Quantcast
Channel: The Buffalo News - niagara
Viewing all 1955 articles
Browse latest View live

Wheatfield native Col. John C. White finds joy in the U.S. Army

$
0
0
Col. John C. White has traveled far from his Western New York roots. This career U.S. Army Soldier has led units featuring nearly every aircraft in the Army inventory. After various assignments in the Middle East and South Korea and a stint at the Pentagon, White took command of the 21st Cavalry Brigade (Air Combat) in May in Fort Hood, Texas.

This Starpoint and Niagara University graduate is now in charge of a group that trains personnel – from the U.S. and abroad – on aircraft including the Apache, which he terms “the most highly advanced attack helicopter in the world.”

White’s mother, Jacqueline, said, “Our family, along with thousands of other families, are thankful for the sacrifice each of our service men and women make in the military today. We know the price that is paid and are proud of all who serve. … We consider John a local hero who loves Western New York and is so proud to call Buffalo his birthplace.”

White was awarded the Bronze Star, and his accomplishments over a 24-year Army career fill a page, but White remains humble and gratified by the opportunities his chosen path has provided.

He recently spoke by phone from his office in Fort Hood about growing up in Wheatfield, his family, his career and his responsibilities to his country and to the parents of those who entrust their sons and daughters to his care.

Tell us about the several members of your family who have served in the military.

My grandfather was in the Navy during World War II (stateside), and my dad (Thomas) was in the Navy for five or six years, and now I’m in the Army and my son is in the Air Force ROTC program at Virginia Tech, so maybe he’ll serve and become an Air Force pilot. My older brother, Bill, was in the Army for a while after he graduated from high school, and my younger brother, Paul, graduated from college and went in the Army and was in the Reserves for seven or eight years. And then after 9/11 he went into the active Army, and he just got out. I’m the only one to make it a career.

How did you find this career path?

I always kind of knew when I was a kid that I wanted to become an officer – it didn’t matter if I became a pilot or not. I graduated from Starpoint High School and went to Niagara University, and after my freshman year, I got an ROTC scholarship that paid for the next three years. In your senior year, you get to select what you might want to do in the Army, and I ended up getting it.

And you’ve continued your schooling, haven’t you?

They stress professional development in the military and education, as well. Being an officer, it’s a lot like taking graduate-level college courses. It’s sort of an upper-level management course – I earned my master’s in human resource management at Webster’s University in Kansas. I also went to the National War College in Washington, D.C., and earned my master’s in strategic studies.

I was promoted to colonel in summer of 2011, then started the war college.

Serving in the military is hard on the entire family. What’s been your experience?

Command tours are generally two years and are board-selected. Other assignments are two to four years. Where you’re going next is generally a gamble, but you can ask the Army, and they’ll help you get where you want to go or where they may have needs for your skill sets.

We’re hoping to get back to Virginia someday. My wife, Dawn, is a schoolteacher, and our daughter, Brianna, who graduated from Western Kentucky University, is a schoolteacher now, too. Our son, Casey, is a sophomore at Virginia Tech.

Families make a lot of sacrifices. My wife has followed me around for 24 years. Our kids have gone to multiple schools. My wife has been mom and dad while I was on four different deployments. But some soldiers have been deployed many more times than I have. It’s kind of amazing.

So a love of travel and ability to adjust to new environments are required for a career in the service?

You need a sense of adventure. You are doing something different all of the time. It really becomes second nature to you after a while. In fact, after two or three years in one place, my wife and I get the itch to move and start clearing things out of the house we haven’t used in a while. It makes for a pretty versatile child, too. You take any Army brat and set him or her down in a room full of other Army brats, and they’ll make friends within minutes.

I went to school in the same district – kindergarten through high school – but I think my daughter went to five or six different schools, including two different high schools. But my daughter graduated from college and now teaches school, and my son is at Virginia Tech, so they’ve turned out pretty well.

What do you think the average U.S. citizen knows about a career in the service?

The average American has no idea what it’s like to be in the military. It’s a lifestyle they just don’t understand. … They see the Army or military on TV and think that’s what it’s like, like Gomer Pyle or the old movies. And they only hear of the bad things that happen, but it’s really completely different. We are held to a higher standard, and we should be. No organization does some of the programs we do any better than us, and that goes for Equal Opportunity Employment or just about anything you can name. We have programs that are light-years ahead of what most civilian organizations have. The Army’s got it down.

What’s been your greatest thrill?

It’s such a neat career. You go up through the ranks and have so many different jobs, go different places and have different levels of responsibility. After graduating from NU, I was a second lieutenant in flight school and then was immediately deployed to Desert Storm. After a year or so in the Army, I was already in combat. I was company commander in South Korea – it was not a war zone then, but there were still things going on there. That was thrilling. Then, I was a major at Fort Campbell, and 9/11 hit and the whole world changed. A few months later, I was in Afghanistan. Five months later, I was in Iraq. It’s been one thrill after another.

But the biggest thrill? I was battalion commander in Afghanistan most of 2009 and had 500 soldiers and 30 to 40 different helicopters. We fought the whole year and brought everyone home. That level of responsibility was thrilling. Moms and dads entrust their children to the Army, and the Army entrusts Col. John White to bring them all back home.

You were elevated to colonel in 2011 and took command of the 21st Calvary Brigade (Air Combat) on May 31 in Fort Hood, Texas. What are the responsibilities in your current job?

It’s a training brigade. We bring battalions in here and train them, and then they go back to their parent groups. We have the most advanced attack helicopter in the world here – the Apache, which was built to destroy the enemy. That sounds gruesome to civilians, but we’re aggressive folks. This is just a neat aircraft. And when our soldiers were fighting in Afghanistan and they were in trouble on the ground, they called for the Apache. They said they always felt safer when they saw the Apache.

We also train battalions on the unmanned aerial systems or what they call on Fox News “drones.” I am responsible for training people here or sending my people elsewhere to train others on these. Plus, I have 75 soldiers from the Netherlands (Royal Netherlands Air Force and Army) here now. They bring their aviators here to train and then go back home.

The joy of this job is that for all of the responsibilities and headaches, I still get to fly. Flying helicopters is such a neat thing to do, and the average person doesn’t get to do it. It’s breaking the bonds of earth and being above everyone and everything. It’s having the chance to fly the most advanced attack helicopter in the world.

Know a Niagara County resident who’d make an interesting question-and-answer column? Write to: Niagara Weekend Q&A, The Buffalo News, P.O. Box 100, Buffalo, NY 14240, or email niagaranews@buffnews.com.

Nancy and James Behrens celebrate 50th wedding anniversary

$
0
0
Mr. and Mrs. James Behrens of Pendleton celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary with a family gathering at Holiday Valley Resort, Ellicottville. Mr. Behrens and Nancy Carol Syers were married Aug. 10, 1963, in St. Christopher Catholic Church, Town of Tonawanda. He is the owner of Window Decor Distributors, Amherst; she is treasurer and office manager. They have three children and four grandchildren.

North Tonawanda Farmers’ Market fixture to celebrate his 100th birthday

$
0
0
WHEATFIELD – Elmer Moje clearly recalls accompanying his father to sell their fruit and vegetables at the North Tonawanda Farmers’ Market at the age of 5.

That was 95 years ago.

Today, Moje, who turns 100 Aug. 20, is still a fixture at that farmers’ market, although he has cut back from three days a week to two.

He rises at 4 a.m. Thursdays and Saturdays to accompany his granddaughter, Carly Freiert.

“It used to take us an hour and a half to get to market with a horse and wagon, and now it takes 15 to 20 minutes,” Moje recently marveled as he sat on a couch in his granddaughter’s home. The house is in what was his family homestead, where he was born nearly a century ago, on Townline Road. He lives next door in a tidy, brick home he built with his late wife, Esther.

Moje gave up his truck three years ago, and while he has turned over the work of growing and marketing the vegetables to Freiert, she proudly said her grandfather is still known as “The Garlic Man.”

“We had 1,200 pounds of garlic” this week, Moje said with a slight shrug, dismissing the quantity as average.

Both sets of Moje’s grandparents emigrated to the U.S. from Germany.

Moje’s garlic can be found throughout the U.S., as folks buy it at the farmers’ market to ship to friends and relatives elsewhere, Freiert said.

What’s his secret to growing enormous, tasty and long-lasting heads?

“You need to sweeten the ground with lime,” he said. And you need to start with good seed and good soil.

“Everyone who wants to know, comes to me,” he said, blue eyes twinkling behind his glasses.

The garlic “that comes from China is like eating an apple – there’s nothing to it,” he said. “I tried to grow some once, and by the time I went to plant it, it was dust. People can keep mine for a year. I use the last of mine (harvested last July) in May. I use it in cooking. Garlic likes air and low humidity.”

