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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 2, 1960)
f!TL TRIBtJNT, MEDFOBB. TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, I960 "Everyone In Southern Oregon Reada The Mall Tribune" Published Dally except SatufdajTby MtDFORD PRINTING CO S3 NorJh Fir St.,Ph SP 2-6141 ROBERT W RUHL. EdltoT " HERB GREY Adve tislne Manaeer GERALD T LATHAM Bus Mcr ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mnp Editor EARL H ADAMS. Cltv Editor HARRY CHIPMAN Teles Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Spoils Edltoi OLIVE STARCHER Women'. Editor DALE ERlCKSON.j:irculatlonJvler An Independent Newspaper" Entered as second class matter at Med ford. Oregon, under Act of Marc3. 1BQ7 SUBSCRIPTIONURATES lly Mail In Advance Copv 10c Daily and Sunday 1 vear $15 00 Daily and Sunday 6 mos 8.00 Daily and Sundav 3 mos 4 25 Sunday Only One year $4 20 By Cnirler In Advance Modford Ashland. Central Point Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue Rlv or Talent and on motor route Daily and Sunday 1 vear Sin 00 Da'.ly and Sunday 1 mo l..0 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c Allerms j:ash In Advance Ofrirlal Piper of lYltv or Mfdfnrd 21'MaL5PT o Jachson County fc-nltod Press" International Full leased Wire tj O.P.I. Telephoto Newsnicty-.g MEMBER OF AUDIT niTRK-AU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representative: WEST HOLIDAY CO.. JNC Of ficesin New York ChlJVo De troi'SSan Franclnco. Los Angeles Seattle. Portland St Louis. At lanta. Vancouver. B.C NEWSPAPER VAISHMS ASSOCIATICgJ ATlOf Al jgigSCTiSiJ oo 0 (9.'Soro' J- Jacl-Ol CoBrflV lory fro,- flie til'' Ol I ho OfVf.ll Triage 1,0. 29, A'. 'V mo so veils (9' is tjP8 jdb 2. IAcOP ("ffttWlXtflW Tin 15 cent rrp oJ.ciftt aiS Mii (II Wit li(4Aifl Itrfjjl ..' fU.? W'tffl. fa, o iA 'to. Fl'iuP r:-M)cOi (I8S V4s '4(V (te'BBwJ 'W V VlfiyiOb'la! IiililHIAWMlVMV. iSj ' '.''"ft iwoa iq))' iSl.I.II'.V?tf, ( OViaVM) Jill 1.H' ;0c0'. t-ifl.' . i'mi.'.' iro ps;,'. 90i.'.O mi) iMif W a fr'K AV icfTiofc 3 of 11 leg-isttivepissim o 115 President coouVi w.i:..M,ii'. rt heQih4 ch'itar's at. ft lonf cfl ?'ft'itft'i S to fiK -'!iws are l-fe1? 0't) rfli 4 8--1. s :' xii4Pk'iil S) i flr't : ia:,i.!.:ts fr S'S"' jQ.v's ftrKil ''('"'tY.O Q L. thetfjG.. lion t 0 S9iP8s (Pcp CfSfD 1950 (lW0O') hftniiliii D. Xoosefjll, LPiiv iDesflcnl. ('ill lour the west, en$ wiO 1(6 t()i'oii 0icil$ Av&. a, o The valley fruit crop isO estimated al 7 cars of fgjji's an50u Qrs of appliQ SO YEA8S AGO At 2. 1910 (T95)?l O JudKe Georiie T. Baldfin -.of Kl. amath Vails is lfl-w group that frflrvis Uie oldi,.i Klamath FalOshluinC stiigc road fOWip so tl'Qt it ii again be us for traffic. Q By Q vote of i 1 thfrciti- tens ul Jacksonville wiled to bond the city for SlfO.W to coiuoruct a nil gravity istei rj'sleni. Mint Of I mi ffrrrtt il tcverior: fcc,ets: a-kr cictllrnt; iiv at (). aLi. f:udy of fcTunanship. prison jnsnagement, or pensions? 2 A hasiocl:05 a type of hosiery, a mantled garment, an upholstered footstool, or a gvsy mound? J. On the averse, do men a or wnmrin livp Inmlnpi u 4. is one who i5 an cx,n ! in dactyoiohy most likely q a.TKmkn d.9.. the! i Volstead Act defined intoxi-i eating beverages to be of what j nleoholic content? i 6. The Red Cross needs blood in the worst way. Is it correct to use "in the worst way"? 7. "Come you back, you British soldiers; Come you back to Mandalay." What kind of a girl tugged at the heart of the "Tommy"? 8. Was the adhesive postage stamp invented by a Euro pean, American, or Asian? 