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Daily News from New York, New York • 80

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
80
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

16 DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1970 Mh Fdm Don Dfe Memtel 1m By THOMAS POSTER Mayor Lindsay, under pressure to take sides in the gubernatorial race, wants to stay neutral this year, City Hall aides close to the mayor said yesterday. "He has not made up his mind ed with the mayor a possible en dorsement of Democrat-Liberal Arthur J. Goldberg, insisted that Lindsay personally would prefer as yet," said Sid Davidoff, Lindsay's special assistant. "As of now he is neutral." Other aides, who have discuss- where Senate Majority Leader Earl W. Brydges and Assembly Speaker Perry Duryea could crush any Lindsay program in Albany, much to the delight of upstate and Long Island lawmakers.

Over this weekend, Lindsay expects to spend much time considering the problem. On Monday, he will stump in Buffalo for Goodell, where Erie County GOP chief Al Billanca has asked for a meeting with the mayor to urge Lindsay to endorse Rockefeller. minuses, of an endorsement of Goldberg or Rockefeller. On the Goldberg side, he has seen a dull campaign that could be pulled out of its doldrums if the mayor would take an active role and unleash his army of volunteers headed by Davidoff. Then There's Albany But repudiating Rockefeller to sit out the race.

Pressure From All Sides The mayor is under heavy pressure from Liberal Party leader Alex Rose, reform Demo crats and Howard Samuels, the would draw the wrath of the GOP leadership in the Legislature, offtrack betting czar, to bolt the Republican Party and back Goldberg. AsUs State Revenue Bill Register Today "A three-day voter registration perod will open today at 1,500 polling places. The hours will to 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. The polls will be open again 'Monday and Tuesday, from 5:30 p.m.

to 10:30 p.m. It will be the last time that New Yorkers may register to vote in November. More than 3 million voters are now registered in the city. But. on the other side, Sen.

Jacob K. Javits. State Attorney General Louis J. Lefkowitz and Sen. Charles E.

Goodell are bending the mayor's ear to endorse Rockefeller or even to stay neu State Sen. John J. Marchi (R-S. announced yesterday he would prefile a bill in the Legislature calling for a national convention to draft a revenue-sharing amendment to the United States Constitution. The senator said the amendment process, initiated by two thirds of the states, as called for in his bill, is "the only legal method" the states have to compel Washington to share tax revenues with the states, cities and other local governments.

tral. Lindsay has been weighing the pros and cons, the (pluses and Sid Davidoff "Am of now mayor is neutral" (Bmidl Wkm PJuSlllillliaDlDGD StMy By RICHARD MATHIEU United States Sen. Charles Goodell turned on his chief political Vice President Agnew, yesterday and demanded that President Nixon muzzle the outspoken Kpirt Jolts Javifts By JEROME CAHILL Washington, Oct. 2 (NEWS Bureau) Individual cases of malnutrition are common in New York State at vice president and keep him out of the New York election. Goodell, running as both a Republican and a liberal, said that Agnew, who had accused the sen ator of being a member of an awful coalition of radical liber 1 socio-economic levels but are particularly prevalent among the poor, a panel of medical school deans said today in a report to Sen.

Jacob K. Javits people who disagree with the ad se Although the panel said ministration are somehow like the people who 'trash' campuses and burn banks and blow up rious widespread malnutrition was not evident, it found that mathematics centers." Responding to a question, Good ell said he had asked the Presi- "pockets of dent to remain neutral in the Senate race. But he added that if Agnew continued his attacks, "we are going up in political flames before this election. I think the woods ar.e on fire right now and the President should come in." Goodell said: "What is at stake is the very right of a senator to disagree. What is involved is the right of people to differ with official policies.

That sort of rhetoric is an unpleasant reminder of the chilling political climate of the early 1950s." He said he referred to Sen. Joseph McCarthy's fight against alleged Communists in government. Goodell called for a "moratorium on inflammatory and divisive rhetoric." And he promised not to take Agnew's attack "lying overt undernu- 2,200 children admitted each year to Lincoln Hospital in the Bronx are suffering from anemia, underweight and stunted growth. A 10-year study of 5,597 low-income families in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn showed 14 had anemia, with the highest incidence among Negro children below the age of 9. A preliminary study by Met trition are present" in rural and suburban localities as well as urban centers in the state.

Javits said the ropolitan Hospital in Harlem report which he AYb requested NEWS photo by Ed Glorandlno Sen. Goodell gestures during press conference yesterday. found 164 children below the growth curve characteristics of other communities. down." based on studies already un Rocky Raps Outsiders Gov. Rockefeller warned yesterday that outsiders should stay out of New York's Republican politics.

