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Man Struck by Car in Road Rage Incident

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A man is accused of striking another person with his car during a road rage incident in Delaware.

The ordeal began Saturday around 1:45 a.m. on Route 13 near Wilmington. Police say the suspect, a male driver in a dark colored Dodge Dart, began following a 36-year-old man driving a silver Mercedes C30 south on I-95 to the Route 896 exit.

After traveling north on Route 896 to Route 4, the 36-year-old man pulled over and confronted the suspect, police said. The 36-year-old’s 42-year-old brother-in-law also got out of the car. That’s when the suspect accelerated and struck the 36-year-old with the front of his vehicle, police said.

The 36-year-old was thrown to the grass median as the suspect fled the area. Police say the suspect’s vehicle also struck another car as it drove away from the scene.

The 36-year-old was taken to Christiana Hospital and treated for serious but non-life-threatening injuries. No one else was hurt during the incident. The third vehicle that was struck sustained minor damage.

Police have not released a detailed description of the suspect but say his Dodge Dart had a Maryland license plate. They also say there was a passenger inside his car at the time of the incident.

If you have any information on the incident, please call Detective James Skinner at 302-366-7100 or email him at James.Skinner@cj.state.de.us.
 



Photo Credit: NBC Philadelphia

Vet Wants Battle of the Bulge Memorial in Philly

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On the eve of Memorial Day, a local World War II veteran wants to make sure there’s a permanent reminder in Philadelphia of the sacrifices his fellow soldiers made.

Army Corporal Stan Wojtusik, who served in the 106th Infantry Division, was injured and captured during the Battle of the Bulge of World War II.

The Battle, which lasted from December 16, 1944 to January 25, 1945, was a German offensive campaign against the Allied forces during the war and a final effort by Hitler to split the Allies in two. With 600,000 troops involved, it was the largest battle fought by the United States in World War II.

“It was a surprise attack,” Wojtusik said. “This was Hitler’s last hurrah. There’s not a day that doesn’t go by that I don’t think of this battle.”

The U.S. Department of Defense reports 19,000 American soldiers were killed, 47,500 wounded and 23,000 missing in the Battle.

“I was 18-years-old at the time,” Wojtusik told NBC10. “Just turned 18. We were picking those Germans off left and right.”

Seventy years after the historic battle, Wojtusik, who grew up in South Philly and now lives in Torresdale, is leading the effort to erect a permanent memorial in Philadelphia’s Washington Square Park. Preliminary designs are for an 8-by-8-foot stone monument, according to Philly.com.

“They should remember the sacrifices that these guys put up,” Wojtusik said. “Their first baptism of fire, of going into battle.”

Wojtusik and other supporters face several challenges however. Washington Square already has a Revolutionary War memorial. They also need federal approval as well as at least $100,000. Yet Wojtusik’s biggest concern is time as many World War II veterans are passing away.

“Time is running out for a good many of them,” he said.

All donations to the memorial fund can be sent to Philadelphia chapter treasurer Gary Lambert , 123 Garfield Avenue, Collingswood, New jersey, 08108. You can also visit the Battle of the Bulge website for more info.
 



Photo Credit: NBC10

Home Invaders Steal 15 Pairs of Jordans: Police

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Police are searching for a group of men who allegedly stole cash, jewelry and over a dozen pairs of Air Jordan sneakers during a home invasion.

Police say five armed men entered a home on the 4200 block of Neilson Street at 5:16 p.m. Sunday and robbed the people inside. The suspects stole $1000, jewelry, two iPhones and 15 pairs of Air Jordan sneakers, according to police. They then fled southbound on Neilson Street in a white Chevy Cobalt, according to investigators.

None of the victims were injured during the incident.

Police say all five suspects were between the ages of 20 and 25. One suspect is described as a dark-skinned man standing 6-feet with facial hair and weighing 200 pounds. He was last seen wearing a gray shirt and blue jeans and was armed with a silver handgun, police said. A second suspect is described as a thin dark-skinned man standing 5-foot-8. Police did not release descriptions of the other three suspects.

If you have any information on the incident, please call Philadelphia Police.
 



Photo Credit: Jordan Brand

Memorial Day Services and Events

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Several Memorial Day services and events took place in our area over the weekend.

Car Slams Into Philly Home

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A car slammed into a Philadelphia home Sunday night.

The accident happened on the 2000 block of West Norris Street. Officials have not yet revealed whether anyone was injured.

