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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • Page 12

Location:
Binghamton, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

12-A PRESS, Ringhamton, N. Y. June 18, 1969 Backlash- Doves- War- (Continued From Page 1A) (Continued From Pag. 1A (Continued From Page 1A) ing Viet Cong troop concentrations 30 miles north of Saigon. Nixon Reviews Missile Stand l't yf milt- J'S 1 I' A -J Washington (UPI) Tresident Nixon today began a final review in the National Security Council of America's negotiating position on disarmament talks with the Soviet Union.

Approval of the U. S. negotiating stand is expected by next week. in Vietnam. The reading was completed today.

Several other antiwar groups were also active. Fifty-two Illinois businessmenmembers of Business Executives Move For Peace formed into five-man lobbying teams and visited members of Congress. They also announced plans to picket the White House and to hire a plane to tow a long peace banner through the skies over Washington. A small group of antiwar leaders, headed by Dr. Benjamin Spock, conferred at the Pentagon earlier Tuesday with Army General Counsel Robert Jordan concerning alleged infringements of the constitutional rights of servicemen.

After the private meeting, Spock told newsmen that Jordan had been asked to clarify guidelines sent to Army base commanders on efforts by soldiers to distribute antiwar literature and hold Vietnam protest meetings on the bases. In other antiwar activity 25 protesters handed out pro-peace literature to lunch time passersby outside the Defense Department. Nuclear Expert Dies Rome Prof. Nerico Persico, one of Italy's foremost nuclear physicists, died yesterday. He was 69.

With both the Democratic and Republican candidates running on the same law-and-order platform, it appeared Lindsay would be a substantial candidate in November. Many liberal votes from both parties that had been scattered in the primaries were expected to go to him almost as a bloc, while Procaccino and Marchi battled for the conservative votes. Supporters of Wagner, Badillo Scheuer and Mailer were expected to back Lindsay. WAGNER, who served as mayor for 12 years until Lindsay's election four years ago, said in conceding defeat, "It's a sad day for the Democratic Party for all parties. Lindsay has been awful," he added "but gee, imagine it under Procaccino." Marchi, a.

48-year-old state senator also running under the banner of the Conservative Party, said, "We've given the people a choice and they've made their selection. This is a city in a tragic pattern and we propose to reverse it." Lab Sale Foughl Buffalo EDP Technology Inc. of Washington, D. C. has filed papers in U.

S. District Court to block any move by Cornell University to sell Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory to the state. was elected over a more moderate opponent. In conceding defeat, Lindsay said, "The Republican Party may have this night given our banner to a ban of ultraright men, to a small minority in concert with the Conservative Party, who will in fact destroy this party unless they are repudiated. "THE MAJORITY of our citizens want something better than the forces of reaction and backlash, which may have this evening taken control of both of the major parties in this city." Lindsay added, "There is a mood of hostility in this city and this nation and that mood has apparently been heard tonight.

But reason will triumph and so will we." Another loser was Pulitzer-prize winning author Norman Mailer, who ran for the Democratic nomination on a platform based on turning New York into the 51st state. WITH ALL 5,286 precincts counted, Marchi had 111,725 votes and Lindsay 106,358 in the Republican primary. In the Democratic primary, with all 5,286 precincts counted, Procaccino had 252,283, Wagner 221,605, Mailer 41,136, Bronx Borough President Herman Badillo 215,381 and Rep-resenative James Scheuer 38,631. Since those first raids, the B52s have dropped more than one million tons of bombs on North Vietnamese and Vict Cong forces and bases ranging from the Mekong Delta in South Vietnam to North Vietnam's southern panhandle. Use of the big bombers in a guerrilla war in jungles has drawn some sharp criticism.

The B52s fly out of bases in Guam, Okinawa and Thailand. Each sortie a flight by one plane costs an estimated $30,000. This figures out to about $1.5 billion for the four-year bombing campaign, not counting maintenance costs for the 100 bombers. The Strategic Air Command says it never has lost one of the $8 million bombers to enemy ground fire, but seven of the bombers have been lost in air collisions and on landing and takeoff. On the first B52 mission, two Stratofortresses collided and crashed in the Pacific, killing eight crewmen.

Workers Return Glen Falls ITI Local 155 of the United Paper Makers and Paper Workers union returned to work today after a twoday strike against the Finch, Pruyn Co. paper mill. the Security Council is expected to examine in detail the U. S. position.

The sources added the United States has begun what it called preliminary consultation with NATO allies on the anticipated talks with the Soviet Union. IT WAS EXPECTED that after the National Security Council bestows approval on the U. S. posture, Rogers will approach Soviet representatives in Washington on setting specific dates and place for beginning the negotiations. Geneva, Switzerland, has been mentioned in diplomatic quarters as a likely neutral site for the talks.

Gerard Smith, director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, has been designated U. S. negotiator. Nixon is planning a news conference Thursday evening during which he may comment on the administration's progress towards opening the long-awaited talks.

