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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 15, 1960)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. FRIDAY. JULY 15, 19(10 Everyone In SouUiern Oregon - Road Ths Mail Tribune0 ?ub!lHhcd Dftlly except Snturdny" by 33 North Fir St., Ph SP 3-0141 ROBERT W RUH1. Editor HERB GREY Advorlitlim Manager GERALD T LATHAM Bu Msr K1HC W ALLEN JR . Mas Editor KARL H ADAMS. Uliy linnnr u arm V riHPMAN. Tclee Editor RICHARD JKWETT. Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Women's Editor DALE JKICK&UN.yrcuiauonniJi An Indenendent Nrwuoaoer Entered as second class matter at Aledtora. ureson. unncr ci i March 3. 1897 RimRrmpTION RATES By Mall In Advance Copy 10c Daily and Sunday 1 year aia w Dally and Sunday mos 8 00 Dnllv and Sunday 3 mos 4.25 Sunday Only One year $4.20 By Cairier In Advance Medlord Ashland, Central Point Eaele Point. Jacksonville Gold Hill Phoenix Shady Cove. Rome Riv er Talent and on motor routes. Dally and Sunday 1 year S18 00 Da'.tv and Sunday 1 mo t.?0 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c AllTerms Cash in Advance "official Paper of" City of Medfori Offlrjal Paper of Jackson County United "Press International Full Leased Wire U.P.I Telephoto Nevsptcturei ""MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OFCIRCULAT10N-S XdvefilsinB Representative! WEST HOLIDAY CO. INC Of fices in New York Chlcaco De troit. San Francisco. Los Anseles. Seattle. Portland St. Louis. At lanta. Vancouver. B.C NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL E D IT O R I A I Flight of Time Medlord and Jackson County History lro.il the tiles ol The Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO July IS, 1950 (Saturday) An Eagie Point man was killed and power service from Ashland to Crescent City was interrupted yesterday when a 120,000-volt transmission line was snapped by a falling tree. Meat, sugar and bread prices increased today In Medford. ; 20 YEARS AGO July 15. 1940 (Monday) The Ashland High school grandstand was destroyed by fire early this morning caus ing an estimated loss of $1,500. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The Cuban election Sunday was not as rough as expected, with only 23 wounded. A lively Saturday night on the Pacific highway would show more sanguinary results. SO YEARS AGO July IS. 1930 (Tuesday) Irrigation water will be ro tated among users in the Med- iord district as the Fish lake suoply is exhausted. A concentrator will be put into operation at the Blue Ledge mine. 40 YEARS AGO July IS. 1920 (Thursday) Game wardens report that deer are plentiful in the hills around the valley and good bunting is assured. The price of wheat dropped in Medford, and the rest of the coast, to $2.60 per bushel amid wild trading schemes. SO YEARS AGO July 15, 1910 (Friday) Eugene Ely, who put on an airshow in this city during May, fell out of his aeroplane at 500 feet yesterday over Winnipeg, Man., and is report ed, o be dying. A rumored delay In the construction of the Pacific and Eastern railroad in this city has been denied by the owners. Vhai's Your I.Q.? Nina or ten correct is superior; even or eight is excellent; five er six is good. . 1. Which state is partly di vided by Chespeake Bay? I. In what country is the City of Hanoi? 3. An electric motor will rot' operate in a vacuum; true or false? 4. When you order a dinner in a restaurant, item by item, are you ordering table d hotc" or "a la carte"? .. Wnat color shirts were worn by Hitler's original fol lowers? 8. Name the capital of Ar kansas, 7. A contest in which two teams try to spell words cor rectly is called a spelling-? 8. In which European city Is the Champs Elysces? 9. Spain is bounded on the west by Portugal and what ocean? 10. "The Flying Dutchman" opera was composed by whom? Answers: I. Maryland. 2, Indo-China. 3. False. 4. "a la carle." 5. Brown shirls. 6, Lit, lie Rock. 7. Bee. 8. Paris, France. 9. Atlantic. 10. Rich ard Wagner. NAME ARMY CHIEF Nicosia, Cyprus-ltlPII-Cyprus named a Greek veteran of three wars as its new army commander Thursday. Gen. Mcnelaos Pantclidcs served in both world wars . and tht Korean conflict. The Should the Republican convention nominate Richard M. Nixon (and it won tV), the nation will be laced with an in teresting choice this fall. Both candidates will smart, personable, expert At least these are been shown by both Vice President Nixon and Senator John F. Kennedy up to the present time. A POLITICAL observer of our acouaintance ( q Romihlimin ltr that by far the most stirring and effective oratory uiuiut; Lite -Lycruiuiiaiiv; wuiivciiiiuii ou xat una week nas been the speeches nominating and sec- l? A Jl ..' n Ol oiicung Aiuai Ej. oievenson. If it had been