-yard run on 3rd-and-8 from the Clemson 34.

“It’s a heck of a win against us. We’re not an easy out, at any time,” said Clemson star defensive tackle Christian Wilkins, one of four Tigers defensive linemen that are likely headed to the NFL. “That quarterback, No. 2, he’s a heck of a player and he got my respect tonight.”

The Orange outgained Clemson 440-317, in large part because Syracuse converted 8 of 19 third-down plays while the Tigers were 2 for 11. The Orange defense, which is one of the most improved defenses in the country, knocked out Clemson quarterback Kelly Bryant in the second quarter as he suffered a concussion on a hard tackle by Syracuse defensive tackle Chris Slayton.

“That is what it looks like when we put together a full game,” said Syracuse senior linebacker Zaire Franklin, who had one of SU’s four sacks. “We played LSU and it didn’t come out the way we wanted it to. Same with NC State. Clemson is the best team we have played all year and we finally decided to come together and put a game together. In the grand scheme of things, we accomplished something major, but for us it confirms everything we have been working hard for.”

Clemson committed 11 penalties for 119 yards and missed two makeable field goals. But Coach Dabo Swinney, who proved that losing coaches can show class, both credited Syracuse for its win and visited the Orange locker room after the game to congratulate the players.

“Obviously, we’re very disappointed. There’s a lot of pain in our locker room, but this is a story about Syracuse,” Swinney said. “This isn’t about Clemson, it’s about Syracuse. They outplayed us, and our coaches and I give them a ton of credit. This was a football game that they flat out wanted more than we did and that’s 100 percent on me.”

Fans stormed Legends Field following quarterback Eric Dungey’s final kneel down. Dylan Suttles photo

Babers said he expects Clemson will win out and still have an opportunity to play for the national championship. If that’s the case, Syracuse’s win will be mentioned countless times as analysts and pundits compare Clemson’s resume to other playoff contenders.

That can only help with recruiting, as will SU’s first appearance in a bowl game since 2013. To that end, the Orange (4-3) needs to win at least two of its five remaining games, starting with the Saturday, Oct. 21, 3:30 p.m. matchup at No. 8 Miami (telecast on ESPN).

According to his former players, another favorite Coach Macism was “Men, learn to do what you do.” To reach a bowl and continue in the direction Babers wants to take them, the Orange would be wise to take that advice and learn from the win over Clemson and what it takes to beat powerhouses on a regular basis.

“For me, it’s just a win. All that is awesome, but like Coach Babers said, he expects us to win,” Dungey said. “At the end of the day we beat the No. 2 team in the country, but that’s what he expects from us and what we expect from one another. We still have five games left in the season, so we need to get to work.”

Feels Like The First Time: Syracuse’s 27-24 win over No. 2 Clemson Oct. 13 was the Orange’s first victory over the defending national champion since 1998 (Michigan) and its first win over a top-10 team since 2002 (No. 8 Virginia Tech).

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The Truth Is Out There

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Are we alone in the universe? According to UFO researcher and columnist Cheryl Costa, the answer is an emphatic no. And her book, UFO Sightings Desk Reference: United States of America 2001-2015 (paperback, $39.95), released on March 24, has the statistics to back up that claim.

Costa and her wife, Linda Miller Costa, co-authored the 359-page amalgam of bar graphs and Excel sheets over a 16-month period of incessant number crunching. The book encompasses data from all 50 states from 2001 to 2015, which includes the number of sightings by month and year broken down by state and county. Shapes of the UFOs are also prominently featured.

Cheryl Costa in her study room. Michael Davis Photo

Due to her book’s groundbreaking subject matter, Costa has garnered national media attention from radio stations, science magazines, and even The New York Times.

The task of gathering data from privately funded and civilian-run organizations was tedious, yet Costa was determined to release that information in a way that she said has never been done before.

“This was the compelling notion: Let’s publish the numbers,” Costa said. “Let’s show people just how big this is. And we suspected it was really big.”

Costa officially retired from the work force in February after nearly 10 years in the Air Force and the Navy as an electronic surveillance technician, more than 30 years at Lockheed Martin as a computer security analyst, and several other short-lived jobs. She now spends her time furthering her research on UFOs and writing a well-trafficked column on the Syracuse New Times website called New York Skies.

Since starting the column in 2012, Costa has spoken at numerous symposiums around the country. Following the release of her book, more doors have been opened to speaking opportunities than ever before.

“We did one in Erie, Pa., and we had an audience there from New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio,” Costa said. “So I shared charts with them for their individual states. At these conventions I talk to everybody about everything.”

Costa is set to speak at the 2018 International UFO Congress in Arizona, which takes place Feb. 14 to 18. The event is the largest UFO conference in the nation, boasting 3,000 to 5,000 attendees per day each year.

Closer to home, Costa will speak at the Center for the Arts, 72 S. Main St., Homer, on Thursday, Oct. 26, 7 p.m. At the free event, she plans to take a break from discussing more recent UFO sightings to instead discuss experiences from the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries.

What first got you interested in UFOs?

I saw my first one when I was about 12. In fact, the whole family saw it. We were coming back from a relative’s house, and we saw a big, silvery sphere parked out in a clear, blue sky in a late August afternoon. It was about a week before school started. My mother had my father pull the car over and we sat there for 15 to 20 minutes watching this thing. It was about the size of your fingernail out there in the sky.

My mother explained it could be a lot of things. It might be people from another planet. That got a conversation going with my mother and I over time, and we started getting books from the library and reading stuff with each other. And that was about as far as it went.

I had a few other sighting experiences in my early 20s. I’ve always just been very well read on the topic.

In November 2012, I saw a sidebar story on CNN.com. It said, “UFOs have been declining since the 1980s. Perhaps they were always just an urban legend.” And that didn’t feel right. So I went out to the Mutual UFO Network website for the first time in my life, and I looked up numbers for a couple of years in the late-1980s right up through about 2000. And the chart went up like a rocket. And I thought to myself, “What memo didn’t the UFOs get?”

That’s what got me going on the idea of, “Maybe we should start reporting these things.” So I pitched it to a couple of editors at different places, and finally I came over and talked to (former Syracuse New Times editor-in-chief) Larry Dietrich, and he was intrigued because I was going to pretty much tell New York state stories for the most part. That’s how we really got deep into it. It’s been five years.

Where did you learn so much about the topic of UFOs?

In 1990 I was recuperating from a medical illness for a time, and I was between apartments. A gentleman I knew at that time, he was taking care of his father who had cancer at another residence. He said, “Hey, if you feed my cat, you can stay at my house.” So I did. And he had first editions on everything that had been written up until that point on UFOs.

So for the few months that I was there recuperating, I read about everything he had. Like I said, I was very well read but didn’t want to follow it. It had a stigma to it. But I think the (article on CNN’s website) in 2012 spoke to me from the standpoint of misinformation. And that’s been talked about a lot over the years.

For over 70 years, there’s been this policy of denial and ridicule. So what does a lawyer do when he or she has an eyewitness to something? They do everything to discredit the witness. So they have this whole thing out there in the public mindset: “Oh, the people who report UFOs are crazy or hoaxers or crackpots or conspiracy theorists.” I hear this all the time, and that’s not the case. Most people I’ve met doing this column want to get it off their chest and there’s no place else to report it.

For your weekly New York Skies blog, where do you get the inspiration for each topic that you write about?

Some weeks, it’s as simple as looking at the report logs, and I see sightings that are interesting, and I’ll write one of them up. There’s a lot of activity lately with the whole disclosure issue. I’m plugged into people who are very close to that, so I’m very knowledgeable on the topic.

Michael Davis Photo

There was a poll in 2012 from National Geographic that said 70 percent to 80 percent of the American public think the government is not being clean with us about this stuff, so there’s an audience there for that. I started doing things where I was keeping county statistics. I have to write about something, with New York state being the beat, so to speak. I found out very quickly in the UFO community that I was about the only one reporting statistics. So, we did New York state back in 2015, and a number of UFO investigators in New York state said, “We didn’t know about that pattern or that pattern or the one over there. How did you get this pattern?” I said, “We added county data to the existing material.”

And because of that, my spouse, Linda, and I were talking and we said, “Why don’t we do the whole United States?”  We figured it would take a year. It took 16 months, and that’s how the book came to be. One of the things I pride myself on is being able to show people the statistics and this stuff is happening, it’s real, and you don’t hear about it anyplace else but here.

What compelled you to create the UFO Sightings Desk Reference?

In 2015, we had (compiled statistics for) New York state, and it revealed truths we didn’t know. A good example was that everybody knew about the Lake Erie Effect. Lots of UFO sightings along Lake Erie and the Niagara frontier.

What we didn’t know, until I put county data into the overall sighting data, was that there’s a Lake Ontario Effect. Monroe County has almost as many sightings for the same period of time as the Erie region does.

So we said, “Wow, this is wild stuff! What would we see if we did the whole country?” It took 16 months, and there are two more books in the works that take the same data but format it differently.

How will the books be different?

Well, the first book we went with purely magnitudes. We wanted to show you the United States and down to the county level. We have city data. It’s not clean enough yet because people spell cities wrong and it doesn’t sort well. And when you’re manually touching 121,000 records, it gets messy and takes time.

But we’re going to publish a cities directory, and I’m about a quarter of the way through it right now. If we had done it with this book, it would’ve been 700 pages. That was too big. So we’re going to do one that’s laid out similar to the current desk reference, except it will literally drill down to the city level and show what the counts are per city and all the states and counties that have these sightings.

So if a county has 500 sightings in that 15-year period, we’ll be able to break down exactly what the cities were. We’ve already done it for a couple of news organizations that have reached out.

For the other book, investigators have been asking for a good summary of the shapes, and we hope to do the same data, except when we get down to the county level, show them exactly what shapes they had in that 15-year period, and that’s a different format.

Where did the data come from? What resources were used?

The National UFO Reporting Center’s data, which was 60 percent to 70 percent of it, depending upon the state. Then the Mutual UFO Network. They were 30 percent to 40 percent. For the most part, that was the data we used. It was all of their public data.

MUFON was very generous with us because we had to ask them to pull it special for us. NUFORC’s was available right off of the internet. It was just a matter of downloading their website’s data using Excel.

We started at 5 o’clock in the morning on Jan. 1; you wouldn’t believe the bandwidth availability because every-body is sleeping. So we were able to download everything in about three hours. It was amazing.

What has the reaction to your book been like so far?

‍In 70 years, ‍The New York Times ‍has never spoken nicely about UFOs. In fact, they were very stodgy about it. Our book rattled them. In fact, something we heard back from a couple media producers was that we caused some shockwaves in the media industry. Much more than we realized.

Michael Davis Photo

So when they decided to do an article about us, they came up and made sure we weren’t sleeping in my mother’s cellar or something. They spent a day with us. The flavor was that this was the first time anyone ever published the numbers. Numbers don’t lie, as they say. That’s why we got the headline, “People Are Seeing UFOs Everywhere, And This Book Proves It.” You can’t dislike a headline like that.

There were people who were seriously interested, and it changed the dialogue of the conversation. Before the book, if I had any kind of an interview usually associated with the column, I usually got a lot of the silly questions: “Are they little green men?” And that was the limit of the conversation.

After this ‍New York Times ‍article came out, a lot of copies (of the book) ended up in a lot of newsrooms because when they started coming to me for an interview, they came to me with serious, solid questions that suggested they had looked at the book.

In terms of disclosure, they’re now asking smart questions for a change. I did get my fair share of people from a TV station asking, “Well, how do you know (the statistics are) credible?” Well, how do you know they’re not? Until someone disproves a witness, an eyewitness account can still get you convicted in any court in this country. We had 120,036 eyewitness accounts, so that was one of the reactions.

But we were getting interview requests from places you wouldn’t expect: ‍Harper’s Magazine‍, a couple of science magazines. V‍ogue.com did a piece on us, and we wondered about that. Then we realized the ‍New York Times ‍article mentioned that our computer we wrote the book on was in our sewing room. So I guess they made that connection.

Have you accomplished what you set out to accomplish with this book?

Yes, we did. What we set out to do was: what, when, where and what shape. That’s all we wanted to know. The focus was we wanted to disprove this notion that had been misinformed for a long time, “Oh, UFOs, they’re gone. They’ve been declining. People don’t believe in them anymore.” And the numbers have been going up. Three waves over 15 years. So we dispelled that myth.

We didn’t expect to discover things. We didn’t expect to discover the weather patterns associated with this, the latitude patterns, how they affect the shapes. We didn’t expect to find the day of the week these things are more prominent. And there’s stuff we’re still finding.”

You’ve been in contact with some production companies for a TV show. What kinds of deals have been in the works?

We signed an agreement in a development context, and that’s kind of where it sits. It’s in development, I have correspondents with (Atlas Media Corp.) in New York City. Of course, because we haven’t done a pilot yet or anything like that, these productions can take about 12 to 15 months.

So after we get up to that stage, we’ll probably do a pilot. That’s when they’re going to go out and pitch this thing to prospective networks who might buy it. It’s going to be about UFOs from a modern context instead of all of the great UFO crashes of the last 50 years, because our book of statistics dealt with 21st- century sightings. We’re looking at that as our hook.

And now the talk is that we’re going to go on the road to some of the hot spots in the United States and visit the people there and maybe camp out and do some sightings.

