Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 39

Location:
Rochester, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
39
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

12B R0CHESTER DEMOCRAT AND CHRONICLE The Governor Race: October 18, 1970 JUST ARRIVED! FRESH NEW STOCK MBS Close Its Be to Going ANNIVERSARY I I I FAMOUS MAKE -ttg ti 1 2 3 Bu i ion SUDIS Adams servative nominee. the figure aid was create a stnFe of false security that has bugged the governor, his staff and high Republicans. They consider that, this is a tough, serious fight, and they greatly fear upstate apa-thy. Confirming this thesis is the fact that Goldberg's strength in New York City is beginning to firm up, or at least to surface. It hasn't upstate to any marked degree and time is running out.

The final answer can be found in the upstate. The tri-cornered U.S. Senate race involving Sen. Charles E. Goodell, R-L, Rep.

Richard L. Ottinger, and James L. Buckley, C-Independent Alli Something here for every man in these handsome, contemporary style suits. Rich worsteds, versatile blends, solids, stripes, plaids. You'll find figure flattery in every model.

We have an excellent selection right now. REG. $125 oover Is the Foe $4 By EM.MET N. O'BRIEN Gannett News Service ALBANY-Forget the press notices. The state campaign for governor is as close as any in J2 years.

it will be decided in the two weeks left before election; in areas of population designated by ethnic descriptions and largely in the response of upstate voters. Gov. Nelson Rockefeller has been ridiculed because he reported his polls (usually accurate) showed him trailing "Arthur J. Goldberg, D-L, in his bid for a fourth term. Then his report that he drew up "neck-and-neck" drew chuckles from the "usually There is one poll figure that never has been discussed, and it explains a lot of the cynicism with which the governor's statement have been viewed.

This is the answer to the question, "Will Rockefeller win?" A Rockefeller poll, it was learned, showed a 60 per cent affirmative answer. Another poll was reportedly as high as 75 per cent. But underneath the figure is the statistic that many who concede that the governor would be re-elected said they still were voting for either Goldberg or Dr. Paul Adams, the Chili pedagogue and Con- Goodell N.Y. Times Endorses Goodell NEW YORK (AP).

The New York Times endorsed in today's edition Republican Sen. Charles E. Goodell for election in November. It said, "the man New Yorkers choose this year to represent them in the United States Senate must be one capable of supplying inspiration as well as intelligence and creativity, a candidate who combines courage with a demonstrated capacity for bold leadership even at the cost of affronting dominant elements in his own party." The Times then said that need would "best be met" by the return to Capitol Hill of Goodell. Gov.

Rockefeller, a Republican, appointed Goodell as senator to succeed the late Robert F. Kennedy, a Democrat. In making the endorsement, the newspaper said he had earned "widespread respect" in his three terms in the House and was no "new-ism. comer" to the cause of liberal-The newspaper said James L. Buckley, the Conservative party nominee, serves as a "rallying center for those who believe that the way to move forward is to do less in the many areas of Social concern in which America is already doing too little." Goldberg ance, could have an effect on the final outcome of the governor's race.

But all indications io far are that the Republicans who favor Burktey also favor Rockefeller. Inasmuch as the governor is first on the ballot, any Republican defection to Buckley will not hurt him. Should th" Buckley glamor draw the voter to the Conservative line, at the outset, that will hurt the governor and help Dr. Aoanis, who drew more than 500.0C0 four years ago, and unt'-r pr-srnt assessment, will fall far short of that this year. Local Rij candidates who follow Buckley on the ballot would be affected.

Ottinger Thus last Wednesday found Arthur J. Goldberg, Democrat-Liberal candidate for governor, telling blue-collar workers at a union rally in front of City Hall that unemployment was increasing fast. "You may be next until this tide is turned," he warned. A maritime union member told a reporter he had voted for Gov. Rockefeller last time, but that Backed Buckley Rockefeller Rockefe'lcr s-nd hic strategists appear io have' neutralized, well in rdvaiue, most of the key iisues in the campaign.

One of their most brilliant move was to convince the state AFL-CIO to endorse a Republican candidate for governor for the first time in its history. That took a good deal of work, and a powerful lot of construction projects and improvement in social laws such as unemployment insurance, workmen's compensation and sickness disability benefits. The endorsement is. more significant in that Goldberg is former Secretary of Labor and former council for the old CIO United Steelworkers. he had been without a jpb for four months and now would vote for Goldberg: "Maybe he can do something about that." At the other end of the state that same day, Rep.