a convention of uncommitted riolao-iilpc wo havo u fpolinrr thou wmiM Vijiva been swayed by the pleas tne otners. But, as the balloting evident that the Kennedv votes nailed down, and 1 L it rumors aoouc waninsr votes" was nothing but THE efficiency of the amazing. The same, obviously, machine. Whether or not this is something no one can haps, at this awesome point in history, we need a leader who can be cold and realistic and, if necessary, ruthless. We would have preferred to see men of great er humanity and sympathy and genuine under standing leading the two parties into this No vember s battle. RUT, faced with a choice between two very u similar men, one must make up his mind con cerning them on the basis of their records, their positions, and on the issues. Extraneous issues undoubtedly will be much in evidence between now and November, and may indeed cany much weight with the voters in making-their choice. Family background, religion, relative wealth, personal associates all these will be brought up, discussed, mulled over. But they are, essentially, extraneous to the big decision which man will do a better job of leading America, and of advancing her cause in a turbulent and threatened world ; which man has the character to mobilize the nation's forces to do the things that need doing, and which man has the broader and truer vision of what Amer ica is and what it should be. E.A. Our usual quota of hour or so a week. But it so long and so hard coming down with square eye-balls. b.A. We don't have to worry about the health of the Democratic candidates. Do we? Johnson's supporters said Kennedy suffers from Addison's disease, and Kennedy supporters point out John son had a near-fatal heart attack a few years ago. Maybe now they both wish they'd kept their mouths shut. E.A. The Task in Africa The near-anarchy of the Congo today, and the western world's essential inability to do very much about it, quickly and directly, is a sort of microcosmic view of the dilemmas of sub-Saharan Africa as a whole. It is obvious that the Congolese nation is not yet ready for full self government. How could it be? A colony for 80 years, it is reported to have only a few residents who have a high school level education, and even fewer with college. It has no trained administrators, politician's, teachers, professional people those who keep the wheels of any organized society turning. A ND yet, with the rest of Africa, the Congolese desperately want freedom and independence, without fully understanding that with freedom goes responsibility; with independence goes a self-control and self-restraint. The same situation, to a greater or lesser ex tent, is time in many other newly-free African nations. In some areas, notably those formerly under British and French control, the native populace has been given some a little training and ed ucation, some preparation for freedom. They didn't even have this chance in the Congo. A ND all the old bitternesses, hates, resentments are now coming to the surface, after Beligum, against her will but with as good a show of grace as possible, turned the Congo loose. How could it be expected that an uneducated people, many of them not even literate, and many still governed by tribal laws and tabus and super stitions, would show responsibility and self re straint? If any solution is to be achieved it must be done through the United Nations. But no one need expect an overnight solution, except per haps in the immediate restoration of order. The dilemma is this: Newly-freed people must be restrained for their own and others' pro tection; the illiterate must be taught, and quickly; people passionate for freedom must be guided to accept the responsibilities of freedom. It is an awesome task. But the alternative is chaos. E.A. Choice is anyone willing to bet be young, good looking, and ruthless. the qualities which have fVto wuiA nrrrpoH with n of Mrs. Roosevelt and proceeded, it became forces reallv had their that all the gossip and 1 il. tl 1 1 il - P sirencrn, ana loss 01 gossip and rumors. Kennedy machine is can be said of the Nixon is good for the country now say for sure. Per - blooded and decisive TV viewing is about ani this week we've watched we feel as though we're Dennis the 'NOW MUCH WOULD YA CHARGE TO BuUO A HOUSE FOB A WHITE RAT NAMED fLOYO'l' Communications I.etteri to the Editor must bear the name and address ol the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the light to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for pub lication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necossarily represent the views of the paper: in fact the contrary is often the case. No 111 Effects? To the Editor: I am boiling mad again, because one of