Conservatives Nominate Judge Merrell for Supreme Court Justice

Judge Charles Merrell_photo



(Lowville, NY – Sept. 22, 2011)  In a surprise move at their convention on Sept. 20, the Conservative Party delegates from the six counties in the Fifth Judicial District selected Democrat Charles Merrell to run for one of the four state Supreme Court seats on the November ballot.

Judge Merrell, County, Surrogate and Family Court judge in Lewis County since 2003, has also been an acting state Supreme Court justice since 2007. He is one of several Democrats in the race, but the only one nominated by the Conservative Party.

Delegate Bernie Ment, the chairman of the DeWitt Conservative Party committee, explained that judicial experience was the key factor in the party’s decision to nominate Judge Merrell. “He is the one candidate who had experience on the bench as an acting state Supreme Court justice,” Ment said.

“One of the primary slogans for my campaign is Experience Matters,” said Judge Merrell. “It’s very satisfying to see that the Conservative Party feels the same way.”

The Democrats in the Fifth Judicial District held their convention on Saturday, Sept. 24 at party headquarters in Syracuse.

To find out more about Judge Charles Merrell and his campaign for State Supreme Court, visit www.electmerrell.com or www.facebook.com/electmerrell

Ogdensburg Man in Critical Condition after Head-on Collision with Tractor Trailer in Lysander

(Town of Lysander, NY – Sept. 25, 2011) Onondaga County Sheriff Kevin E. Walsh reports that Sheriff’s Deputies are investigating a car/tractor-trailer accident on Route 370 in the Town of Lysander, which sent one person to the hospital with life threatening injuries.

At approximately 1:46 a.m., Sheriff Deputies responded to a reported car/tractor-trailer collision on Route 370 just west of Tater Road near the Cayuga County line.

Deputies reported that a 2009 Toyota Corrolla, operated by a Paul A. Congleton (26) of English Settlement Road, Ogdensburg was traveling east bound on Route 370 when he crossed the center line into the west bound lane of traffic into the path of a 2003 Kenworth tractor-trailer being operated by John W. Reese (64) of Wiman Avenue, Syracuse.

The force of the tractor-trailer pushed Congleton’s vehicle back several hundred feet before both vehicles came to rest.

Rescue crews from the Plainville, Cato and Baldwinsville Fire Department also responded to the scene, where they had to extricate Congleton from his vehicle, due to the extensive damage caused by the collision.

Congleton was then transported by GBAC ambulance to University Hospital where he is listed in critical condition and is said to have internal injuries with several broken bones.

Reese was not injured but was evaluated at the scene by medical personnel.

Route 370 between Tater Road and the Cayuga County line is closed to all traffic while the Sheriff’s Accident Investigation Unit continues to investigate the scene. Fog weather conditions and alcohol appear to be a factor in Congleton crossing the center line prior to the collision.

Tickets are expected to be issued pending the outcome of the investigation.

Byrne Dairy Named Official Chocolate Milk Sponsor of The Inaugural Empire State Marathon and Half Marathon

(Syracuse, NY – Sept. 23, 2011) Achieve Fitness, LLC announced today Byrne Dairy as the official chocolate milk sponsor of the Inaugural Empire State Marathon and Half Marathon on Oct. 16, 2011, as well as the Driver’s Village New York State Health and Wellness Expo on Oct. 14 and 15.

As an official sponsor, Byrne Dairy will distribute samples to participants and get frequent mentions during the Empire State Marathon and Half Marathon. The company will also have booth space at the Driver’s Village New York State Health and Wellness Expo and assist at the finish-line recovery station, where runners can relax and refuel.

“In addition to health benefits such as building strong bones and muscles, milk also serves as an effective recovery drink,” said Brian Collins, principle owner of Achieve Fitness, LLC, management company for the Inaugural Empire State Marathon and Half Marathon. “So it’s only fitting we partner with Byrne Dairy to help promote the role dairy can play in supporting active lifestyles.”

Kate Byrne, Sales and Marketing Specialist states, “We are very excited to be a part of this race in its opening year, and to help aid runners in their recovery as they cross the finish line. We look forward to talking with the athletes at the Health and Wellness Expo and will provide materials on the many benefits of drinking low fat chocolate milk after a strenuous exercise. Byrne Dairy looks forward to a great race this year and in the years to follow as this race continues to grow.”

