Syracuse Brewers: A History
This documentary features a brief history of the art of brewing in Syracuse. Watch as the heyday of the local breweries died out, only to be rekindled today by various local companies that have made a name for themselves in the past ten years. ...
1975 NYSPHSAA Intersectional Wrestling Championships
The 13th Annual NYSPHSAA Intersectional Wrestling Championships held March 7-8, 1975 at Onondaga County War Memorial in Syracuse, NY. See
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Haunted History Trail of New York State visits 13 Curves
A quiet country road outside of Syracuse, NY can sometimes be a terrifying experience. Haunted History Trial of New York State visits 13 Curves.
Onondaga Land Rights Vigil (Syracuse, NY) Part I
On October 10, 2007, Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation organized a vigil in support of the Onondaga Nation's Land Rights Action. The gathering, under the flags of New York State, the United States and the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, took place the evening before the initial court hearing in the case.
1982 NYSPHSAA Intersectional Wrestling Finals
The 20th Annual NYSPHSAA Intersectional Wrestling Championships, recorded live March 13, 1982 at the Onondaga County War Memorial in Syracuse, NY. Reproduced by armdrag.com with permission from the NYSPHSAA.
The Syracuse 8: Leaving the Game to Stand for Equality
Hear members of the legendary Syracuse 8, a group of young men who took a stance in 1969-70 to petition for racial equality on the SU football team. Their stories of courage are told in a new book, Leveling the Playing Field: The Story of the Syracuse 8 by David Marc.
Bostonian's & SU Alumni Dana Harrell & A. Alif Muhammad are joined by other members of the Syracuse 8 to discuss the controversy they created when they walked away from the game. Dan Lebowitz, Executive Director at Center for the Study of Sport in Society at Northeastern University, moderates the discussion.
Special thanks to Cappy Gilchrist of St. Christopher's School for use of his excellent summary video. (
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WTVH Channel 5 News - Blizzard Of 1966 - Syracuse NY
- WTVH Channel 5 News - Ron Remembers home video - Blizzard Of 66 - Ron Curtis - Syracuse, NY
Pennsylvania's flag!!
Some quick facts about Pennsylvania's flag????????
Onondaga Nation Press Conference Washington DC
On Tuesday, April 15, the Onondaga Nation filed a petition against the United States with the Organization of American States' Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) in Washington, D.C. The petition accuses the U.S. of human rights violations by stealing 2.5 million acres of the Nation's land since 1788 in what is now central New York state and seeks redress for the violation of the Onondaga people's rights to property, equal treatment, and judicial protection.
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Finishing the Empire State Trail
Finishing the Empire State Trail
Future Infrastructures: The Over and Under of I-81
March 22, 2018 in Slocum Hall. Presented by City Scripts and City Symposia.
The symposium is the second in a series, made possible by a unique partnership between two internationally prominent colleges at Syracuse University, the School of Architecture and the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs.The partners believe their collaboration will insure that policy and design are at the forefront when confronting the challenges facing cities in the United States and around the world.
The goal of the symposium is to create an ongoing, interdisciplinary and applied dialogue that reaches beyond the university and, ultimately, influences both policy and design.
Future Infrastructures: The Over and Under of I-81 will focus on the choices for renovating or re-routing the I-81 elevated highway in Syracuse, New York from both urban design and public policy perspectives. This challenge facing the city engages a range of interdisciplinary issues and is emblematic of similar infrastructural questions confronting cities across world.