But long before Moje was known as the Garlic Man, he was known as the “Honey Man,” recalled Freiert.

“I kept bees for 60 years,” Moje said. “I sold the honey at market. I started when I was 15. There were fruit orchards all around here, and my father would rent bees for pollinating. I told him if he’d buy a couple of hives, I’d take care of them. A man on Shawnee schooled me on it. I had 40 hives in three different places around here.”

But he said he was forced to retire from beekeeping when arthritis weakened his knees.

“The hives got too heavy to handle,” Moje said.

Partial knee replacement surgery in 1998 helped alleviate the pain.

“From the waist up, I feel like a 20-year-old,” Moje said with a chuckle. “But my legs have worn out. I think they’ve traveled a million miles. But my knees are still good as new.”

As proof, Moje straightened his jean-clad legs out straight in front of him for a good stretch.

His family has a record of longevity, with one of his aunts reaching her 104th birthday and several other ancestors living well into their 90s.

“I never drank coffee, I never smoked – but I still drink milk – whole milk – every day,” he said. “I guess it’s just good country living.”

“And he eats a lot of blueberries and garlic,” added Freiert.

This father of three, grandfather and great-grandfather retired from National Grinding Wheel Co. in North Tonawanda after 36 years, where he rose from a wheel-finisher to a supervisor. He also served in the U.S. Army during World War II, spending eight months in Africa and two years in Italy, as well as serving stateside for a total of five years, rising to the rank of master sergeant.

He marveled at the changes he’s seen in the world in the past 10 decades.

“I went to a one-room schoolhouse on Shawnee Road and had to walk no matter what the weather was,” he said. “I took a train to high school, and it cost me 10 cents. I graduated from North Tonawanda High School in 1931 – that was the depth of the Great Depression, and I worked 10 hours a day on a dairy farm for $1 a day.

“I was 27 when I went in the Army and 33 when I got married in 1946,” he recalled. His wife, Esther, died in 1994. They had a daughter, Beverly, and adopted two sons, Robert, who lives in Cambria, and the late David.

Moje is a lifelong Buffalo Bills fan, and held season tickets from 1965, five years after the team’s founding, to 2005. He still catches sports every night on television, changing sports with the seasons. He also still belongs to a social card-playing club, the Bobcats.

And, he’s approaching the 100th anniversary of his baptism at St. Paul’s United Church of Christ.

He recently gave a speech at the church, remarking on the church’s history and his own 100 years in the community, concluding, “I was born in 1913, when the men still wore pants and the women wore earrings.”

Moje has belonged to the Shawnee Volunteer Fire Company for 61 years and will be feted at 1 p.m. today at the fire hall. An additional party will be held at the North Tonawanda Farmers’ Market from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday.

“My grandfather is still very sharp of mind, is quick-witted and loves to charm the ladies,” said Freiert. “He is in amazing shape for being a near-centenarian.”

Lockport man inducted into American Academy of Chefs

$
0
0
Professional Chef Scott Steiner, of Lockport, was inducted into the American Academy of Chefs – an honor society of the American Culinary Federation – at the 2013 ACF National Convention last month.

Steiner, ACF-Certified Culinary Educator, is an instructor of culinary arts at the Niagara Falls Culinary Institute of Niagara County Community College. His experience includes more than 10 years of culinary instruction. He currently serves on the national ACF Conference and Convention Committee. Steiner is chairman of the board of ACF of Greater Buffalo, New York.

The ACF consists of more than 20,000 members; approximately 850 belong to the AAC.

To become a member, chefs must be nominated by two current AAC members and complete the required application process. But to be considered, applicants must be an ACF-certified chef for no less than two years; be in the culinary profession for no less than 15 years, with 10 of the 15 years as an executive chef at a full-service restaurant or at least five years for a culinary educator; be an ACF member for a minimum of 10 consecutive years; and have attended any combination of four ACF regional conferences and/or national conventions. In addition, applicants must fulfill at least 10 of the 20 elective attainable goals.

The AAC, which recognizes those individuals who have made significant contributions to both the culinary profession and ACF, was established in 1955 at the ACF National Convention in Pittsburgh. Those credited with its founding include Pierre Berard, Peter Berrini and Paul Laesecke.

email: nfischer@buffnews.com

Bicyclists with cause to circle Lake Ontario in 585-mile journey

$
0
0
WILSON – Waves of dedicated cyclists recently made Calvin E. Krueger Park on Lake Road their first stop on a 585-mile sojourn around Lake Ontario to raise awareness and funds for tree care and education.

Members of the Wilson Lions Club and friends welcomed 80 bicycle riders from around the country and the world on July 28 in the “Tour des Trees.”

“It was spectacular,” said Mayor Bernard Leiker, who also serves as president of the Wilson Lions Club.

The Tour des Trees event is a weeklong cycling excursion that serves a dual purpose. The event helps raise awareness of the need to care for a community’s trees, and it also raises money to help fund tree research and education programs.

Each year, 75 to 100 cyclists who share a passion for trees and for the environment join forces in this effort.

Leiker explained that the group chooses a different site each year for this event.

“They started this year in Niagara Falls, Ont., and rode here, making Wilson their first stop on Lake Ontario,” he said. “Then they rode on to Medina and Rochester and around the lake. By the end of the week, they ended up in Toronto, where they held their convention. It was very exciting.”

Hydroplanes will Thunder on the Niagara at Gratwick-Riverside Park

$
0
0
NORTH TONAWANDA – Hydroplanes, boats that float on a pocket of air, will be center stage – or more correctly center Niagara River – for the annual Thunder on the Niagara races from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and next Sunday off Gratwick-Riverside Park.

“It’s like riding a magic carpet,” said driver Ken Brodie II, of Grand Island, whose Grand Prix-class hydroplane, the fastest class in the race, reaches speeds up to 150 mph.

“People in the Tonawandas love their boat racing,” said Peter Hackett, race director for the Niagara Frontier Boat Racing Association. “It’s like a liquid fix. There’s no comparison.”

Nearly 90 boats, from as far as the Midwest and Florida and even Montreal, are expected to compete in the two-day event, which has a nearly 75-year history in the area.

Founded in 1939, the event started at the Buffalo Launch Club in the early 1940s and then held races off Niawanda and Isleview parks in the 1970s and 1980s, where it gained a following. In the past, races had been held in a number of area sites at one time but were consolidated due to expense and moved to Gratwick-Riverside Park in 2006.

The 2013 Thunder on the Niagara will also be partnering with the American Power Boat Racing Association and the American Canadian Hydroplane Association.

Hackett said that when the event first came to Gratwick, it was rainy, and there were about 40 boats and a couple of thousand spectators.

“Last year tens of thousands came out to watch,” Hackett said.

Hackett, of the City of Tonawanda, grew up in North Tonawanda, following both his grandfather and father into hydroplane racing. He said his great-grandfather Edwin “Pop” Schroeder had a shop on Oliver Street where everyone came to have their boats fixed.

Brodie, a second-generation racer, called it a “family sport,” with all his family in the pit crew. His 13-year-old daughter, Amanda, is waiting for her turn at the wheel – though she’s not quite up to dad’s level yet. She said she wants to race in the slower T-class, for ages 14 and up, as soon as she can.

“I’ll be 14 in October. I can’t wait,” Amanda said.

“It’s a nice course,” Brodie said. “It’s about a mile long, and there are no rock walls like in Niawanda and Isleview. Gratwick is the perfect setting.”

“We use the whole park,” said Hackett.

The park has been undergoing a $1.78 million restoration, with a new restaurant, Lumber Jacks Patio Grill, and an upgraded marina.

“Waterfront development is about bringing people to your waterfront and making it accessible,” said North Tonawanda Mayor Robert Ortt.

There are plenty of viewing sites for this free family event throughout the park, with a donation of $5 for on-site parking, which benefits the not-for-profit Twin City Community Outreach. The park will open at 8 a.m. on both days, with races beginning at 10. Those attending are asked to enter the park at Ward Road, off River Road.

Food vendors and crafters will also participate in the two-day event, with a breakfast offered Sunday morning.

Additional information is available on the website at www.thunderonniagara.com.

Communication leaps into the 21st century in North Tonawanda School District.

$
0
0
NORTH TONAWANDA – Students can forget about trying to hide their report cards from their parents. And their parents won’t have to worry about the latest school bulletin being lost in their child’s backpack.

The North Tonawanda School District has gone digital, beyond a website, to offer an interactive Facebook page and a school app that is available to provide instant notifications to all students, parents and interested community members.

