an ancient city on the north coast of Africa (northwest of Carthage); destroyed by Arabs around 700 AD
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Utica \U"ti*ca\, a. [So called from Utica, in New York.] (Geol.) Of, pertaining to, or designating, a subdivision of the Trenton Period of the Lower Silurian, characterized in the State of New York by beds of shale.
In 1879, Frank Winfield Woolworth opened a 5-cent store in Utica, N.Y.
Sightings of low-flying aircraft Friday afternoon were reported from the Massachusetts border to Utica in central New York, forcing searchers to look for the plane in a half dozen counties, she said.
Eastern New York state also got heavy snow from the storm, with 17 inches at Utica, Piseco Lake and Bolton Landing, and 11 inches at Albany.
A telephone call to Shearson's Utica office was not answered and a woman who answered the phone at Stein Roe in New York said there was no one available to comment.
"I haven't granted an interview in two years and all I will say is that I am glad to be here for my brother's wedding," North said after Saturday's ceremony at Sacred Heart Church in west Utica.
In 1879, Frank Winfield Woolworth opened a five-cent store in Utica, N.Y.
Mr. Henke previously was chairman and president of the Utica bank and chairman of American Bank.
Utica Cutlery Co., alleged to have sent the most liquid waste to the landfill, was hit with a $490,367 allocation, and several trash haulers were tagged with smaller six-figure sums.
"Essentially it means nothing," said William Sullivan, president of Local 1126 in Utica, N.Y.
He previously worked for the Observer-Dispatch in Utica, N.Y., the Korea Times in Seoul and The News American in Baltimore.
Allied-Signal, based in Morris Township, N.J., said in March that it planned to shed Utica as part of a reorganization of its aerospace lines.