Curated by: Syracuse Architecture associate professors Elizabeth Kamell and Lawrence Davis, undergraduate chair; Carol Faulkner, Maxwell School professor of history and associate dean; Grant Reeher, Director, Campbell Public Affairs Institute, Maxwell School
Panelists:
Joseph Kane, Economist
Metropolitan Policy Program
Brookings Institution
Alex Krieger, Urban designer
Professor of Practice, Harvard University
Jonnell Robinson, Social geographer
Assistant Professor, Geography, Maxwell School, Syracuse University
Ben Walsh, Mayor
City of Syracuse
174th Attack Wing History Highlights
On December 31, 1941, just 24 days after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, the Office of the Chief of the Army Air Force authorized the construction of an air base at Syracuse, New York. In the ensuing 70+ years, members of the 174th Attack Wing and its associated units have proudly served in the Berlin Crisis, Pueblo Crisis, Operations DESERT SHIELD, DESERT STORM, PROVIDE COMFORT II, NORTHERN WATCH, ALLIED FORCE, IRAQI FREEDOM, ENDURING FREEDOM, ODYSSEY DAWN, and in support of countless other missions.
The daily mission across Hancock Field is to provide qualified airmen and weapon systems to joint global air, space and cyberspace operations, in support of homeland defense, and to aid civil authorities at the direction of the Governor of New York State. We are home to a number of diverse and unique missions, including the 174th Attack Wing’s MQ-9 combat operations mission, MQ-9 aircrew training mission, and MQ-9 maintenance training mission; the 274th Air Support Operations Squadron’s Close Air Support command, control and coordination mission; the 222nd Command & Control Squadron’s space operations control mission; and the 152nd Air Operations Group’s air operations center mission.
The Air National Guard is a reserve component of the United States Air Force. The Air National Guard provides almost half of the Air Force’s tactical airlift support, combat communications functions, aero medical evacuations and aerial refueling. In addition, the Air National Guard has total responsibility for air defense of the United States. The Air Guard maintains two-thirds of the nation’s fighter interceptor force and maintains more than half of its reconnaissance force. (New York Air National Guard video by Master Sgt. Eric Miller/released)
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Onondaga County set to cash two Shoppingtown Mall tax checks
Onondaga County set to cash two Shoppingtown Mall tax checks
Discovering the US: Haudenosaunee Influences on U.S. Culture and Democracy
The third program in the Onondaga Land Rights and Our Common Future Series held on June 13, 2006 at Syracuse Stage, Syracuse, NY.
The late John Mohawk, Ph.D. was a Seneca educator and author.
He directed the Indigenous Studies Center and co-directed
the Center for the Americas at the State University of
New York at Buffalo. He worked on various Native
American publications, including Daybreak magazine,
Akwesasne Notes and the Indigenous Press Network.
Mohawk is also the founder and director of the Iroquois
White Corn Project and the Pinewoods Café, located on
the Cattaraugus Territory of the Seneca Nation. His books include Utopian Legacies: A History of Conquest and Oppression in the Western World.and others.
What Really Happened: The Hillary Clinton Campaign, and Its Lessons
With Amie Parnes and Jon Allen, authors of Shattered: Inside Hillary Clinton’s Doomed Campaign
Amie Parnes is Senior Political Correspondent for The Hill, and a regular CNN political analyst. Jon Allen is a columnist for Roll Call, and an adjunct professor at Northwestern University. Together they wrote the #1 New York Times bestselling story of the Clinton campaign. The two discuss their experiences covering the 2016 presidential election, speculate about some of the political lessons the election suggests, and reflect on the current political climate.
Event Date: November 3, 2017
The Ground Beneath Your Feet is Sacred: Haudenosaunee Cultural Resource Protection
For centuries the cultural heritage of the Haudenosaunee has been under assault, including everything from excavation of burial grounds for development to the theft of human remains and important cultural artifacts which were stored in museums. Learn about the increasingly successful efforts to reverse this trend and preserve this crucial heritage for the Haudenosaunee and the wider community.
Presentations by Peter Jemison and Jack Rossen on June 14, 2010 at Syracuse Stage.