9. Do male holly trees pro' duce berries? 10. Is Haram, Shecham, or Palestine generally held to be the birthplace of Hebrews? Aniwersi I. Prison Man agement. 2. Upholitered fool (fool. 3. Women. 4. Yei. S. One-half rf one per cent or more. 6. No. 7. "Burma, S.European, jame'i chaimeri. relationship based on respect for international; 9. No. 10. Haram. obligations. "-E.R.R. j The 'Special' Session On the authority of the GOP candidate for President, the August like a political brawl. Vice President Nixon even before achieving his party's nomination predicted that Congress was not likely to act "intelligently" or "responsibly" on legislation after the conveiQ tions. Nion recalled his own service in the House of Representatives inl948 when President Tru man summoned an angry Republican Congress back to Washington for a so-called "special" ses sion. (TechnicaTipthe 1948 session was on con tinuation after recess of the preceding regular session although Congress had0thought it had finisViprl fni- ihp vparl Hp remembers the session 12 y&ars ago as '"one of exercises he has even been tnrougn. hen the legislators rerarned on July 26, 1948 Congress had departed Washington on .feinp ') thorp mas talk of immedite adjourn ment. But the Republican ed from that course y kt.... 1....1. U. &rTJ Souther senatorsquickly tied up the Senate fdih a filibuster agai;t aninti-lynch bilVbackeAl by the euub that Congress ( liourned o o fdiEfiSmeHb'? 'Pru0i reuuru ur ui it; hushuuii by the eoublican leadership. Q he upshot -as EiToriAiin ashin(d.on, having coapletwd ion on oni niQ-n 5b e ection. IndCTt . rruOimrs wlOMIe- alUJipiup wr:"v'KJii!4?ii juitu V" hililii o tn era rrtittcr disftlhiiOwueS'. .8.6aub'fcis Vi&mp t trf to etiljsJA'o HWifli8i inicciwinft sti(is ckiI i"ifc gfJ, oppaownr i6 wtico'iflD HK. Tft HiQff lirlw4 o . . . jt9aiOSftft9s, Jio- an tyiy siiftiimiM. pirt:ep,oG. SioaiA ie:tSl.ai:ioi fltwojy io pog&A iUrffti (far him md l veti tu'l 4Cica' 'jO.'i.U ;:.,, fil6ri Hn&Al'i JJBMwtft'rftit ttfr, 'iMif rrs 'o In ut.il' m in ivsr f)l'lbr 1(B) (WYWBAf it) ihiMU th ubmosi tht I,iltiirr skil" of ft'ii. LynAon M. Johnion, d of (0u: or lm coxBawi on tin tH-fet, fy. John 5cnm,d. thir rf'Qi.nUs;? tbe flttcpulilitsjns rrtiw th nrv;liir nrl moral snnnort. of th GSfiiif iinivjro oa'eil ttVn ot inconsi'robO lcislW knoS hoft' f that other Capitol Gill Urftii, liitiud sw.fisiixon. 6.K.K. O ?.0 - O IJDirmal diplomatic United States ;Qd (Jimnumist Chin are, in the I iilu'd f,"'ct's wiU' ti'eVins, wls of the M) 0,.nt,?tic inform, MmptJ.oo"' sioTe under present Conditions, hut Sino-AnieW ing called "Irish Niggirs." ican negotiations of g sort lif) been held reg ularlv since AllL- On thatQate five yoaQj U. Alij.i John son, American Ambassador to Czeclroslovakia, and Wav Ping-nan, Chine; Comiinist v'Qibas sadorQo Poland, s down t(ath at Gene to ClWcuss "letters at countries. J-(the last twcVys the talks have been held at Warsaw alut -jnce montliwith Jacob BOm, U.S. Aigbassair to PolaiuPrt resenting this country. gfHE remarkalijl thing abt the cunversl tiis, as one observer has sakLis that they have lasted song without either breaking din or achieving anything offDiuch substance. At the meg. reeei tnfrontation. July (, Wang is s:l to have been in a particula nasty mood, spottt ing acirvisations about Formosa, U-:' flights, U.S. inteif erencp in the affairs of the Ccriigo, th anese secuiVtv treaty, and the like. . Fo'- part.he United States keeps ntising the issue of the five Amei'icaiisOeldQirisoneJ' by tfcuQReds. The United Stales also seeks art'eiTliro- ,.W vm-Lamcnt iOh,ih.;i,V thn nt.f,,, jvt ui-viivjtt i triiuuii-iiii; means of sett ing th6 Formosa question. otlOng;;;-,;-,,,;'-,-'";;; has been settled ?'