Coming soon will be Twitter notifications and paperless report cards, as well as virtual meetings.

“Lots of things change last minute, so we try to encourage people to check the website and have been using that for about a year now in addition to our regular paper schedule, but for September we hope to have a Twitter account, which is even more instant,” said Superintendant Gregory J. Woytila. “It’s trying to move paperless, because we still do spend a lot of money printing a paper school calendar.

He said that starting in the 2013-2014 school year, they will no longer be sending paper report cards home but will be using the Global Call System to inform parents and students that the report cards are available online.

“It saves on postage, saves on paper, the printing,” he said.

Woytila said other schools have turned to Twitter, but the North Tonawanda district may be the first in Niagara County.

He said the electronic calendar app has really taken off with the secondary school, because kids have their own devices, which they use to update their parents’ devices.

“Coaches will tell kids to put this link on their phone, because when they call in a change it goes through the system quickly, and during the school day you can see if a practice is canceled – in addition to the phone calls home. Kids will text their parents to say, ‘Coach canceled practice,’ ” Woytila said of the calendar app. “A lot of parents have it, but the kids are driving it.”

He said instant updates are key to the school’s Facebook page, with staff dedicated to updating the page and a chain of command that streams information to the page.

“When I became superintendent four years ago, the web page was just there. It was not interactive and wasn’t up-to-date,” he said. “We redesigned it. I wanted it to be more interactive, and we added Facebook two to three years ago.”

He said he can update immediately from home when there is a storm and can link the calendar, which then sends them an alert.

Woytila said social media keeps parents more aware of what is going on at the school.

“Parents’ time is precious,” Woytila said. “But as far as involvement in secondary events, we do tend to lose them. If they have time, they are at kids’ practices, not necessarily a home school meeting.”

Woytila said they are trying to establish virtual home/school meetings, but that plan is still in its early stages.

“They are always looking for a physical presence, but at least if there is a comment or suggestion, those messages can get through to the people in charge,” Woytila said.

He said that at Parent Partnership meetings, comparable to PTA and PTO groups, sometimes only two parents are in attendance. The district has more than 1,200 high school students.

He said one mom is trying to find a way to have a virtual meeting where people can log in and see the discussion. The principal would run the meeting from his office computer, but people would be able to comment.

“If you are at a swim meet, but you have your cellphone with you, you could still participate and basically be in two places at once,” Woytila said. “That’s what we are going to try to set up this fall at the high school.”

“If you think about the way the future is moving, with Skype and all that stuff, this might be the way you get people in – not a body in the building, but at a virtual site. We would still like parents to come in, but it’s hard. It’s not that they are not interested, but their time is precious,” Woytila said.

Information on the district calendar app is available on the district’s website, www.ntschools.org.

email: nfischer@buffnews.com

Restaurant review: My Thai lacks Asian ambience, but food tastes authentic

$
0
0
NIAGARA FALLS – The last time I walked into the Thai restaurant Mii on Pine Avenue, the Beatles’ “Dear Prudence” was playing on the sound system. An odd choice, I thought.

Recently reopened as My Thai, the cozy little spot directly across from the City Market still doesn’t look or sound like anything remotely resembling southeast Asian, but it really doesn’t matter all that much. The food is good enough to make up for the lack of cultural aesthetics.

On a couple of recent visits, members of the entourage – seasoned Thai food fans, I might add – noted that the pad Thai here was among the best anywhere, as well as the Pho soup. Other dishes received similar raves.

“The Pho was amazing ... literally the best of my life,” said my daughter. Her friend, a Thai aficionado visiting from Pennsylvania, said that he samples the local Thai cuisine wherever he travels and that My Thai’s pad Thai was “probably one of the best. Very, very good.”

So forget about the local radio playing in the background, and cut them some slack over the lack of authentic furnishings. It’s still a very nice-looking place – just not Asian-looking to any great degree. Just remember: You can’t eat the décor.

When it comes to eating out at ethnic restaurants, I guess I would rather soak up authentic flavors than authentic ambience, if a choice has to be made. The flavors at My Thai are phenomenal.

Eric described his pad Thai ($9.50) as “very subtle. I could taste the different components of the dish (tofu, egg, crushed peanuts, bean sprouts and lime) instead of them being drowned out by a heavy peanut sauce, like others I have had.”

“This version also had fried tofu in it, which gave it a lot of substance and made the dish very hearty,” he said. “The shrimp was cooked perfectly, not overdone, and very tender. Plus, it was a very good-sized portion.”

He was also impressed by the presentation, with a subtle garnish of chopped peanuts and lime on the side.

Speaking of presentation, the pineapple fried rice ($11.50) was the hit of the night, arriving at the table in a hollowed-out pineapple half. Consisting of a heaping portion of rice, complemented with pineapple, curry powder, chicken and shrimp, it was a meal in itself, with contrasting sweet and sour flavors. Excellent!

The Pho, a traditional Vietnamese noodle soup, was served in what literally seemed to be a two-quart bowl. It easily presented enough for two solid meals. Steffany ordered the Bangkok Street Beef Soup version ($9.50) and was brought a bowl teaming with long, thin rice noodles, scallions, onions and cilantro. But the highlight was the beef: Butter-tender, it had a tasty sweet flavor reminiscent of subtle ginger and other seasonings. It must have been marinated for some time to achieve that level of melt-in-your-mouth goodness.

I decided to take the road less traveled and went with a dish called lard nar ($9.50). It consists of stir-fried rice noodles in a thick gravy with Chinese broccoli and your choice of meat. I opted for shrimp. They were tender and tasty, as Eric had noted. I couldn’t distinguish any difference between the Chinese broccoli and your average domestic spears, but the gravy definitely was different from any I had ever had. It reminded me primarily of Chinese egg drop soup; it had a very runny, eggy quality to it, but it wasn’t bad. All in all, I enjoyed the dish.

The roasted duck Laab ($13.50) was excellent, set off with a nice, not-too-spicy sauce with toasted rice powder, dry chili, shallots and mint that allowed the competing flavors to shine through. The duck meat itself may have been a little overcooked, being tough in spots, but it was well-garnished with red peppers and green beans, and pleasing to both the eye and the palette.

We also sampled the Pataya fried rice ($11.50), which was augmented with chicken and shrimp and came wrapped in an omelet. Everyone agreed that it was simply awesome. There was only one word for the roasted duck curry ($15.50), made with red curry and tossed with pineapple and tomato: yum!

For starters, we sampled the calamari ($6), which was cooked to perfection, not rubbery or tough. It was tender and extremely flavorful but was served tossed in a pickled mixture of cauliflower, carrots and cucumber, which caused it to be somewhat cold. Otherwise, it was quite good and recommended.

The crab spring rolls ($4) were good, but (as is the case with many Asian restaurants locally) featured imitation crabmeat – although the menu said “fresh” crab. The rice wraps had a very fresh flavor, possibly due to the julienned ingredients having been tossed in lime juice. A word of warning: These rolls are very filling, so you probably want to keep it to one apiece.

To keep the experience as real as possible, we washed down dinner with iced lemon grass tea, which was surprisingly refreshing, and Thai iced tea (each $2.50), which is always delicious and sweet.

We capped it all off with helpings of the mango sticky rice and sweet black rice desserts ($4.50 and $3.50, respectively). We weren’t overly impressed with either, which was surprising given the quality of the entrees and appetizers; they just didn’t seem as sweet as we would have expected. They were more savory than sweet, less of a dessert than a side dish. OK, but not great.

The service was more than adequate. All in all, it was an enjoyable experience. A little Thai music might go a long way toward making the visit even more authentic, but its absence certainly isn’t a deal-breaker.

email: niagaranews@buffnews.com

Niagara Falls Sal Maglie Stadium could be entering the final innings

$
0
0
Since being struck by lightning two summers ago, a bank of lights on the west wall of Sal Maglie Stadium has been disabled, casting a shadow on the baseball diamond below.

Out past the outfield, on the other side of Hyde Park, another shadow looms over the future of the stadium that has been home to Niagara Falls ballclubs since 1939.

The Niagara Falls City School District, which has operated Sal Maglie Stadium since 1999, is rapidly constructing a new 13,000-square-foot athletic complex at nearby Niagara Falls High School.

The school district’s lease on the city-owned stadium runs through June 30, 2014. But the district can terminate the lease earlier with 30 days notice, Deputy Superintendent Mark Laurrie said.

The Wolverines will continue to play football games at Sal Maglie this fall, but athletic director John Forcucci is hopeful the artificial turf baseball field will be ready to open in the spring. “That’s our goal,” he said.

