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Bill's Broadsides

POSTED:Fri, September 25, 2009 @ 1:32PM

Valley views


I went to Syracuse on Wednesday to attend the New York Associated Press Association's annual seminar and awards banquet. The topic of the seminar was -- what else? -- the painful transition newspapers are making from print to digital. I came away from those discussions with more ideas than I could shake an iPhone at, so I'm going to take a few days to ruminate on the subject before I write about it here on the blog.

For now,  I'll simply mention that it was the first opportunity I've had to hear Gov. David Paterson speak in person, and I can report that he still seems upbeat, confident and quick with a joke despite his lack of support in the polls. I enjoyed his description of Albany: "a planet with little gravity and no oxygen." On the whole, however, he didn't seem to say anything substantively new or different from his other public remarks this week. (Follow the link in the box at right to read the Syrcause paper's report on Paterson's speech.)

Another highlight of my trip had little to do with journalism and politics: instead of taking the Thruway all the way home, I took Route 5 from Utica to Little Falls, and then went up through Dolgeville to get back to Johnstown. I took some photos along the way, some of which you can see here. I'll put the rest up on my CU site later today.  

My photography junket got particularly exciting in Little Falls, where a police officer asked to see my identification and wanted to know why I was taking pictures. Apparently, he thought I might be scoping out a bank and planning a big heist! We had a brief discussion about whether I was doing anything wrong -- I reminded him it's not illegal to take pictures from a public sidewalk -- before I showed him my press pass and reassured him that I wasn't planning to hold up the Little Falls Savings & Loan.

 

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Member Comments

View Comments: | 1-4 | Post a comment
Discobulous
10-01-09 3:39 PM
I believe the movie was called "A Place in the Sun". Kids couldn't go see it because it offended the Catholic Legion of Indecency.

FireKatt
10-01-09 1:43 PM
This all happened in the early 1900's.

FireKatt
10-01-09 1:40 PM
Now is the Herkimer Co. Sheriff's Dept also the old jail?? I have been wanting to go ever since I read "Murder in the Adirondacks: An American Tragedy Revisited". It was the true story of Chester Gillette and Grace Brown. He was housed in the Herkimer Co. Jail and his cell is still intact and I beleive the way he left it. Or maybe they transferred the stuff to the historical society. Anyway...Chester murdered his pregnant girlfriend and his trial was held in herkimer. It's a great historical story if you are interested in that sort of thing. Theodore Drieser made a movie on it called "An American tragedy" starring Liz Taylor and Shelly Winters. Of course as Hollywood goes it wasn't anywhere near the truth. Craig Brandon's book is excellent. Lots of pictures too.

Discobulous
09-26-09 3:59 PM
That bull wasn't Elmer, was he? Where was Elsie?

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Bill Ackerbauer

Assistant City Editor Johnstown native Bill Ackerbauer began his journalism career in 1996 as a reporter with The Leader-Herald. He has been an editor and writer for newspapers in Schenectady, Saratoga Springs and Dover, N.H., and returned to the Leader in 2007. 'Bill's Broadsides' has twice won first-place awards (2007-08 and 2008-09) in the New York State Associated Press writing contest for newspapers in the Leader-Herald's circulation category. Bill teaches English as an adjunct instructor at Fulton-Montgomery Community College, and he has taught journalism courses at the University at Albany. In his spare time, Bill plays folk music on guitar, banjo, fiddle and other traditional instruments. He lives in Johnstown with his wife, Jen, and their two sons, Liam and Carter.

Contact Info 518-725-8616 x250
backerbauer@leaderherald.com

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