. 1 the degree of vituiieWttion uiu- can of Paul Revere, .-wi nas oeen settlen ?jny.i tne degree ot vitupeMttion ithe can of Paul Revere, April rl at recent sessions indicates rrAitions between the!1!,lh- 1975: Tufls college, and two powers art-0as discordant as ever. Hut the f.";'L'8!V,'HUrf,rn'V,,;,,"f L,rlrfd TI inn. if . O i..-- iO t i ii , famous and refreshing MedyN...h 100th meeting siikV 1!oo Iras been scheduled ford Hum " 9h v for bept. fj. Futile as all the effort may appear, Amer- ican officios stress that the talks keep open a valuable channel of communications. Some im- nortant business (bv mutual agreement not dis- closed) manages to get discussed amid the propa-' ganda exchanges. And there is always the hone ; that from these Warsaw jnn.. o.-.vwrt .1 ..i i i -'i . i dence some dav that the Red Chinese trovernment might be again in the words of the Democratic I Diatform "ceilllinplv nrrmnroil tn cro:itn nmv session of Congress looks the most non-prod uctiveO learlershJ'is dissuad- Uov. lhom b. Dewey oi ,,Mni;.W i,.(Sk.i'noo Aug. 7alter two weeKSf o promptlOturnd the iu cteuuum. in cciin- 0:ofiile to t6 L05 .yift'16s worfoinn i&l yieii' wiifl f0)fV4l foi' ftO QA 'A . . lifteir to top rapiffoj8 J si'tvritWtibrHt. fVffi- oil '.isil-V.)i. mrti.!. JNwiA feftlfjr?a ol atht Kijulicnv (& obt-jyu'tiBiitft ,oUi Q o riOitions between 1, 1)5, on mb;ailonal issue" betgen the two 11 irn i n.i m i '1' till . ' l lum. . C i meetimrs will come Dennis the Menace i rrri mm I . . III V I II 'II, I VJ..O-B lE'.THl X 1 r ML I -J A . 1 i i P r feelfop vou.pArfg- J CANT hide ALly turps JUST CAUS yaJRf.jTflSR VAISHT Buy SOME' o I.Vters to the Editor musf-beaOthe naie and addre; of le ritr. ol Vioagh uiUler certaig name or. initial tor oua iuea is iraissiaifu tad Mail G)ruur4ar,:e,i th iQ:! to clificotio 0"i c(0)ll!solioo. li'QliO i!t, ot esc0 Cft ersitot, faf Can 0 To the Qclilor: In the Spiy'yg of lrS)15oMr. Geor Stevt Millvr, lutai rrf tfi iforsi SylttuW fciXoi't (M.ct9i'l n .0.i. i., id tta :iduti cle Ikjt "ifct ,'o Tea) fiilOrt (4 l'u f, , ;-r3)i I ttcr4. on li a in) of Mr. filltr't tfti't, i i-. .-1 1 1 u 'jc- ;i'.tf.i( to htvi lfn .Var liKliir (0i'. 14 uol TvA !II. !Mii' claa !(:, Iiad in h'm axsittf:l Pfl)trcl, th ri(jt at . "atlblic lm.'i.4." 'ra'iwa tea.' coull la A I lAo toria. atroiMl lil the corrct ;P hit ri,(j)t. i'0'ftlin l h tuit ftiitiQi&l fii-ii itl a. .Vriains ana! i lart numlar nlfinn frcwi the Mtmic - of tJ iirl wii'h Io;m. Wii'i Sii.iili'.Oof this !! inni. vlio bt'fo: Uarii Hit ships, tied tip al GWvk' 9'$r4, htd spent too muck ti.wt it Ktarby lav ir0 taii'(A cowr(( from dinia II" lh'C) Umo drin t or Word Hum, I wivai thrM.ioiul the olid. Tr.-i. riumue4 off Olft.iafl oi'lli of Ui inttOthc ater, in violitiiQ of the Tea Act of 1T7! ai'hichOie Mritish CmBn e09 ttcmptiijr to save a horct of politicians and cat)i j talisls from the brink of nrw. 'i Tln nnlilii1 hi:irin0; ro- vealcd niy "flaws" and ad missions of facts in the thQ used history booksused at Medfnfc High schoorrsuch as. the 2tlu Irish Catholic, who These two groups, under 1 command of Geutw Wasl(Il)g tnn nn SI. Pwrrirk's rl:iv .arch 17th, 1 771!. drove the British in the waters of bos ton harbor, and the counter sreji on the eve of MikK'li 17th, lV?