Recently, the topic of disclosure has come out in the mainstream media. What does this mean, and what do you see happening from here?

Disclosure: The idea of the government coming clean. I wrote a column some time back about three former presidents who, when they were on Jimmy Kimmel Live, wouldn’t give him a straight answer and nervously laughed it off.

My question is: Why wasn’t 60 Minutes or 20/20 or some news organization asking that question? Why did it have to be a late-night comedian? It’s a conversation we don’t seem to be able to have. So that’s the big deal in disclosure right now.

Back in January, right before President Obama left office, the CIA had declassified some older UFO documents. That was sort of a smoking gun because here are some of these documents — I’ve got PDFs of these things — they were pulling their hair out about 70 years ago about some of the things that Linda and I were pulling our hair out about when we were doing our book. And they were getting paid, I was getting ridiculed.

The people in the UFO community know this stuff is genuine. There’s enough evidence out there. It’s the general public who haven’t had somebody bless it, so to speak, for some government official to stand up and say, “Yes, this is real.” And that’s what we’re trying to get. We’re trying to get them to be honest and own up to what’s going on.

Michael Davis Photo

Most classified material, and I worked with it both in the military and as a civilian contractor for an aerospace firm, is usually declassified in as little as 15 to 30 years; worst case about 50 years. It’s been 70 years on this topic matter. It’s classified higher than the H-bomb. If it’s so ridiculous, why is it still classified like it’s been since the 1950s? It’s wrong. We need to know what’s going on.

(In one of my recent blog posts,) we had Luis Elizondo, the head of a particular (Department of Defense) unit that collected information on UFOs. And he got on that video and said, “They’re real, guys.”

So that was very, very eye-opening. People in the UFO community wanted to drink from the fire hose, but for your average person who knew nothing about UFOs, that was about as much disclosure as they could take. I’ve talked to a few people who have seen that clip and they said, “Wow! Up until now I didn’t believe it was real, and now it’s real.”

What do you hope to see change regarding UFOs?

‍There needs to be a national conversation on the topic matter. I had somebody writing something up about us and he referred to me as a UFO enthusiast. And I said, “No, I’m not a UFO enthusiast. I’m trying to out the truth out there.” I think this is an important thing.

I hope that the truth does come out. There’s a lot of people besides me working on it. We had hoped it would happen at the end of the Obama administration. There’s a registered lobbyist in D.C., and he was working really hard at it. We don’t know where it’s going to go with the current administration, but there are other efforts afoot.

I’d like to see the dialogue that’s going to lead to disclosure, because for 50 to 70 years, we’ve had this mentality that we’ve been sold a bill of goods. The people who are interested in this topic are loony toons, hoaxers, all of this stuff. And that is not the case.

When I was first getting ready to write the column, I sat down at a diner and I said, “Hey, I’m getting ready to write a column about UFOs. Anybody here seen one besides me?” And somebody leaned in and said, “Yeah, I saw one.” Somebody came over a little while later and told
me, “Oh yeah, my brother saw this during the war.”

With the column, I’ve had people invite me to a backyard barbecue and say, “Hey, we want you to meet our Uncle Ralph who saw this.” We’re finding out that people are handing these things down like family heirlooms.

People have been convinced that if you report one of these things, people are going to label you as a nut. For example, somebody in my family has been harassed because of the visibility that my book has caused. We’ve got to get past that.

Part of the reason we can’t get congressional hearings is because everyone has bought into it. If a congressman stands up and says, “I think we need to have UFO and E.T. presence hearings,” they’re going to label them a kook because it’s been built into the culture over the last 70 years. I want to see that end. If it’s serious enough to be classified higher than the H-bomb, then it’s time for them to come clean with us. SNT

The post The Truth Is Out There appeared first on Syracuse New Times.


The Con Con: Pros and Cons

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Twenty years ago on Central Issues, the WCNY-Channel 24 public affairs program, host Dan Cummings asked Lee Plavoukos, then associate counsel to the speaker of the New York State Assembly, if we should have a constitutional convention. A provision in the New York state constitution mandates that every 20 years citizens decide whether they wish to convene a convention to revise and amend that document.

Plavoukos described the endeavor as romantic. “It’s a great idea,” he told Cummings then, “but it’s not worth the risks.” Today he thinks we have no other choice.

In a telephone interview, state Sen. John DeFrancisco, currently touring to determine the prospects for a gubernatorial campaign, dismissed the concept as having “very little likelihood of success.” He noted that good government groups may see a constitutional convention as the only way to deal with current corruption in Albany, with the election of three delegates from each state Senate district together with 15 statewide delegates bringing fresh faces into the political system. “But realistically,” he observes, “who are the people most likely to get elected?”

Former City Hall lawyer Joseph Bergh, whose practice often included constitutional issues, views the convention as an opportunity to address such issues as municipal finance and the improvement of the court system. He agrees with Plavoukos that it could provide a platform for settling the issue of consolidation of government services.

“The last time we had a constitutional convention,” he points out, “the world was a lot different.” That time, which Plavoukos describes as a distant mirror of today, was 1938, a time when traditional political values — freedom of speech, religion, and the electoral process — were under attack from both the right and the left.

That year the voters approved the convention, 1,413,604 to 1,190,275. But civic attitude toward the process can be gauged by the total vote on the proposition, which was 3 million less than that cast on the governor’s race on the same ballot. Voters rejected the concept in 1957, 1977 and 1997.

That year, despite controlling the governor’s office, the state Senate and New York City, Democrats failed to win control of the convention. The final tally was 92 Republicans, 75 Democrats and one member of the American Labor Party. A special convention was called by the state Legislature in 1967.

The 1938 version attracted an all-star lineup of then-prominent politicos. Frederick Crane, chief judge of the Court of Appeals, was elected convention president. Also on hand were four-time governor Al Smith, Sen. Robert Wagner, Congressman Hamilton Fish and urban planner and power broker Robert Moses.

During a five-month session, the delegates debated and enacted proposals both progressive and traditional. Conflict over an “exclusionary rule,” prohibiting the use of any evidence obtained by an illegal search or seizure, previewed that year’s race for governor. Thomas Dewey’s arguments against the rule prevailed, but Herbert Lehman beat him that November.

If voters approve a convention for next year, they may be providing a stage for a confrontation between environmentalists and developers over the future of Adirondack Park. Unions fear their right to organize, to receive the prevailing rate on construction projects and to bargain collectively might be adversely affected courtesy of powerful special interests.

And then there are the strange bedfellows. Advocates for Planned Parenthood and the National Right to Life Committee finally agree on one thing: Both groups oppose the constitutional convention. The New York State Conservative Party and major public employee unions view the prospect of a constitutional convention as a dangerous waste of time and money.

The New York State Teachers Union is warning members and the general public that the current education system would be compromised by private school tuition vouchers, tax credits and charter schools, all made possible courtesy of the constitutional convention.

There is, however, one issue that everyone concerned can agree on: Albany has a longstanding tradition of government corruption. “After I left Albany,” Plavoukos recalls, “I realized that politics is all the organized crime we can agree on.” Since 2000, almost three dozen members of the state Legislature have faced criminal charges resulting in their resignation or removal. Several good government groups view the convention as an opportunity to address the issue of ethics reform.

The convention could create a full-time legislature, with term limits and a ban on any outside income. Also possible is establishing the right of every New Yorker to health care, including reproductive rights protections. Currently, the state constitution is silent on those issues.

“Right now we see the far right and left pulling the political spectrum so far apart there is no longer any common ground for compromise,” Plavoukos projects. “Each side points fingers at each other as to the reason why nothing is getting done. Call it institutionalized failure. A constitutional convention could provide the vehicle to bring policymakers back to the middle, long enough to do something positive, with the rest of us looking over their shoulder.” SNT

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Furious Styles For A Cool Yule

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Dave Bergan’s fashion consciousness came early. His family talked clothes at the dinner table. After all, his family was in the clothes business.

“A family of retailers,” he recalls about growing up in Fulton, where his father started a clothing store in the late 1950s. “Throughout the years everybody in the family participated in the business. Finally my brother Michael and I decided to go in as partners together in the early 1980s.”

The family tradition has settled in over the years until the point where Bergan Brothers Clothing is the longest continuous running business on South Salina Street in downtown Syracuse. The shop, 328 S. Salina St., is open Mondays through Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. For information, call (315) 471-9162 or visit berganbrothers.com.

Dave and Mike occasionally reflect on how tough business can be and whether they should continue. “But as good retailers, you put your feet down,” Dave observes. “You really take a look at what the reality of life is out there. We’ve decided to stay in downtown Syracuse. We want to show people across the country that this is a vibrant, active and beautiful community to do business in.”

What was your very first sense of fashion?

We grew up in the fashion business, so as a young boy that was the talk at the dinner table. We were a typical Irish Catholic family. At night all five children were queried on our daily activities, but then fashion and clothing would become the focus.

Did you ever imagine you would end up with a store of your own?

Probably not at all. In those days in Fulton, there were seven or eight small men’s clothing stores, predominantly white. As we moved our business into downtown Syracuse, we saw a very unique reason to have clothing for the Afro-American. We looked out onto Salina Street and saw the tremendous need. We actually moved the racks out on the sidewalk. I wore a change purse, similar to a carpenter’s nail bag, and we would actually do business right on the street.

Was it hard to find the clothes to stock?

In those days the garment industry wasn’t targeting the black shopper, particularly the Afro-American male. It was difficult at first. As the years went on, and with a lot of coast-to-coast traveling, we found the sources who could supply us with the merchandise.

But as the retailing developed, did you become more than just a clothes store for the communities of color?

Very, very important: The NAACP has an award, and in 2001 it was presented to myself and my brother Michael for being a participant in the community. What a great honor that was at that time.

Was one of your greatest achievements the creation of a black Santa Claus at Christmas time?

All our clientele, and certainly all the children, would come in around the Christmas season, and they would go to the malls and confront themselves with a white Santa Claus. We thought it was very important to be so special for that community, and we had a fella working for us who took great pride in doing it, (the late) Mr. Zack Odum. We put him right in the front window: We had an Afro-American Santa Claus, a very jovial man. It was a great success; it went on all three television stations.

Is Santa Claus really black?

Who knows? But what a surprise for the children when they came in for their own Christmas. It was a delight to provide that service to the community I remember working closely with Jackie Robinson, who was with WSTM-Channel 3 at the time.

You were also active downtown, such as being elected president of the Heart of Downtown Association.

In the early 1980s we had a very active merchants association. We had more locally owned merchants downtown. We didn’t have the chains. We didn’t have the development you see now. We were a very active group for about 18 years. We had the Summer in the City activity, which would block off the streets for a weekend. We had the three-on-three basketball, which actually started right here in front of the store on the 300 block of Salina Street. They voted me in 18 years in a row.

What did you learn about downtown from that experience?

I learned where downtown really is. It’s a mixing of cultures and we had to become aware of that and who the clientele really was and who we could provide our product. That’s when we really started to excel in providing fashion and fun.

One of the most fun experiences must have been Live at Bergan’s, the in-house informercial show on WNYS-Channel 43 in the mid-1990s. Was throwing clothes on the floor your signature?

It was kind of an accident that happened. I got frustrated, loaded up with clothes that were passed by one of my associates, and I decided to start throwing them in a nonsensical way out to the audience, and it became my trademark. I still have people, many years after the show, come in and say, “You’re the guy that used to throw the clothes on the floor.”

In those days we came on right after Soul Train. We had the unique experience to have Mr. Don Cornelius, who isn’t with us anymore, actually call us. And I blew him off. His assistant called one day and wanted to offer us a donut, which is a preview on Soul Train, regionally, not nationally, to advertise Live at Bergan’s. I thought it was kind of a hoax, because we would get 40 to 50 phone calls every Saturday because we called ourselves Live at Bergan’s, although we were a taped show.

So I blew him off and then Channel 43 called and said, “Why did you blow off Mr. Don Cornelius?” Then he called, and I had the beautiful opportunity to speak with him, and he was so delighted to see that there was a TV show regionally that was making a unique effort in going after the excitement of the Afro-American trade community, the dance part of it, the fashion part of it. He gave us two free donuts, and they were very expensive in those days, two previews on his show saying “Coming up next, Live at Bergan’s.”

Why is the show no longer broadcasting?

They have many times asked us to do the show again, but there is the time involved with doing a production, and Michael and I are devoting our time to really expand Bergan Brothers on a national basis. That’s with our brick-and-mortar store as well as our internet facilities. Now what we do is a lot on the internet.

How did you discover the internet?

I have to tip my hat to my brother Mike. He’s the one who, many years back, had the foresight to realize that the retail men’s clothing, and perhaps any retail situation, to sell your wares you’re going to have some sort of internet exposure. So Michael built the page, it’s all self-starting, we’ve done it all in-house. We started our internet business, and it’s flourished.

The real secret for retail going forward is a combination of brick-and-mortar as well as the online business. You see that Macy’s is closing so many stores, but they are keeping their flagship stores. People still want to touch and feel and experience the fun and excitement of shopping for clothing right in the store, but then we find that 2 o’clock in the morning people are buying suits all across the country, in Iowa, in Illinois. So we’ve become a coast-to-coast national business, which is of great pride for my brother Mike and me.

