Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 172, Decatur, Adams County, 23 July 1959 — Page 10
PAGE TWO-A
Kennedy May Challenge For Indiana Voles By EUGENE J .CADOU United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPD-Youth-.ful Sen. Jack Kennedy of Massachusetts probably will challenge his older rival, Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri, for Indiana’s Democratic national convention delegates in the Hoosier presidcn-
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tial preferential primary next May 3. That was the word being circulated today among the politicos, who also said indications are that the two senators may be the only Democratic hopefuls to run the primary gantlet. Among the Republicans, the situation has not yet jelled sufficiently to determine whether there will be any serious , entrants in the GOP presidential primary in Hoosierland. Vice President Richard M. Nixon is far ahead of the field in this state in both organization and popular vqte strength, with little mention of New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, according to the observers. Nixon may prefer to let the organization take charge and boycott the primary.
There have been no indications to date that other Democratic possibilities will enter the primary. They include Sen. Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota, Sen. Lyndon Johnson of Texas, favorite of Sen. Vance Hartke of Indiana, Adlai E. Stevenson and New Jersey Gov. Robert Meyner. Meyner to Invade However, Meyner is scheduled to visit Indianapolis and Bloomington on Sept. 18. Symington will address the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association's meeting at French Lick Aug. 29, a little more than, six months after headlining the Jeff-erson-Jackson Day Dinner in Indianapolis. This scheduling required a bit of fast foot work by the Missour-
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA
ian’s chief Hoosier lieutenants, former national ghairman Frank E. McKinney and Frank M. McHale, former national committeeman. Nevertheless, Kennedy will wage a fast four-day Hoosier campaign with concentration on areas of big Democratic votes early in October. He will be in Indianapolis on Ot. 2, in Fort Wayne on Oct. 3, in Dubois County and in other Bth District areas on Oct. 4 and in Lake County on Oct. 5. Primary is Weak The Indiana presidential preferential primary is a weak institution. The winner is bound to receive the votes of the entire Hoosier delegation only on the first ballot for president. On subsequent ballots, the delegates may I ~ ’ ■■ ■ !j -w —
■ go elsewhere, if they so desire. Kennedy is reported to hope for , big first ballot power; hence, the Hoosier campaigning and possibly 1 primary entry. Symington, on the - other hand, because of apparent i organization backing, may win i most of the Indiana delegates on ■ the second ballot, even if he loses t in the primary, the politicos say. Indiana's first presidential pref--1 erential primary, held in 1956, • had little effect. Sen. Estes Kefauver, Tenn., was the Democratic winner. He was the only entrant. ■ But the Hoosiers hover voted for ■ him for president because he had • quit the contest before the first ■ national convention ballot. President Eisenhower was the • victor over Lar Daly, Chicago 'l perennial “Uncle Sam suit” can-
didate in the GOP sham battle. There are indications that the puny presidential primary law may be repealed by the 1961 General Assembly. Southern Indiana To Become Jazz Center INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) Soutern Indiana’s rolling woodlands, long associated with scraping fiddles and hillbilly music, becomes a national jazz center next week With a festival at French Lick and a clinic at Bloomington. ’ Such jazzmasters as Duke Ellington, Stan Kenton, Count Basic
and Sarah Vaughn will entertain during a four-day seond annua) festival on the grounds ol the French Lick-Sheraton Hotel July 30-Aug. 2. Kenton will conduct a Weeklong clinic for 150 jazz enthusiasts from 25 states and Canada on the Indiana University campus beginning July* 27. The French Lick experiment in jazz entertainment drew nearly 15,000 during a three-day run in 1958. It was so successful plans were made immediately for an annual event, and the setting was changed so 6,000 could be seated in a stadium-type setting on the fairway of a golf course. On July 30, the entertainers are Count Basie, the Modern Jazz Quartet, Lambert-Hendricks and
THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1959
Ross, Sarah Vaughn and George Shearing. On July 31, it’s the Dukes of Dixieland, Dakota Staton, Miles David and Andre Previn. Kenton, the Kingston Trio, Ahmad Jamal and Chris Conner are on the Aug. 1 program and Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Marian McParland, Jimmy McPharland, Buck Clayton, Vick Dickenson, Pee Wee x Russell and Jimmy Rushing on Aug. 2. At Bloomington during the clinic there will be a daily one - hour clinic with Kenton, one hour of instrument instruction and., Fiction rehearsal by clinicians, one hour of workshop, two hours of stage band rehearsal and two hours of entertainment and jam sessions.