(i, was "S'0ilrkkj" (ffjst history boofe!, rveV J.iy, will r reveal tse his torical f;Qs. However, the Irish of South Beiston never fail to tell visitQif)to the f0 mous vti', .u'ii;fiin i. rai rick's Day" parade held each March 17th. in South Boston, (fich is 98 per cent Irish. The sport world renumbers "little ' Tufts colcgi(g) Mrd ford. Pilch l!)l(i defeated the "mighty" Harvard foot hall team, which in 191B was the .othall Kit" ofli U.S. ":Afmd l;n" plaiwd an histonWl Qt in andMibout "the seat of culture, the hub of the Universe. wl(8)e the Lovtjf.cs spoke only to the Ca bols. and the Cabots spoke only to Cod" now they speak ingrain, by gosh Medfiinl. on the lldtic ri- ver. Os settled in l30. jiums tor ship building. Pie Modford. Wisconsin, has r juice;' but to tins writer, who as a boy in Medford. on Jhe Mystic river, well remcm- in,.v n.vers.de aven ..- which in the iath and ism Cvi-icemurics. "V'de M.cd.fl.,rt!. fa: mous as tne home oi Aieotord D Mr. Muier later became vice president of Tufls col- s' stenhe,, f c,iiii WhSla Cityi 0. O circumstoc! Iho use of a e cOii U lel!rswiti a view to LfitiM! laeOKtAr for o0b fords. TQ let'(Ui pdg5 iA Cr& S3Ci?0 To the ditor: "umfii vimminv cricfints!" c:g3mQcJel9i'r8 toQJn ,".u diB eca.,ir() aun of 9c o tis)'ri0 full c( jLgif bi5iie riL could lvQ b I on up" by " "iszlj bar" m:a;il90o -tonniQfnce flifht f6gyl? "19 uat Qs't urArrslMt An- fuxxy iatitQof ii3rt9.T ho. Wiyta vex to obact ..itt hW ok mrt impgi;t is juitjjio grett a re-i!cu;ion smonfst U..0. (unicittifis! flyi!0objects) on say tail, Mid just und oK" Q (Mepit n fill). Tn llQ tUiHW T'n& febA. pwli prott of it ) to "rxr .r. friaeh: "?Niii ' ttmrm ft a contii(fJ):n ji iftlinj', duriRa tk sessions of the Co.-ii'iii' lifmi in VWltieK iaUicting all m ersns. In pirticular I m!l rT9nu' l Iisht lcr lho l,b' lishment of stiiTiinS com P,itt on vatirtns afl.ir in ih .'ia.Mia, lajLiiapI f mi thai', such tn in.titutioMl ifi gtitit i tht best mrth(: of uriny und conKlerttira of vatartns 10:gjtioii. "You 10 y knoflOthat ra raeolutio S. Res. ft, to cr ate"his committe w5 con sidered Qfy th SeiQte (r)(J)'i committee Qiortly btfojr tht recess of Congress. My rcsohu tion had 25 co-sponsors arrts had bei fvorbly reQm- 0 tended bffl stOcautmitce of ever, Q lvf,s tabled by (9 vote of 5 S. This amounts to killii it for t yt5r. Nil less to say, I urtfcs Wry much disappointed in their jtion of the Rules committee. "th Qindest r(i's, "Sincerely. u O "yne Mogl Tid i-iQh d)i'i R i-i lJ.U. Box 2iVi 'liite City, Oi L&figo C86I686B fcw Yoi.-IUPII- Arthur B. Homer, PjfjSldQt of Bile hem Qteer Corp. since 19S31, Monday was eiecled cliainv.i of thfjeoncern. Edmund F. Martin, vice president of steel opcrMKins for the nation s ss& ond largest steel Vompany, was namcdaresident. Homer will continue as Bethlchcnsij chief executiv W &S -By BENNETT CERF- 4 CURIOUS B0ST0NIAN full niAive resralia gazincr platform oVlhe Albuquernue ventured the Bostontan, t-ifo von Indians like itO nowadays in New Mex- Ka-Qco?" The 1 n d i a n an- ku.-k-pH enlrllv. "We . U e got na oi it, aiait i we?" - There once was a writer r, dribbled on forever. His editor commanded him to write no more than three pages in his next chnpter. The writer got through pages one and two all right, but then creative genius conquered him again, and he filled fourteen more sheets. He solved his problem by taping all fourteen pagei to gether and labelling them "Pge three." The editor went out and got drunk. O CO A chari' ible foundation recently conducted a nation-wide sur vey, ueimuiumi;, mm uo j tuusiuc. vn "i'l"". velopment for women during the past decade?" One young lady answered, "Rock Hudson." 