“We’re anticipating probably staying with (the lease) through June 30,” Laurrie said. “But it’s all dependent on the progress of our capital project, and a lot of it is dependent on how the winter is. Once we observe the progress they make through December, we will be able to make a better judgment.”

Niagara Catholic High School moved its baseball games to Washuta Park in Lewiston three years ago, and no longer fields a football team.

That leaves Niagara University and the Niagara Power collegiate league team as Sal Maglie Stadium’s lone tenants moving forward. Niagara rents the stadium for about a dozen dates in April and May but does not practice or play fall games there. The Power play the home portion of their 40-game New York Collegiate Baseball League schedule and a few exhibition games at Maglie.

The stadium also hosts high school baseball playoff games.

Both the Purple Eagles and the Power have been frustrated with field conditions at Maglie in recent years, and a plumbing issue forced Niagara to play six games on campus this spring. The scoreboard and lights also need repair.

Yet, neither Niagara athletic director Tom Crowley nor Power president Cal Kern is eager to move out of Maglie.

“Sal Maglie has been good to us,” Crowley said. “Any university would prefer to be playing on campus, but in lieu of that, Sal Maglie is very important to us.”

Baseball coach Rob McCoy estimates that the university would have to invest more than $1 million to make its on-campus Bobo Field a suitable home. “Our field on campus doesn’t provide us a Division I venue,” he said. “Sal Maglie Stadium gives us that.”

The Power have played at Sal Maglie for seven seasons, becoming just the second baseball club to last more than five years in Niagara Falls. “Our heart’s desire,” Kern said, “is that we come back and play at Sal Maglie for 2014.”

The club’s long-term future in Niagara Falls, however, is tenuous.

Attendance has risen to an average of roughly 300 fans at Power games the past two seasons, Kern said, far less than the stadium’s capacity of 4,000 or the crowds in excess of 1,000 that the Pirates (1970-79) or the Rapids (1989-93) of the New York-Penn League were able to attract before folding.

Kern remains committed to Niagara Falls. He fondly recalls going to what was then known as Hyde Park Stadium when the Buffalo Bisons played there in 1967 and 1968. He played his last baseball game for Kenmore East there and brought his son, Brett, now a punter for the Tennessee Titans, to Sal Maglie to watch the Pirates.

“This is something I’ve always wanted to do. I’m living out a dream,” Kern said. “It’s not a moneymaking venture. Will we ever draw crowds like the old days? No, because the whole demographics have changed. Developing a fan base at Sal Maglie over seven years has been hard. But we want to stay, and I think with stronger marketing efforts on our end, we can get more people there.”

Still, Kern, who lives on Grand Island, has scouted other locations for a potential move.

“I’ve had to, because I don’t know what the future of the stadium holds,” Kern said. “Just in case something doesn’t work out. I have to look at Plan B and Plan C. I think anybody in my shoes would do the same thing.”

Kern said he has concerns about who will be operating the stadium in the future, how well the fields will be maintained, and what rental arrangements will be. McCoy said he also has “a little anxiety” about use of the stadium beyond the 2014 season.

“I don’t know what is going to happen,” McCoy said. “I’ve been told we are going to be working with the city to come up with a plan. But there are a lot of contingent situations. But I think, ultimately, it’ll be a great relationship for us.”

“The challenge for us is who is going to run the stadium in 2014,” Kern said. “My question, as president, general manager and bus driver, is are we going to play at Sal Maglie under the City of Niagara Falls or the school district? If we sign a lease with the city, what is that going to look like? And we have certain expectations as far as field conditions and lights that need to be addressed.”

Kern said he would be interested in taking over the stadium operations and subletting the field to Niagara and other tenants. “If somebody said, Cal, get your troops together and take care of that field, we can do that,” Kern said.

Crowley said Niagara University will also investigate the possibility of operating the stadium.

According to Laurrie, the school district two years ago estimated the annual cost to operate and maintain the stadium at close to $150,000, with a net cost of closer to $100,000 when counting revenues from rentals and overtime and utility costs incurred by tenants. Replacing the broken lights will cost more than $20,000, Laurrie said. “We needed to get out of the business of running a stadium,” he said.

Having grown up a relay throw away on Willow Avenue, Laurrie hopes Sal Maglie Stadium will continue to thrive once the school district is no longer involved. “It’s a historic place,” he said. “I remember going there to watch my favorite player, Johnny Bench, and Tony Pena play there.”

Laurrie points to the private operation of Hyde Park Ice Pavilion in recent years as a model for success. “That place has never looked better, and it’s packed constantly,” he said. “If they look to do something similar at Sal Maglie, then I don’t think it’s the beginning of the end.”

But until future plans are outlined, some believe the stadium is falling behind in the count.

“If Niagara University doesn’t continue to play there, then I don’t see the stadium having any future at all,” local baseball historian and Power announcer Doug Smith said. “People will go by and say, ‘That’s just another piece of Niagara Falls that failed.’ ”

“That would be disheartening,” Forcucci said. “I would hate to see it fall into disrepair. It’s a great baseball venue, and a great community asset.”

Lighthouse reopens at Old Fort Niagara

$
0
0
YOUNGSTOWN – Repairs have been completed at the iconic Old Fort Niagara Lighthouse at the entrance of the garrison, and the tower in the historic lighthouse, which had been closed to tours this summer, has reopened.

“It’s important to preserve it because it reminds people of the importance of maritime history to this region,” said Old Fort Niagara Executive Director Robert Emerson.

The octagonal-towered, limestone lighthouse, is one of 28 historic lighthouses that serve as landmarks on the Great Lakes Seaway Trail.

It is normally open for daily tours in July and August, but this year’s opening was delayed for restoration work on the tower’s windows, according to Emerson.

The lighthouse is open from 1 to 4 p.m. daily through Labor Day. The gift shop, which had formerly been housed in the Lighthouse, moved across the parking lot to the Visitors Center. There visitors can see the Fort Niagara Lighthouse’s original Fresnel lens, which was used to magnify the light in historic lighthouses.

The restoration work included the rebuilding of several tower windows. Masonry repairs were also needed due to the leaking windows.

The $10,000 restoration project was funded by a donation from the East Hill Foundation of Western New York, located in North Tonawanda.

The first Fort Niagara Lighthouse was established on the roof of the Fort’s French Castle in 1781 and was the earliest unofficial lighthouse on the Great Lakes. It was used to help vessels find the mouth of the Niagara River, according to Emerson.

The U.S. Army moved the Fort Niagara Lighthouse to a separate building just outside of the fort, in 1871 and it was opened the following year, Emerson said.

The tower was raised 11 feet in 1900 and could cast a beam visible for 15 miles. The lighthouse was deactivated in the 1990s and replaced by an automatic beacon at the U.S. Coast Guard Station Niagara, which sits adjacent to Old Fort Niagara, at the mouth of the Niagara River and Lake Ontario.

email: nfischer@buffnews.com

Newfane August Fest gets kick-start from annual Bike Cruise

$
0
0
NEWFANE – Newfane residents and shopkeepers are looking forward to a busy weekend as the annual Bike Cruise kicks off the festivities Friday night, and the August Fest takes center stage Saturday.

The motorcycle cruise attracted “just short of a thousand bikes last year,” according to one of its organizers, Sue Neidlinger, of the Newfane Business Association. She said Main Street will be closed to accommodate the event, which runs from 6 to 10 p.m. Friday and will feature the music of “The Weight.”

Attendance is totally weather-dependent, but Neidlinger warned, “Sometimes, even if it’s raining in Buffalo, it’s not raining in Newfane, and we do this rain or shine.”

Around a dozen vendors will offer everything from tie-dye items to sunglasses as well as motorcycle-related accessories. There will be the Depot Open Air Bar, barbecue and offerings from local businesses, such as Wilson’s Pizza Shop, Scotchie’s Ice Cream and Three Sisters Bakery.

One of the sponsors, the Niagara Falls Harley Group Chapter, has long been relied on for its volunteer help with this event, Neidlinger said.

“They help out every single year, and we donate some money in their name to one of their causes in return,” she said.

Other sponsors include Certo Brothers Distributing and the Kantor Law Firm. All makes and models of motorcycles are welcome.

The parade gets the August Fest off and running at 11 a.m. Saturday. Family entertainment, an art show and more than 40 craft and food vendors will add to the fun on Main Street, which will remain closed until 4 p.m.

Newfane United Methodist Church will offer a chicken barbecue, while pizza, ice cream and baked goods from local businesses will again be available for purchase.

“This is Newfane’s Main Street summer event, and it’s a time to get out and shop, support local businesses and see people you haven’t seen since last year,” said Neidlinger.

In addition to the Newfane Business Association, sponsors include; MPD Architecture, M&T Bank and First Niagara Bank and Insurance.