Byrne Dairy recently won first place – with a perfect score of 100 percent – in the 2011 New York State Fair Fluid Milk Quality Competition. The competition included milk samples from 21 New York State plants that were evaluated by Cornell University’s Department of Food Science for flavor, bacteria, butterfat and freezing point.

Stone Endorsed by Conservative Party

Stone

 

(Syracuse, NY – Sept. 23, 2011) John G. Stone. Esq. was endorsed by the Conservative Party to be their candidate for Supreme Court Justice for the New York State Fifth Judicial District.

Stone has been the Principal Law Clerk to New York State Supreme Court Justice James P. Murphy for 7 years.  Prior to that appointment, Stone spent 17 years as a litigation attorney in private practice and as a Senior Assistant Corporation counsel for the City of Syracuse serving under Mayors Thomas G Young, Roy A Bernardi and Matthew J Driscoll .

He resides inManlius with his wife, Dr. Barbara Krenzer, and their three children, Elizabeth, John and Matthew.

Abolitionists Battle Down a Door in Syracuse to Free a Fugitive 160 Years Ago

Loguen, Jermain PD Rudy 2-16-11cr-cm p (1)

 

Pictured is the monument in Clinton Square, Syracuse, to honor the Jerry Rescue of Oct. 1, 1851. John M. Rudy, National Park Service, will share his research on the freeing of a fugitive in a program at the Gerrit Smith Estate National Historic Landmark in Peterboro Saturday, Oct. 1, at 2 p.m.

Jermain Wesley Loguen of Syracuse was one of the primaries in the rescue of Jerry McHenry from a jail in Syracuse Oct. 1, 1851.

(Peterboro, Syracuse, NY – Oct. 2011) On Oct. 1, 160 years ago, a captured fugitive slave named Jerry was freed by a mob of Syracuse citizens. For seven years after that date, Central New York abolitionists celebrated the Jerry Rescue with an event that commemorated its importance.

In 1859 Gerrit Smith refused requests by the Jerry Rescue Committee to speak because people had not maintained the high level of commitment to abolition that the Jerry Rescue had demonstrated.

On Oct. 1, exactly 160 years after the Jerry Rescue, John M. Rudy of the National Park Service will present “The Jerry Level: Gerrit Smith and the Memory of the Jerry Rescue” at 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 1, at the Gerrit Smith Estate National Historic Landmark, 4543 Peterboro Road, Peterboro.

Oct. 1, 1851, events in downtown Syracuse drastically altered the course of the lives of countless Central New Yorkers. As abolitionists battered down the door to a Syracuse police station and freed the fugitive slave Jerry Henry, they embarked on a journey which would span the course of the next decade.

The Jerry Rescue was a catalyst for Upstate’s abolition activity from 1851 until the dawn of the Civil War.

Among those who turned the freeing of one man on Clinton Square in Syracuse into mass action were Gerrit Smith and Jermain Loguen. Smith advocated living life to the “Jerry Level” regarding the need for radical action. Loguen took the Jerry Rescue as inspiration to become more active in the Underground Railroad in Central New York.

Throughout the 1850s, the two men grew more radical every year until, by 1859, civil war seemed inevitable.

Rudy will share some of the history he unearthed during research for his thesis. Daniel Webster, in his May 1851 speech in Syracuse which challenged the abolition community, leads off the study. The next chapter centers on Loguen, Syracuse’s “King” of the Underground Railroad.

Third is a discussion of Smith’s disillusionment with the Upstate abolition community over the course of the 1850s and his eventual alliance with John Brown. The final chapter discusses Samuel May and the “death” of the Jerry Rescue spirit in Syracuse at the coming of the war.

It seems that the abolition world for about 10 years revolved around Syracuse and its personalities – Smith being key among that community of thinkers.

A native of Pompey, Rudy has been studying the history of Upstate New York’s abolition community since 2005. He holds a master’s in applied history from Shippensburg University and a bachelors in history with a minor in Civil War Era studies from Gettysburg College.