0 1M0. by Binneit Cirf, Distributed by Klni r4.ur Syndtute O Matter of Fact by Jo WHAT HEALLY HAPPENED Chicago-Now that the Re publican Convention is over at last, it is possible to tell - the true story turn -about that occurred i here, What really happen ed was vastly more stirring and astonish ing than any one supposes. Joseph alsoi'-d e g i n n nig, then, at the beginning, with th;ompletely solitary choice which Vice PresidenRichard J M. Nixon made in Washing- ''. ton on Friday. Julv 22: (vrai cn:Sf;e- 50 m"cnfbt Washington, to ask nim to Tdiscussed, ,wis mor con?plexftome at once to Chicago in- Even tKftj chS):e, so muchL than all but the itjwiders imag- ftr NAlinn 'S' Rnnkpfpllpr made his' threat to start a floor fight over th party plat form, the Vice rtSsident had a secret w e Q- o n which Rockefeller himself most prcbly did not know about. Over seventy memb; of the NewGk'ork Republican dele gation id in fact privately Sludged themselves to Nixon, to abandon the Governor and to join the Nixon camp no later than MsnyJay, July 25. Tl(e) temptation to risk a floor fight, and to ptnyish Rockefeller with a punning public humiliation, Qjl.ust therefore have been very strong.TSnt besides thf)cer - taintv b? humiliating Rcke - feller, there was another 'err- tainty for tlVice President l consider. In the flQir fight. Nixon ould be unaidably driven to ffitac the Roc feller position on civtpMghts, njjtiorfil deftnst and uie l$e. it thc Mart the vary piii- tiGfflin 0hic .inlt4 uai:....j ' C0fi0.is no,: hi fim&.is iylephoe ce;i t.td suD;queni jourfyy to rti Yoifl, itkavt tttrni op cc ilti.. iA;oni. Titt r.ilt vtt the lfi5it Mion-jciillirO comptct. It jublicttion, ts- fckt diten o Stturty, caus ed two simulttntous eiplo sions of tlmot QiclMr pro porSms. The first ts the Ntwport xplcion. 'fhis explo'9 f)t via mufflii rom the publie; bt tn uwteu'sirt tu tDity htt atramistllf ri- mtrM v.it'if our rtrat only harf co a O.rpy. tfeito K F?iioMnt MfriKMBl. on Saturdiy mcrninf, i woul't ii t fiut KhrnaAarisrt ." ?i trui vio l!i of tii Htviwrt implo sion is pao-t by to sintle, sirpli fict. Thi White House lisison msn in Chicago, Rob ert Merriim, at once gQ or- ii to prevtnt th ConveiQ tim men 0'crdntin" th ewilio)ir Administrttion. As for tht cod txplcakw, i ChictfJ, its tru. violence mav hp eeuepH hv thp hevuS of a lcfijint NixoOite Marritm ts not cftlone in putting prsur on the jfit form ccanmittee to ijinore the Niiym - RocafeIler M:ompact. Tiy chairman of theCRagibli can Ntionl Committee, Sen. Thruston Morton of Ki tucky.rajiso ap.'ared 0 a full meeting of the platform co mittee on Saturday , to urge th& Qmmittee ro pay no at teniion atfSjl to anything that l(3)i 1'pened "outside." Furthermore, Morton & personal impounded the subcommittee d't of the various p3"s tnat Nixon and Rockefeller had rejected in New YoifEt He caused all these drafts tc be mimeographed for release; and he started releasing them. Nixon's per sonal i(H)ef - of - staff , jbert Finch, hearing about this,(Jjild the Republican National com- mittpp niibtip rutinlirmc man Qou Guylay, to stiec the re leases. Morton o v e r rjj 1 e d (ginch. O 1 The total chaos of Saitirday andgjSunday was maife offi- cial, sogjo say, when the plai. form cmiimittee formally a fife) & encountered a Indian in out at the sunset on the railroad station. "How," oseph Also? ed by a two-to-one majority to stand by the platform as previously drafted, without any revision to meet Nixon's and Rockefeller's announced wishes. At this