TWO PRIMARIES: Voters Back Nixon, Kennedy By The Associated Press BOSTON M-)- Sen. John F. Kennedy proved himself the over- whelming favorite son of his home state Democrats yesterday with a runaway victory in the presi- dential primaries. Kennedy even ran well on the 6OP ballot, picking up about five per cent of the write-in votes of cross-over Republicans. Vice President Richard M. Nix- on, while dominating the Repub- lican primary, managed to pick up the votes of about once in a hundred of the Democratic write- in. Voting was light. With a quar- ter of the precincts reported, a seven per cent turnout was mndi- cated, as was predicted in ad- vance. None of the contenders cam- paigned in Massachusetts and contests for places on the delega- tion to the national conventions were few and of only local im- portance. Poor Showing Adlai E. Stevenson, two - time loser as a Democratic candidate for president-and' not running but draftable this year--made a poor showing. Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York, a potential Republican can- didate who withdrew, ran a poor second to Nixon in the Republican write-in. Sen. 'Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, Kennedy's chief comn- U 1 M ~fToMR M , X4 .. inspired simplIty Tan-inviting slim dress for im- portant summer occasions by Mr. Mort. Expertly cut sheath starring the important bare look. Double-breasted bodice, narrow belt. $9A95 petitor in the primaries in Wis- consin and West Virginia, made a poor showing in the Democratic poll. With 534 precincts of 1619 re- ported, the preference write-in showed these scores: Democratic: Kennedy 21,002, Humphrey 213, Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson 65, Stevenson 1,039, Sen. Stuart Symington 92, Nixon 252. Republican: Nixon 10,496, United Nations Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge 101, Rockefeller 795, Kennedy 507. Election Oddity An election oddity turned up in two Boston precincts, one in Chinatown, the other in the Rox- bury Negro section ofthe city. In both precincts not a single write-in was reported for any can- didate. No names of candidates, either announced or potential, were printed on the ballots. Instead voters could indicate their prefer- ence for president by writing in his name in a blank space. Kennedy also swept into a com- manding lead over four other Democrats in the "write-in race" in the Pennsylvania presidential primary. Republican votes piled up for Vice President Richard Nixon, running unopposed on the GOP ballot. All the votes for Democrats were write-inshnone having officially entered the primary. They were being tabulated for Kennedy, Ad- ja E. Stevenson, and Sens. Hum- phrey, Symngton, and Johnson. GOP write-ins for New York's Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller also were being counted. Unofficial tabulations from 1292 of the state's 9,013 precincts show- ed: Kennedy 10,121, Humphrey 215, Symington 115, Stevenson 437, Johnson 32. The Republican count gave Nixon 117,934 votes and 515 write- ins for Rockefeller. Danne miller, Warner Tell Plans To Run Republican State Rep. James F. Warner of Ypsilanti and Demo- crat William F. Dannemiller, an Ypsilanti a t to r n e y, announced their candidacy for the State Leg- islature's second district in Wash- tenaw County yesterday. Warner, who is seeking his third straight term in the House of Representatives, promised to work for "more economies" and criticized state income tax pro- posals. "People expect to pay for nec- essary functions of good state government, but they also expect the Legislature and' administra- tion to be as careful and econom- ical in spending the tax dollar as they would be with their own pocketbooks," he said. During this three terms in of- flee, Warner said he has, as a member of the House Ways and Means Committee, tried "to elim-' inate waste and make for more economies in certain departments of state government." Warner will be opposed in the Aug. 2 primary election contest for the GOP nomination by Vivian S. Richards of Milan, who an- nounced his candidacy last Feb- ruary. Dannemiller, who is the first Democrat to announce his bid this year, is a graduate of the Univer- sity. "We must continue to provide that political and social climate wherein each and every human being can realize to the utmost his individual capacities for hap- piness, self-realization and econ- omic accomplishment," Dannmil- ler said. To Launch Peace Talks In Industry WASHINGTON () -President Dwight D. Eisenhower yesterday asked American business and or- ganized labor to arrange a series of summit peace conferences to assure better relations and the nation's economic growth. After conferring at the White House with AFL-CIO President George Meany, Eisenhower said the government will help get the conferences going but then will let the participants negotiate on their own. Eisenhower's statement added: "The