But I don’t think anything is guaranteed in the clothing business. I have a lot of students from Syracuse University that come down every year, and we try to show them that it’s an extremely risky business, but with a well-thought-out game plan you can have a nice career. But you have to be aware of the changes in the market that we confront. SNT

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Project Censored 2017

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In America, we commonly think of press freedom and censorship in terms of the First Amendment, which focuses attention on the press itself, and limits on the power of government to restrict it. But the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, drafted in the aftermath of World War II, presents a broader framework; Article 19 reads, “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”

By highlighting the right to receive information and ideas, Article 19 makes it clear that press freedom is about everyone in society, not just the press, and that government censorship is only one potential way of thwarting that right. That’s the perspective that has informed Project Censored from the beginning, more than 40 years ago.

Even though Project Censored’s annual list focuses on specific censored stories, the underlying issue has never been isolated examples. They serve to highlight how far short we fall from the fully informed public that a strong democracy requires — and that we all require in order to live healthy, safe, productive, satisfying lives. It’s the larger patterns of missing information, hidden problems and threats that should really concern us. Each Project Censored story provides some of that information, but the annual list helps shed light on these broader patterns of what’s missing, as well as on the specifics of the stories themselves.

During the 1972 election, Bob Woodward and CarlBernstein were reporting on the earliest developments in the Watergate scandal, but their work was largely isolated, despite running in the Washington Post. They were covering it as a developing criminal case; it never crossed over into a political story until after the election. That’s a striking example of a missing pattern. It helped contribute to the founding of Project Censored by Carl Jensen, who defined censorship as “the suppression of information, whether purposeful or not, by any method — including bias, omission, underreporting or self-censorship — that prevents the public from fully knowing what is happening in its society.”

In the current edition’s introduction to the list of stories, Andy Lee Roth writes, “Finding common themes across news stories helps to contextualize each item as a part of the larger narratives shaping our times.” He goes on to cite several examples spanning the top 25 list: four stories on climate change, six involving racial inequalities, four on issues involving courts, three on health issues, “at least two stories” involving the Pentagon, three on government surveillance and two involving documentary films produced by the Shell Oil Co.

Roth goes on to say, “There are more connections to be identified. As we have noted in previous Project Censored volumes, the task of identifying common topical themes within each year’s story list and across multiple years transforms the reader from a passive recipient of information into an active, engaged interpreter. We invite you to engage with this year’s story list in this way.”

It’s excellent advice. But to get things started on the more limited scope of the top 10 stories, three main themes clearly seem evident: first, threats to public health (1. Widespread Lead Contamination Threatens Children’s Health, and Could Triple Household Water Bills. 6. Antibiotic-Resistant Superbugs Threaten Health and Foundations of Modern Medicine. 8. Maternal Mortality a Growing Threat in the U.S.); second, threats to democracy, both at home (4. Voter Suppression in the 2016 Presidential Election. 5. Big Data and Dark Money Behind the 2016 Election. and 9. DNC Claims Right to Select Presidential Candidate) and abroad (10. 2016: A Record Year for Global Internet Shutdowns); and third, an out-of-control military (2. More Than $6 Trillion in Unaccountable Army Spending. 3. Pentagon Paid UK PR Firm for Fake Al-Qaeda Videos, and 7. The Toll of U.S. Navy Training on Wildlife in the North Pacific.).

But don’t let this overview pattern blind you to other patterns you may see for yourself. Even individual stories often involve different overlapping patterns: environmental destruction and an out-of-control military in No. 7, for example, or public health and infrastructure concerns in No. 1. These patterns don’t just connect problems and issues, they connect people, communities and potential solutions as well. A shared understanding of the patterns that hold us down and divide us is the key to developing better patterns to live by together. With that thought in mind, here is Project Censored’s Top 10 List for 2016-2017.

1. Widespread Lead Contamination Threatens Children’s Health, and Could Triple Household Water Bills

After President Barack Obama declared a federal emergency in Flint, Mich., based on lead contamination of the city’s water supply in January 2016, Reuters reporters M.B. Pell and Joshua Schneyer began an investigation of lead contamination nationwide with shocking results. In June 2016, they reported that although many states and Medicaid rules require blood lead tests for young children, millions of children were not being tested. In December 2016, they reported on the highly decentralized data they had been able to assemble from 21 states, showing that 2,606 census tracts and 278 zip codes across the United States had levels of lead poisoning more than double the rates found in Flint at the peak of its contamination crisis. Of those, 1,100 communities had lead contamination rates “at least four times higher” than Flint.

In Flint, 5 percent of the children screened had high blood lead levels. Nationwide, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that 2.5 percent of all U.S. children younger than age 6 — about 500,000 children — have elevated blood lead levels.

But Pell and Schneyer’s neighborhood focus allowed them to identify local hotspots “whose lead poisoning problems may be obscured in broader surveys,” such as those focused on statewide or countywide rates. They found them in communities that “stretch from Warren, Pa., where 36 percent of children tested had high lead levels, to Goat Island, Texas, where a quarter of tests showed poisoning.” What’s more, “In some pockets of Baltimore, Cleveland and Philadelphia, where lead poisoning has spanned generations, the rate of elevated tests over the last decade was 40 percent to 50 percent.”

In January 2017, Schneyer and Pell reported that, based on their previous investigation, “From California to Pennsylvania, local leaders, health officials and researchers are advancing measures to protect children from the toxic threat. They include more blood-lead screening, property inspections, hazard abatement and community outreach programs.”

But there’s a deeper infrastructure problem involved, as Farron Cousins reported for DeSmogBlog in January 2017. “Lead pipes are time bombs” and water contamination is to be expected, Cousins wrote. The United States relies on an estimated 1.2 million miles of lead pipes for municipal delivery of drinking water, and much of this aging infrastructure is reaching or has exceeded its lifespan.

In 2012 the American Water Works Association estimated that a complete overhaul of the nation’s aging water systems would require an investment of $1 trillion over the next 25 years, which could triple household water bills. As Cousins reported, a January 2017 Michigan State University study found that “while water rates are currently unaffordable for an estimated 11.9 percent of households, the conservative estimates of rising rates used in this study highlight that this number could grow to 35.6 percent in the next five years.”

As Cousins concluded, “While the water contamination crisis will occasionally steal a headline or two, virtually no attention has been paid to the fact that we’re pricing a third of U.S. citizens out of the water market.”

2. More Than $6 Trillion in Unaccountable Army Spending

In 1996, Congress passed legislation requiring all government agencies to undergo annual audits, but a July 2016 report by the Department of Defense’s inspector general found that the Army alone has accumulated $6.5 trillion in expenditures that can’t be accounted for over the past two decades.

As Dave Lindorff reported for the website This Can’t Be Happening!, the DoD “has not been tracking or recording or auditing all of the taxpayer money allocated by Congress: what it was spent on, how well it was spent, or where the money actually ended up.” But the Army wasn’t alone. “Things aren’t any better at the Navy, Air Force and Marines,” he added.

The report appeared at a time when “politicians of both major political parties are demanding accountability for every penny spent on welfare, ditto for people receiving unemployment compensation,” Lindorff wrote. Politicians have also engaged in pervasive efforts “to make teachers accountable for student ‘performance,’” he added. Yet, he observed, “The military doesn’t have to account for any of its trillions of dollars of spending, even though Congress fully a generation ago passed a law requiring such accountability.”

In March 2017, after Trump proposed a $52 billion increase in military spending, Thomas Hedges reported for The Guardian that “the Pentagon has exempted itself without consequence for 20 years now, telling the Government Accountability Office that collecting and organizing the required information for a full audit is too costly and time-consuming.”

The most recent DoD audit deadline was September 2017, yet neither the Pentagon, Congress, nor the media seem to have paid any attention.

3. Pentagon Paid UK PR Firm for Fake Al-Qaeda Videos

Concern over Russian involvement in promoting fake news during the 2016 election is a justified hot topic in the news. But what about our own involvement in similar operations?

In October 2016, Crofton Black and Abigail Fielding-Smith reported for the Bureau of Investigative Journalism on one such very expensive, and questionable, operation. The Pentagon paid the British public relations firm Bell Pottinger more than $660 million to run a top-secret propaganda program in Iraq from at least 2006 to December 2011. The work consisted of three types of products: TV commercials portraying al-Qaeda in a negative light, news items intended to look like Arabic TV, and — most disturbing — fake al-Qaeda propaganda films.

Former Bell Pottinger video editor Martin Wells told the bureau that he was given precise instructions for production of fake al-Qaeda films, and that the firm’s output was approved by former Gen. David Petraeus — the commander of the coalition forces in Iraq — and on occasion by the White House. They reported that the United States used contractors because “the military didn’t have the in-house expertise and was operating in a legal ‘gray area.’”

The reporters “traced the firm’s Iraq work through U.S. Army contracting censuses, federal procurement transaction records and reports by the Defense Department’s inspector general, as well as Bell Pottinger’s corporate filings and specialist publications on military propaganda,” as well as interviewing former officials and contractors involved in information operations in Iraq.

Documents show that Bell Pottinger employed as many as 300 British and Iraqi staff at one point; and its media operations in Iraq cost more than $100 million per year on average. It’s remarkable that an operation on this scale has been totally ignored in midst of so much focus on “fake news” here in the United States.

4. Voter Suppression in the 2016 Presidential Election

The 2016 election was the first election in 50 years without the full protection of the Voting Rights Act, first passed in 1965. In Shelby County vs. Holder (2013), a 5-4 conservative majority in the Supreme Court struck down a key provision requiring jurisdictions with a history of violations to “pre-clear” changes. As a result, changes to voting laws in nine states and parts of six others with long histories of racial discrimination in voting were no longer subject to federal government approval in advance.

Since Shelby, 14 states, including many Southern states and key swing states, implemented new voting restrictions, in many cases just in time for the election. These included restrictive voter-identification laws in Texas and North Carolina, English-only elections in many Florida counties, as well as last-minute changes of poll locations, and changes in Arizona voting laws that had previously been rejected by the Department of Justice before the Shelby decision.

Ari Berman, author of Give Us the Ballot: The Modern Struggle for Voting Rights in America, was foremost among a small number of non-mainstream journalists to cover the suppression efforts and their results. In May 2017, he reported on an analysis of the effects of voter suppression by Priorities U.S.A, which showed that strict voter-ID laws in Wisconsin and other states resulted in a “significant reduction” in voter turnout in 2016 with “a disproportionate impact on African-American and Democratic-leaning voters.” Berman noted that turnout was reduced by 200,000 votes in Wisconsin, while Donald Trump won the state by more than 22,000 votes.

Nationwide, the study found that the change in voter turnout from 2012 to 2016 was significantly impacted by new voter-ID laws. In counties that were more than 40 percent African-American, turnout dropped 5 percent with new voter-ID laws, compared to 2.2 percent without. In counties that were less than 10 percent African-American, turnout decreased 0.7 percent with new voter-ID laws, compared to a 1.9 percent increase without. As Berman concluded, “This study provides more evidence for the claim that voter-ID laws are designed not to stop voter impersonation fraud, which is virtually nonexistent, but to make it harder for certain communities to vote.”

As Berman noted in an article published by Moyers & Co. in December 2016, the topic of “gutting” the Voting Rights Act did not arise once during the 26 presidential debates prior to the election, and “cable news devoted hours and hours to Trump’s absurd claim that the election was rigged against him while spending precious little time on the real threat that voters faced.”

The story continues. In May 2017, the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University’s School of Law identified 31 states that have introduced 99 bills in 2017 to “restrict access to registration and voting,” with significant action (meaning committee votes or more) on 35 bills in 17 states. “The majority of states acting to restrict voting are legislating on topics where courts previously acted to protect voters,” the center noted.

5. Big Data and Dark Money Behind the 2016 Election

When Richard Nixon first ran for Congress in 1946, he and his supporters used a wide range of dirty tricks aimed at smearing his opponent as pro-Communist, including a boiler-room operation generating phone calls to registered Democrats, which simply said, “This is a friend of yours, but I can’t tell you who I am. Did you know that Jerry Voorhis is a Communist?” Then the caller would hang up.

In 2016, the same basic strategy was employed but with decades of refinement, technological advances and massively more money behind it. A key player in this was right-wing computer scientist and hedge-fund billionaire Robert Mercer, who contributed $13.5 million to Trump’s campaign and also funded Cambridge Analytica, a data analytics company that specializes in “election management strategies” and using “psychographic” microtargeting — based on thousands of pieces of data for some 220 million American voters — as Carole Cadwalladr reported for The Guardian in February 2017. After Trump’s victory, CEO Alexander Nix said, “We are thrilled that our revolutionary approach to data-driven communication has played such an integral part in President-elect Trump’s extraordinary win.”

Cambridge Analytica’s parent company, Strategic Communication Laboratories, was more old-school until recently in elections across Europe, Africa and the Caribbean. In Trinidad, it paid for the painting of graffiti slogans purporting to be from grassroots youth. In Nigeria, it advised its client party to suppress the vote of their opposition “by organizing anti-poll rallies on the day of the election.”

But now they’re able to micro-target their deceptive, disruptive messaging. “Pretty much every message that Trump put out was data-driven” after they joined the campaign, Nix said in September 2016. On the day of the third presidential debate, Trump’s team “tested 175,000 different ad variations for his arguments” via Facebook.