point, as Rockefel ler's chief - of - staff, Emmet Hughes, pointed out to Nix on's chosen Chicago negotia tor, Attorney General William more stirrinE(?REers. it appeared that Nix on was going to nave to runQ1 on two coninciing piaxiorms Qieaning the one Nixon had joined in writing in New York and the one written in Chi cago. The Nixonites were so alarmerQiy the same pspect that Meade Alcorn of Con necticut and other leaders telephoned the Vice PrcTf ident steairf making Ks previous ly scheduled arrival on Mon day. ATTORNEY GeneM Rogers, meafihile, had assured Rockefeller, thnfivbgh Hughes, that Morton's behavior did not mean that Nixon wasfj b.'tfking out of his agreement wftR th) Governor. This as surance, given on Sunday, was confirmed on 5itn(yy when Nixon reached CtlicagcO With Alcorn and other po litical lieutenants, the Vice President at once began see- in T3 r,nrHir,o nlifnrm SAbcommittcehairmcn. CoiQGuard, 'in led bySen. Bar Wrrcntly Hughes, represent ing Rockefeller, ai Attorney ILng "occeteiier, angjAUC P.enoral R.g? nd J ames Shepley of tl(e) Nixon staff hid themselves in a room at theBjackstone. Their assigned task was to agree on new tnnpuapp tn hrinu ihp nlatfnrjn Ghto line with the Nixw- Roctfellercompact. The sticiyhg point in the feotfit was not the civil rights plankr which got all tht puhflyityO The sticking joint e.as the defense plank .v"jy'icMita,td an implied rtveitietion of President Eis- tnhvtr. Tl PrWidOnt reKb ytcBrti!ily tnSOpublicl insi ) thM as no need itvtr to inoe.-.e se, or "inttnsify," oj "accflerflte" th fint tflort. Yet those ld to b Ueed, in order to lir:W tloj jeison-Socge-ftlle ccenjisct. o TOKITT Hawca liin man Wr :nf.ria,m hri dre Us cc. particularly eieTl with to fV'fr.a tJli.'om:ttcr) of tlej pltfors committee. The cl-ir.-.si t.ta. Glenrd Lip- omlO tnd t majority ofthe M'0niitta i m b e r s at firtt "flatly refused Nixq$t's plegj to change their oritGial drall. Lete Monday afternoon, this refusel was reported to Hughes by Shepley and Attor ney General RiQ;rs, arho now ststsd that the origini draft aio'really not so Qacv ' Huhes disOgreed. All RocijefeOer-Nixon liaison word on the platfsrsm was at oncQsust'nded. Roswell Per kins, who had been represent- r tvp Wpw Vni-i, nrvi,pr.r,prYiext dav. with its on tne domestic flanks, join ed Hughes in what anwunted to a walk-out. When Vefiind Perkins laUr) reported to Rockefeller. howed??ir. Hughes i. . . - ... .vyrgea tne oovernor to reaa the original draft of the de fense plank with utmost care before reaching decision on the next s(gji. O Rockefeller took Hughes' adviepj but soon announced that we'Ji go to theTloor, noQnatteQwhal happens, un QjtSrM'e can get something bet terMomorrow." Tlie Governor thereupon fcDephoned the Vice President to aimnce his decision. But when the connection was made, Nixon tookO'ie words nut of Rocke- feller'iriouth. He at once de(J)1 plarpd Tile intpntinn In ttftrt tn I i the full platfci immittee tomorrow, not only on sivil rights but a'0 on defense." If need be, the Vice esident rln .p,,l lin D U (Pieller in a floor fight on the defense plipk AT NIXON'S reqiere fore, Hiighcs resumed his work with Rnger.iid Shep ley. Their s!neeting. early Tuesday morning, produced a new defense draft. The sym bolic and crucial word "in tensify," "accelerate" and crease, were all includ: The platform jsomniiec, meanwhile, was gnmlv in formed of the continuing feoli- darity and 0ermination of Nixon and Rockefeller. That i lt the committee members ; no choice. With many a grum- j ble. they now voted, by