tne neighbors told me we could not sell our fruit or garden produce or give It way be cause the state has condemned the vicinity where we live. I am sure the siate sanitary man would have informed all the people to that effect, if true. The people that are taking petitions around to annex us to the city of Medford, arc- scaring people half to death telling them they would be hauled into court if they did not sign the petition. Some people are just plain fools, and believe it. We have had a garden and fruit since 1948 and have al ways used irrigation water. I always take off my shoes and wade stocking footed while irrigating. I've seen children wading in the ditches near my home with no ill effects. The water cannot be so bad, as pictured. Anyway, it is about time the irrigation company cov ered the ditches with tile as they are unsightly and dan gerous for small children fall ing into them and drowning. So Dear People, know the person that is circulating the petition. Asjt them their name and address or better still, go to Hobbs Texaco Service Station on West Main. He has both petitions down there. He is honest. You can trust him. Sign your petition there, and be safe. Do it, today, Lillian Green, 2411 Sunset Court, Medford Unreasonable Discipline To the Editor: I would like to commend the life guards at Hawthorne Pool for taking their jobs so seriously, or, should I say, letting their au thority go to their heads? I think it's about time someone spoke up for the kids who frequent the pool. Many of them receive laps (walking around the pool 20 or 30 times) or are "kicked out." What for? Splashing wa ter! Isn't that part of swim ming? I can certainly understand them being reprimanded for running or shoving, but not for having a good time. That is what the pool is for, isn't it? There's little enough for the youngsters of Medford to do (certainly nothing that doesn't cost at least 25 cents) without having to put up with life guards that apparently enjoy "throwing their weight around." I've talked to several youngsters who think the dis cipline of the pool is quite unreasonable and many of them refuse even to swim there because it's "no fun." There are a lot of boys and girls who do go to the pool so maybe kicking a few of them out doesn't make much difference, but It does to the ones who get kicked out and after a while il gets a little old. I' think the life guards there had belter lake another look at their list of "duties" and case up a little. Young sters cooperate bettor If they in turn arc shown a little co operation. They also respect authority as long as those having it do not abu.se it by using it so often il no longer is a form of discipline but is a common occurrence. Mrs. B. J. Wyall . 1122 West Eight si, Medford, Menace Kennedy's Religion To the Editor: The nomi nation of John Kennedy as Democratic presidential can didate could mean the end of religious liberty in America. While any man has a right to his own religion, I feel that I have just as much right to defend myself from a church system which would destroy me if necessary for refusing to acknowledge its power. This is what Catholics do to day, 1960. where they have power in Spain and through out Latin America. The rec ord is readily available to any who care to read. . Senator Kennedy is not a free moral agent. He sur rendered his conscience to the Catholic church, and must follow its priests on questions where the church takes sides. The penalty for refusal is excommunication. This sup posedly would damn him to everlasting hell. Through con fession, the Catholic church can control Senator Kennedy on any issue it chooses to stand on. Rome's first interest is to unite all churches under the Pope. The World Council of Churches now is considering such an invitation from the present Pope. This probably will go on faster now. Those evangelical, funda mental, Bible-believing Christians are heretics. Liberal Protestants and Catholics believe society would be better without them. A world super church would soon eliminate them. If these "heretics" are right to trust God to save them, He will. Soon Christ will come to take us Home. Parker Bailey, 542 'i 'A' st. Ashland, Ore. Editor's note: The Mall Tribune is not going to en courage a public debate in the "Communications" column on the subject of religion in poli tics. But it undoubtedly will be discussed during the com ing campaign, and temperate, thoughtful letters on the sub ject will be printed, so long as they bring up matters of substance, and are not repe titious rehashes of old charges. In light of the letter print ed above, Senator Kennedy's public statements on the sub ject are pertinent: On Feb. 18, 1959, he said, "Whatever one's religion In his private