This messaging had everything to do with how those targeted would respond, not with Trump’s or Mercer’s views. In a New Yorker profile, Jane Mayer noted that Mercer has argued that the 1965 Civil Rights Act was a major mistake, a subject never hinted at during the campaign.

“Suddenly, a random billionaire can change politics and public policy — to sweep everything else off the table — even if they don’t speak publicly, and even if there’s almost no public awareness of his or her views,” Trevor Potter, former chair of the Federal Election Commission, told Mayer.

With the real patterns of influence, ideology, money, power and belief hidden from view, the very concept of democratic self-governance is now fundamentally at risk.

6. Antibiotic-Resistant Superbugs Threaten Health and Foundations of Modern Medicine

The problem of antibiotics giving rise to more dangerous drug-resistant germs (“superbugs”) has been present since the early days of penicillin, but has now reached a crisis, with companies creating dangerous superbugs when their factories leak industrial waste, as reported by Madlen Davies of the Bureau of Investigative Journalism in September 2016. Factories in China and India, where the majority of worldwide antibiotics are manufactured, have released “untreated waste fluid” into local soils and waters, leading to increases in antimicrobial resistance that diminish the effectiveness of antibiotics and threaten the foundations of modern medicine.

“After bacteria in the environment become resistant, they can exchange genetic material with other germs, spreading antibiotic resistance around the world, according to an assessment issued by the European Public Health Alliance, which served as the basis for Davies’ news report,” Projected Censored explained. One strain of drug-resistant bacterium that originated in India in 2014 has since spread to 70 other countries.

Superbugs have already killed an estimated 25,000 people across Europe, thus globally posing “as big a threat as terrorism,” according to a UK National Health Service chief medical officer Dame Sally Davies.

“At the heart of the issue is how to motivate pharmaceutical companies to improve their production practices. With strong demand for antibiotics, the companies continue to profit despite the negative consequences of their actions,” Project Censored noted. “The EPHA assessment recommended five responses that major purchasers of medicines could implement to help stop antibiotic pollution. Among these recommendations are blacklisting pharmaceutical companies that contribute to the spread of superbugs through irresponsible practices, and promoting legislation to incorporate environmental criteria into the industry’s good manufacturing practices.”

Superbugs are especially threatening modern medicine, in which a wide range of sophisticated practices — organ transplants, joint replacements, cancer chemotherapy and care of pre-term infants — “will become more difficult or even too dangerous to undertake,” according to Margaret Chan, head of the World Health Organization.

Superbugs already cause more deaths than breast cancer in the United Kingdom, according to data analysis by the UK Sepsis Trust, as reported by Katie Morley and Madlen Davies in the Telegraph in December 2016.

In May 2016, Scientific American reported on a dangerous new superbug that had spread to the United States: a superbug resistant to colistin, known as an “antibiotic of last resort.” The gene for resistance was found both in a human patient and in an American pig. If picked up by other bacteria already resistant to multiple drugs, the results would be “a royal flush: the infection has an unbeatable hand,” one leading expert told Scientific American.

“Although the threat of antibiotic-resistant microbes is well documented in scientific publications, there is little to no coverage on superbugs in the corporate press,” Project Censored noted. “What corporate news coverage there is tends to exaggerate the risks and consequences of natural outbreaks — as seen during the Ebola scare in the United States in 2014 — rather than reporting on the preventable spread of superbugs by irresponsible pharmaceutical companies.”

Once again, it’s not just a problem of suppressing a single story, but two overlapping patterns: the biological problem of superbugs and the political economy problem of the corporate practices that produce them so wantonly.

7. The Toll of U.S. Navy Training on Wildlife in the North Pacific

The U.S. Navy has killed, injured or harassed marine mammals in the North Pacific almost 12 million times over a five-year period, according to research conducted by the West Coast Action Alliance and reported by Dahr Jamail for Truthout. This includes whales, dolphins, porpoises, sea lions, and other marine wildlife such as endangered species like humpback whales, blue whales, gray whales, sperm whales, Steller sea lions and sea otters. The number was tabulated from the Navy’s Northwest Training and Testing environmental impact statement and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Letter of Authorization for the number of “takes” of marine mammals caused by Navy exercises.

“A ‘take’ is a form of harm to an animal that ranges from harassment, to injury, and sometimes to death,” Jamail wrote. “Many wildlife conservationists see even ‘takes’ that only cause behavior changes as injurious, because chronic harassment of animals that are feeding or breeding can end up harming, or even contributing to their deaths if they are driven out of habitats critical to their survival.”

As the Alliance noted, this does not include impacts on “endangered and threatened seabirds, fish, sea turtles or terrestrial species” due to Navy activities, which have expanded dramatically, according to the Navy’s October 2015 environmental impact statement, including:

• A 778 percent increase in number of torpedoes

• A 400 percent increase in air-to-surface missile exercises (including Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary)

• A 1,150 percent increase in drone aircraft

• An increase from none to 284 sonar testing events in inland waters

“It is, and has been for quite some time now, well known in the scientific community that the Navy’s use of sonar can damage and kill marine life,” Jamail reported.

“With little oversight on Navy training activities, the public is left in the dark regarding their environmental impacts, including especially how Navy operations impact fish in the North Pacific and marine life at the bottom of the food chain,” Project Censored noted. “There has been almost no coverage of these impacts in the corporate press.”

8. Maternal Mortality a Growing Threat in the United States

The U.S. maternal mortality rate is rising, while it’s falling elsewhere across the developed world. Serious injuries and complications are needlessly even more widespread with shockingly little attention being paid.

“Each year more than 600 women in the United States die from pregnancy-related causes and more than 65,000 experience life-threatening complications or severe maternal morbidity,” Elizabeth Dawes Gay reported, covering an April 2016 congressional briefing organized by Women’s Policy Inc. “The average national rate of maternal mortality has increased from 12 per 100,000 live births in 1998 to 15.9 in 2012, after peaking at 17.8 in 2011.”

“The United States is the only nation in the developed world with a rising maternal mortality rate,” Rep. Lois Capps stated at the meeting.

“Inadequate health care in rural areas and racial disparities are drivers of this maternal health crisis,” Project Censored summarized. “Nationally, African American women are three to four times more likely than white women to die from pregnancy-related causes, with rates even higher in parts of the United States that Gay characterized as ‘pockets of neglect,’ such as Georgia, where the 2011 maternal mortality rate of 28.7 per 100,000 live births was nearly double the national average.”

“The Alliance for Innovation on Maternal Health has developed safety bundles of ‘best practices, guidelines and protocols to improve maternal health care quality and safety,’” Gay wrote. “These ‘bundles’ include equipping hospital labor units with a fully stocked cart for immediate hemorrhage treatment, establishing a hospital-level emergency management protocol, conducting regular staff drills and reviewing all cases to learn from past mistakes, among other things.”

More broadly, Kiera Butler reported for Mother Jones that doctors rarely warn patients of the potential for serious injuries and complications that can occur following birth.

“Women have a right to make informed decisions about their bodies and serious medical situations. However, when it comes to birth and its aftereffects, Butler found that doctors simply are not providing vital information,” Project Censored summarized. Many state laws require doctors to inform women of the potential complications and dangers associated with delivery, but none require them to discuss potential long-term problems, including the fact that some complications are more prevalent in women who give birth vaginally, rather than by C-section.

“All told, according to a 2008 study by researchers at the California HMO Kaiser Permanente, about one in three women suffer from a pelvic floor disorder (a category that includes urinary incontinence, fecal incontinence, and prolapse), and roughly 80 percent of those women are mothers,” Butler reported. “Women who deliver vaginally are twice as likely to experience these injuries as women who have a cesarean or who have not given birth. For one in 10 women, the problem is severe enough to warrant surgery.”

According to Butler, numerous other studies suggest that “50 percent to 80 percent of women who give birth experience tearing of the pelvic skin and muscles. For more than 1 in 10, the tearing is severe enough to damage the anal sphincter muscle, which often leads to the loss of bowel and bladder control.”

Sexual dysfunction, stress urinary incontinence and pelvic organ prolapse — a chronic and painful condition of the uterus or bladder that often requires multiple surgeries to repair — are other common conditions more prevalent following vaginal birth than following C-sections, Butler reported. Yet doctors rarely discuss these issues with pregnant patients.

“The corporate news media have paid limited attention to maternal mortality and morbidity in the United States,” Project Censored notes. There have been scattered stories, but nothing remotely close to the sort of sustained coverage that is warranted.

9. DNC Claims Right to Select Presidential Candidate

A key story about 2016 election has mostly been ignored by the media: a class-action lawsuit alleging that the Democratic National Committee broke legally binding neutrality agreements in the Democratic primaries by strategizing to make Hillary Clinton the nominee before a single vote was cast. The lawsuit was filed against the DNC and its former chair, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, in June 2016 by Beck & Lee, a Miami law firm, on behalf of supporters of Bernie Sanders. A hearing was held in April 2017, in which DNC lawyers argued that neutrality was not actually required and that the court had no jurisdiction to assess neutral treatment.

As Michael Sainato reported for the Observer, DNC attorneys claimed that Article V, Section 4 of the DNC Charter — which instructs the DNC chair and staff to ensure neutrality in the Democratic presidential primaries — is actually “a discretionary rule” that the DNC “didn’t need to adopt to begin with.” In addition, DNC attorney Bruce Spiva later said it was within the DNC’s rights to “go into back rooms like they used to and smoke cigars and pick the candidate that way.” Sainato also reported that DNC attorneys argued that specific terms used in the DNC charter — including “impartial” and “evenhanded” — couldn’t be interpreted in a court of law, because it would “drag the court into a political question and a question of how the party runs its own affairs.”

Jared Beck, representing Sanders supporters, responded, “Your honor, I’m shocked to hear that we can’t define what it means to be evenhanded and impartial. If that were the case, we couldn’t have courts. I mean, that’s what courts do every day, is decide disputes in an evenhanded and impartial manner.” Not only was running elections in a fair and impartial manner a “bedrock assumption” of democracy, Beck argued earlier, it was also a binding commitment for the DNC: “That’s what the Democratic National Committee’s own charter says,” he said. “It says it in black and white.”

Much of the reporting and commentary on the broader subject of the DNC’s collusion with the Clinton campaign has been speculative and misdirected, focused on questions about voter fraud and countered by claims of indulging in “conspiracy theory.” But this trial focuses on documentary evidence and questions of law: all publicly visible yet still treated as suspect, when not simply ignored out of hand.

As Project Censored notes, “Even Michael Sainato’s reporting — which has consistently used official documents, including the leaked DNC emails and courtroom transcripts, as primary sources — has been repeatedly labeled ‘opinion’ — rather than straight news reporting — by his publisher, the Observer.”

10. 2016: A Record Year for Global Internet Shutdowns

In 2016, governments around the world shut down internet access more than 50 times, according to the digital rights organization Access Now, “suppressing elections, slowing economies and limiting free speech,” as Lyndal Rowlands reported for the Inter Press Service. “In the worst cases internet shutdowns have been associated with human rights violations,” Rowlands was told by Deji Olukotun, of Access Now. “What we have found is that internet shutdowns go hand in hand with atrocities.” Olukotun said.

Kevin Collier also covered the report for Vocativ, noting that Access Now uses a “conservative metric,” counting “repeated, similar outages” — like those which occurred during Gabon’s widely criticized Internet “curfew” — as a single instance. The Vocativ report included a dynamic map chart, designed by Kaitlyn Kelly, that vividly depicts internet shutdowns around the world, month by month for all of 2016, as documented by Access Now.

“Many countries intentionally blacked out internet access during elections and to quell protest. Not only do these shutdowns restrict freedom of speech, they also hurt economies around the world,” Project Censored notes. “TechCrunch, IPS and other independent news organizations reported that a Brookings Institution study found that internet shutdowns cost countries $2.4 billion between July 2015 and June 2016” — a conservative estimate according to the study’s author, Darrell West.

As Olukotun told IPS, one way to stop government shutdowns is for internet providers to resist government demands. “Telecommunications companies can push back on government orders, or at least document them to show what’s been happening, to at least have a paper trail,” Olukotun observed.

In a resolution passed in July 2016, the UN Human Rights Council described the internet as having “great potential to accelerate human progress.” It also condemned “measures to intentionally prevent or disrupt access to or dissemination of information online.”

On July 1, 2016, the UN Human Rights Council passed a nonbinding resolution signed by more than 70 countries lauding the internet’s “great potential to accelerate human progress,” and condemning “measures to intentionally prevent or disrupt access to or dissemination of information online.” It noted that “the exercise of human rights, in particular the right to freedom of expression, on the internet is an issue of increasing interest and importance.”

Yet “understanding what this means for internet users can be difficult,” Azad Essa reported for Al Jazeera in May 2017. Advocates of online rights “need to be constantly pushing for laws that protect this space and demand that governments meet their obligations in digital spaces just as in non-digital spaces,” he was told by the United Nations’ special rapporteur on freedom of opinion and expression, David Kaye.

“Corporate news coverage of internet shutdowns tends to focus on specific countries, especially ones in Africa,” Project Censored noted. Here again, we see another example of how important it is for systemic patterns to be understood. Although Project Censored did note some coverage of internet shutdowns from CNN and the New York Times, it concluded: “However, corporate coverage tends not to address the larger, global scope of internet shutdowns — and, unlike independent news coverage, these reports tend not to address how internet providers might resist government demands.”