an-' uiuui iwu-iu-uue iiiargin, io reverse their previous two-to-one vote. Thus She Nixon Rockefeller compact was ex pressed in the platform at last. That still left the President to deal with, however. With frank venom, Eisenhower had almost publicly denounced Rockefeller as a "God-damn egomaniac." On his arrival in Chicago, the President had also bitterly suggested to Sen. Morton that the Convention ought to "tear up the plat form" and let the Vice Presi dent "run orQJudd's speech" -the keynote by Rep. Walter Judd. which attributed all but Uu.tjn - nprf.p, inn tn the Eisen- 2'" 1'," !?:" nower Administration. The task of dealing with the President was undertaken by the Vice President himself. Washington Report By WILLIAM DARK BROWN FEELING Washington - t e n d ing n,,Ar.nf nnlif,-ll KniHTPn. tions in a row co tires the body and mind as to leave one (0l i with a dark I brown reeling of s p i r i tual r and intellectu al hangover. One corre spondent now returned irom the wars of Los Angeles and Chicago finds it .fJficult to discern in the coming cam paign any clear division of is sues or even of personalities as between the two top candi dates, Sen. John F. Kennedy for the Demc.ts and Rich ard M. Nixon for the Repub licans. T h eQiistinctions between the two party platforiasior example, are far more fMle- gree than of principle. The Republican convention pro duced a consensus of the mid- MJe of the Crfy) Nixon, as the presidentiaVnominee, made an accommodation both with William S. White theJeft wing, as represented() We shall all have a great byt?ov. Nelson Rockefeller of ew lorK, ana wun me uia ry Goldvvater of Arizona. Kennedy, as the DiVr,ocratic presidential nominpe, arrang ed a very simila Truce as be- tween the union labor faction of his party and the moderate to conservative factiorQ'hicb is represented on tbticket by Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas. SOOTHE campaign will fae pnnrlnplpH and ile nTil- come determined more by technical factors than by sharp collisioron i.'ies. .lg)oth top candidates are young, highly able profession al politicians, ana aJ:Ii lses sisted by a no less able run ning mate. To Kennedy, John son will give a presumed en tree into the south and border states. To Nixon, Henry Cabot Like most old-line Army offi cers, the President h always yarded nolitics as a squalid business, roll of squalid but necessary' compromises. Mop. n.nUkl m,vpn eimntv n-A-W the argument of proved politi cal necessity. At any ratOQhe got Eisenhower to agre3U'.t thP revised platform, includ ing the f'cyel defense plank, was "afCT'ptEle." uO ' o THE President's bad len'4ftr iPn dure d, nonetQ;lessVlt showed in the red-faced anger of his denunciation, to the fu'convention, of ' "Job's boils" who wanted (jnore de fense spending. It Qiowed again in the President's breakfast iffleech warning that he was stiftJU President and still in charge of national policy, no matter yvhat the party platform ijyght riy. ii even wowea o' ins first, jhly cunoiis telegram to Nixon, congratulating him on his nomination on the ground that being nominated at last freed the Vice Presi dent "to speak your own mind." It now remains to be seen whether this conventional bad temper will carryover into the special session of Con gress. Eisenhower's own chief policy adviser.'Qled by Secre ty of State Christim, R. Herter, now favor a massiiftT) inuiease in acidise appropria tions as a stern waffljng to Nikita S. Khrushchev, winjse recent behavior has caused the (J"epest concern. Eisen hower's own party