Vendor applications will be accepted up to the last minute, provided there is space, Neidlinger said. For vendor applications or more information, visit Wilson’s Pizza Shop, 2730 Main St.

Niagara Falls to get parcel with river sediment

$
0
0
NIAGARA FALLS – When the city gets a 50-acre parcel of land near Hyde Park Golf Course from the New York Power Authority, it’s going to come with a little something extra.

The Porter Road parcel, located between the golf course and an old railroad yard just west of Interstate 190, also will come with about 9,000 cubic yards of sediment dredged from the Niagara River.

The land is a fairly large parcel with rail access, unlike other single tracts of land in Niagara Falls.

“I think the city sees it as an economic development parcel,” said Thomas J. DeSantis, the city’s senior planner.

The land is to be transferred to the city under terms of the settlement deal between the local governments and school districts that host the authority’s Niagara Power Project. A final date for the transfer has not been determined.

It originally was used as a location for putting soil and rock excavated during the construction of the nearby conduits for the power project. Since then, the authority has owned the land but has not used it for other purposes, said spokeswoman Connie Cullen.

The dredged material has been tested, and the city’s Office of Environmental Services has determined the material coming from the river “will not impair the soil on the Porter Road parcel,” according to a memo from Mayor Paul A. Dyster to the City Council.

The parcel also has also been found to be “clean” following tests conducted by the Power Authority, according to Dyster’s memo, citing a review by the city’s Planning Department.

The sediment will be coming out of the river as part of the Frog Island Habitat Improvement Project, which also stems from an agreement tied to the federal relicensing of the Niagara Power Project.

The Frog Island area is located between Motor and Strawberry islands, near the southern tip of Grand Island. The island, which used to be four acres, eroded and was no longer visible in aerial photographs starting in 1985, according to planning documents.

The purpose of the project is to re-create marsh and a submerged aquatic vegetation habitat that will support wildlife in the river.

The work will include the addition of some underwater plants to improve the natural habitats for wading birds and fish, said Jill Spisiak Jedlicka, executive director of Buffalo Niagara Riverkeeper.

The river project is one of several “habitat improvement projects” that the Power Authority agreed to undertake as part of agreements for the federal relicensing of the Niagara Power Project.

Even though the land has yet to be formally transferred, the Power Authority asked the city for permission to deposit the dredged material, a request that was unanimously approved by the Council on July 24.

All of the dredged material would be placed in upland areas on the site, not in any wetlands that may be there, and would be placed on site no later than July of next year, according to a June 25 letter from the authority to the city.

Having the dredged material on the site will actually be beneficial toward future uses of the land because the soil could be used to level off some low spots and improve drainage, said DeSantis, the city’s planner.

Gill Creek runs through the site, and there are some suspected wetlands on the eastern side, but none that would appear to meet state or federal standards, DeSantis said.

Still, the city would not do anything to impact the wetlands because of the necessary ecological function they perform, he said.

Based on the size, the rail access and the lack of any close neighbors, the site has potential from the city’s perspective.

“This would be a valuable redevelopment parcel for the right development,” he said.

email: abesecker@buffnews.com

Wilson school chief gets raise in wake of failed budget

$
0
0
WILSON – The only school district in Western New York to be operating on a contingency budget for the upcoming school year granted its superintendent a pay raise and new benefits.

Wilson Superintendent Michael S. Wendt, whose pay had been frozen for the past three years, received a 3 percent raise for each of the next four years, unless some other pay level is negotiated by him and the Board of Education.

Wendt’s new five-year contract, obtained by The Buffalo News through a Freedom of Information request, also gives him a tax-sheltered annuity, a life insurance policy, a longevity payment and district-paid long-term care insurance, the latter taking the place of health insurance coverage for the first two years of the deal.

The new contract was approved at a June 11 School Board meeting that took place between the voters’ first and second rejections of the proposed 2013-14 budget.

“It’s public knowledge, and I haven’t any complaints about it,” said Timothy F. Kropp, the former School Board president, who was defeated in the May election and left office at the end of June.

“I’ve heard people say, ‘You’ve got to pay the position.’ You want somebody good, you’ve got to pay for him,” Kropp said.

Research by The News through the statewide website seethroughny.net, operated by the Empire Center for New York State Policy, indicates that since 2010, Wendt is the only superintendent in the region to receive a new contract in the same year his district’s budget was defeated.

“My contract isn’t contingent on the budget,” Wendt said. “Obviously, I want to work in Wilson, and I want to be competitive with what’s out there.”

Kropp said he made a study of other superintendents’ contracts before negotiating Wendt’s new deal. He said the trade-offs in the contract, such as long-term care insurance in place of two years of family health coverage, “are budget-neutral for the district.”

“I don’t get certain subscriptions or memberships that I used to get,” said Wendt, who contended that the long-term care swap for health coverage saves the district about $2,000.

The contract sets Wendt’s base salary for 2013-14 at $144,471, which is a 3 percent increase from the $140,263 salary he had drawn for the previous three years.

“How long do you negotiate a zero-percent contract?” Kropp asked. “We were optimistic this budget would pass. There were a lot of underlying factors why this budget went down.”

Wendt also receives a $8,500 longevity payment this year, a figure that increases $1,000 a year until 2016-17. Under the former contract, the longevity payment was $6,500. The district makes a $3,000 annual payment to a tax-sheltered annuity, a figure that increased from $1,500 in Wendt’s last deal.

The district also pays $11,000 a year toward a split-dollar life insurance policy for seven years, as well as reimbursing him $1,000 toward Wendt’s pre-existing life insurance policy.

The long-term care cost is $4,710 per year. When Wendt is receiving health insurance, the full cost is paid by the district. Up until 2011, the district’s cost was capped at $12,000 a year.

The health care for Wendt and his wife continues at the district’s cost until he turns 65. Kropp said former contracts kept that benefit going until age 70.

The Newfane School District is sharing Wendt’s services until at least Sept. 30 while Newfane looks for a new superintendent. During that period, Newfane pays 49 percent of Wendt’s salary and benefits, or $10,374 per month.

email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Lockport property owner wins lawsuit over city auction

$
0
0
LOCKPORT – Daryl Ubiles, a Lockport man who sued the city after it rejected two of his winning bids at last year’s tax foreclosure auction and refused to return his deposits, scored a victory in State Supreme Court on Thursday.

Court officials said Justice Frank Caruso granted Ubiles summary judgment – a win without a trial – in the fight over $6,150 in deposits.

Ubiles, who owns four other properties in Lockport, was the winning bidder on 37 Center St. and 185 N. Transit St. in the Oct. 23 auction.

He put down his 20 percent deposits: $4,100 on the Center Street property and $2,050 on the North Transit Street parcel.

But six days later, the City Treasurer’s Office told Ubiles that he had not paid his school tax on one of his existing properties at 422 Clinton St.

Under auction rules, that delinquency entitled the city to reject his bids, keep his deposits and give the auctioned properties to the second-highest bidder.

Ubiles protested that he never received a school tax bill last fall for 422 Clinton St. He paid the $399 tax the same day the city told him of it.

The city said in a court filing that the rules were printed in the auction catalog and publicly announced, and Ubiles signed a notice when he put down his money.

Its attorneys argued that it was up to Ubiles to keep track of his school taxes.

Treasurer Michael E. White said Friday that the Center Street and North Transit Street properties have already been deeded to the second bidder.

He said the practical outcome of Caruso’s ruling probably will be that Ubiles will be refunded his deposits.

Attorneys in the case – A. Angelo DiMillo for Ubiles and Deputy Corporation Counsel Michael E. Benedict for the city – could not be reached Friday.

email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Kellie Pickler brings charm and classic country to Lockport crowd

$
0
0
LOCKPORT – When Kellie Pickler takes the stage, she lights up the room. Even if that “room” happens to be a massive municipal parking lot tucked behind the library in the heart of downtown Lockport.

Pickler, the former American Idol and Dancing with the Stars contestant, is incredibly adept at conveying a sense of down-home, Southern girl charm to thousands of people at a time, as Friday’s Lockport gig, part of the yearly Labatt Blue Canal Concert Series, made plain. She’s both “girl next door” and sex symbol, a sort of PG-13 modern day diva whose heart belongs to classic country music.

And classic country music, with a dash of Southern rock, seemed to be what the close-to-capacity crowd in Lockport was thirsting for. Well, that, and the offerings of series sponsor Labatt Blue.

Pickler, who finished in sixth place during season five of American Idol, but went on to take top honors in last season’s Dancing with the Stars, wears her influences proudly on her sleeve. During Friday’s show, she chatted amiably with the crowd at several points during the evening, addressing us with a twang as “Y’all,” and telling stories of growing up in Carolina with her grandparents, whose taste in music ran to both flavors – country and western.