life, for the office holder nothing takes prece dence over his oath to uphold the Constitution and all its parts Including the First Amendment and the strict separation of church and stale . . . I believe . . , that the separation of church and state is fundamental to our Ameri can concept and heritage . . ." On April 21, 1960, he said, "There is only one legitimate question underlying all the rest: would you, as President of the United Slates, be re sponsive in any way to ec clesiastical pressures or obli gations of any kind that might in any fashion Influence or interfere with your conduct of that office in the national Interest? I have answered that many times. My answer was - and Is - 'NO'." YANK TOURISTS ARRIVE Moscow - (IIPIl - An Ameri can group of 250 tourists landed in Leningrad Thurs day from the cruise ship Vic lorlo, the Tass news agency reported. The group Is tour ing European ports. Kennedy's 'Balancing' of Ticket; Not All Happy By LYLE C. WILSON Los Angeles HOT - The pro cess by which Son. Lyndon II. Johnson became tho Dem ocratic vice presidential nom- tu'o tu run with Sen. John F. Ken n c d y is known as bal ancing the ticket. It is by bal ancing t It c ticket t h I politicians be- viu c wiison come strange Cuban-Russian Involvement Makes Monroe 'Mara of Week' By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor The man of the weekt James Monroe, fifth presi dent of the United Slates (1817-18251. The Place: Washington. Congress, The Quote: "The Ameri can continents are no long er subjects lor any new co lonial establishments." On Doc. 2, 1823, in a mes sage to Congress, President Monroe enunciated tho policy which since has become known as the Monroe Dui trine. Never 1 n c urporntod into law or treaty, il none t h e I c s s be came accepted as a U.S. stale. IMIH. NKWSOM tnent of policy effective to this day. This week Soviet Premier Nikitn Khrushchev sought to bury it, just as he once prom ised to bury capitalism. What Khrushchev Thinks "We consider that the Mon roe Doctrine has outlived its time, has outlived itself, has M Today & Tomorrow By Walter THE QUIET DEMOCRATS For a Democratic conven tion this one is, as of Tues day morning, exceptionally quiet and undramutic. Where is Armageddon? Where are the ideologi cal c 1 a s h cs, tho sertlnmil conflicts, and duels which have so regu larly in the past made the D c m o c ratic n n ,i linn linn Walttr J . Liopmimi such a great show? For the old timers there is something missing, and presumably therefore there must be something wrong, especially In view of the fact that the convention is nominating a controversial young man in a time of world wide turbulence. What Is the explanation of this unusual puzzling harm ony? There are those who ex plain it by the devil theory of politics. In the devil theory everything you do not like Is due to the sinister machina tions of a hidden conspiracy, be it the Communists, the Catholics, the Masons, the Jews, the Wall Street bank ers, the United Nations, or Waller Reuthcr. For the devil theorists anything they arc opposed to must have been plotted, paid for, and carried out by an enemy. The whole history of man is one long unceasing battle with con spiracies engineered by the devil and his agents. For those who see life In this way the absence of con flict at Los Angeles means, can only mean, that the con vention has been rigged, that the delegates have been bought, bullied, and seduced by young Kennedy and his father's money. The result, they .say, is a prclcr-naturally quiet convention. - . rro reject this view is not to forget that the Kennedy campaign has been rough, and to suppose thai he ha collected his delegates by nothing but polite persuasion and the unanswerable brief ing of the professors from Harvard and tho Massachu setts Institute of Technology. The Kennedy tactics to push aside his rivals have been rough but they have been the normal tactics when the game of politics Is played lo win. The Kennedy tactics do not differ from the tactics Nixon has used to push aside Rocke feller. It would be naive to suppose that money and its equivalent In the promise of favors lo come Is not used in the game of politics. But these tactics have al ways been employed when there was a real contest be cause the succession was open. Johnson la no mean i mm Choice of bed follows. Tho political fuels of tills Detnoi'i'iillc Nu tiouiil convention included these: - The Southern .states were sorely itfft'onled by the par ly platform. - Organized labor, Negro spokesmen and the Democrat ic left wing pronounced the platform n good one. - Some Negroes c.iUel II the best ever, - A platform which cm forms lo the political Id -as of Negroes, organized labor and 'the Democratic left wing