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Miner Details

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Outgoing Syracuse Mayor Stephanie Miner probably began considering her political options at a young age, stuffing envelopes with local candidates’ campaign appeals at her grandmother Cooney’s Eastwood kitchen table.

Term-limited, she says she is looking forward to taking lessons learned from the Syracuse experience and bringing them to a classroom at New York University’s Robert F. Wagner School of Public Service. Miner will be at NYU as a Visiting Distinguished Urbanist, “teaching the next generation of urban scholars, political scientists and government leaders.”

Michael Davis Photo

Elected as a citywide common councilor in 2001, she was re-elected in 2005, receiving more votes than anyone on the ballot including the incumbent mayor, Matt Driscoll. She was elected mayor in 2009 and re-elected in 2013 with 68 percent of the vote.

After graduating from Syracuse University with concentrations in political science and journalism, Miner worked on Geraldine Ferraro’s Senate campaign and served as Central New York regional representative for Gov. Mario Cuomo. She earned a JD degree from SUNY Buffalo.

Like former Mayor Tom Young (witness Armory Square), Miner will probably not be credited right away for her accomplishments in City Hall. But she has been recognized as a “Trailblazing Woman in Public Finance” by the Northeast Women in Public Finance. Her work in developing one of the first land banks in New York state contributed to IBM’s naming Syracuse as one of the nation’s 100 Smarter Cities, which should help counter its recognition as one of America’s most segregated and poverty stricken.

Political options for the future are opening for Miner. Originally maintaining that she had no interest in challenging Republican Rep. John Katko for his 24th District congressional seat, a logical next step in the minds of many Democratic activists, she recently refocused on a possible run, energized by opposition to the tax bill being debated by Congress. She scheduled a Dec. 5 “Tax Town Town Hall” meeting at City Hall to share her opposition with local elected officials, maintaining that the bill raises taxes on working families, increases the deficit and cuts taxes for billionaires.

Miner has also expressed interest in challenging Gov. Andrew Cuomo in a Democratic primary, an effort that one recent poll showed might reveal a lack of support for Cuomo statewide, especially outside the New York City area.

How was your term as mayor?

It was a great privilege, one that I am thankful for every single day. It was a terrific adventure. I got to work for people that I have a great deal of affection for. Got to work with people that I enjoy, and got to do the kind of work that is intellectually and emotionally challenging and rewarding. What more could you want out of a job?

What’s coming?

Cities are downhill from all levels of government, and we are seeing a tremendous tumult in the federal government and also in state government. Cities are the future of economic development, and with the global economy that we have, you have to have the kind of creativity and energy that comes from people coming together and thinking about things and building on each other.

So Syracuse has the assets to really flourish in the future. But it needs to have public policy from both the federal and state level that is thoughtful and focused on doing really good and thoughtful approaches to government and public policy.

What are the city’s assets?

There are a ton of them. You start off with the fact that we have a work force that has a tremendous work ethic. We have institutions of higher learning and hospitals, so we have very highly educated, highly skilled personnel who are not going to get up and move someplace else.

We are right between Canada and New York City. Canada is our largest trading partner. They have to come through Syracuse in order to be that.

We have lots of infrastructure, that while old, can be brought up to the 21st century relatively easily if it’s made a priority and a focus. We’re right on the cutting edge of having all the assets necessary in order to thrive in the 21st century.

Michael Davis Photo

In all the eight years, what was absolutely the best thing?

I can’t answer that question because it was almost all good. The challenges, the people that I got to work with, the issues I got to work with, the people that I got to know. It was challenging personally and professionally in a really profound way. And there is really something rewarding about looking at the work that you do and knowing that you have an impact at a time and a place that it matters.

I worked with terrific people here in City Hall. The workforce here is above and beyond to make sure that they answer the call of the people who are in our city, whether they are residents or citizens or just people traveling through. Working with the people I got to work with, working on the issues I got to work with that are on the cutting edge of where we are as a country, and thinking about what government should provide, and what it shouldn’t provide and how do we meet these challenges.

Was there one thing that made you want to quit?

It’s not in my genetic makeup to quit. It’s just not part of who I am. But at the lowest point, clearly gun violence. It’s just irrational, and too often it’s young men who one day would be the victim and 48 hours later could be the aggressor. And the lowest point was really when the toddler was shot in his car seat when someone was trying to kill his father.

There’s a current street logic that says, “Yo, if we had jobs, we wouldn’t be shooting each other.”

I think there’s something to be said for that generally, but I also think there’s a certain responsibility that people have to own as well. It is deviant behavior to pick up a gun and shoot at another young person and take their life. If we had a better economy, could we interrupt the violence? I think it would be much easier to interrupt the violence. But when a 17-, 18- or 19-year-old picks up a gun and shoots at someone he knows, often there’s a whole breakdown in society that has caused that to happen.

At this point to say it’s the lack of a job, there are family breakdowns, there are neighborhood breakdowns, there are school breakdowns. And what we have also seen is that, relatively speaking, it’s a small group of offenders. Trying to break that cycle is really hard because you can take them out of that place for a period of time but then they go right back in with all of the same stimulus and the same kind of outcomes. Chicago, Baltimore, New Orleans, Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo, Albany, we are all experiencing the same kind of issue.

What does Donald Trump represent as president?

I think it’s important for our country that we have to determine what kind of national government do we want. Do we want a national government that aims all its policies at taking care of rich people? Do we want a government that says that only rich people can have health care, access to clean water and good infrastructure? That only poor people and middle-class people will pay taxes? Or do we want a government that says we want to make sure that everybody has opportunity?

Michael Davis Photo

That’s being played out every day in our country, every day in our cities. I think you’re seeing more and more people understand that in a democracy everybody has a responsibility to make sure they have the kind of government that they want.

What kind of congressperson would you make?

I think that people in Central New York deserve to be represented by someone who can see how the local is global. As mayor, I’ve tried to raise the profile of issues impacting our community, notably education through Say Yes and the need for more investment in infrastructure.

I have also prided myself on having an open office, attending and hosting community meetings, and responding to the people of Syracuse. I think the priority of any elected official needs to be listening before acting and hearing their constituents out. It builds respect and trust and helps leaders enact better public policy

What kind of governor would you make?

I think, by definition, I would be iconoclastic. The last upstate governor was Franklin Delano Roosevelt, so it’s not a bad person to follow. I think, as Michelle Obama said, the job doesn’t give you character, it exposes what kind of character you have. I think that the past eight years as a mayor, and before that as a city councilor, people have seen that I’m an aggressive advocate, somebody who speaks to the issues the way I see them, regardless of how powerful, how moneyed or what party the person on the other side is. That I’m a truth-teller. That I believe in public policy. And I believe in policy that will help everybody take advantage of the opportunities of this country, not just a select few.

What would be the most fun if, as has been suggested, you and state Sen. John DeFrancisco toured together to promote your potential gubernatorial candidacies?

Sen. DeFrancisco has a litigator’s training, so he’s got a great verbal spark to him. And I would enjoy playing off of that because the senator and I are different political parties, we have different political philosophies.

But what I have found with him, which is so refreshing, is that you can have these political disagreements in public and it doesn’t become personal. He is smart. He is thoughtful, so you better bring your A-game when you’re coming to him on a policy or on a discussion.

We have had times when we agreed.  We have had times when we disagreed. But we have always been able to work together to forward the best interest of  our constituents.

 

 Photo Gallery: A Look Back – Stephanie Miner

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JFK: The Unsolved Mystery

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Thousands of previously classified documents have been released this year, but no new suspects have surfaced in America’s most famous cold case: the Nov. 22, 1963, murder of President John F. Kennedy.

While it’s too early to fully assess information from the long-awaited document dump mandated by the JFK Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992, analysis of previously released files and testimonies points to a handful of suspects. Several names repeatedly crop up as likely participants in planning and carrying out the assassination and, even more strongly, in its cover-up.

Conspirators believed to have orchestrated the shooting in Dallas include CIA Operation Mongoose honcho William King Harvey; his buddy, mafioso Johnny Roselli; CIA black ops contractor David Sánchez Morales; and CIA psychological warrior David Atlee Phillips, a Latin American specialist who apparently acted as Lee Harvey Oswald’s case officer in 1963.

Before he died in 2007, Watergate mastermind E. Howard Hunt, a former CIA agent, identified Harvey, Morales, Phillips, Watergate burglar Frank Sturgis and an unidentified French sharpshooter as the brains and brawn behind the president’s killing.

A prime mover in the cover-up was Jack Ruby, the nightclub operator who shot Oswald in the Dallas Municipal Building basement two days after the president’s murder. As Ruby pumped a .38 slug into Oswald’s abdomen while he was handcuffed to a Dallas policeman, the shooting was broadcast live by NBC-TV.

A native of Chicago, Ruby functioned as an informant for both the FBI and the Dallas Police Department, and he associated with gamblers, pornographers, dope dealers and gunrunners from Las Vegas to New Orleans to Havana. Although researchers believe that his police contacts helped him pull off his very public murder of Oswald, it would be a great surprise if any of the new documents proved once and for all who or what motivated Ruby to sacrifice his own freedom by eliminating Oswald.

Cover-Up Conundrums

National Archive photos

Such revelations are highly unlikely according to John Newman, author of the groundbreaking 1995 study of the accused assassin’s intelligence files, Oswald and the CIA. Scores of documents “were shredded exactly before the House Select Committee on Assassinations investigators started asking for them” in 1976.

“There’s no control of some things,” Newman said at JFK Lancer’s annual November in Dallas conference on Nov. 19, at the Adolphus Hotel in Dallas. “We have no idea, for instance, how many soft files (non-record working papers) were tucked away in desk drawers.”

But we know beyond a doubt that a handful of powerful men in Washington coordinated the cover-up, including former CIA director and Warren Commission member Allen Dulles; FBI director J. Edgar Hoover; and CIA counterintelligence chief James Angleton, who served as the agency’s liaison with the FBI as it investigated the Kennedy killing for the commission.

A less well-known CIA officer, George Joannides, continued to misdirect investigators during the late 1970s when he was called out of retirement to become the agency’s liaison to the House Select Committee on Assassinations.

Joannides was a curious choice for that task. Years later, declassified documents showed that in 1963 Joannides oversaw the anti-Castro Student Revolutionary Directorate in New Orleans. Accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald had publicly clashed with the anti-Castro group that summer while he ostensibly represented the pro-Castro Fair Play for Cuba committee.

Just as Dulles and Angleton had the agency’s back during the Warren Commission investigation, Joannides stonewalled the HSCA. The foxes were guarding the henhouse.

Information on Joannides remains under lock and key.

Former Washington Post investigative reporter Jeff Morley painstakingly documents Joannides’ undercover work in New Orleans, as well as his assignment to undermine the work of the HSCA, in his 2016 eBook, CIA & JFK: The Assassination Files.

Meanwhile, Morley has sued the CIA for its Joannides records. “In the course of that litigation, the CIA acknowledged holding 295 documents about Joannides’ career that they say cannot be released in any form,” Morley said.

Trump and the Document Dump

This year’s JFK document dump is a mountain of molehills: thousands upon thousands of previously classified documents from the FBI, the NSA, congressional committees and, of course, the CIA. In fact, three-fourths of the documents originated with the agency.

“It’s all mixed together, and you can’t tell what’s what,” said Russ Baker, author of Family of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, America’s Invisible Government, and the Hidden History of the Last Fifty Years.

Baker runs the website whowhatwhy.org, and his staff plans to examine each and every newly released file. “It’s a huge job,” Baker said. “And no other news organization in the world is looking into all of the documents as we are doing.”

The declassification of the files was mandated by a 1992 law which set Oct. 26, 2017, as the deadline for the National Archives and Records Administration to release records that had been redacted to protect methods and sources.

National Archive photos

But Rex Bradford — who manages maryferrell.org, likely the largest single private repository of assassination information — characterized the 2017 process as “chaotic,” and said massive redactions remain. “The impression that only agent and informant names and the like are being withheld is mistaken,” he said. “Entire pages in some documents remain redacted.”

Thousands of documents remained classified or redacted when the JFK Assassination Records Collection Act was passed following the release of director Oliver Stone’s flamboyant assassination film, JFK (1992), A quarter-century later, as the release deadline approached this year, 441 files were released early, in July. Another 626 files came to light in October and November, and some 30,000 other documents that had been partially opened over the years were set to be released in full.

But on Oct. 26, President Donald Trump decided to hold back some documents for six months while the CIA and FBI pleaded with him to keep them secret, citing “national security, law enforcement, and foreign affairs concerns.”

Or because they could blow the covers of longtime spooks.

After 54 years, most people involved in the JFK investigation have retired and died. But San Francisco civil rights attorney Bill Simpich thinks he knows why Trump caved in.

“The wiretap operators in Mexico City, it’s quite possible that some of those people are still alive,” Simpich said at this year’s JFK Lancer conference. Alleged assassin Oswald reportedly visited the Cuban Consulate in Mexico City some seven weeks before the president’s shooting, and CIA operatives are believed to have tape recorded his telephone calls there.

Simpich authored the book State Secret: Wiretapping in Mexico City, Double Agents, and the Framing of Lee Oswald, which is available for free at maryferrell.org.