purpose would be to con- sider among other things the in- terest of the public, as well as mutual interests, in the mainte- nance of industrial peace, price stability, incentive for continuous investment, economic growth, pro- ductivity and world labor stand- ards." Eisenhower said he asked Meany -and will soon ask President Ru- dolph Bannow of the National Association of Manufacturers - each to designate three represen- tatives to a conference planning group. This committee would develop, without government help, an agenda for the conferences, addi- tional participants to be invited, the time and place for the first meeting, and other matters. Eisenhower said the conference delegates should be top level ex- ecutives of the AFL-CIO and either presidents or board chair- men of firms having collective bargaining agreements with AFL- CIO unions. Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell, who attended Eisen- hower's meeting with Meany, told newsmen later he hoped the con- ferences would develop into a con- tinuing mechanism for both sides to thrash out mutual problems. "The success or failure will be up to labor and management themselves," Mitchell said. "But I am hopeful that left on' their own, with government urg- ing to accomplish better under- standing, they will do so." Mitchell conceded that prior at- tempts at holding labor-manage- ment talks generally have failed. But he said he considered business and labor now are more mature and for that reason there is more reason to hope for success this time. Mitchell said he hoped the six- man arrangements group will get together in the next few weeks. Bill Provides For Delegates LANSING WP)-A bill providing for partisan nomination and elec- tion of delegates to a constitu- tional convention was signed into law yesterday by Gov. G. Mennen Willams. If a constitutional convention is approved, the Legislature only will be required to set the times for nomination and election of delegates. The legislature failed to place the constitutional convention on the ballot by resolution. The League of Women Voters and the State Junior Chamber of Commerce now are trying to gather enough signatures to put the proposal on the November ballot by petition. 15 Nations Summoned To Meeting Ambassador Gives Resignation, Apology WASHINGTON (-The United States called yesterday for a speedup by South Korea's govern- ment in removing "the grievances of the people" and summoned a special meeting of nations which fought the Communists in Korea. In a related development, Am- bassador You Chan Yang an- nounced he is submitting his res- ignation after nearly nine years as Seoul envoy to Washington "because I have made mistakes." Incorrect Declaration Yang said that under instruc- tions from his government, he had wrongly declared in public that the Communists fomented the demonstrations seething in his homeland. He said he found out from a friend in Korea that this was not so and "I want to publicly apologize for the state- ments which I have made. The Korean diplomat said also he had received a threat from a Korean businessman here, Koh Byong Choll, to get out of the embassy in 24 hours or be forced out. But Yang denied this influ- enced his decision to submit his resignation. U.S. Concerned United States concern that Kor- ean President Syngman Rhee has not moved adequately to meet popular discontent was shown in a State Department statement. "President Rhee seems to rec- ognize that the current unrest in Korea stems from various abuses, particularly the election irregu- larities of March 15 and that this unrest is. a genuine expression of popular discontent," the statement said. "He has promised to hold new elections and indicated that he is prepared to resign. He also asked the vice president-elect to resign. "We are naturally following these developments closely in the hope that adequate measures will be taken to redress the grievances of the people. The last press re- ports from Seoul, however, indi- cate the demonstrations against the government are continuing." Want Quick Reform State Department press officer Lincoln White, who read the statement in response to a ques- tion, added that Washington hopes to see the reforms take place" as soon as possible. The 15 countries who joined with the United States in the Korean War were asked to send their diplomatic representatives here to an afternoon meeting with Assistant Secretary of State J. Graham Parsons. The Korean War allies, most of whom still have contingents in the Asian land, are concerned lest the disturbances south of the armistice line tempt the heavily armed Communists once again to invade across the 38th parallel dividing North from South Korea. IN STUDENT DEMONSTRATION: Japanese Radicals Protest U.S. Pact TOKYO (P)-Six thousand radi- cal left-wing university students tried to batter their way through massed police lines into the Par- liament Bldg. yesterday