Rudy currently lives in Gettysburg and works with the National Park Service’s Interpretive Development Program in Harpers Ferry, W.V., creating training materials for park rangers across the entire park system.

The Gerrit Smith Estate National Historic Landmark and the National Abolition Hall of Fame and Museum are open from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays from May 14 to Oct. 23. Admission to each site is $2. Stewards and students are free.

For more information, call (315) 684-3262 or visit gerritsmith.org or abolitionhof.org.

 

Local Man Completes Novel Cancer Treatment

By Margo Frink

(Town of Nelson, Syracuse, NY – Sept. 2011) Who better to raise awareness of yearly screening for prostate cancer than someone who’s been diagnosed? And with a new treatment recently approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), a patient can hope to prolong their life.

Fifty-nine-year-old Larry Omans of Nelson missed a screening one year and by the following year tests concluded he had prostate cancer that spread to his lymph nodes. That was in 2007.

“I went from being OK to having a PSA (Prostate-specific Antigen) of 125.7,” Omans said. “It was already aggressive and in my lymph nodes.”

Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is a protein produced by cells of the prostate gland. The PSA test measures the level of PSA in the blood. The higher a man’s PSA level the more likely cancer is present.

According to the New England Journal of Medicine it was not rare to find biopsy-detected prostate cancer in men with PSA levels of plus or minus 4.0 ng per milliliter, a level thought to be normal.

Omans began four and half months of chemotherapy that left him weak followed by 42 radiation treatments and hormone therapy.

He remained on hormone treatments that would have ended in October of last year but his PSA levels started to rise. That’s when his urologist, Dr. Christopher Pieczonka of Associated Medical Professionals of NY, located in Syracuse suggested he try a new treatment approved by the Food and Drug Administration in April of 2010.

PROVENGE is the first FDA-approved autologous cellular immunotherapy indicated for the treatment of men with asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic metastatic castrate resistant (hormone refractory) prostate cancer. It is designed to stimulate an immune response against prostate cancer.

Omans explained that he had three treatments, each two weeks apart. He said his white blood cells were collected, which took about three hours. A courier picked up his blood and it was taken to the Dendreon Manufacturing Facility in New Jersey and treated with PROVENGE. It was then incubated for 48 hours, brought back to his doctor’s office in Syracuse and injected back into his body. Omans completed his treatments at the end of June with no side effects.

“After the first treatment was done, I went shopping,” Omans said. “Chemos the worst. I lost my hair and was weak but I didn’t get sick.”

Omans continues to see his doctor for bone scans and CT scans but has no idea how much longer he has.

“[PROVENGE] extends your life,” Omans said. “It’s not a cure. I’m not going to say it’s a cure because it’s not. How much longer would I have if I didn’t take it? I wasn’t supposed to be alive now.”

Dr. Pieczonka said it takes about three months for the treatment to begin working and at Oman’s stage of cancer it could increase his life up to four months.

“Hopefully he will have even longer,” Pieczonka said. “I’m crossing my fingers that he has a good run of this and has many, many years.”

In one case PROVENGE extended the person’s life up to 27 months. Pieczonka has treated eight other men so far and everyone has continued their normal activities with no side effects, he said. Most common side effects reported in studies were chills, fever, fatigue, back pain, nausea, joint ache and headache.

Pieczonka said, although very expensive costing $90,000 it’s the only medicine of its kind, but the treatment is controversial. In most cases, treatment is only approved if the cancer has spread to the lymp nodes and bones and the man’s hormones have stopped working.

“We really need to show it’s going to extend life,” Pieczonka said. “Patients should be given PROVENGE as a first treatment.”

But that’s not the case. Men who are diagnosed are usually given more traditional treatments of chemotherapy and radiation or the prostate is removed.

“If you take the prostate out, it could extend life up to 25 years,” Pieczonka said. Studies are being done now that would allow patients to have PROVENGE first, he said. But again, studies have to prove it extends life longer than traditional treatment.

Pieczonka advises men to do their own research and get two, three or even four opinions before beginning any treatment.

And Pieczonka said if you don’t see your doctor for routine care, it may be too late.

“[Prostate cancer] is very, very treatable. It can be cured if caught early enough,” he said.