Regardless of why Trump decided to hold back documents, researchers remain frustrated. Dan Hardway, a former investigator for HSCA, is one of them.

“There has been no explanation of why the intelligence community has requested this delay,” he wrote in a Nov. 3 letter to a U.S. senator. “It was made in secret. What kind of pressure have they brought to bear? How can they force a president to so blatantly disregard the law?”

Larry Hancock, a longtime Cold War historian from Oklahoma and author of the JFK tell-all, Someone Would Have Talked, agrees that Trump is catering to the intelligence community. “The quantity of redaction is clearly not what Congress intended or what the president promised, so at this point the release does not appear to be in compliance with congressional intent regardless of how you spin it,” he said. “And as far as NARA is concerned, these redactions are the president’s prerogative.

More Questions Than Answers

National Archive photos

The newly available documents are a mishmash. Hundreds of the freshly opened files involve post-assassination Soviet defector Yuri Nosenko, including audiotapes and transcripts, many in Russian. Such material illustrates the famous paranoia of James Jesus Angleton, the CIA counterintelligence chief from 1954 to 1975, who obsessively feared Soviet infiltration.

Angleton’s Special Investigations Group office had maintained Oswald’s “201 personality file” since 1960. At the Lancer conference, Newman cited evidence of agency interest in Oswald even before the ex-Marine’s dubious defection to Russia in 1959, suggesting that Angleton knew things about Oswald that were not even shared with the CIA’s own Soviet Division. In any case, Angleton’s counterintelligence people tracked Oswald closely up until the weeks prior to Kennedy’s murder in Dallas.

Fortunately, we have a new biography of the mercurial Angleton: The Ghost: The Secret Life of CIA Spymaster James Jesus Angleton by former Washington Post investigative reporter Jeff Morley. The son of an Office of Strategic Services officer and a Mexican mother, Angleton is depicted as a man haunted by the threat of KGB infiltration of U.S. intelligence operations, a man who remained loyal to former CIA director Allen Dulles, a man who went to great lengths to keep secret the CIA’s pre-assassination knowledge of the accused assassin. During his early years with the agency, Angleton earned Dulles’ undying trust by conducting sensitive operations in Eastern Europe and Israel.

A 2015 book by San Francisco investigative journalist David Talbot, The Devil’s Chessboard: Allen Dulles, the CIA, and the Rise of America’s Secret Government, indicts Dulles for orchestrating the Kennedy assassination at the behest of corporate leaders such as David Rockefeller, who perceived the president as a threat to Third World corporate expansionism, specifically into Latin America. After the assassination, Dulles lobbied Lyndon Johnson to be appointed to the Warren Commission, which he dominated.

Angleton biographer Jeff Morley spoke at the November in Dallas conference, as did Baker, Simpich, Hancock and others. “Angleton was an ally of Bill Harvey,” Simpich said. The pistol-packing, hard-drinking Harvey partnered with special ops Col. Ed Lansdale to lead Operation Mongoose, a covert operation against the Castro government. “And Angleton was an opponent of the Kennedy brothers.”

Harvey shared that animosity. His widow, C.J. Harvey, called JFK and his family “scum.” Angleton and Harvey had both been involved in assassination plots against Castro.

In the fall of 1962, Hancock asserted at the conference, CIA deputy director of plans Richard Helms directed Harvey to activate a new executive action program, a death squad dubbed “the magic button.” Hancock studied Harvey’s notes from those meetings, an eye-opening list of murder dos and don’ts, many utilized in the JFK matter, such as “blame the Soviets” and set up a patsy with “forged and backdated documents.”

Angleton was “deeply involved” with anti-Castro Cuban exiles, Hancock said, and had closely examined the state of Cuban intelligence agencies following the Bay of Pigs.

On May 23, 1963, six months before the bullets echoed over Elm Street, Angleton wrote a memo regarding Cuba and mentioned the ease with which an American citizen might secure a visa for travel to Havana at the Cuban Consulate in Mexico City. Oswald apparently enacted that exact scenario when he visited the Mexican capital some seven weeks before the assassination.

To summarize his view of Angleton’s culpability, Morley writes, “Dulles wanted to steer the (Warren) commission’s investigation away from the CIA, and Angleton was obliging. A conspiracy theorist would say Angleton masterminded the JFK cover-up. A prosecutor would say he obstructed justice. A bureaucrat would say he covered his ass. In every practical sense, his actions were invisible. In the tragedy of Dallas, Angleton played a ghost.”

So, researchers have their eyes peeled for more on Angleton and his officers in the new releases, but have so far been stymied. “Information on Angleton’s activities were dispersed throughout the agency,” said British researcher Malcolm Blunt. “There are no official Angleton files anywhere at the CIA.”

None. And Angleton held a top-level post for 13 years!

New Leads To Pursue

A few intriguing tidbits have surfaced. The mayor of Dallas in 1963, Earle Cabell, had been granted a CIA security check and clearance. His brother was Gen. Charles Cabell, the CIA’s second-in-command under Allen Dulles before Kennedy fired them after the Bay of Pigs. Earle Cabell had been in charge of JFK’s motorcade on Nov. 22, and it was his police department that failed to protect Oswald from Ruby. “So that does raise some questions,” noted Dick Russell, author of On the Trail of the JFK Assassins.

National Archive photos

Another revelation sheds light on a violent anti-Castro group known as Alpha 66, a memo from Mongoose leader Lansdale ordering a hold on Alpha 66 and its sabotage of Cuban shipping. “So here we have a document suggesting that either Lansdale was totally clueless about Alpha 66 or that the CIA did have some sort of highly cutout operational control over them,” Hancock noted. “Which tells us nothing about the JFK assassination per se but might tell us something very new about what would have been a deeply buried CIA operation.”

And the new file names have identified the Dallas IRS informant – Robert Vanderslice – who officially reported that Ruby had advance knowledge that something would happen in the motorcade. In fact, on the morning of Nov. 22, 1963, Ruby

invited Vanderslice to come down and “watch the fireworks,” as reported in Larry Hancock’s book, Someone Would Have Talked.

Alan Dale, an editor at the Assassination Archives and Research Center (aarclibrary.org), emceed this year’s Lancer conference. He views the document dump as proof that “there are a lot more cards in the deck than we realized. Now it’s up to serious, disciplined researchers to put together the pieces.”

Dale footnotes his optimism with a note of caution. “Documents don’t always mean what they say or say what they mean. What they purport to reveal is seldom complete and may not be accurate, perhaps even false, especially when they are issued by intelligence agencies whose tradecraft includes deception and maintenance of ‘plausible deniability.’”

This year’s document dump may be a mountain of molehills, but there just could be a rat lurking in one of them — if only we dig deeply enough. SNT

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Elder Women Activists Honored At ArtRage

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Oral histories come in various formats: in books, in conversations between elders and grandchildren, in radio or television programs, in other media. And now the ArtRage Gallery is hosting an exhibition devoted to 26 women who have lived in Central New York and are all at least 80 years old.

Still The One: Douglas Lloyd Makes Portraits of Women Making Change the Old-Fashioned Way pairs Lloyd’s distinctive images with narratives developed during interviews conducted by Sharon Bottle Souva. Those conversations posed fundamental questions: What is activism? How do we make it through turbulent times? What values endure from decade to decade?

Ann Tiffany, Douglas Lloyd photo

The show pivots on the notion of activism but doesn’t define it narrowly. Certainly, some of the participants speak of attending anti-war demonstrations or marching for employment opportunities for city residents. Yet activism takes other forms: writing a letter, talking to a neighbor, making intense changes in one’s own life.

The exhibit’s energy flows from the portal it opens for the women to reflect on decades of experience, to tell their own stories, to discuss today’s sociopolitical climate. Most of all, it gives them an avenue for talking about interactions and the idea of community.

Although each participant is telling her own story, there are instances in which narratives connect. For example, Joan Netta Burstyn lived in London during World War II when that city was besieged by rockets and bombers, while Fumiyo Hirano experienced war firsthand as a small child growing up in Japan.

And there are other intersections. For many years, Carol Rizzo Berrigan taught inclusive education at Syracuse University, stressing the right of all children, regardless of ability, to attend public schools and receive necessary supports.

In 1971, Marian Miller confronted the issue of mainstreaming directly when her newborn son was diagnosed with Down syndrome. Angered by a doctor who said her child should be institutionalized, she rejected that advice and raised her son at home. Then in 1988 she went to work for Arise, an organization advocating for people with special needs.

Links to education arise elsewhere in the exhibit. In 1950, Marjorie Dey Carter became the first African-American teacher in the Syracuse City School District, the first step in a long career. Later she was named president of the Syracuse Teachers Association. Moreover, Geneva Hayden has played multiple roles in instructing children: within her own family, working in city schools, as the founder of an after-school program based in her own home.

Betty Scheiss, Douglas Lloyd photo

In a slightly different vein, Ruth Johnson Colvin was a national pioneer in literacy services, beginning her work after the 1960 census concluded that roughly 11,000 adults in Syracuse lacked basic literacy skills. She founded an organization that eventually morphed into ProLiteracy, a current-day group with a national profile.

Joyce Eileen Stokes Jones spent many years researching her family ties to Harriet Tubman, the abolitionist, and working with her daughter, Michelle, to publicize Tubman’s legacy. They co-wrote the book Beyond the Underground: Aunt Harriet, Moses of Her People.

And the exhibit makes some connections indirectly, showing that various participants have taken action on issues that emerge again and again. As a young woman, Dolores Ann Brule was involved in struggles including school integration, fair employment at Niagara Mohawk, and the proposed building of Route 81 through the city of Syracuse. Today, that segment of Route 81 is once again a lightning rod for controversy.

Ann Tiffany’s activism spans demonstrations against the Vietnam War, taking part in the Sanctuary movement, which supported refugees who fled El Salvador and Guatemala during the 1980s, and picketing during 2017 to protest attack drones directed from Hancock Air Base.

Beyond that, the interviews incited discussion of how to make change, of how to co-exist with other people. Amy Sinbad Doherty said that “people need to learn to talk to each other. First it starts in the home and the schools. We need to to be educated to learn about each other. This is the most difficult thing we face.”

Charlotte (Chuckie) Holstein spoke of the concept of citizen trusteeship: The planet is on loan to us from previous generations and we need to make it better for those who will follow us. And Brule

remarked, “Always remember that in the end, all we really have is each other.”

Clearly, text is a major element of the exhibit, but Lloyd’s photos are equally important. He created portraits of every participant using a technique called wet-plate collodion photography, which was invented in 1851. He has indicated that this style enabled him to reconnect with photography in a physical, tactile way. He much prefers this process to digital work.

His images, and the statements from each participant, make for a show demanding full attention from viewers. It’s not possible to engage the work with 30-second glimpses. Those who make the effort will encounter an exhibition that’s intense, intimate and innovative.

Still The One runs through Jan. 13 at ArtRage, 505 Hawley Ave. The gallery is open Wednesdays through Fridays, 2 to 7 p.m., and Saturdays, noon to 4 p.m. On Dec. 13, 7 p.m., Douglas Lloyd will discuss the exhibit and his artistic process. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, call (315) 218-5711. 

 

Frances Parks, Douglas Lloyd photo

Marjorie Carter, Douglas Lloyd photo

Douglas Lloyd photo

Arlene Abend, Douglas Lloyd photo

Carrol Berrigan, Douglas Lloyd photo

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Welcome to the Jungle

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One of the reasons so many people follow Syracuse University men’s basketball is that the season helps us mark the time through our long, dreadful winters.

Michael Davis Photo

Two more games this week, and we’re at the Martin Luther King Jr. Day holiday. One more game the next week, and we’re near the end of January. Two more games the following week, and we’re almost into the shortest month of the year. And so on.

Before you know it, it’s March, the Orange is playing in postseason tournaments, and 32 degrees no longer feels like a heat wave.

So as we finally emerge from this brutal stretch of sub-zero temperatures, let’s look at what you should know as the Orange carries us through the next two months to the start of the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament March 6.

In or Out?

As always, the biggest question surrounding SU is this: Will the Orange make the NCAA Tournament? Before the Tuesday, Jan. 9, game at No. 3 Virginia, Syracuse was 12-4 (1-2 in the ACC) with a few nice wins (Buffalo, Maryland) and without any of the really bad losses that kept the team out of the NCAA Tournament last year.

Before losing 51-49 to Notre Dame Jan. 6 at the Carrier Dome, the Orange was ranked No. 31 in the RPI (Rating Percentage Index), which remains an important tool in the NCAA Tournament selection process. And because Syracuse plays in the rugged ACC, the Orange will have plenty of chances to record a signature win or two against top-40 RPI teams Duke (No. 1), Virginia (No. 2), Clemson (No. 5), North Carolina (No. 8), Miami (No. 22), Florida State (No. 27) and Louisville (No. 32).

With 14 conference games remaining, here are three reasons why the Orange will make the NCAA Tournament. And three reasons why it won’t.

Why SU Will Make the Tournament

The Defense. Clearly, this year’s team is not an offensive juggernaut. But it plays Coach Jim Boeheim’s vaunted 2-3 zone defense about as well as any SU team has played it. Entering this week’s games, the Orange ranked third in the ACC and 20th in the nation in points allowed (62.2 per game) and fourth in the ACC and 19th in the country in field-goal percentage defense (.381).

