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THE APPROACH |
For years, decades even, Troy has tried to get Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute students into the city to spend some time and, more
importantly, spend some money.
For as long, students and the college itself resisted every
effort, preferring to stay on the hill and look down The Approach as if it were
a nose at the lowly “townies” below. The residents of Troy, not known to
overlook a slight, looked back up The Approach at the “rich, spoiled kids” who
thought they were too good to rub elbows with those who chose “Troylet” as
their home rather than a pit stop enroute to bigger and better things – even the
moon. It’s a vicious cycle.
But all amour has a chink, and all rules have exceptions.
RPI, directly or indirectly, invested millions into the old Best Western and
the Proctors Theater and Chasan buildings. And Trojans have an indescribable yet
indisputable endearing quality about them – which is why I spent more awake
time in the Collar City than any other place on earth for more than 15 years –
and more students are slowly starting to hang out downtown.
The latest incident though is perhaps the most clear cut
example of the RPI student body assimilating itself into Collar City ways.
According to The Rensselaer
Polytechnic, the campus newspaper, five members of student government were caught on tape ripping down signs advocating for changes to the Rensselaer Union
Constitution that were on the ballot as a referendum. In all, according to the
newspaper, some 1,000 signs were ripped down campus wide.

Obviously, Troy is wearing off on RPI and I’m not just
talking about the most recent voter fraud scandal that saw eight indictments and three trials. Messing around with elections
goes back to at least 1893 and Bat Shea, a story turned into a book by Troy
author Jack Casey that includes ballot stuffing and murder. While I don’t think
anyone has committed murder over an election since, I know there have been variations
of ballot stuffing, outright forgeries and even dead people voting by absentee –
which isn’t that far from the truth but illegal just the same.
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JACKSON |
Maybe President Shirley Ann Jackson would serve the student body well to
have Troy political operatives like Bob Mirch, Tom Connolly, Mark Streb, Tom
Mathews, Bill McInerney, John Sweeney, Rich Crist, Steve Bogess, Ed McDonough, Bill Powers or
Tom Wade participate in her next Colloquy instead of someone like Supreme Court
Justice Antonin Scalia. They may not have the nationwide stature of a Scalia,
but they can teach the political neophytes on the hill some practical lessons
on how to mess with an election the proper way – or at least not get in too much trouble if
the envelope is pushed a bit too far.