Peter Jemison (Seneca) is the manager of Ganondagan State Historic Site, a re-creation of a 17th-century Seneca village, located in Victor, New York. Jemison represents the Seneca Nation of Indians on repatriation issues; he served on the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation andon the board of directors of the American Association of Museums. He is also an artist whose work has been widely shown for more three decades. His paintings and drawings have shown in solo exhibitions at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo and at the Fenimore Art Museum in Cooperstown, New York. He was the founding director of the American Indian Community House Gallery in New York City. Jemison received a BS in art education and an honorary doctorate in fine arts from Buffalo State College in Buffalo, New York. He is the director of the film Hanondagonyes Town Destroyer (2005) and coeditor of Treaty of Canandaigua 1794: 200 Years of Treaty Relations Between the Iroquois Confederacy and the United States, Clear Light Publishers, 2000.
Jack Rossen is the Chair of the Anthropology Department at Ithaca College. An archaeologist, Jack's recent work has focussed on an early Cayuga village site near Cayuga Lake. He'll report on the preliminary findings of their work finding settlement from the 10th century. Jack was one of the founders of SHARE (Strengthening Haudenosaunee American Relations through Education). He is part of developing a new vision for archaeology, one that cooperates with and strives to be a positive force for Native people, studies issues that Native people are interested in, is oriented to site protection, and respects sacred areas and burial grounds. Jack has worked and taught throughout the US and South America as well as taking classes to study on the big island of Hawaii.
The program was part of the Onondaga Land Rights and our Common Future series held in Syracuse, NY, from February 2010 to February 2011 and coordinated by Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation.
Revitalizing Syracuse: Community Strategies to Create Wealth
Joe Minicozzi of Urban3, a consulting firm based in Asheville, NC, addressed how public investments in the built environment affect local business decisions and the fiscal health of government. Minicozzi is a native of Upstate New York. Panelists included Andrew Fish of CenterState CEO and Honora Spillane of the Syracuse Industrial Development Agency. This event was co-sponsored by the Syracuse Downtown Committee and the New York State Association of REALTORS.
Onondaga Nation Land Rights Action Goes International (Part 1)
Syracuse, NY (Indigenous Onondaga Nation Territory): On Monday, May 5 at Westcott Community Center, Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation (NOON) hosted an educational event about the Nation's filing with the Inter-American Commission of Human Rights of the Organization of American States. Tadodaho Sid Hill, other Onondaga leaders and General Counsel Joe Heath shared information about the petition and how people can support it.
This is part 1.
A Native American group is asking the international community to charge the United States with human
A Native American group is asking the international community to charge the United States with human rights violations in hopes of getting help with a land claim.
The Onondaga Indian Nation says it plans to file a petition at the Organization of American States on Tuesday, seeking human rights violations against the United States government. It wants the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to declare that the U.S. government's decision not to hear its lawsuit asking for the return of 2.5 million acres in upstate New York to be violations of international human rights agreements.
The nation has argued that about 4,000 square miles in 11 upstate New York counties stretching from Pennsylvania to Canada was illegally taken through a series of bogus treaties. More than 875,000 people live in the area, which includes Syracuse and other cities.
U.S. courts have refused to hear the lawsuit asking for the return of their land, with the Supreme Court turning away a final petition in October.
While in Washington, the group plans to display a belt that George Washington had commissioned to commemorate one of the treaties that was supposed to guarantee the Onondaga their land and the free use and enjoyment thereof.
The group says it is not seeking monetary damages, eviction of residents or rental payments. Instead, it wants a declaration that the land continues to belong to the Onondagas and that federal treaties were violated when it was taken away. Onondaga leaders have said they would use their claim to force the cleanup of hazardous, polluted sites like Onondaga Lake.
The petition against the United States was brought by the Onondaga Nation and the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, which is made up of the Onondaga, Mohawk, Oneida, Cayuga and Seneca Nations.
It could be years before the commission decides whether to hear the nation's complaint, Heath said. Even then, there is nothing that could force the government to follow international recommendations, Heath said. The hope is that public pressure would bring state and federal officials to the table.
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