WEDNESDAY, AUGUST"$,1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNSDA, AUUST8, 962 HE ICHIAN AI_ PRIMARY: GOP Candidates Lead Dems White House Greeting VIEWS DIFFER: Explore Computer Use i 1 1 (Continued from Page 1) "This has been a campaign in which I have stood on my record of 14 years. It's been a record of which I feel justified of being proud. 'A Clean Fight' "I have not engaged in person- alities. I have fought a clean fight, but I have lost and I publicly thank the thousands who support- ed me." In the only statewide contest on the ticket-the GOP nomination for lieutenant governor-Clarence Reid, a Detroit attorney who held the post in 1953-54-was running far ahead of two other candidates. Reid held a comfortable lead over Sen. John Stahlin (R-Beld- ing) and Rockwell T. Gust Jr., of Grosse Pointe Farms, attorney and delegate to the constitutional con- vention. One-Fourth Vote Election officials reported that only about one-fourth of the state's 3.7 million registered vot- ers bothered to cast ballots in the off-year election. At stake were party nomina- tions for 19 congressional districts, including a new district where the candidates ran on a statewide at- large basis because the Legisla- ture and Gov. Swainson failed to CARLTON MORRIS ...concedes defeat agree on how to carve out district. the Running without opposition on their respective party tickets were two wealthy and prominent can- didates--former Republican Con- gressman Alvin Bentley, and Owosso manufacturer, and Demo- craticnational committeeman Neil Staebler of Ann Arbor. Swainson Talks As the returns poured in, Swain- son urged all candidates to buckle down to the task ahead. He said: "I am confident the record of my administration and the record of service to the people of Michi- gan by the Democratic Party will bear the scrutiny to which it will be subjected to in the coming months." Swainson predicted a hard- fought campaign which he said would be waged on his part "in accordance with the time-honored principles of honest debate." Richard Durant, conservative leader of Republicans in Grosse Pointe, was defeated 3-1 in his bid for reelection as Second Pre- cinct delegate. Rep. Robert Waldron (R-Grosse Pointe) won the head-to-head contest,460-147. Durant had been criticized by Romney for his role in the John Birch society of which he is a ALVIN BENTLEY ..wins race --t-.-- Match mates! "sponsor" and asked his resigna- tion of vice-chairman of the GOP's 14th district organization, Twlo States Hold Votes WASHINGTON - Senators Ed- ward V. Long, a Missouri Demo- crat, and Frank Carlson, a Re- publican from Kansas, loped to renomination tonight while Sen. James B. Pearson built a healthy lead in his bid for the GOP nod for Kansas' other Senate seat. In Kansas, Pearson led former Gov. Edward F. Arn for the Re- publican nomination to the Sen- ate. Incomplete returns from 342 of the state's 2,977 precincts gave Pearson 11,644 votes to 6,682 for Arn. Pearson, 42, was appointed last January to succeed the late Sen. Andrew F. Schoeppel, a Republi- can. The contest now is for the remaining four years of Schoep- pel's term. Paul Aylward, an attorney, has no opposition for the Democratic nomination for that post. Kansas' Republican Gov. John Anderson won renomination. Early returns gave him 11,827 votes to 2,241 for Harvey F. Crouch i i278 precincts. State Rep. Dale Saffels led George Hart, former state treas- urer, for the Democratic guber- natorial nomination. Hutchinson Wins Race (Continued from Page 1) Byrns participated in program of the United World Federalists and a letter to the editor in which he praised the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. to Congress. Byrns said he moderated one of UWF panels, but was not 'a mem- ber. He said his letter was not in praise of Democrat Roosevelt, but an attack on the Tammany Hall machine. On Thursday night, the Ber- rien County Republican Screening Committee met to study the situa- tion and recommended Boothby and Pears as "qualified Republi- cans." Announce Suit MondayPears announced he planned to sue the News-Palla- dium Publishing Co. for $1.5 mil- lion for statements linking him with Boothby's action. "I regret this action is neces- sary. I feel that my statement made to this newspaper has been misrepresented and that I have been subjected to statments made by this newspaper not grounded in fact," he declared. Council Approves HRC Appointment The Ann Arbor City Council Monday night approved the ap- pointment of Max Frisinger, a lo- cal contractor, to the Human Re- lations Commission to fill the va- cancy caused by the resignation of Richard J. Mann last month. r ection i. Moern GoinZ - DIAL 5=6290 HELD OVER! *,/d. U0er1thb W//so: " .'*/ THE MOST MARVELOUS MOVIE EVER MADE I FROM THE PLAY THAT KEPT PLAYING FOREVER! ROBETPRE TON [SHlRtE ~f' tfES" OY CEII~ fERMlIOGIG6 B'P O[ [ TECHNIRAMAE TECHNICOLOR- PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. Shows 1:00 - 3:30 - 6:11 - 9:00 Feature 1:00 - 3:38 - 6:25 - 915 Weekday Matinees 1.00 Evenings and Sunday 1.25 -AP Wirephoto PRESIDENTIAL GREETING-President John F. Kennedy greets members of the National High School Symphony Orchestra of the University sponsored National Music Camp at Interlochen, Mich., when it played on the White House lawn Aug. 6 as part of the "For Youth By Youth" program sponsored by Mrs. Kennedy. China Border Dispute Poses India Crisis 4. ; .+ . 