Pickler said that her earliest musical memories involve Tammy Wynette, and she proved as much with her own “Where’s Tammy Wynette,” and the raucous, “hell hath no fury like a woman scorned” romp, “Stop Cheatin’ On Me.”

“No one lived the stories in country music quite like Tammy Wynette did,” Pickler laughed, and then played “White Lightnin’,” a tune by Wynette’s husband, the notoriously alcoholic but unfailingly brilliant George Jones. Perhaps surprisingly, given modern country’s unwillingness to acknowledge its own history pre-Garth Brooks, the majority of the wide age range crowd seemed to know who both Wynette and Jones were.

Pickler is not a flawless singer – her voice is strong, but her pitch varied at times during Friday’s show. This might be a factor during a “beauty contest” like American Idol, but in the thick of an honest-to-goodness country music concert like this one, lack of perfection made Pickler seem human, and thus, much easier to bond with. The singer – and her band of top-notch Nashville musicians, all of whom practice a seemingly effortless (if abbreviated and probably not at all improvised) form of virtuosity – breathed fire into the more upbeat tunes, particularly “Things That Never Cross A Man’s Mind,” the irreverent swipe at Nashville’s early closing times for gin joints that is “Unlock That Honky Tonk,” and of course, the joyful and bawdy “Red High Heels.”

Opening sets from Western New York’s Ransomville and Rochester’s Tommy Brunett Band were well-received by the crowd, which was a massive throng even early on in the evening. Ransomville, fronted by vocalist Rob Bilson, performed a stirring hybrid of country and rock bolstered by strong harmony vocals and the eloquent twin guitar attacks of pickers Rob Burgio and John Rosini. In addition to songs culled from its recent Cowboy Troy-produced “Living Is For Everyone” release, the group punctuated its energetic set with convincing covers of Queen tunes, and a set-closing take on Journey’s evergreen “Don’t Stop Believing.”

The Tommy Brunett Band brought considerable charisma to its set of rockabilly, old-school country, and punk-laced Americana. Fronted by the disarmingly charming Brunett on vocals and guitar, the band was aided considerably throughout its set by guitarist Mike Gladstone, who offered a virtual clinic in chicken picking’ and roots rock stylings. Brunett worked the crowd masterfully, getting them to sing along with his “I Like Beer” – seems like a no-brainer, huh? – and a sturdy take on Johnny Cash’s “Folsom Prison Blues.”

email: jmiers@buffnews.com

Around Town / Niagara County meetings and hearings this week

$
0
0

Lewiston

The Town Board will meet at 6 p.m. Monday in Town Hall, 1375 Ridge Road.

Lockport

The town Planning Board will meet for a work session at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Town Hall, 6560 Dysinger Road.

Also this week:

• The Common Council will meet for a work session at 5 p.m. Wednesday in the Municipal Building, One Locks Plaza.

• The School Board will hold an executive session at 6 p.m. Wednesday in the Board of Education building, 130 Beattie Ave. A regular session begins at 7.

Niagara County

The county Industrial Development Agency will meet at 9 a.m. Wednesday in the Center for Economic Development, 6311 Inducon Corporate Drive, Wheatfield.

North Tonawanda

The Common Council will hold a work session at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in City Hall, 216 Payne Ave.

Also this week:

• The School Board will meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Administration Building, 175 Humphrey St.

The public portion of the meeting will begin at approximately 7:30.

Pendleton

The Starpoint School Board will meet at 7:20 p.m. Monday in the district’s board conference room at Starpoint Middle School, 4363 Mapleton Road.

Porter

The Town Board will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in Town Hall, 3265 Creek Road.

Also this week:

• The Zoning Board of Appeals will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Town Hall.

Royalton

The Town Board will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in Town Hall, 5316 Royalton Center Road, Middleport.

Barker

The Village Board will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in Village Hall, 8708 Main St.

Somerset

The Town Board will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Town Hall, 8700 Haight Road.

Also this week:

• The Planning Board will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Town Hall.

Wheatfield

The Town Board will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in Town Hall, 2800 Church Road.

Wilson

The School Board will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the middle/high school auditorium on the district’s Lake Street campus.

Also this week:

• The Town Board will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Town Hall, 375 Lake St.

• The Village Board will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in Village Hall, 375 Lake St.

North Tonawanda Farmers Market fixture to celebrate his 100th birthday

$
0
0
WHEATFIELD – Elmer Moje clearly recalls accompanying his father to sell their fruits and vegetables at the North Tonawanda Farmers Market at the age of five.

That was 95 years ago.

Today, Moje, who turns 100 on Aug. 20, is still a fixture at that farmers market, although he has cut back from three days a week to two.

He rises at 4 a.m. on Thursdays and Saturdays to accompany his granddaughter, Carly Freiert.

“It used to take us an hour and a half to get to market with a horse and wagon and now it takes 15 to 20 minutes,” Moje recently marveled as he sat on a couch in his granddaughter’s home. The house is in what was his family homestead where he was born nearly a century ago on Townline Road. He lives next door in a tidy, brick home he built with his late wife, Esther.

Moje gave up his truck three years ago and while he’s turned over the work of growing and marketing the vegetables to Freiert, she proudly said her grandfather is still known as “The Garlic Man.”

“We had 1,200 pounds of garlic” this week, Moje said with a slight shrug, dismissing the quantity as average.

Both sets of Moje’s grandparents emigrated to the U.S. from Germany.

Moje’s garlic can be found throughout the U.S., as folks buy it at the farmers market to ship to friends and relatives elsewhere, Freiert said.

What’s his secret to growing enormous, tasty and long-lasting heads?

“You need to sweeten the ground with lime,” he said. And, you need to start with good seed and good soil.

“Everyone who wants to know, comes to me,” he said, blue eyes twinkling behind his glasses.

The garlic “that comes from China is like eating an apple – there’s nothing to it,” he said. “I tried to grow some once and by the time I went to plant it, it was dust. People can keep mine for a year. I use the last of mine (harvested in July) in May. I use it in cooking. Garlic likes air and low humidity.”

But long before Moje was known as the Garlic Man, he was known as the “Honey Man,” recalled Freiert.

“I kept bees for 60 years,” Moje said. “I sold the honey at market. I started when I was 15. There were fruit orchards all around here and my father would rent bees for pollinating. I told him if he’d buy a couple of hives, I’d take care of them. A man on Shawnee schooled me on it. I had 40 hives in three different places around here.”

But he said he was forced to retire from beekeeping when arthritis weakened his knees.

“The hives got too heavy to handle,” Moje said.

Partial knee replacement surgery in 1998 helped alleviate the pain.

“From the waist up, I feel like a 20-year-old,” Moje said with a chuckle. “But my legs have worn out. I think they’ve traveled a million miles. But my knees are still good as new.”

As proof, Moje straightened his jean-clad legs out straight in front of him for a good stretch.

His family has a record of longevity, with one of his aunts reaching her 104th birthday and several other ancestors living well into their 90s.

“I never drank coffee, I never smoked – but I still drink milk – whole milk – every day,” he said. “I guess it’s just good country living.”

“And he eats a lot of blueberries and garlic,” added Freiert.

This father of three, grandfather and great-grandfather retired from the National Grinding Wheel Co. in North Tonawanda after 36 years, where he rose from a wheel-finisher to a supervisor. He also served in the U.S. Army during World War II, spending eight months in Africa and two years in Italy, as well as serving stateside for a total of five years, rising to the rank of master sergeant.

He marveled at the changes he’s seen in the world in the past 10 decades.

“I went to a one-room schoolhouse on Shawnee Road and had to walk no matter what the weather was,” he said. “I took a train to high school and it cost me 10 cents. I graduated from North Tonawanda High School in 1931 – that was the depth of the Great Depression, and I worked 10 hours a day on a dairy farm for $1 a day.

“I was 27 when I went in the Army and 33 when I got married in 1946,” he recalled. His wife, Esther, died in 1994. They had a daughter, Beverly, and adopted two sons, Robert, who lives in Cambria, and the late David.

Moje is a lifelong Buffalo Bills fan, who held season tickets from 1965, five years after the team’s founding, to 2005. He still catches sports every night on television, changing sports with the seasons. He also still belongs to a social card-playing club, the Bobcats.

And, he’s approaching the 100th anniversary of his baptism at St. Paul’s United Church of Christ.

He recently gave a speech at the church, remarking on the church’s history and his own 100 years in the community, concluding, “I was born in 1913, when the men still wore pants and the women wore earrings.”