Associated Press WIREPHOTO. GETTING MORAL SUPPORT Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York City talks to his wife, Mary, after learning he lost in the primaries. to? mmmmmtmmmmmmmmmmlmmm SALE ENDS JUNE 28, 1969 SORRY NO DEALERS We reserve the right to LIMIT QUANTITIES Nixon was joined by Secre tary of State William P. Ro gers, Defense Secretary Mel-vin R.

Laird and security adviser Dr. Henry A. Kissinger at the council meeting to examine the government study of negotiations with the Soviets on limiting offensive and defensive missile systems. The study has been in progress since January. Rogers reportedly, indicated to Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin last week the United States hoped to begin talks on limiting missiles by the end of July.

DOBRYNIN LEFT for Moscow at the end of last week for general consultation with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. It was not known when the Soviet envoy would return. Administration so.rces indicated National Security Council review of the U. S. Negotiating position probably would not be completed until a second meeting is held on the subject next week.

In the interim a review committee of Panthers- (Continued From Page 1A) He said it is estimated the number does not exceed 4,000. "The subcommittee has the names of about 2,000 identified members and has obtained the arrest record of approximately 350 officers and members of the Black Panther party," he said. "Of this number about 90 per cent have been convicted of crimes of violence." Two defectors from the party were scheduled to follow the police captain in testimony before the subcommittee, which is probing urban and campus violence in the United States. The investigation is being directed by Sen. John L.

McClellan, chairman of the subcommittee. The panel's previous hearings were devoted to the radical Students for a Democratic Society, which has also come under new attack by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for allegedly following a Communist blueprint to disrupt war production. Hoover, writing in a labor union newspaper, said the summer "work-in" issued by SDS is actually a document originally drafted by pro-Red Chinese American Communists. Hoover's charges aeainst SDS are being published in the weekly newspaper of the million-member AFL-CIO International Association of Machinists.

In describing the CDS manual for infiltrating industry this summer, Hoover said: "It is, in fact, a manual issued some two years ago by the Progressive Labor Partv. the pro-Peking wing of communism in the United States, as a blueprint of instructions for Communist infiltration into industry and labor." A New Angle Utica Deputy Police Chief John W. Clark of Utica, recently suspended by the city on a charge of wiretapping without a warrant, had been worrking with the FBI on a case with Mafia implications, his lawyer said yesterday. fSTscop DESENEX MOUTHWASH pa i DeseneM 17 ez. Betrte Mfi.

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The 1st and 2nd brigades of the 9th Division will leave Vietnam, while the 3rd will remain. The U.S. Command also identified four nondivisional Army units, totaling about 2,000 men, that will be redeployed by the end of August. They are the 86th Engineer Battalion (Construction); 6th Battalion, 56th Artillery (air defense-Hawk missiles); 70th Engineer Company, and the 1097th Transportation Company (medium boat). The command said their destination in the United States will be announced later.

The announcement said these units make up the remainder of the 4,000 nondivisional Army personnel to be withdrawn. The other 2,000 are in Army Reserve and Army National Guard units. The command gave the following strengths of forces to be pulled out of Vietnam and their destinations: 2nd Brigade, 9th Division 4,000 men to be sent to the United States and inactivated. Headquarters, 9th Division and 1st Brigade 7,400 men, to be sent to Hawaii. Army Reserve and Army National Guard units 2,000 men, to be sent to the United States and demobilized.

Nondivisional Army support units men, to be sent to the United States and inactivated. Four Navy vessels and Navy support personnel 1,820 men, to be sent to the United States! aml tne pacific Marine Regimental Landing Team 98,000 men, to be sent to Okinawa. A Marine tactical fighter squadron 400 men, to be sent to Japan. 100 Years Old Berkeley, Cal. The.

University of California began life 100 years ago with 10 students at Berkeley. that they be prosecuted on misdemeanor charges in city court. City Judge James J. Clynes Jr. took no immediate action on Alexis' motion.

He gave Alexis until July 18 to file a written brief and the district attorney's office until Aug. 1 to file an answer. The seizure of the Willard Straight student union by black students on April 19 was a highlight of campus unrest at Cornell. When the students walked out of the building after the second day, they were armed with guns and other weapons. Earlier this month, Cornell trustees went along with Dr.

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fir 7 Mff. Liquid COVER CREAM (J Hosel 30 OFF ON ALL FILM DEVELOPING DONE IN PLAYTEX tampons SUPER ef 30 iaf. Si. Price 1.88 no P'aytex- Ithaca A lawyer asked City Court today to dismiss charges filed against 18 black students accused of taking part in the seizure of the student union at Cornell University in mid-April. Attorney George Alexis of New York City said the charges of second degree trespass fail to give the source of the information and don't spell out details of the alleged crime.

He also said the state violated the due process clause of the constitution by selecting 18 students to prosecute. Over 100, he said, participated in the demonstration. Alexis said he expected to ask permission to examine the grand jury records of county court. The grand jury had refused to indict the students and recommended, instead, FINISHING DEPARTMENT 1 NOW OUR PHOTO COURT STREET BINGHAMT0N cjTuT ulru. apLD IB Mon.

and Thurs. 9 to 9 Sat. 9 to 5:30.

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