More than 30,000 men die a year of prostate cancer. It’s the second most common cancer in men in the U.S. and the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in men. One in six men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during his lifetime.

If your father or brother was diagnosed, your risk is two-and-a-half times greater of developing prostate cancer.

Omans continues working at Ferris Industries in Stockbridge as an assembly supervisor where he’s worked for 10 years. He enjoys his Harley Davidson motorcycle, golf and looks forward to deer hunting.

“I’m feeling good. I’m working every day,” Omans said. “I’m going to fight this thing.”

Omans wishes he hadn’t skipped that year with his doctor.

“I shouldn’t have had it that advanced. I’m too young,” Omans said. “They compared me to Lance Armstrong. Don’t’ skip a year. Get your check-up every year.”

Margo Frink is vice president of M3P Media LLC and managing editor of the Madison County Courier. She can be reached at Margo@m3pmedia.com or 315-481-8732.

 

 

Erratic Operation Leads to DWI arrest on Thruway

(Sept. 19, 2011) On Sept. 17, Long Vu, 40, of 156 Mary St., 2, Syracuse, was arrested by the New York State Police – Junius Ponds for Aggravated Driving While Intoxicated (BAC > .18 percent) after he was stopped for erratic operation on the Thruway.

Vu was found to have a BAC of .19 percent; he was released to appear in the Town of Farmington court on Sept. 26 at 6 p.m.

 

 

 

Syracuse man arrested for UPM on Thruway

(Syracuse, NY – Sept. 20, 2011) On Sept. 19, Jeffrey D. Utton, 24, of 513 Tennyson Ave., Syracuse was arrested by the New York State Police – Junius Ponds for Unlawful Possession of Marijuana after his vehicle was stopped for speeding on the Thruway.

Utton was released to appear in the Town of Farmington Court Oct. 3 at 6 p.m.

 

Rehab Tech Practitioner Earns BOC Designation

(Syracuse, NY – Sept. 19, 2011) Rehabilitation Technologies of Syracuse announced that Jeremiah Hall, CP, CTPO, BOCPO, has received certification in prosthetics and orthotics from Board of Certification/Accreditation, International (BOC). Hall is a third generation practitioner, following the career path of his father and grandfather.

To receive BOCPO designation, practitioners must meet eligibility requirements in education, patient care, and experience, complete an exam series successfully, and attest to upholding the ethics and standards of the organization.

Hall has worked in the prosthetics and orthotics field for nearly 20 years and is an ABC-Certified Prosthetist and a Certified Prosthetic-Orthotic Technician. He earned his associate’s degree in specialized technology at the Median School of Allied Health, Pittsburgh.

Hall resides in Pennellville with his wife, Erika.

RehabTech’s patient care facility is located at 1101 Erie Blvd., East, Ste. 209, Syracuse.

 

 

Rosamond Gifford Zoo to Hold Baby Patas Monkey Naming Contest

(Syracuse, NY – Sept. 20, 2011) The Rosamond Gifford Zoo is asking the public to help name their new baby patas monkey. On Aug. 23, the second baby patas monkey of 2011 was born at the Rosamond Gifford Zoo. D.J., a female patas monkey, was born earlier this year in January.

Suggestions should be sent to contest@rosamondgiffordzoo.org and must be received by 4 p.m. on Sept. 25.  Entrants must include their name, age, address, phone number, e-mail address, name suggestions and reason for their choices.

The contest is open to those 5 and older.

Since the gender of the baby has not yet been determined, contestants may submit two names: one for a boy and one for a girl.

Patas monkeys found from the rainforest of Western Africa through the savannahs of Kenya; name suggestions with a native influence are strongly encouraged.

A committee at the zoo will select the top names (minimum five) of those suggested.

The top names will be posted on the zoo’s website (rosamondgiffordzoo.org) from Sept. 28 through Oct. 3. The winning name will be announced at the zoo on Oct. 5.

The winner will receive a Patas Monkey Adopt an Animal package valued at $100.

The Rosamond Gifford Zoo is one of just 15 American zoos to house patas monkeys. They are part of a Species Survival Plan (SSP) – a collaborative effort between the Association of Zoos and Aquariums and zoos around the world to help ensure their survival.