“We’ve just got to move (on defense), we have to continuously move, get to your spots,” SU guard Tyus Battle said. “There’s going to be some breakdowns. That happens. But if you keep running them off the (3-point) line and making it hard for them, we’ll win on that side of the floor.”

The Big Three. Syracuse’s “Big Three” of Battle (19.5 points per game entering this week), point guard Frank Howard (15.4) and forward Oshae Brissett (15.2, plus 9.8 rebounds per game) will continue to play at a high level and offset the Orange’s offensive deficiencies.

Brissett has been a real find, as he’s looking to become the first SU player since Rick Jackson in 2010-2011 and the first Orange freshman since Carmelo Anthony in 2002-2003 to average a double-double.

“I think he’s a very good prospect,” Virginia Tech coach Buzz Williams said of Brissett. “The freshmen that play the minutes at the rate that he’s playing at Syracuse, normally they have really good careers while at Syracuse and thereafter.”

Easy Baskets. The best way to offset the offensive woes is with easy baskets in transition. To that end, the Orange entered this week ranked first in the ACC in steals (8.4 per game) and second in blocked shots (6.44 per game), and both often lead to easy baskets.

Why SU Won’t Make the Tournament

Not Enough Offense. Battle, Howard and Brissett account for more than 70 percent of Syracuse’s offense. When one or two get shut down or have an off night, the Orange is in deep trouble because no other player has been able to consistently make up the difference.

“We just cannot score. It’s been a struggle, and it’s probably going to continue to be a struggle for us to score points,” Boeheim said after the Notre Dame game. “When you can’t score 50 points at home, you’ve got a problem.”

Lack of Depth. This isn’t to beat the dead horse about whether Boeheim should play more than six or seven players, because he has only eight scholarship players anyway. This is about Battle, Howard and Brissett playing every minute of every conference game and what kind of toll that will eventually take on them. Having backup center Bourama Sidibe return from his nagging injuries will help ease the load for starting center Paschal Chukwu, but overall the bench does not offer much help beyond freshman forward Marek Dolezaj.

Rebounding. This wasn’t an issue until recently, and in fact the Orange entered the week with the third-best rebounding margin (+7.8 per game) in the ACC. But Syracuse was out-rebounded by Wake Forest 38-29 and Notre Dame 42-27 in back-to-back losses.

“We’re not a good rebounding team. That was a myth. A complete myth,” Boeheim said after the Notre Dame game. “Nobody’s really gone to the boards except for the last two games and when they did, we cannot rebound down there.”

The ACC Schedule

Following its two-game road trip to No. 3 Virginia and No. 23 Florida State this Saturday, Jan. 13, the Orange will play a four-game stretch against some of the ACC’s weaker teams (Pittsburgh twice, Boston College and Georgia Tech). That will provide an opportunity to pick up some needed wins because after those four games, the Orange will play six of the its final nine league games against the ACC’s strongest teams: Virginia, Louisville, No. 18 Miami, No. 20 North Carolina, No. 7 Duke and No. 19 Clemson.

You never know how everything will shake out, but if the Orange can finish 9-9 in the ACC and 20-11 overall in the regular season, that should be enough to get SU into the NCAA Tournament.

If you’re looking to catch a game at the Carrier Dome over the next two months, the big ones are Virginia Feb. 3, defending national champion North Carolina Feb. 21, and Clemson March 3 in the final regular season game of the season. Visit cuse.com for ticket information.

The Past

Former SU player Dennis DuVal’s jersey was retired during the Jan. 6 Notre Dame contes, Michael Davis photo

At halftime of the March 3 game against Clemson, the Orange will retire Lawrence Moten’s jersey No. 21, as he will join 13 other Syracuse players who have had their jerseys retired. Syracuse retired Dennis DuVal’s jersey No. 22 during the Jan. 6 Notre Dame contest.

Moten remains the most prolific scorer in Orange history: He tallied 2,334 points in 121 games from 1991-1995 and he’s also the all-time leading scorer in Big East Conference history.

And in case you missed it, Syracuse is honoring former administrative assistant Kelly Seubert by having the players wear a patch with a heart above the letter “K” for the remainder of the season. Seubert, who was on Boeheim’s staff for 13 years, died in August after losing her battle with cancer.

The Future

While it’s likely that Battle will head to the NBA and Brissett is putting himself in position to join him, the future looks bright for the Orange with Darius Bazley headlining next year’s incoming class. Bazley is a 6-8 forward from Princeton High School in Cincinnati who is ranked No. 9 in the 2018 recruiting class.

He’ll be joined by 6-3 point guard Jalen Carey, a four-star prospect who’s playing at Immaculate Conception High School in Montclair, N.J., and 6-5 shooting guard Buddy Boeheim, who’s attending Brewster Academy in New Hampshire. Buddy, of course, is the son of Jim Boeheim.

The Lowdown

This year’s team has endeared itself to fans because of the way the players have hustled on defense, scrapped for loose balls and exceeded expectations. The losses in winnable games against Wake Forest and Notre Dame seemed to set the team back, however, and Howard said they need to rediscover their mojo because they’re going to lose without it.

“I think we got comfortable and you can see that in our play,” Howard said after the Notre Dame game. “We’re not going after the ball anymore, we don’t have that chip on our shoulder.

“You’ve got to have that mentality and you’ve got to feel a certain type of way about things. You can’t go out there and float, you know what I mean?” Howard added. “We’re not being as active any more, our skills are down, our rebounds are down and we’re going to lose like that.”

 

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Indie Jones

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When Nic Oliver and Mark Turley started L.R.S. Records in January 2013, the duo didn’t envision a long-lasting label. It just sounded like a fun match between two longtime pals and their talents.

Turley was the musician, in bands constantly since age 14 when he was a Cicero-North Syracuse High School student. His classmate Oliver provided the business side.

“I thought, ‘I’ll do this on the side, the idea will fold and we’ll be done,’” Turley recalls. “Nope. It kept going.”

L.R.S. Records

L.R.S. Records founders Nic Oliver and Mark Turley. Michael Davis photo

The label has since released more than 20 projects with bands that hail from Albany to Greece to Georgia. Turley and Oliver also started a podcast called Long Range Sarcasm two months ago.

The pair will celebrate the label’s five-year anniversary on Saturday, Jan. 20, 5 p.m., at the Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. The show, presented by After Dark Entertainment, will feature eight bands backed by L.R.S.: Goodnight Forever, Matthew Blake and The Blues Dragons, Bridge Under Fire, Against The Giants, Slaughterhouse Chorus, Participation Trophy, The Amazing Shakes and Telegram Show. Admission is $10 in advance, $12 at the door; ages 16 and up are welcome.

Two stages will run back-to-back to ensure nonstop music. Turley also promises special sets from many outfits. Bridge Under Fire will play songs from their first EP, which they haven’t performed in seven years, and Goodnight Forever will offer an all-acoustic show. Special deals on band merchandise will also be available throughout the night.

Turley, who also plays in Bridge Under Fire, remembers the 2013 start of the label. His local band and Albany’s Slaughterhouse Chorus split a seven-inch vinyl after the groups met each other on tour. It’s fitting that both will appear on the bill for the fifth-anniversary party.

“It’s turned into this cool thing,” Turley says. “Bands that put out a record with us stick around and help with everything else. It wasn’t intended to be that way, like a family, but it just happened. We trust each other with musical references and know what we’re looking for.

“And we’ve got a network of musicians. If you need a bass player for this quick run, there’s always somebody you can call, somebody who has your back, so bands don’t miss opportunities.”

In the past year, L.R.S. has released five full-length albums. When the label began it was only EPs and splits.

“When we started, we thought we’d put out one record, have good stories and that would be it,” Turley said. “But it (the album) recouped, so we could do a second one. The second one sold out. That allowed us to do a third one, then a fourth. It just kept growing.”

Although Turley and Oliver still maintain other full-time jobs, they have watched their label grow into a viable side business. Most of their satisfaction comes from knowing they’re helping bands they believe in to create products that will last forever.

“Our mentality is: Your band is really good. We believe in you,” Turley says. “We want to document that. We might sit on copies of a certain album for years, but we want it to exist. We want to be able to pass it along to people.”

Traditionally, major labels front money to pay for a band’s studio time to record an album, then release the album and deal with the promotional side. L.R.S. tweaks its operations depending on each band, but essentially delivers many of the same benefits, helping groups as they make investments in their craft. The label also assists with marketing and publicity once the albums are finished and offers contacts for touring.

“I want this to be as artist-friendly as possible,” Turley says. “I want to make it as easy on the artist as possible. As a musician, it’s what I would want.”

This year Turley hopes they’ll continue their string of releases as well as doing events such as Taste of Syracuse and Record Store Day. He also emphasizes that they’re always on the lookout for new talent.

“We want to be just like old Capital Records of the 1960s,” he says. “They put out Led Zeppelin, Roy Orbison and everything in between. First, we released punk rock, then folk rock acoustic, then a pissed-off heavy band. And we want everything in between. If you’re into it, we’re into it.”

For more information, visit lrsrecords.com.

 

L.R.S. bands Slaughterhouse Chorus . Dylan Suttles photo

Against the Giants. Dylan Suttles photo

 

Michael Davis Photos:

L.R.S. Records

 

 

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Nevertheless, She Persisted

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A crowd formed in the parking lot of Laci’s Tapas Bar on Syracuse’s North Side Saturday morning, Jan. 20. The group began as only a handful of women, but soon it swelled  to more than 300 as the time of the rally drew closer.

The crowd was a mix of backgrounds and life experiences. Ages ranged from toddler to Vietnam War veterans. Some were native-born U.S. citizens, while others were immigrants. Decked out in iconic pink “pussy hats,” holding signs and chanting in unison, they all had a single goal: solidarity.

“What does a feminist look like?” Roseanne Olszewski, a co-founder of Syracuse’s New Feminists for Justice, the group behind the event, asked the marchers.

“This is what a feminist looks like!” they roared back.

Amid the outward show of love and support for all women, a discussion was stirring about the role of intersectionality and allyship. A letter, penned by “a coalition of women,” was read aloud before the march began. Titled “Dear Sisterz,” the piece acknowledged a problem with the women’s march — both national and local — seemingly creating a platform that favored white, heterosexual, able-bodied, cisgendered women.

“Although the mass mobilization against Donald Trump was impressive, it left many womxn behind, feeling a collective sense of ‘where have you been’ and also ‘where are you going to be next week’ when the real work needs to be done,” the letter stated.

The 2018 Women’s March took place nationwide to support women’s rights and equality and bring awareness to the current political climate. (“What makes America great? Love makes America great,” was a common local call-and-response.) It came on the anniversary of last year’s Women’s March — the initial event that drew millions worldwide — and one year after President Trump’s inauguration.

Syracuse’s New Feminists for Justice, with Olszewski and co-founder Donna Moore, spearheaded both the 2017 and 2018 marches. Olszewski said she was looking for an outlet for her frustration, as she feared the new administration would derail progressive policies.

“We determined, if the country was going to resist this, we would need a feminist movement,” Olszewski said. The group also organized last year’s thousands-strong Women’s March.

This year’s event was to promote healing and celebrate the accomplishments of women. Along with the rally Saturday there was a Women Together Inspiring Entrepreneurial Success (TIES) event on Friday, Jan. 19, to discuss supporting women-owned businesses and the history of women’s suffrage, and a special tailgating event for the Sunday, Jan. 21, Syracuse University women’s basketball game against the Pittsburgh Panthers (SU won 70-52).

The group marched to the ArtRage gallery a few blocks from Laci’s. The gallery agreed to keep its exhibit, Still The One: Douglas Lloyd Makes Portraits of Women Making Change the Old-Fashioned Way, up for the weekend so marchers could see the 26 local women activists displayed in the show.

Poet Joan Netta Burstyn, an English immigrant who remembered the previous women’s rights movement, spoke of resistance and keeping momentum going in the face of adversity.

“What does it take for me to be true to what I want, even if I’m not going to get it?” she told the group to ask themselves.

Azra Gradincic, another speaker, recently became a U.S. citizen after immigrating to the country from Bosnia in the 1990s while fleeing the Bosnian War. She recalled bullets flying through her home as a child, remembered dodging sniper fire in the streets and described a near-death experience when a grenade was thrown into an apartment where she and her family were seeking refuge.

She told the mass of people packed into the gallery that they had strength in numbers and in their unity: “This is my home. These are my people. I love my people.”

Although Olszewski said the group told the community everyone could be involved and let people come to them if they wanted to be present, Cjala Surratt, one of the people behind the letter, said historically that type of laid-back attitude isn’t enough.

“It’s indicative of an ongoing issue,” she said. Marginalized women were not involved in planning the event, creating a microcosm of the common issues seen in most political spaces: The majority holds power, while the less privileged go unheard. There was passion in having a movement, but a seeming lack of interest in long-term community investment or engagement, Surratt said.

Olszewski said event organizers heard the message and would try to be more inclusive going forward. Surratt said this mindfulness, and seeking other voices to lead, is the mark of true allyship and can help create a better sense of unity rather than schism in the movement. This is especially true in the current political climate, where she said silence for some has a stronger potential to lead to ramifications.

“You should always ask yourself, whether you’re sitting in a room or meeting virtually, whose voice isn’t present,” Surratt said.

