Abel F. Aldrich

MECHANICVILLE – Abel F. Aldrich, longtime resident died Thursday evening at Saratoga Hospital Hospice, after a brief illness.

Born in Troy, January 17, 1954, son of John and Margaret Butterfield Aldrich, Abel attended local schools.

A woodworker and painter and handyman, Abe worked for a number of contractors and for himself over the years.

 

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Judge and Jury – By Sports Writer Doug Keenholts


When the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (BBWAA) vote was counted last week and nobody was elected to the Hall of Fame this year, it signaled a tipping point in the ongoing debate about performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) in baseball.  With Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens appearing on the ballot for the first time, and receiving just 36.2% and 37.6% of the vote, respectively (it takes 75% for enshrinement), the writers have made a statement.  It can’t be argued, based on numbers alone, that Bonds isn’t in the top 5 position players of all time and Clemens isn’t a top 5 pitcher.  Absent suspicion of PED abuse, each would have been a first ballot lock.  Remember, neither has admitted (wink, wink) to knowingly using PEDs, despite mountains of evidence.  They’ve been convicted, and rightfully so in my eyes, in only the court of public opinion.  More interesting to me is the case of Mike Piazza, who received 57.8% of the vote in his first time on the ballot.  Other than rumors and innuendo, Piazza has never been formally linked to PED use.  His numbers at the catcher position certainly make him Hall of Fame worthy, but suspicions in the PED era cast a wide net.

There has been so much debate about how to handle the PED era in documenting the history of baseball.  More than any other sport, baseball is anchored by its history and its numbers.  Both have been severely tainted by the widespread use of PEDs from the mid- to late-1990s through the early 2000s.  The culpability is widespread:  Bud Selig and the owners turned a blind eye; the players’ association worked far harder to protect the dirty players than they did the clean ones; and fans and baseball media alike ignored obvious evidence of PED use, such as Brady Anderson going from 15 homeruns to 50 homeruns overnight, and Bonds’s head doubling in size.  It is for this last reason that I think the BBWAA is taking the stance it is now.  They missed the boat on this completely.  They were in these locker rooms, covering these teams coast to coast, and they somehow either missed the rampant PED abuse or chose to ignore it.  From a journalistic standpoint, it is inexcusable.  They are collectively tainted by the stain as well.  This is the writer’s chance to exert some measure of revenge.

The debate has raged since the vote as to whether no one getting into the Hall of Fame this year is a good thing or a bad thing for baseball.  My opinion is that it is a good thing.  I don’t agree that you should “just put everyone in and tell the story on the plaque”.  The Hall of Fame is, at its core, a museum of baseball history, and artifacts from Bonds, Clemens, McGwire, Sosa, et al., are prevalently displayed - Including the ball that Bonds hit for his 756th homerun, breaking Hank Aaron’s record, that is now emblazoned with a large asterisk (placed there by the ball’s eventual owner, fashion designer Mark Ecko).  This history of the PED era can be told in other parts of the museum, but to honor those individuals either implicated in or strongly suspected of using PEDs with a bronze bust and induction ceremony would be wrong.  Are there cheaters already enshrined?  Undoubtedly so.  And if a player such as Piazza never did anything wrong and is being wrongly persecuted, that is too bad.  But the clean players had their chance to stand up during this period to clean up the game and did nothing.

So I applaud the BBWAA for sending this message.  I hope Bonds and Clemens are never enshrined.  Because if they are awarded the honor, knowing what we know, what kind of message would that be sending?

January 1863: Stones River Part 1 – By Sandy McBride

It has been said that “war is hell”.  The American Civil War certainly was, but it did have its lighthearted moments, too.

In the closing days of December, 1862, Union General William Rosecrans with his 40,000-man Army of the Cumberland was approaching Murfreesboro, Tennessee with a plan to drive Confederate General Braxton Bragg and his 35,000-man Army of Tennessee out of the state.  Bragg’s forces were encamped just north of Murfreesboro astride Stones River. On December 30, even though his advancing troops and supply wagons were under continual raiding from Confederate cavalry units who swept around their rear, Rosecrans, whose army had marched from Nashville, had closed to within two miles of Murfreesboro.  He halted his army to make camp just a few hundred yards from the rebel camps.

 

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Saratoga County Animal Shelter Pets of the Week January 4th

Rex. Rex is a 3 year old neutered German Shepherd. He is housebroken, and good with kids. Rex needs to be the only animal in the home. He was brought in because he wasnt getting along with the other animals in the home.

Bella Kitty is an young adult spayed female. She is litter trained and good with older kids. She is shy at first until she gets to know you. She does not like to be picked up, but loves to be petted.

Saratoga County Animal Shelter
6010 County Farm Road?
Ballston Spa, NY 12020
PHONE: (518)885-4113??
FAX: (518)885-2570
 

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Mrs. Phyllis J. Martinelli – 81

STILLWATER – Mrs. Phyllis J. Martinelli, 81, of Hudson Ave., died Wednesday, January 2nd, at her home, in the loving company of her family. Born July 7, 1931 in Mechanicville, where she lived for many years, daughter of the late Raphael and Rose Taglione Costanzo.

Phyllis was a homemaker, who years ago had worked at both the Stillwater Knitting Mill and White Sulpher Springs Hotel onSaratoga Lake.

 

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Pittstown Area Food Pantry Relocates Temporarily – By Christine Barton

Molly Weeden VF Fire Department

 

On Saturday December 22nd the Pittstown area food pantry bid farewell to its current location at the Raymertown Lutheran Church on Mason Lane where it has been housed since 1991. The Raymertown Lutheran Church closed its doors after holding the last church service on November 17th.  The old building has been historically costly to heat and a lack of church membership has made it impossible to keep the doors open. The church has since been put up for sale and according to one volunteer; there is a potential buyer.

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LOOKING BACK ON 2012 – By Sandy McBride

 

2012 is in the history books.  It seems that it was a year of really high highs and very low lows, and most people say they are not sad to see it go.

With 2012 drawing the lightning from many angles, I will begin with a brief recap of a few of the events in the wider world that have tested our spirit, our resolve and our ability to bounce back from the lows.  And I’ll add a few of the highs that have brightened our days.

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