Fire officials and PECO crews are responding to the scene.

This story is developing. Stay with NBC10.com for updates.



Photo Credit: NBC10.com

2 Adults Killed, 2 Kids Hurt in Crash

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Two adults were killed and two kids were hurt following a car crash in Millville, New Jersey late Sunday afternoon.

A 22-year-old man was driving a black Honda Civic south on Buckshutem Road approaching the University Road intersection in Millville at 4:13 p.m. At the same time, a 49-year-old woman in a Toyota Camry was stopped at a stop sign on University Road at the intersection.

As he was driving, the man suddenly lost control and his Honda Civic began to spin clockwise, police said. The Civic then struck the Camry.

Both the man and the woman died from their injuries in the crash. Police have not yet revealed their identities. A child in the Toyota Camry was also flown to the Cooper Medical Center while another child in the Camry was taken to a nearby hospital via the Millville Rescue Squad. Officials have not yet revealed their conditions.

Police continue to investigate the accident.
 



Photo Credit: NBC10.com

WATCH: Soldiers Surprise Sister at School

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A local high school student received a huge surprise when her two older brothers who serve in the U.S. Army visited her at school after being away for nearly a year.

Sergeant Justin Potenski, 24, and his brother Specialist John Potenski, 26, had been deployed in Qatar since June of 2014.

“This was the first deployment for a year so this was much longer than any of us were used to,” John told NBC10.

The two brothers returned to their native Mays Landing, New Jersey on May 18 but only a few family members knew they were home at the time. One person who had no idea was their younger sister Brielle Potenski, a student at Oakcrest High School.

“We knew she was in school,” John said. “So I first called the school right away to ask if we could surprise her and they were okay with it.”

The camera rolled as the two brothers walked into their sister’s class the next day. Brielle screamed and ran into their arms as her classmates watched.

The homecoming is especially sweet for John who spent Memorial Day weekend with his wife and family.

“We won’t have to go back anytime soon,” he said. “We do a one week a month drill until our next deployment, which right now won’t be until another four or five years, hopefully. I’m not trying to leave my family again. You don’t really know what you have until you don’t have it. Makes you appreciate life a lot more.”

Locals Stake Out Their Spot to Watch City's Largest Memorial Day Parade

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People are already staking out a spot to watch Bridesburg's annual Memorial Day parade that begins at 10 a.m. at the base of the Betsy Ross Bridge and NBC10's Katy Zachry talks to some parade-goers excited for this year's event.

NBC10 First Alert Weather: Great Parade Weather

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Its a little breezy this Monday morning but it will be a sunny, dry Memorial Day with a high of 87 degrees and chances for storms increase throughout the week.

Boardwalk Business Booming This Memorial Day Weekend

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Business owners down the shore were happy the weather held up this Memorial Day weekend and brought out big crowds to the beaches and boardwalks.

Decades-Old Parade Marches Down Delco Road Once Again

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The town of Media will host its annual Memorial Day parade at 10 a.m. where several Vietnam vets and miltary vehicles will march down an eight-block stretch of State Street in Delaware County.

Vietnam Veterans Memorial Makeover Unveiled

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Former prisoner of war, Ralph Galati will speak at a ceremony to rededicate the Philadelphia Vietnam Veterans Memorial at Penn's Landing which has recently undergone a big makeover.

600+ Local Service Members Honored at Korean War Memorial

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Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter will help mark Memorial Day with a ceremony at the Korean War Memorial in Old City at 11 a.m. that honors more than 600 service members from the Delaware Valley.

Unified Prayer and Moment of Remembrance for Memorial Day

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Memorial Day honors the military men and women who gave their lives in service to the United States. Monday, May 25 at 11 a.m. is a time for unified prayer and 3 p.m. as a national moment of remembrance.

Car Flames Spread, Spark Garage Blaze

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A fire started in a car and then quickly spread to an attached garage on Norristown Road in Horsham and officials are still trying to determine the cause.

Investigators Looking Into Camden Shooting

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Investigators are looking into an overnight shooting at Sheridan and Norris Streets in Camden that injured at least one person.

Man Dies After Shots Erupt on City Street

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A man was rushed to the hospital but died after being shot overnight near 17th and Luzerne Streets in Nicetown.

Police Search for Apartment Complex Shooter

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Philadelphia police are looking for the shooter who shot a man in the leg inside an apartment complex on Woodhaven Road in the Parkwood section of the city.