Moje has belonged to the Shawnee Volunteer Fire Company for 61 years and will be feted at 1 p.m. today at the fire hall. An additional party will be held at the NT Farmer’s Market from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday.

“My grandfather is still very sharp of mind, is quick-witted and loves to charm the ladies,” said Freiert. “He is in amazing shape for being a near-centenarian.”

Niagara County Real Estate Transactions

$
0
0
CAMBRIA

• Shawnee Road, Richard F. Clark to Suzanne C. Hedemann; Morgan B. Hedemann, $192,000.

• Randolph St., Heather J. Lambert; Gary R. Lambert to Brett C. Baker, $176,000.

• Daniels Road, Rhonda M. Stephenson; Mark D. Stephenson to Lisa M. Batt; David M. Singer Jr., $171,000.

• Green Road, Joseph D. Critelli to Michael E. Kessler; Kathryn M. Kessler, $25,000.

LEWISTON

• River Road, Genevieve Montante to Alexandre Nikifortchuk; Deborah Nikifortchuk, $325,000.

• Sara Court, Steven A. Cristiano; April S. Cristiano to Randy A. Gerwitz; Carole L. Gerwitz, $270,000.

• West Hill View Court, Randy A. Gerwitz; Carole L. Gagliardo; Carole L. Gerwitz to Genevive A. Montante, $224,900.

• Elm Drive, Lona Lachiusa; David G. Geiser; Lona M. Geiser; Raymond J. Geiser; Lona A. Lachiusa to Marco Soffritti; Natalie A. Soffritti, $178,000.

• River Road, Dorothy Irene Shorey; David G. Boniello to Margaret R. Bernot Fasciano, $129,000.

• 310 Kerr St., Jeanne M. Taylor; Jeanne M. Rodino to Carol Mahalko, $119,000.

LOCKPORT Highest price: $1,412,246 Average price: $174,852 Median price: $85,000 Number of Sales: 14

• Davison Road & Tudor Lane, Southwind Realty of WNY Llc to 296 Main Llc, $1,412,246.

• North Adam St., John J. Marotta to Anees S. Kashmiri, $120,000.

• John St. & High St., Mary E. Harris to Ronald W. Daniels, $103,000.

• Treehaven Drive, Craig Family; David L. Craig; Timothy D. Craig to Brian D. Literman; Gabrielle K. Foe, $98,880.

• Cherry St., Verna M. Matheis; George G. Matheis to Shelly A. Stranges, $95,900.

• Niagara St., Gerald Apolito; Julia Apolito; Sandra A. Harris to Molly S. Siemucha; Luke M. Siemucha, $95,400.

• 125 Outwater Drive, Arthur Brittin; Charlotte L. Brittin to Sean E. Ellis, $93,000.

• Grove Ave., Karen L. Moskalik; Karen L. Liermo to Mallory M. Stodolka; Charles F. Stodolka, $77,000.

• Hawley St. & Outwater Drive, Jonathan P. Damico to Nicole M. Coon, $76,000.

• 673 Market St., Christopher A. Wahl to Mary Ellen Harris, $72,000.

• Vine St., Brian M. McCachon to Christina M. Hardter, $64,000.

• Walnut St., Tracey M. Murphy; Michael J. Murphy to Marie A. McClamb, $58,000.

• 23 Bright St., Crestview Property Holdings to Kathleen D. Nogle, $52,500.

• Washburn St., Joel Angeles; Wendy Angeles to Lita Harden, $30,000.

TOWN OF LOCKPORT

• Locust St. Ext., Kathleen M. Wenner; Darryl C. Wenner to Laurie A. Walp; John C. Walp Jr., $310,000.

• Niagara Road & Stone Road, Sharon M. Palladino; James E. Palladino to Flevie Danielewicz, $165,000.

• Brian Walk, Robert D. Roach; Christina M. Castellana; Christina M. Roach to Marjorie C. Strobel, $150,500.

• Young Road, Julie T. Giles; James H. Giles to Margaret M. Zimmer; Susan J. Odle, $139,000.

• Tonawanda Creek Road, Larry Wills; Lorraine M. Dysinger; Warren L. Vanburen; Lorraine M. Vanburen to Todd R. Cummings; Ashley R. Cummings, $121,550.

• Slayton Settlement Road, Nanette Macfarlane; Kent Macfarlane to Wendy R. Macevoy; Michael S. Macevoy, $77,000.

NEWFANE

• Wallace Ave., Anne M. Callaghan to Heather J. Lambert; Gary M. Lambert, $190,000.

• 2452 Hess Road, Sarah Bassler to Harlena R. Montgomery; John E. Montgomery Jr., $76,300.

• Main St., Yolanda Nunez; Orlando Nunez to Michael Bonk, $74,000.

TOWN OF NIAGARA

• 3028 Pretoria St., Fannie Mae to Emily A. Depronio; Jacob D. Atwood, $57,600.

• Military Road, Robert Warren; Kathleen A. Warren to Alfred E. Flessel III, $50,000.

NIAGARA FALLS Highest price: $325,000 Average price: $66,962 Median price: $50,000 Number of Sales: 32

• Military Road, Muffler Man Inc. to Crush Distributing Inc., $325,000.

• Rankine Road, Suzanne Hedemann; Morgan B. Hedemann to Stanley L. Wojton; Kristyn A. Wojton, $170,000.

• Terrace Drive, Joseph John Freitas; Joseph C. Freitas Jr. to Salvatore Mancuso; Rosario Mancuso, $138,000.

• Buffalo Ave., Charles Cino; Charles C. Cino to Matthew R. Manera, $120,000.

• 100th St., Michael J. Smith; Alice A. Smith to Patricia Nowak, $100,000.

• 101st St., Michael J. Smith; Alice A. Smith to Patricia Nowak, $100,000.

• 92nd St., Robert P. Shoff; Cathie M. Shoff to William V. Rinaldi, $92,700.

• Deveaux St., Jennifer M. Collins to Kristina M. Schliesman, $92,500.

• Barton St., Kristyn A. Wojton; Kristyn A. Moreland to Teresa M. Wojton; Stanley N. Wojton, $92,000.

• 7730 Packard Road, Frank L. Benchik to Kenneth D. Singley, $85,000.

• 69th St., Harriet Chick to James P. Collins, $82,680.

• 84th St., Robert J. Ginty; Katherine M. Ginty to Jenna Smith, $75,000.

• 3028 Pretoria St., Fannie Mae to Emily A. Depronio; Jacob D. Atwood, $57,600.

• Gerald Ave., Joseph V. Alongi to Jennifer L. Schmidt, $55,900.

• 74th St., Lori Pasquale; Lynn Pasquale; Ernest G. Pasquale to Robert Lizardo, $54,000.

• Isherwood Drive, Ronald E. Snyder; Frederick E. Snyder; Bernice L. Snyder to Eric C. Pieszala, $53,000.

• Military Road, Robert Warren; Kathleen A. Warren to Alfred E. Flessel III, $50,000.

• Sherwood Ave., Roberta Vannortwick; Marian E. Magin to Melissa Mittelstaedt; Christopher Crawford, $49,000.

• 2145 Jerauld Ave., Tanis M. Toni; Kenneth W. Edwards Sr,; Tanis M. Caskinett; Kenneth W. Edwards; Patricia L. Edwards; Patricia L. Carlin to Sue H. Westoven, $43,500.

• 78th St., Sandra M. Leenhouts to Tyler A. Muller; Cynthia L. Minko, $40,000.

• 22nd St., James Keith Wilson; Keith James Wilson to Paul A. Mezhir, $38,000.

• Walnut Ave., Kelley A Swick Joseph to Cindy Nguyen, $36,500.

• 547 22nd St., Buffalo Niagara Falls Real Estate to Jose A. Fournier, $32,500.

• D St. West, Deborah Clemens to Andrew J. Drabczyk, $30,000.

• 1350 Maple Ave., Household Finance Realty Corp. of New York to Lorraine Kochelev, $27,000.

• 20th St., Ambrosina Torcasio to Sm Ahmed Llc, $25,000.

• Linwood Ave., Juliana M. Masic to Michelle McCrayer, $25,000.

• 1111 Linwood Ave., Aldo D. Sepe Jr. to MDB Property Fund New York, $23,500.

• Niagara St., Little River USA Llc to Rosecrest Llc, $20,000.

• 2103 North Ave., M&T Bank to KC Erie Niagara Properties, $19,000.

• 5121 Tuscarora Road, David P. Stopa to Wildwood Acres Condo I, $11,854.

• Falls St., Michael Fritsch to Michele Timineri, $7,500.