died, so lo say, it n a t u r a death. Now the remains of this doctrine should be burled To which White House Press Secretary James C. llagerty had this succinct reply: "That's what he thinks." . Not for 50 years had the Monroe D.n .rine boon so dl roctly uttac' od and not for more than 100 years hud foroli'n iwor so directly clinl- long;l It. It wis a coincidence that the Monroe Doctrine evolved rln riiiy another period of sir:!ti with Russia. C.anst Russia then was rx- tendlng her settlements south ward from Alaska, and by im perial order sought to bun navigation and fishing within 1110 miles of North America's northwest coast. Monroe's message to Con gress was a denunciation of the Czar's order and a warn ing to other European powers against any attack on the newly-independent nations of Lat in America. While the doctrine never ws written Into law, its spirit was contained in three Inler Amerlcan treaties - the fllo Treaty of 1 047, the Bogota Charter of 1048 setting up the lippmann tractician hlinsolf, and he cer tainly does nol lack money. The rigging theory docs not explain the quiet of this con vention. ffUlE explanation, I venture - to think, must begin uv recognizing that I960 i.iin.i the passing of the old politi cal generation and the appear ance of the new. With Eisen hower and Truman the gener ation of the wor leaders is retired, and the generation of those who were in the war but too young to command -Kennedy and Nixon-are tak ing over. The harmony at Los Ange les about Kennedy can best be explained by looking at the part played by Adlal Stevenson. He is, one might say, a younger member of the older generation. It was his refusal to enter a combina tion to block Kennedy, and not the rigging of the con vention, which brought about the stampede to Kennedy. The comparative harmony on issues, which have in the post divided the party irre concilably, is due, I believe, lo the passage of time. The party has not settled all Us Issues. But II has outgrown them lo a point where, especially In tho field of civil rights, there has been an enormous change of feeling in the younger gen eration. Above all, in place of the old issues there are new ones-revolving around the problem of national power and of public necd-whlch are much more inleresting. This shift of Interest is a national, not at all a merely partisan, Democratic phenom enon. It is manifest in the Rockefeller insurgency which has inside the Republic.'! -i parly fur more sympathi. -n, than it now has avowed sup porters. All in all then, the Demo crats feel, perhaps rightly, that they are riding Hie wave of Ihe future. (c) I960 New York Herald Tribune Inc. in a TRIUMPH TR3 AT ONE SEE YOUR TRIUMPH DEALER NOW! Three days accommoda tion! for two ponons FREE at one of then re lorti, with purchiio of new Triumph TR3. Hurry! Johnson can have Utile appeal to while Southern Democrats - Kentieduy's nomination for president equally with tho platform, was satisfactory to or"'iolnl labor and the Dt'inocntlc left wing al lli"tt' li ihere was raised some riicsllon whether Kennedy could win the northern No Kioos. Kennedy's choice of John son ns a iiiitnlng mate Is, first, a recognition of an un commonly able man. It also: Socks lo soothe Iho trim bled South, lo hold the elec- Organization of A in e r i c u n Slutes, and the Caracas Reso lution of 1054. The Caracas Resolution spe cifically banned establishment In tho western hemisphere of a state dominated by Interna tional communism. It was this I n I t o r point which particularly roused Khrushchev's linger, and at the sumo time gave a possible Inkling of the course lo be fol lowed by tho Soviet Union In its relations with a Communist-oriented Cubii. "There lire no Communists ill Cubii." Khrusliehrv sulci. Thus, by a denial of commu nism in Cubit, Khrushchev ap parently hoped to destroy in uclvanco tho possibility of Joint action by the American stales against tho Fidel Castro re gime within the framework of tho Caracas Hesolullon. Washington Report By WIUIAM MASSIVE . . . MECHANICAL Los Angeles - Massive. Me tallic. Monolithic. Mechanical. These lire the adjectives to 1 describe this Dccnoc ratic Niilionnl Con vention, which is surely t h c strung est of this genera tion and may be even of this century. Excitement hern really is lucking. Drama here rcully does not c:.it This is scene In which an enormously cure- I fill scn'c of organization has orought a very young-ana in many ways a very able-man to the nomination for the presidency by the odd, spraw ling, mid ordinarily Illogical instrumentality which is the Democratic Party. No convention In my time, at least, has seemed so fore gone in Its result-that Is, of course, wherever the prob lem has not been simply that of