 

Michael Davis Photos:

 

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Still Folkin’ Around at 40

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The Oswego Music Hall has been bringing local and national acts in the folk and acoustic veins to Central New York music fans since 1977. Although the operation has moved among buildings and changed names, the commitment to the cause has remained the same. The organization is currently celebrating its 40th anniversary season through May with a roster of musical talent taking the stage.

“It’s taken the commitment of the volunteers and the community,” says artistic director Ellen Jeanne Wahl about the venue’s successful history. “It’s the volunteers, but also the people who came to the shows, too.”

Wahl began attending shows at the hall 38 years ago when her daughter Loren was 4 months old. The hall then inhabited the Lowlife Café, next to where the Old City Hall restaurant currently resides on Water Street in Oswego. It offered a place to bring her children and enjoy events as a family. Her husband, Mark, also enjoyed the artistic community, but as a musician and songwriter who also makes and repairs guitars.

Loren Barrigar. Michael Davis photo

“We’d attend, we’d enjoy the shows, be part of the community,” recalls Oswego Music Hall president Mark Wahl. “A lot of our friends would go. When that kind of thing happens, then you wind up helping set up. Then you wind up helping search for talent. Once you get started, then you’re a board member. Once you’re on the board, you get invested in what you think is best. Before you know it, you own the damn thing!”

The Wahls have grown increasingly attached to the organization, with both holding several additional office positions including vice president, secretary and treasurer. Yet the pair are also proud of the growth of the hall, which they call “growing young.”

“We needed to renew ourselves and bring in new blood,” he says. “Kids are stomping around shows again. Not a bad thing.”

The venue has more than doubled the number of shows each season, from 17 per year to 40. The Wahls have also initiated an open mike night on alternate Fridays and a songwriter series called “The Hook” designed to showcase singer-songwriters from local and national talent pools.

“In trying to get new faces, new 20-somethings, open mike sessions have helped bring that community back,” he says. “There are musicians and songwriters out there and they’re compelled to come when you offer them something. That’s part of our new energy.”

Volunteers keep thinking of new ways to attract young blood, which is part of the reason Ellen Wahl will soon step down as artistic director. “We need to speak to the next generation,” she says.

The Oswego Music Hall is also more than a building. The formal name is the Ontario Center for Performing Arts, a 501(c)3 organization with a 17-member board of directors. The hall is currently housed at the McCrobie Civic Center, 41 Lake St., overlooking Lake Ontario.

The venue is known for its superb sound, thanks to engineers from SubCat Studios (T.J. James and Jeremy Johnston) and donations of equipment from the Richard Shineman Foundation and the New York State Council for the Arts.

“The sound is terrific and the lighting is dramatic,” Mark Wahl says.

“And we offer a listening room environment,” adds Ellen Wahl. “To be a musician or performing artist and to play your music or tell your stories to people who actually listen, it’s got to be great. It’s unique and it’s been an education for me. I’ve learned more about our performers; my heart goes out to them. It’s inspired my own energy to keep it that way and feed the creative talent in our midst. There’s so much talent right around us.”

But that only happens as a result of the 19,000 volunteer hours that go into keeping the doors open each season. “It takes a lot of work,” Mark Wahl says. “That’s kept us going, but it’s also something different. Music is a very, very powerful element. It cuts across all cultures and interests. There’s always going to be a common note. I think the better job we do putting on shows, the better technically, better sound, better diversity among us on stage. It’s a powerful force and that compels people to get up and perform.” 

 

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DeFran Makes His Move

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Whether at the ballot box or in pickup basketball games, it is obvious that state Sen. John DeFrancisco doesn’t like to lose. A calm intensity settles in, and an attitude emerges based in large part on hard work and force of habit. From the Syracuse City School District’s board of education to the city’s Common Council to his current 50th state Senate District seat, he has never lost a contest for elective office.

This time, however, he has announced his intention to seek the Republican endorsement in the coming race for governor. “I know how to play hardball,” he insists. But the odds are far from friendly.

Being a Republican candidate from upstate running against an incumbent downstate Democrat, the son of a previous governor, does not seem to be piling up many reality points. But DeFrancisco feels that his athletic roots just might even the score.

Michael Davis photo

“From my formative years I played baseball probably since I was 6 years old through college and beyond,” he observes. “What it did for me was a lot of things. I was normally the captain, or as we got older the one who organized everything because nobody else wanted to take on that responsibility. It wasn’t only the excitement of playing the sport; being an athlete was a great reward, but dealing with people and being with a team means so much for anything you do in life.”

First, however, he must secure his party’s nomination. Two other contenders have thrown their hats in the ring, state Assembly Minority Leader Brian Kolb and former Erie County Executive Joel Giambra, and two others are considering.

DeFrancisco made his announcement Jan. 30 at Liverpool’s Holiday Inn, as he criticized Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s penchant for “gimmicks and budget one-shots” and Albany’s “pay-to-play culture,” and declared, “We must make New York affordable again.”

He also used a rare celestial phenomenon as a metaphor for his political chances. “There’s an old saying: once in a blue moon,” the senator said. “Everyone in politics knows that once in a blue moon we can bring about fundamental change. Well folks, tonight, there is actually a blue moon,” pointing out the Super Blue Blood Moon lunar eclipse that would occur within hours of his speech.

In anticipation of athletic competition there are physical and mental warm-up exercises to prepare you for the challenge. How do you prepare for playing the candidate in the voting game?

I’m still very active in physical exercise, whether it be working on an elliptical machine or with free weights, or simply running. I also still play tennis. I play golf periodically. You’ve got to be in shape to be at your best.

Being in elective office, and having practiced law, the mental part is obviously the toughest. You’ve got to be mentally tough. With politics, now that I’ve been in state government so long, the issues come easy to me, I’ve seen them for years. Now I feel as good as I can possibly feel mentally, because I’m constantly talking about these issues, because I’ve been running around the state saying the same things.

One element of athletic psychology is intimidating potential opponents out of the race. Two other folks have announced GOP gubernatorial intentions. You announced. Nobody dropped out.

That’s true, because it’s a little different than an athletic game. This is simply a numbers game. There are counties throughout the state that have committees. Those committees are going to decide, based on a weighted vote: Bigger counties have a stronger number of votes that go to the selection of the candidate. What you’re really doing is going to each area of the state, making phone calls, talking to people face to face, and you’re keeping a count and trying to figure out how you’re going to get more than 50 percent. There’s no psych there.

Your strategy for this game requires a balance of teamwork with individual effort. Do they get confused?

No. Not at all. In fact, much of today I was calling committee people in different areas of the state, and calling members of my team following state senators, asking for their assistance, talking to their chairpeople. The teamwork is required for the game I’m playing right now, both the mental and the physical elements. I announced on Tuesday night. The following morning I was on a 6:30 a.m. TV interview. I drove to Albany, had two radio interviews, and interviewed on shows in the area the rest of the day up until 7 o’clock at night. If you’re not in physically good shape you don’t make it through day 2. You’re always on your toes because every interview is different.

Does stardom have the same impact on this game as it does in athletics?

I don’t know about stardom, but what I believe is the competitive drive keeps you going. You want to be successful at the goals that you have put out for yourself, and that’s been true of every campaign I’ve run over the years.

In fact, when I was in law school there was another very competitive individual in my class and we engaged in many all-night Monopoly games. Nobody wanted to lose. I’ve been a competitive individual my whole life, and that’s what keeps you moving in this capacity.

Michael Davis photo

In athletics there are minor leagues for developing skills. Looking back now, what did the Syracuse school board prepare you for?

It prepared me for being an elected official and making nobody happy. The school board was probably one of the most difficult positions that I have ever been in, because it’s very deeply personal. With parents, their child is the most important thing to them, and they know what’s best for their children and unfortunately different parents have different knowledges of what they think is best. You have to listen to everyone and make a good decision. In many cases the positions were irreconcilable.

What did your experience on the Common Council give you for this race?

It’s just a continuation of the same thing. It was, quite frankly, a lot less stressful. There were issues, but when you’re dealing with things other than an individual’s child, the emotions aren’t as strong.

But what the council did was broaden the issues. The council had to pass a budget that included the budget of the school district, but it also had to deal with the state of New York, because most of the funding came, and still comes, from the state of New York. You get a broader feel for the inner-workings of government because you’re really in the middle of how the government units interact with each other.

What has your current position in the state Senate, particularly your leadership roles, given you in anticipation of being governor?

There are several committee chairmanships, including Judiciary and others before that, and then Finance Committee. Being chair of Finance, what that did for me, I truly learned, in an intimate way, all the aspects of the budget.

If you’re chair of the Judiciary you know things about the courts and whether it’s criminal or civil. You know a lot of things about the codes of the state of New York dealing with criminal or civil matters. But when you’re finance chair you learn about the financing of all the departments. We would have hearings that would last for 10 hours for 13 different days. I learned more in that period on the Finance Committee than I learned in any time in my history in government. 

 

See the full photo gallery from the event here.

 

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Catwalk On The Wild Side

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Downtown Syracuse’s Landmark Theatre, 362 S. Salina St., is usually the classiest venue in the area to catch live concerts and stage performances. Yet once each year the vaudeville-era showplace is the home for the Blowout Fantasy Hairshow, one of the most over-the-top runway shows to hit Central New York.

The seventh annual Blowout event, this year titled “Superheroes & Villains,” takes place Sunday, Feb. 18, 3 to 6 p.m. The nonprofit ACR Health is behind the annual runway competition among professional hair salons and stylists to see who can create the most extravagant look based on a certain theme.

Categories include overall look, best makeup and best presentation, with first-place and runners-up finalists. The Blowout winner receives a trophy, a $500 cash prize and will be featured in an upcoming issue of Syracuse Woman Magazine.

Given this year’s theme, expect super-duper variations involving capes, masks, pecs and Spandex. Previous Blowout themes have been based on fairytales, the circus and Las Vegas weddings, said Maureen Harrington O’Neill, ACR Health’s assistant director of development.

“It gives (hairstylists) an opportunity to step out of the box and do something different,” Harrington O’Neill said. “It’s not your standard cut and blow-dry.”

blowout

Michael Benny in selfie mode, Michael Davis photo

Fiery, sky-high beehive hairdos with working smoke machines, twisted flowering vines with pastel brushstrokes, and plates of edible wedding cake served to the judges are just some of the dazzling, eye-filling elements that have come down the runway in past Blowouts. The 2018 Blowout audience will be treated to styles from more than 10 salons, as 15 models will strut the 70-foot-long catwalk.

The first Blowout was held in the back of a local bar, but that space quickly proved too small as attendees crammed in to see the models, and salons came out with big performances and skits to accompany their hair themes. “We knew within 10 minutes of opening that we had stumbled onto something very unique,” Harrington O’Neill recalled, as the hunt for a larger space became a top priority. This will be the sixth year that the Landmark’s main stage will host the Blowout.

The Syracuse Blowout was inspired by a similar fundraiser held in Binghamton, as the Southern Tier AIDS Program agency mounted a Hair Warz event. Harrington O’Neill thought it would be a good way to promote small, women-owned businesses and also pay tribute to a commonly unsung hero: hairdressers.

“Your stylist is always there for you,” said Harrington O’Neill, “from your wedding day to a loved one’s funeral.”

People will often confide to their beautician about things they would never talk about at home, such as abuse, addiction and disease. Because of these close relationships, hairstylists, nail technicians and aestheticians in Illinois are required by a 2017 law to take training courses to recognize the signs of abuse and assault before being able to renew their licenses.

“We really couldn’t do the work that we do without people like this in the community,” said Harrington O’Neill. “And the Southern Tier AIDS Program has been incredibly supportive; we have even had the same participating salons at our Blowouts.”

Harrington O’Neill said she’s excited to see how the stylists put their own twist on existing characters or how they’ll create their own for this year’s show. Comic-book heroes will also be in the entertainment news this week: The new Marvel Comics action movie Black Panther will start screening at more than 3,800 multiplex screens on Friday, Feb. 16.

Blowout eventgoers can sip on this year’s signature cocktail, “Wonder Woman,” and peruse various beauty and business vendor tables that will be set up at the Landmark. Each attendee will also receive a complimentary gift bag, thanks to partnerships with Gilead Sciences, Goldwell NY & MilkShake, Harrington O’Neill said. VIP ticketholders are allowed after-show access to a reception in the Grand Promenade, where stylists and models will mingle and food from Attilio’s restaurant will be served.

Money raised from the Blowout goes toward ACR Health, which serves nine counties throughout Central New York. Their core focus is combating HIV and AIDS, but the organization also helps those with drug addiction, bringing awareness to the inequalities facing LGBTQ youth and assisting with general poverty reduction and prevention, Harrington O’Neill said.

“I think for everyone, we walk in and think that we’re just putting on a show and that’s it,” she said. “But at the end of the day we see how much money we made for a good cause, and we see this strong camaraderie between the salons and the connection there.”

This year’s judges are TeNesha Murphy, co-host of WSYR-Channel 9’s Bridge Street, Jeff Watkins from Cloud City Comics and Marianna Ranieri from New York City-based salon Midoma. WTVH-Channel 5 news anchor Michael Benny will again host the outrageous proceedings.

Blowout tickets are $25 for regular admission or $50 for VIP seating. For information, visit acrhealth.org.

 

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