1298 By HENRY BRADSHER Associated Press News Analyst NEW DELHI-India's angry ter- ritorial dispute with Communist China is forcing a difficult deci- sion on Prime Minister Nehru. He must decide whether to ne- gotiate on Peiping's terms in the hope of ending aggression along India's mountainous northern bor- der. The Chinese want to negoti- ate without withdrawing from the disputed territory they hold, as India has insisted. Nehru's agreement to talks would imply renunciation of the disputed territory in bleak, three- mile high Ladakh which the Chi- nese already control. This is an area of 12,000 square miles. In- dia controls another 39,000 square miles of the disputed 'Himalayan borderlands. Cry 'Appeasement' Angry cries of "appeasement" are beginning to be heard as signs increase that Nehru might negoti- ate. Critics assert that whatever influence India now has in Asia will evaporate if Nehru accepts the Chinese terms. Nehru apparently is drawn to- wards talks, however. He once thought India and Red China, the world's two most populous na- tions, would stand together as the friendly heart of Asia. Now, in his weary old age, Nehru seems to want to make another, perhaps last desperate attempt to resolve the quarrel with Peiping. Rather than being cooperative, the Chinese have been arrogant, he has said. Refuse To Withdraw "No force in the world could oblige us" to withdraw from the disputed area, Chinese Foreign Minister Chen Yi said last week. India lacks the force to evict the Chinese. The realization of China's dominant military posi- tion in Ladakh has come hard to New Delhi. When the Chinese began press- ing into Ladakh in 1957, India had no army troops in the area. By last spring India had managed to establish 3,500 to 5,000 troops in this area behind the world's two highest mountain ranges, the Himalayas and the Karakorams. This created a feeling of confi- dence in New Delhi. Erode Confidence It had been eroded recently when the government realized the Chinese had the ability to bring a superior force to bear any time they chose. This is what happen- ed last month in the Galwan Val- ley of Ladakh when the Chinese rushed up hundreds of troops to menace an Indian outpost. The outpost's supply line is still threatened and the situation there remains explosive. Recognition of the Chinese strength is believed to have been an important factor in the July 26 note to China, which Nehru made public Tuesday. It said India was willing to hold discussions with the Chinese as soon as the proper at- mosphere has been created. An' official spokesman was un- able to clarify for correspondents later whether the requirement of a proper atmosphere meant Chi- nese withdrawal. The note's fail- ure to state clearly a demand for withdrawal led some members of Parliament and newspapermen to conclude India had weakened its demand. The Chinese reply, which Nehru called "rather disappointing," said Peiping is ready to have talks as soon as possible - without any preconditions, meaning no with- drawal from the disputed terri- tory. Nehru said the Chinese note is under consideration. Signs of Settlement There were signs in early 1960, when Chinese Premier Chou En- Lai visited New Delhi, that Nehru was willing to trade away a few thousand miles of Ladakh for settlement of the dispute, includ- ing the Chinese renunciation of the rest of their claim of 51,000 square miles. He found himself un- able to do it because of angry public opinion. , Now public opinion is not so loudly heard. The sharpest critics in Nehru's governing Congress Party have been silenced by giv- ing them official posts. The non- Communist opposition parties are weaker. Only a few newspapers have spoken against negotiations without Chinese withdrawal. One leading paper, the Hindu- stan Times, said, "The hour of dis- honor is near" unless public opin- ion halts what the editor considers the drift toward negotiations on Chinese terms. By GERALD STORCH A Los Angeles attorney predicts that computer systems eventually will be able to predict United ' States Supreme Court decisions,' as well as to "help reduce the backlog of the courts and the cost of litigation by reducing the time required to perform thorough legal research." Reed C. Lawlor told the Ameri- can Bar Association's special com- mittee on "electronic data re- trieval" that such work is still in its infancy, although progress is being made, the Associated Press reported yesterday. (These views, however, met with some skepticism from Law School faculty members.) Predict Views When computer methods are further developed, Lawlor said, lower courts will be able to pre- dict how the Supreme Court will view their decisions. These tech- niques also will help lawyers ad- vise clients whether to pursue cases or settle them, he added. He noted, however, that some legal problems "may be too dif- ficult to solve at all, let alone with the aid of a computer. "No attempt has been made yet to use a computer in analyzing trends in cases or when a court will overrule its prior, decisions," Lawlor said. Techniques Successful Computer techniques have been successful in their testing so far, although its formulas have been tried out in only the narrow field of right-to-counsel cases. The elec- tronic calculations, based on a mathematical theory of stare de- cisis, proved correct in predicting 35 out of 37 votes by individual Supreme Court justices in 10 such cases. "Lawlor might have done just as well in his predictions without a computer." Any good lawyer, by analyzing past judicial deci- sions and the extent to which the current cases parallel the pre- vious ones, could have been just as accurate or more accurate in such predictions, Prof. Kadish as- serted. "A computer is no better than what you feed into it." He and Prof. Alfred F. Conard of the Law DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Jobs should consult the bulletin board in Room 2200, daily. MALE I-Good commercial artist for news. paper advertising. Part-time or full- time. 80-Psychological Subjects. Must be stu- dents. At least one, 2 hour session. 