Balcom family home on Routes 5 and 20 in Aurelius. - 6:10PM
Parents and admirers snap pictures of the dolled-up high school students at the
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- Shannon Jackson doubts if her hair looks OK. "Does it look bad?" she asks the
- Stephanie Gaston, right, helps her classmate and friend, Anna Vanderhorst, hide
- Parents and admirers snap pictures of the dolled-up high school students at the
- Kelly Delaney, at right, snaps a picture of classmates Clare MacClellan and
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- Anthony Emmi's family and friends pray the rosary in his Beech Tree Road home a day after he became comatose last July. Natalie Emmi said both she and her husband were comforted with their family around them. "So as we all knelt here, as he was in a coma, we could hear him say the rosary 'Blessed mother, blessed mother, my Jesus, my Jesus' It was beautiful," she said.
- Hospice of the Finger Lakes nurse Marie-Louise Wyckoff comforts Anthony Emmi during a home visit last spring in Aurelius. Wyckoff was one of several Hospice employees and volunteers who helped Anthony and his family cope with his liver cancer. "I'm forever grateful for Hospice, because I never would have gotten through it without them," Anthony's wife Natalie said.
- Since last July, the Emmi family has struggled with the loss of their patriarch, Anthony. While his legacy lives on through the 300+ buildings he built around Auburn, it continues growing every day through the new homes built by Emmi Construction, now run by his son Louis. "We hurt very, very much," the Rev. Robert Belligotti said. "This causes us great pain in our hearts. But, we can begin to feel good about Anthony. He was a master builder indeed."
- Anthony Emmi's granddaughters, Rachael and Amanda, pray during calling hours at Cheche Funeral Home last July in Auburn. "He's in a much better place now, " Natalie Emmi said.
- The students visit the sink after playing with a tray full of shaving cream. While some activities seem to encourage
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