renominating a sitting president. No convention In my lime has been on so clear and so obvious and so prede termined a track. FJEMOCRATIC conventions " historlcully-agaln with the exception of those simply re nominating presidents already In office-have been scenes of minor chaos and major strug gle and of a whole mixed and crazy series of hopes and dreams. But this convention has been one of a cold and abso lutely fixed order, II has been like a play In which the crisis of the middle act and of the final act has, in fuel, no clement of crisis at all. The first acl is the second act. And the third acl Is the first act. And the second acl is both the first act and the third act. Not often has the element of question and doubt been so absent. Democrats have for years complained and indeed right ly "omplalned-of the organi sation man, of the man In the gray flannel suit, of Madison Avenue and of all the various techniques of shaping and controlling public opinion. In Los Angeles, II Is not perhaps Madison Avenue-for Madison Avenue Is common ly supposed to mean Republi can Avenue. But If il Is nol OP THfSP FaAftiniK Dccnorc m William a. niille SPORTS fteno, Nbvsos I CARCl! STARDUST HOTEL AT 0NB 0F THS MUCOUS RESORTS ) L!1H! !N KEITH SCHULZ TRIUMPH SALES Across from SP Paiiongar Depot 116 N. Front St. Declared to ra I votes of several ii for grieved Southern stales tho I HUH Democratic ticket. - Seeks to reassure " o niolo conservative votem na tionwide that Ihey would have a voice In a Kennedy ad-' ministration In opposition to the voice of the left wliux Americans for Democratic. Action (ADA). Tliul volen! would ho Johnson's. ; Johnson long was it curd currying now dealer, lie slip' pod lo vole for that Tiifl-llurt- ley Act and lo help puss It over Hurry S. Trtiiunn's veto.- The Doinociutlc loft wing, not-: ably ADA, opposos .loluuoir (or his labor record, for his- opposition to extreme legls-t liitlou In behalf of civil; rights, for his sympalhellc In--teres! In the oil and uas In-. thistiles of ills native Texas and, In general, for Ihe leuls--' lutlve record of the U.S. Son-f ale under his' Democratic leadership. , The Democrats hud plan- nod to make In this cuinpulgn : big thing of the Issue of : consiiiners-versus-thti oil and -gas Industries. They killed ! thul issue when Johnson . said lo Kenedy. "I wllll" They almost made an all- out, timiuulillcd bid for Iho voles of northern Negroes. espoclully In their plutform. ' Hut If Kennedy Is weak umong the northern Negroes " Johnson is weaker. Much wenker. AVIATION PIONEER DIES Ottawa - lltl'li - C. P, Ed- ' wards, 74, a pioneer In Can- udu's radio and civil aviation fields, died Wednesday. S. WHITE Madison Avenue, it is much more. For this is a place In ". which ul it single moment bus ; been gathered, all In nno ' piece, every Imssiblo modern luetic of pressure and per- ' suasion, gentle and otherwise. IN THE sense that nothing t succeeds like success, the ) campaign made for and by ; Son. John F. Kennedy tun -surely been a kllegllt muster- . piece. The point of the mo- nicnt Is not whether this 11 , bad or good. Indeed, lo those . who have always distrusted emotionalism in politics, this might be regarded us the final denial of emotionalism In ' politics. " Enormously able protest- slonully, as it Is, and enor- -inously efficient in terms of results, as it is, It still bus : something of tho character of a struggle without suspense . and of a contention without '. contention. What wo have scon here Is the end result of a plan of '. Incredible competence which has moved forward in a pre- " destined wny. There bus boon a single missing element. This ' Is the truditlonnl clement of ' wonder-who Is ahend nnd I how will It alt come out? It ; has been long evident who is r ahead. For those who believe . In planned politics, this lias ; been, surely, the muster work, the magnum opus of that . system. ; ITENNEDY Is not really dls liked here by any large number of Democratic dele gates, nor was he deeply op posed by ony large number. With his nomination herc and somehow this has been as sumed from the start as though It were a case where Tuesday followed Monday-he will go to the country as the choice of a cool and careful convenllon-und, Ironically, lo meet the choice of another cool and careful convention, that of the Republicans who in Chicago arc shortly going to nominate Vice-President Nixon as their man for the presidency. The one thing absolutely certain is tills: we shall have the most contained, and one of the most technically ex pert, campaigns of our his tory between two highly con tained rivals for the presi dency. (Copyright, I960, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) w SP 2-4756 TtOQA HOHI. CwtiBiy, Onion I