NORTH TONAWANDA Highest price: $375,000 Average price: $138,597 Median price: $125,0O0 Number of Sales: 15

• Meadow Drive, Laurie L. Hill to Wattengel Funeral Home; Twin City Mortuary Inc., $375,000.

• 1005 Castlebar Drive, Dennis A. Bockhahn to Luke P. Kankiewicz, $199,900.

• Creek Road, Monica Burgio to Marie Zaiter; Mark S. Simon, $187,300.

• Daigler Drive, MCW Construction Inc. to Kathleen Dundas; Thomas Dundas, $155,000.

• Thomas Fox Drive East, Kathleen E. Sacher; Kathleen E. Hamilton to James A. Klimek; Amy L. Klimek, $146,000.

• Niagara Falls Blvd., Paul H. Steinig; Linda L. Steinig to Jacob I. McPherson, $125,750.

• Fairfax Ave., Kathleen M. Carere; James J. Carere to Chrystal Manzare; Christian M. Manzare, $125,000.

• Nash Road, Tracy L. Kluge; Michael R. Kluge to Mary Ellen Brockmyre; Mark C. Brockmyre, $125,000.

• Vandervoort St., Michael J. Skuce to Waverly Park Llc, $115,000.

• Linwood Ave., Martin G. Leslie; Susan M. Davis to Matthew S. Diel, $110,000.

• Meadow Drive South, Jean Marie Rumbold; Paul A. Rumbold to Charles A. Rumbold; Beverly D. Rumbold, $91,000.

• Master St., Mary T. Aiello-Bowman; Gerald R. Bowman Jr. to Paul Stratiff; Susan Stratiff, $87,000.

• Prospect Ave., Chrystal A. Manzare; Christian M. Manzare to James E. Wood, $86,000.

• Sommer St., Katelyn Fontana to Melanie N. Battaglia, $76,000.

• Shad St., Martha Metzger; William W. Cowles; Jean W. Cowles to Jacob R. Metzger, $75,000.

PENDLETON

• Townline Road, Veronica E. Smith; James S. Smith; Joseph S. Smith to Suzanne M. Diflorio, $110,000.

• 5754 Dunnigan Road, HSBC Mortgage Services Inc. to Justin Moslow, $84,900.

ROYALTON

• 15 Orchard St., Byron J. Howe to Fannie Mae, $89,457.

• 7703 Tonawanda Creek Road, Andrew Malicki; Debora K. Malicki to Patricia Stapley; Ian Stapley, $25,000.

WHEATFIELD Highest price: $310,000 Average price: $211,620 Median price: $218,000 Number of Sales: 13

• 3725 Timberlink Road, Deborah Lashomb; Carl W. Lashomb to Rhonda Blatner; Robb W. Blatner, $310,000.

• Mourning Dove Lane, Vanderbilt Properties Inc. to Tricia L. Margitus, $303,900.

• Nash Road, Jane L. Raggi; Jane L. Dahmer; Cheryl L. Montgomery to Robert F. Stearns; Karen A. Stearns, $290,000.

• 3844 Knottingwood Drive, Chanthala Burger; Patrick J. Burger to Jason Gielow; Renee Gielow, $285,000.

• Fritz Road, Joel E. Kennedy to Betty Skrzypek; Joanna Skrzypek; James Skrzypek, $219,900.

• Colin Court, Kathleen Montesanti to Miles Sumner; Katherine M. Sumner, $219,500.

• Jennifer Court, Robb W. Blatner; Rhonda L. Blatner to Nicholas Neeb, $218,000.

• Marigold Drive, Andrew T. Karkau to Maria V. Coats; Darren C. Coats, $199,000.

• Lockport Road, Thomas M. Dundas; Kathleen A. Dundas to John Fahy, $181,260.

• Moyer Road, Thomas Iania to Pamela J. Becker; John T. Becker, $175,000.

• Nash Road, Kristen L. Guidotti to Gary L. Zalewski; Barbara A. Zalewski, $162,500.

• Stieg Road, James Larosa to Alexander W. Marshanke; Marilyn B. Green; James E. Green, $97,000.

• Ward Road, Albert Haseley; Janet Haseley; Barbara Flow; Althea Haseley; Linda Stevens; Joan Amico to Mark R. Stevens, $90,000.

WILSON

• Palmer Road, Stephen C. Neumann to Steven A. Cristiano; April S. Cristiano, $200,000.

• Palmer Road, Jacquelyn D. Delorenzo; David W.J. Delorenzo to Joyce Lawrence, $145,000.

Discovery Center seeks grant for Lockport’s Flight of Five model

$
0
0
LOCKPORT – The Erie Canal Discovery Center is submitting a request for a state grant to pay for a working model of the 19th-century Erie Canal locks.

The Lockport Common Council passed a resolution last week supporting the request, which the center needed in order to submit its request today.

Melissa Dunlap, executive director of the History Center of Niagara, the Discovery Center’s parent organization, said the center is applying for $75,000 to $80,000 to pay for construction plans.

The working model of the Flight of Five, as the original canal locks are known, is to be set up outdoors next to the Discovery Center at Church and Ontario streets. It is to include scale-model boats going up and down the five stair-step locks.

Two of the locks in the real Flight of Five are slated for restoration next year. Hohl Industrial Services of the Town of Tonawanda was the low bidder on the restoration work at $1.74 million.

The model, whose size won’t be determined until the design is completed, will be what Dunlap called a concession device. In other words, visitors will have to pay to see the model work.

“This is part of the whole interpretation plan” for the restoration, Dunlap said.

She said she hopes the model will be complete sometime during the 2014 tourist season.

The Council also gave its stamp of approval to another state grant application: that of the Historic Palace Theatre for up to $450,000 for interior renovations.

In other matters at the Council meeting, the aldermen awarded Rel Comm of Rochester a $28,640 contract to replace the City Hall phone system.

Consultant Julie Dotton, who was paid $10,000 for her services, said the city will receive new analog and digital phones, having no need to spend the extra money for voice-over-Internet service. That would have cost about $350,000, Dotton said; it could be added in the future if needed.

The Council turned down a lower bid of $23,831 from Ivergent of Amherst. Dotton said they offered hardware that couldn’t record phone calls, which was unsuitable for the needs of the Police and Fire departments.

The Council also held a public hearing on renewing the 4 percent “bed tax” on hotel and motel bills, most of which is sent to the Niagara Tourism and Convention Corp., the county’s tourism promotion agency. However, no action was taken.

Mayor Michael W. Tucker said the notion of raising the tax to 5 percent to pay for the Towpath Trolley, the city’s summer tourist shuttle, is on hold until he discusses the idea with hoteliers. He said the Council will probably vote on a three-year renewal of the 4 percent tax, with the increase to be added later.

The Council also voted to give some old bleachers, rotting away behind the city highway garage, to the Cambria Fire Company, which will add new wood and set them up on its ball diamonds.

email: tprohaska@buffnews.com

Lockport Town Board votes to demolish abandoned house on Erica Lane

$
0
0
LOCKPORT – The Town Board voted last week to demolish a long-abandoned house at 6804 Erica Lane. Town Attorney Michael J. Norris said Niagara County foreclosed on the house because of unpaid property taxes and decided to give the property to the town.

The Town Board agreed to the deal in April, but the transaction didn’t close until late July. Town Supervisor Marc R. Smith said the demolition will take place within a few days. Norris said the basement of the house has been repeatedly flooded.

Councilman Mark C. Crocker said he visited the house recently and, looking through the windows, saw walls covered with mold.

“It appeared to be beyond any type of repair,” Crocker said.

Also at last week’s session, the board approved a new contract for dog sheltering services from the SPCA of Niagara. That organization hadn’t raised its price for the town’s contract in more than a decade, Smith said. The town was paying under $10,000 a year. The new contract will cost the town $6,606 for the second half of this year; $13,476 for all of 2014; and $13,746 for 2015.

The board also approved an upgrade of the software on its website that shows assessed valuations of property. The town will pay Proserve $2,561 per year for the software, which will be about $50 less than the current software. Smith said Town Assessor Jill Lederhouse will be able to enter updated assessments into the system from the computer on her desk, rather than having the town’s contracted webmaster do it.

The board also voted to buy two 20-foot sections of five-row bleachers for the soccer fields in Day Road Park from Belson Outdoors of North Aurora, Ill., for $7,262.

Councilman Paul W. Siejak said 27,000 pounds of electronic waste was dropped off at the town garage for recycling in the first half of the year, nearly doubling the amount from the first half of 2013. The town received $2,236 as its share of the proceeds of recycling this year’s material. Siejak also said a townwide brush pickup is set for Aug. 19, with pickup starting at 7 a.m.

email: tprohaska@buffnews.com
Viewing all 1955 articles
Browse latest View live