Richard L. Ottinger stood outside a soon-to-close Twin Industries air frame plant in Cheek-towaga to rail at Nixon economic policies and dramatize rising joblessness in the principal heavy industry area of the state. "I think it is unconsicionable to try to curb inflation by. throwing men out of Democratic Senate candidate said over and over all across Central New York at firms which have slashed their labor forces or announced plans to shut down altogether. At a union breakfast in Buffalo for Ottinger, a machinist union official said some men with 30 years seniority were reduced to "pushing a broom" to stay on the payroll at all.

Adam Walinsky, the aggressive Democratic candidate for attorney general continued to flail away this week at Rockefeller and. Atty. Gen. Louis J. Lefkowitz for failing to enforce laws on industrial safety.

Walinsky aired the theme when speaking to a black businessmen's group last Tuesday. Rockefeller and Lefkowitz were failing to enforce laws requiring that New Yorkers get preference on state construction jobs, he said. He that instead of training blacks who have been kept out of construction unions, the state is allowing thousands of workers to be imported from Canada and from other states for massive state projects. Ithoco and elhr calendar clock NEW SEASON SPORT COATS 3 HALF-PRICE $24 $48 $24 Qannett News Service NEW YORK Regardless of their actual opponents, Democrats on the state ticket seem to be running hardest against Herbert Hoover. They appear to have concluded that in a year when both prices and unemployment are, soaring, the traditional "pocketbook" issues will bring the strays back to the Democratic fold.

Their objective is to persuade voters that the Republican administrations in Washington and Albany are not only' gouging the average man, but don't care. In raising the spectre of the Great Depression, for which President Hoover took the blame at the polls in 1932, the Democrats are well aware that one result of that searing economic catastrophe was to keep Democrats in the Executive Mansion in Albany for one decade, in the White House for two. Buckley ELMIRA (AP) The Star-Gazette and Sunday Telegram, ELmira's daily newspapers, endorsed James Buckley, the Conservative Party candidate for U.S. Senate in today's edition. The paper said it chose Buckley because it believed "that he is more in accord with the goals of the national administration and the mood of the electorate than either of his two opponents." "He champions the values that many of us feel are threatened in today's turbulence and turmoil.

He is against the 'easy' solutkn to America's problems of spending more money and airther expanding the federal ou-reaucracy," the paper said. In endorsing Buckley, the Star Gazette followed the lead of other newspapers in the Gannett group. to set up a commission to represent agrarian interests. Speaking generally, the governor said "I'll be damned if I'm about to liquidate the establishment now that I am on top in this state. "We must change the establishment to meet the new needs of the people.

We must see that government remains relevant to the needs of the individual." Earlier, Rockefeller took a walking tour through a section of the Bronx, accompanied by former City Comptroller Mario A. Procaccino, a Popular fall colors and patterns in a great selection of famous make sport coats. You'll find your favorite here. REG. $89.95 T0BUV Rocky Pledges Ban On Jet Transports ZIP-LINED RAINCOATS Reg.

Famous Make BELTLESS SLACKS Reg. $29.95 Pile Lined SUBURBAN COATS Reg. $65 Pile Lined Corduroy BUSH COAT Reg. $35. Stained glass hanging domes.

Fair cash prices paid. These domes and table lamps were popular 50 to 75 years ago and are electrified! Check your attics. Also buying antiques of the following types: Oueen Anne Chippendale Hepplewhite Sheraton Fine furniture, chests" of drawers, desks, marble? top furniture, bow front china closets, cupboards, hand decorated furniture, cut glass, colored glass, china, sterling silver, watches, jewelry, table lamps, old clocks, coverlets, wash bowl pitcher sets, iron toys, old dolls, guns, oil paintings-, picture frames and just about anything old. Write or call before Oct. 26.

will be in the area Ocf. 26 to Nov. 7 NEW YORK (AP)-Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller promised yesterday to "do all in my power" to see that supersonic transports do not land at New York airports.

He simultaneously put himself on record as opposing extension of Kennedy Airport runways into Jamica, Bay. The Republican incumbent, seeking an unprecedented fourth consecutive four-year term, spoke to more than 400 civic leaders in Queens. He also told the group "we are going to keep this state an agriculture state," promising ft! ANTIQUES P. O. Dox 703 Wjlliamsporf, Pa.

Ph: uwvvmwvvN ana in tne ukccuc iuvync ymlu.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Democrat and Chronicle
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Democrat and Chronicle Archive

Pages Available:
2,656,601
Years Available:
1871-2024