ijrftvtform now says that the defense ef fort should be "intensifies." "accelerated" and O'increas- f)'d." But will the (president go aiung: i)on can sav. Copyright 196tiNew York '(rald ibune Inc. q Mr. InsugarTcs 1 vW Fred R. Brennan, C.I.A. 1 :.jML I PHONE SP 3-7343 MEDFORD INSURANCE Agency 27 North Holly Street S. WHITE Lodge will give the foreign policy prestige of a man who, as our ambassador to the United Nations, has dealt over anSAjver with the Russiors. But neither ticket or plat form deeply stirs the emo tions. It was noticeable at Los Angeles that Kennedy was re spected by delegates but not greatly loved. Exactly the same 'jjing was clear at cm. cago concerning NixVn. rpHEREFORE, we are iPf i- a test in which the -nificant thing will not be per sonalities or traditional issues. The significant Jjhing will be the comparativeSflegree of ex pertness Q campaigning by tktwo principals. The voter will, therefore, iQtft with aritinusually d(5) ficult problerS? in deciding how to choose - asaatjtefar more by his mind tilery by his heart. There is not this time Eisenho'Jy who evokes special lining ainuug me re publicans; there is not on the Democratkwide a man with : person34pal of a Roos evelt. obligation, therefore, (TO pay the most careful attention to what will be said by the can didates artMjaynake an ulti mate decision Tjised upon each person's own final estimate of whic ticket would be better (Ht the country in a time of Boria pern. - Because both sets oHcandi datesare so unially iali fied as ;cticing m'liticiaris, and because b o t n sets are more distinguished for com petence than for personal ap peal, it will be more neces sary than ever before to watch T)at they do and .-y. O IT WILL E a new kind of O cnri in very sense. For illustration, the Nixon ticket will make genuiE)ef fort in the south as well as in the north. And the Kennedy ticket will concede nothing to its opposition - not even Maine and Vermont. The so calirj ind:ndent voter will have the most decisive role this time in the history of our politics. The essential problem for Nixon, Qis the representative of a Diority .irty in terms of registered '(rj'.ers, is to hold tl the traditional Republi- ngnr nt-iA in r-pnil all pr nMI. ly all of the IndepVndenQ and a good many dissatisfied Dem ocrats as well. The essenQil problem for Kennedy is to prevent any widespread defection among the Democrats Kid to do at least reasonably well among the Independent In a word, it is to be a slide rule campaign, short of "heart" but ktgon common sense. And we are immense- vttf fortunate in this: No mat- : nlnprl vvp Hrp ici viiu la cltfcfT' going to le a highly skilled man in the White House and a highiyj skilled man to help him as vice president. (CopcJght, 1960, by United Features Syndicate, Inc.) Aid ToJEsca,) 0 Gels obafiosi Salem - IUPH - A 26-year-old mother of four -iio helped her husband escape from the state prison annex last spring was put on probation for two years Monday by Marion county circuit court. Mrs. Janet Christina Ray mond of SalenHileaded guilty td--a charge of .(e.ping Hereth Robert RaymoWi, her )iis band. get away March ri.Q She drove him from a spot near the annex to Portland where they separated. Ray mond was caught near The DallQ five days l;r and given pother 18 tfryuns. 6 o e Frtd Bretanao Umbrella Pr5teeon Our insureds wear an umbrella of protection if they W'H Pe,r- Qt us to place the needede coverages. May we open the umOella over ycyjr possessions? A survey of hazards and costs are yours for the asking. O O Co o O