Although Rockefeller did not mention his name, the remarks obviously were directed at Vice President Agnew, who had attacked Sen. Charles Goodell as a "radical liberal" who "had left his party." Rockefeller, who waB Joined by Goodell at a fund-raising reception of the Albany County Republican Committee said: The only way we can win is by attracting voters across the board." Goodell is opposed in the sen In Suffolk County, doctors Sen. Jacob K. Javits der way at the serving high percentages of wel seven medical atorial race by Democratic Rep. Richard L.

Ottinger and Conservative candidate James L. Buckley. schools, was "shocking," and un fare clients reported that most of the poor people they treat suf istration on several key issues, especially Vietnam. Buckley spoke to a group of cab drivers at the Belmore Cafeteria, 28th St. and Park Ave.

South. He called for installation Agnew is scheduled to attend a derscored the need for expanded programs of nutrition education and food for the needy, as well fer from diseases or illnesses related to poor diet. fund-raising luncheon in the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel on Monday. In N.Y., de as efforts to improve living con The funds are apparently ear ditions. of strongboxes, bulletproof shields, and two-way radios in cabs to increase protection for ficiency anemia afflicted one out of five pre-school children from the inner city and the same pro marked for candidates who back the Nixon-Agnew administration.

Goodell has split with the admin- Chief findings of the One third of the 2,000 to the drivers. portion of young children of migrant workers. Almost half of 375 vounc Meiv Statement Leaves 747 Safety HHp in the Air mothers studied at Syracuse were found to be anemic and three out of 10 of their children were By FRANK VAN RIPER anemic at the age of 1. Washington, Oct. 2 (NEWS Bureau) The Federal Aviation Administration in Most-Common Cases The deans said the most com sisted today that the 747 jumbo jet is one of the safest planes in the air.

despite a warn with a special government-industry task force to get new reports on problems with 747 engines. An associate of consumer advo ing by the National Transportation Safety Board that the big plane's engines operate mon individual cases of poor nu- at "near critical temperatures. trition involved neglected or Acting Administrator Oscar cate Ralph Nader declared yesterday in a letter to Transporta Sliff said. He conceded, however, that the 747 engine, during its Bakke all but discounted the safety board's finding that sev eral problems with the plane had tion Secretary John A. Volpe that a "conspiracy of silence existed between the FAA, the airlines iirst eight months of commercial operation, has had more "shutdowns" than earlier en occurred "as the result of (en pine) operation at higher than and firms involved in the manu.

gines, including those on the abused children, pregnant women, the elderly, drug and alcohol addicts, hospital admissions and the chronically ill. "The major health problems among the poor in New York related to diet and nutrition appear to be dental caries, obesity and, possibly, hypertension," they add desirable temperatures." Boeing 707. facture" of the 747. However, neither tsakke nor Sliff pointed out, however, that Bakke conceded that the agen Richard S. Sliff, deputy director cy gets reports of engina troub the 707 engine had been used by of the agency's flight standards the military before being mount les from the industry by agreeing not to make them public.

He add' ed on commercial aircraft, while the 747 engine had never been ed, noting that heart disease is ed, however, that in his opinion, remedial steps had been taken flown regularly before com more prevalent in New York Stat mercial use. and New York City than any with all the problems so far uncovered in the engines and said where else in the nation. 5 Billion Safe Miles Bakke, who was seated next to he felt the 747 was perfectly safe. schools participating in the re Bakke volunteered that he and a scale model of a 747 and a port were Albert Einstein College of Medicine (Bronx), Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn. his wife recently returned from Europe in a 747.

brightly colored sign saying service, would say flatly that they disputed the board's findings, which were announced "yesterday. Inspection Ordered Several weeks ago, the agency ordered the nation's air lines to inspect the Pratt Whitney engines of all 747s following engine failures and fires on two jumbo jets an American Airlines plane and an Air France jet. Both planes had been able to land safely, with no injuries to passengers. "It is not unusual to have en- gines shut, down jn and this plane is designed to. accbrti-nlodate these failures safely?" i "step into the next decade of air Mount Sinai School of Medicine (Manhattan -Central Harlem).

Senate OKs Road Bill Washington, Oct. 2 (AP) The New York Medical College (Man Senate unanimously passed a bill travel," declared: "We've flown 5 billion passenger hours without hurting anybody on the aircraft yet." hattan-East Harlem), the State University of New York at Stonv today providing massive federal aid for the nation's highways, including $4 billion a year for two Brook Health Science Center (Snf- "Without exception, safety folk County), the Universitv of ajr commerce is our No. 1 pri Rochester chool of Medicine and years to help finish the interstate highway The meas- Oscar Bakke bein nurt" Bakke said. He added the Upstate Medi- that the agency' had 1erf meeting ure now goe1.

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