Man Shot Dead Found Near Basketball Court

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A man died after being shot in the head and police found the man near a basketball court at 41st and Aspen Streets in Philadelphia's Mantua section overnight.

Parents' Voicemails Preserve Their Memory in Death

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Tune into All Things Considered on Monday, May 25, to hear a segment based on this story.

 

The voicemail message was like so many others from my mom.

"Hi, it's mom," she began, then chatted on, full Jewish mother in her distinctive gravelly timbre. "There's a storm coming your way2026Please drive very carefully2026.Love you. Bye."

It's the type of message I normally didn't pay much attention to, quickly deleting it after I listened. But three weeks after my mom, Harriet Ornstein, uttered those words, she died at a hospital outside Detroit. I unearthed this message and others from her while plumbing my iPhone's cache of deleted messages, amazed and grateful by this unexpected ability to preserve her voice.

I have many treasured memories of my mom, who died in January 2013. I have serving platters, wine glasses, birthday cards she sent me, and photos of her as a girl and with my children. I have videos of her and my dad at my Bar Mitzvah and wedding. But somehow, oddly, the voicemails2014those unscripted moments of everyday life2014are the ones I turn to most often when I'm feeling sad.

I hear her, maternal and overprotective, even as I raise a family of my own. The mom eager to share a juicy story ("Just watching the news and there was another crazy New Jersey guy2026," she said in one message.) The mom who called every few hours, brimming with excitement as my family and I drove 10 hours from New Jersey to visit her and my dad in Michigan. The mom increasingly frail as her Parkinson's disease advanced. ("Charlie, I have a favor to ask of you2026 I'll talk to you later. Love you. Kiss everybody.")

I had stumbled upon the messages almost by accident. While going through voice messages of condolence from friends, I came upon a single mundane call from my mom. I then made the fortuitous discovery that my smart phone was really smart2014it required a second delete to send discarded messages into the ether. I had a trove of verbal memories.

Our phones have become our new scrapbooks. Unlike photos that capture how we looked in second grade or remind us of our 21st birthday, voice mails2014perhaps because they are divorced from the visual2014capture our essence at different moments in time. My 5-year-old son's impishness as he asks for a call back. My 8-year-old's obsession with our fantasy sports teams. My mom's voice growing weaker over time.

Hit delete and messages left on the home answering machine are gone for good. But our cell phones allow us to carry memories with us, perhaps without realizing it.

When I upgraded my iPhone last year, I kept the old one and, just to be safe, saved the messages to a digital voice recorder.

A day before my mom's heart unexpectedly stopped, sending her into the coma from which she never recovered, she called my dad's cell phone from the hospital emergency room. It was before dawn. "Hi. I love you. It's 5:30. I haven't slept but I love you. Take care of yourself please. Bye."

It's haunting to listen to those words. I wonder if she knew her own end was near. I recorded that one on my phone, too.

Sadly, I would go through a similar ritual when my dad, Alexander Ornstein, died suddenly, four months after my mom. Last week marked the two year anniversary of his death.

"Hi everybody. Shabbat Shalom. It's Papa O, calling from Michigan. Okey doke, bye now," said my dad's soft voice, still sending us love in one message we had inexplicably not erased on our home machine.

When I listen to my dad's messages on my phone, I hear the gentle caring man who always asked about how others were doing, irrespective of his own myriad health problems. ("I don't know what time you were going home. Have a safe trip and give me a call when you're back in New Jersey.") I hear the dad who always made us roll our eyes and chuckle because he insisted on noting the precise instant of his call2013 "1:33 and a half," despite the time stamp on the message and Caller ID.

Like the messages from my mom, those left by my dad chronicle the slow march to his death, which ended the daily calls (often in the heat of my workday when I didn't have much time for chatting) and the messages I now treasure. In his final weeks, complications of diabetes and a fall led to the amputation of one toe, and then all of the toes on one foot.

"You know I'm minus a toe but I'm more worried about the foot," he said in one message. "Anyway, I'm OK with it. Alright, bye now."

Eight days before he died, he left me what would be his last message: "Everything seems to be going fine," he said at the end. "Bye now."

My parents endure in many forms. But most of those, I don't carry with me in my pocket. More than once, I've pulled over while driving alone, taken out my phone and played the messages one after another. I marvel how the things I cherish most about my parents aren't those that I would have ever imagined.

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