Syracuse’s Asa Goldstock, one of the best players in program history, isn’t your typical lacrosse player
Updated 11:11 AM;
Today 10:00 AM
Asa Goldstock is closing in on Syracuse s record for saves in a career.Scott Schild | sschild@syracuse.com
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Last year, Syracuse poured millions of dollars into renovations for the Dome. Among those changes were state-of-the-art video boards that broadcast every jaw-dropping replay – and each mistake – to every corner of the stands.
From the turf of Ernie Davis Legends Field, the screens look even more massive. Just ask Asa Goldstock, starting goalie for the Syracuse women’s lacrosse team. After almost every goal she lets in, Goldstock huddles with her team and then turns around and looks up. Her eyes scan the replay board projecting her latest mistake.
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New ‘modern’ general store opens in Cazenovia, expanding Brae Loch Inn family’s legacy
Updated 7:00 AM;
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Travis Barr is expanding his family’s legacy in Central New York.
Barr, 40, has opened a new, “modern” general store in downtown Cazenovia, a stone’s throw from where his grandfather Grey Barr helped establish the Brae Loch Inn when it moved from Borodino, N.Y., more than 70 years ago. The shop, located at 53 Albany St., is fittingly called H. Grey Supply Co. and co-owned by Travis Barr’s partner of 10 years, Alex Altomonte.
“He went by Grey Barr, but his first name was Henry,” Barr said of his late grandfather, who was also known as the “Silver Scot” when he worked at the Brae Loch for 67 years.
Months after Covid-19, CNY ‘long-haulers’ suffer fatigue, breathing problems, loss of smell
Updated 6:09 AM;
Syracuse, N.Y. – Shanica Echols was discharged from the hospital last spring after a two-week stay with Covid-19.
A year later, she still suffers lingering symptoms. She still gets winded on the stairs in her two-story house.
“I get exhausted climbing the steps,” said Echols, a traveling nurse. “I’ll climb the steps and then sit down in my room for a little bit before I do what I came upstairs to do.”
Greg Jenkins’s eyes water when he slices an onion. But he can’t smell it. Eight months after being diagnosed with Covid-19, Jenkins still has diminished taste and smell. He, too, has a hard time climbing the stairs. A singer, he’s had to relearn songs, inserting more breaths into his phrasing.