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Daily News from New York, New York • 199

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
199
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

By GENE SPAGNOLI Staff Correspondent of The News Albany, Sept. 14 The three candidates locked in a bitter struggle for the U.S. Senate met on the same platform for the first time today and the atmosphere was just as jolly as that at a clambake for most of the time. Calm and relaxed, Republican Sen. Charles Goodell, Democratic "-if, WMi-i fi "tf, 1-1 P5 PQ I to 1 a most during his campaigning was "public officials are no damn good." He said that he would encourage people's lobbies to go to Washington to help change the policies of the government and pointed to the Vietnam protests as an example of how it could be done.

Buckley agreed with Ottinger that the people were dissatisfied but said the remedy was to give more power to local government and not let "everything go to Washington." Wage-Price Controls Goodell said that was not a realistic aproach and said the federal government must be involved. He said that fedral funds were necessary to solve the problems affecting all areas of the country. Goodell and Buckley opposed wage and price controls; Ottinger favoi'ed them. Asked whether the $100,000 bail on the Black Panthers in New York was unconstitutional, Goodell and Ottinger said that it was, but Buckley said it was within the judge's right. Buckley added that it was outrageous that the court system keeps people in jail so long and urged reform of the court system.

On Direct Elections Ottinger and Goodell favored the direct election of the President but Buckley disagreed. When Buckley said the present method would do more to preserve the two-party system, Goodell laughed and clapped him on the shoulder and said, "You're for the two-party system." Buckley is reportedly cutting into Goodell's Republican strength. Rep. Richard Ottinger and Conservative Party candidate James Buckley handled the questions of a four-member panel at the New York State Publishers Association dinner in easy fashion and joked with one another. Only at the end of the hour-and-a-half program did testiness show as Goodell snapped sharply that he would go into Ottinger's war stand, "later in the campaign." Snipes at Buckley Ottinger, in his summary, also spoke more sharply than during the program as he said that Buckley "would have bombed China in a preemptive attack," would have invaded Cuba, and would support the Pentagon in its "very expensive" plans.

Goodell, Ottinger said, had been in the House with him and was a staunch conservative. He said Goodell had supported Goldwater and that his "real problem is one of identity. I don't know where he stands." During the question and answer period, Buckley said "it would not be surprising if I had the best wishes of the White House. The political facts of life are such that the administration would like to see someone who is in tune with its objectives." Goodell Nixon Goodell said that he "had changed his policies" and said he was proud of it. He said: "I stood up for Nixon when he was right and I stood up to him when he was wrong." Ottinger said that the people had lost faith in government and noted that the phrase he heard Associated Press Wirephoto Allen Xeuharth (1.) outgoing president of New York State Publishers Association, chats with senatorial candidates James L.

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About Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
18,846,294
Years Available:
1919-2024