in pro- test against Japan's new security pact with the United States. Members of the Zengakuren N aStiern 1 Students Association were cheered on by black-uni- formed leaders. The leaders ex- horted the youths to emulate South Korean students who forced President Syngman Rhee to bow to their demands for reforms. But the anti-American Japanese students lacked both the inspira- tion and mettle of the pro-Ameri- can Koreans. .,. ike ToAsk For Action In Congress WASHINGTON (P) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower soon will attempt to prod Congress into act- ing on his stalled legislative pro- gram and into killing what he considers budget-busting proposals sponsored by Democrats. Republican congressional lead- ers announced the plan for a special message yesterday after their weekly meeting with Eisen- hower at the White House. Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Illi- nois and Rep. Charles Halleck of Indiana, the GOP leaders, men- tioned some of the things Eisen- hower opposed but did not detail to reporters what he will press Congress to pass. They said he will list what he is for and what he's against. Dirksen said the President is "quite sensitive" because Congress has been in session almost four months and has acted on only one major administration measure, the civil rights bill. The legislators plan to adjourn early in July be- fore the national political conven- tion opens. Eisenhower is quite concerned, Dirksen said, that Congress so far has sidetracked many of his pro- posals. In response to questions, Dirk- sen mentioned only the $4,175,- 000,000 foreign aid program - which some members of Congress want to cut by $1.5 billion - and minimum wage legislation. COEDS: Our hairstyling will enhance you. Our win- dow pictures are the latest coiffures. no appts. needed The Dascola Barbers near Michigan Theatre Baton - wielding police t h r e w back the massed assaults of the chanting, shouting young men and women in a four-hour series of shoving contests punctuated by free-for-alls which left many faces bloodied. At least 30 police and more than 100 demonstrators were injured. Eighteen students, including one of the leaders, were arrested in the riot, which many regarded as a trial test for demonstrations the students plan when President Dwight D. Eisenhower visits Japan in June. The youths are members of the radical wing of Zengakuren, which was thrown out of the Communist Party for its extreme policies. The group has staged repeated protests against the military treaty, signed in Washington last January and now up for ratifica- tion by the Japanese Diet. Used Riot Force Police rushed 6,000 riot force men into the fray. Two thousand others were held in reserve, but never used. Three bumper-to-bumper rows of police cars and trucks barred, the way of the mob into the Par- liament Bldg. Disregarding police advice to go home, the shouting students charged the police cordon. Some swung flag staffs to topple officers from the roofs of trucks. Others hurled themselves on the police and fell with them on top of the demonstrators below. The major force of police let the vanguard of the youths scale the third row of trucks, then swung into action. They quickly broke up the' charge, using hands as much as possible but sticks when necessary. The main body of the students fell' back. Many of those who broke through were bleeding at the nose and mouth as they were led away by officers. During the peak of the battle in front of the building, several thousand Japanese quietly march- ed to the side gate and presented petitions urging that the treaty be scrapped. The students, like the opposi-- tion socialists and leftwing labor groups, want Japan to cut its military ties with the United States. They want Japan neutral- ized, but openly advocate closer ties with Red China. Give Cheers T~o de. Gaulle In New York NEW YORK (iP-French Presi- dent Charles de Gaulle made an- other of his great triumphal re- turns yesterday, this time to New York City. At one point he strode away from his security guard to embrace well wishers in Times Square. Police estimated a million per- sons lined lower Broadway to roar a greeting to the austere old war- rior. De Gaulle is one of the few men ever to receive a second ticker tap parade up the historic Man- hatten canyon of heroes. De Gaulle last came here in 1945 as premier of his nation's first provisional postwar govern- ment. U.S. Tells 'Removal Ko: o~f rea To Ruse I, Second Front Page 29-531 E. Liberty Michigan Theatre Bldg. i Wednesday, April 27, 1960 Page 3 5 Y YYYIY iYY Y YYY *4R The senior officers of the Michigan Union announce EXTENSION of petitioning for general male co-chairman of 1960 Homecoming. 1. Pick up information in Union student offices - 2nd floor - North Wing - from 2-5 P.M. WEEK- DAYS. 2. Petition'due: Thursday, April 21 3. 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