1-To do heavy work, inside a home, for an older woman-in exchange for room. Starting immediately after summer session gets out. FEMALE 1-Good commercial artist for news- paper advertising. Part-time or full- time. 1-Food supervisor. Degree in dietetics or equivalent experience. Monday thru Friday, 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. ORGANIZATION NOTICES French Club. Film, "God Needs Men," 7:30 p.m. today in the Multipurpose Rm., UGLI. School, although feeling the com- puter methods are somewhat of a "gimmick," thought there was some potential for machines in a mechanical function in lessening the amount of work and time needed to dig up old facts and back cases. Lawlor explained to the bar as- sociation that the new methods are based on the idea that each individual justice is consistent in the manner in which he decides cases involving similar facts. "The problem is to develop tech- niques for recognizing the under- lying consistency and to express the rules in computer language." Lawlor's groundwork for predic- tions is to be as accurate as pos- sible in analyzing past decisions. Use Large Computer The tests and experimental equations have been carried out on a large computer at the Uni- Classroom.Ex Aids Foreign By MICHAEL SATTINGER A broad non-profit, organization with the announced intention of increasing understanding, called the People-to People Exchange Program, will have 400,000 United States students by fall, 1963, in communication with foreign stu- dents. The idea was initiated by former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, presently chairman of the board of trustees, at a White House con- ference in 1956. This is the first year that the project will be run full scale. A Kansas City-Mexico City trial run was conducted last spring. Voluntary Basis On a voluntary basis, elementary and secondary school- teachers ar- range through the program to have their classrooms put in touch with corresponding classrooms in other countries in South America, Europe and Asia. Both classrooms then participate in related activities. Student let- ters, scrapebooks, classrooms and art work, displays and information are traded between the two class- rooms involved. The role of the People-to-People program is creating foreign con- tacts, coordinating the schools and classrooms involved, developing special materials and aiding in the transportation that is needed be- tween countries. The United States Navy has offered to carry the ma- terials to be traded from country to country. Establish 'Pen Pals' Perhaps the largest project is to establish "pen pals" between students in the United States and other countries. If the American I '/A Year PAGE THBEE n Decisions versity of California, Los Angeles branch. Prof. Conrad, who directs the Law School's research programs, said that no comparable work has been done here, although the Uni- versity has conducted some re- search into statistical problems of law. He declared that he had not yet seen sufficient proof of computer abilities with regard to stare de- cisis methods to warrant con- fidence in beliefs that a basic change in legal proceedings is forthcoming, but said that inves- tigations into the legal potential of electronics are extremely valu- able. Dean Allan F. Smith, Associate Dean Charles W. Joiner and As- sistant Dean Roy F. Proffitt of the Law School, along with sev- eral professors from the school, are attending the ABA convention. ehange Plan Relatiouns student cannot correspond in a foreign language, then arrange- ments are made with a foreign student who knows English. Eisenhower called the project "an effort to learn more about and understand our foreign coun- terparts." The program is completely sup- ported and run privately. The People-to-People program I is at present trying to attract teachers and principals interested in the possibilities of increasing understanding. Admen Give American Male Revised Image ' Advertisers are giving the Amer- ican male a new image of ade- ' quacy-and he seems to like it- Prof. Ross J. Wilhelm of tie busi- ness administration school noted, "From a psychological point of view the new approach empha- sizes the male as an adequate personality. The emphasis is upon a strong self-image of the male," he explained. "This approach can best be ex- pressed in the feeling and tempo of such words as jazz, precision, bucket seats, hard-hitting, compe- tent, sophisticated, urbane and reven witty," Prof. Wilhelm noted. He said that this approach had already created big sales gains and if the trend continues it will ireplace the stodgy male image of I the job-oriented, slow to change i and meek male. ~1INEEP 698 6I/ . " U p111 11Mll Il111Dial 2-6264 III 111iuti tton SHOWS START AT 1:00 2:00-4:55-7:00 and 9:15 FEATURE STARTS AT 1:00 2:55-5:05-7:10 and 9:25 ." r.. . f i a " STARTING TODAY ? ALL THE YOUNG LOVES FROM THE SENSATIONAL REST-SELLER! 998 f r .. " , . ' t :. t > v : s lFt We're clearing all summer dresses and costumes plus many darks from spring, all good for seasons of wear. Many dresses have been added to these groups. There's rack after rack of :>. PURE SILKS >'':":" r BLENDS:. 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