Y' J-HOP GRAVY TRAIN See Page 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State 4 6F Qi Q SNOW VOL LX, No. 87 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 15, 1950 EIGHT PA rte.. S T I 11 L Washington Curbs Coal Purchases Strike Continues Without Letup WASHINGTON- ()-Informal coal rationing began in the Capi- tal last night on the eve of court- ordered new negotiations for a soft coal contract. The nationwioe miners' strike, meantime, continued full force in the face of the government's Taft- Hartley injunction against it. THE COAL sales curb right un- der the negotiators' noses was only one of a series of new signs of the tremendous pressure that the tightening fuel emergency is put- 'ting on their talks. In Albany, N. Y., Gov. Thom- as E. Dewey got quick unani- mous approval from the State Legislature for emergency 90- day authority to ration coal and restrict use of electric power and manufactured gas. In a special message the Gov- ernor said New York State has on- ly a 10-day coal supply and "If the present strike should continue longer than a few days more, our state would face a catastrophe." Republic Steel announced the shut-down of "b blast furnace at Troy, N.Y., for lack of fuel, the sixth Republic plant to be cooled by the coal strike. The Republic workers in Troy join a swelling army of m''nade jobless of lack of fuel for steel mills, railroads and a widening list of other industries. For the moment coal rationing in Washington was not formal, though the District of Columbia commissioners said officially there is an "emergency." They asked coal dealers to de- liver (a) only one ton at a time to anthracite customers and (b) only three day's supply to soft coal buyers and that much only when the buyer's bin is below the three-day level. * * * Dealers Cite Coal Crisis In Ann Arbor Although the Plant Department is confident that it has enough coal to withstand all but the most severe temperatures, Ann Arbor coal dealers have no more than a week's supply on hand and expect no further shipments. The Plant Department an- nounced a rigid, threefold, con- servation plan: the reduction of steam pressures rrom the central heating plant between 8:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m.; the reduction of heating temperatures in all corri- dors and public spaces where the heat is controlled by thermostats and the closing down of ventilat- ing units except where they are required for heating. THE EFFECT of this plan, ac- cording to Walter M. Roth, sup- erintendent of the Plant will not be enough "so that you'll notice In Ann Arbor, coal stocks continued to dwindle as .home owners laid in an extra supply in view of the shortage. Coal dealer Arbie B. Clever stated that the greatest danger lay in coal hoarding by people who al- ready have a sufficient supply. League House landladies con- tacted reported to the Daily that their supplies will last until June unless the winter is very severe. Meanwhile, Roth emphasized his plea to University students to keep their windows closed by stating, after all "We can't heat all of Washtenaw County." Rushers Must Governor Asks New 'U'Building By RON LINTON (Daily Lansing Correspondent) LANSING-Governor G. Mennen Williams yesterday requested a capital outlay appropriation of $3,095,000 for the University, slash- ing the original request by $2,950,000. The University will receive $2,800,000 for construction of an Out-Patient Clinic and $295,000 for modernization of the Natural Science Building, if the governor's recommendations are acted on in full. * * * * LEFT OUT OF Williams' requests to the Legislature were $120,000 for improvements of the West Engineering Annex, $130,000 for im- provements for the Architecture Building and $2,700,000 for an extension to the General Library. The total outlay recommendation sent to the legislature was $27,928,500 or 40 per cent of World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-The race seg- regation system under which the District of Columbia operates its schools was upheld yesterday by the United States Court of Ap- peals. HANNOVER, Germany-Ger- man police announced yesterday the arrest of a former Nazi block leader in a bizarre plot to kill President Theodor Heuss of the West German Republic. WASHINGTON-President Tru- man yesterday chose Sumner T. Pike, a Republican, as acting chairman ofthe Atomic Energy Commission to direct the develop- ment of the Hydrogen Bomb. The White House said Pike will begin serving tomorrow as acting head of the multi-billion-dollar Atomic Project, pending the ap- pointment of a successor to David E. Lilienthal. * * * VATICAN CITY - Pope Pius XII, 73 years old, suffering a slight attack of influenza and fatigued by the demands of Holy Year audiences and ceremonies rested yesterday. PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia-Spy- conscious Czechoslovakia announc- ed yesterday that two American Mormon missionaries, missing for more than a fortnight, are under arrest on charges of trying to en- ter a prohibited area. SEATTLE - Wind, waves and weather blacked out the two-na- tion search for a $6,000,000 Air Force B-36 bomber tonight. The huge ship with 17 men aboard presumably "ditched" in1 stormy Queen Charlotte Sound, some 460 miles northwest of here. J Hop Extras Aid Polio Fund The March of Dimes Committee for Ann Arbor reported last night that the latest count shows $377 was collected for the polio fund through sale of the J-Hop Extra of the Daily, sold on Campus Mon- day by M Club members. Copies of the extra are still available at the Student Publica- tions Building for J-Hoppers who have not yet obtained one. f the total requested by state O supported agencies. Some 90 per cent of the total' capital outlay recommendations will go to hospital and educational building programs. * * * STATE EDUCATIONAL institu- tions will receive $11,198,851. The major share will go to the Univer- sity and Wayne University for medical facilities and to Michigan State College for a veterinary clinic. In addition, of the $28,000,000 total about $9,000,000 will go to commitments made last year. In submitting his recommenda- tions, the governor hinted that a leveling-off period may be in store for the University. * * * HE EXPLAINED that $1,300,000 was proposed for a new classroom building at Western Michigan Col- lege of Education as a "safety valve" proposition. Williams said the University and Michigan State may have, or will, become too large and that some of the other state col- leges must be prepared to take up the student load. At the same time, the governor recommended the passage of a corporation profit tax to fill an estimated $90,000,000 gap between revenues and total expenditure for the 1950-51 fiscal year. "OUR PRESENT expenses are running in excess of present rev- enues," the governor stated. "It is obvious that we cannot finance this acutely needed construction on our present income," he con- cluded. Yesterday's request brought the total sum being sought from the legislature to $44,000,000. Members of the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee met for two I hours yesterday with the gover- nor, going over the requests made so far. * * * HOWEVER, members of both committees stated that it was too soon to get a picture of the entire situation. The committees will begin work on the appropriations bills today with hopes of having them ready by the March 15th open- ing of the legislature. The Out-Patient Clinic, if built, will furnish accomodations for 20,000 patients monthly, accord- ing to University spokesmen. It is part of a planned medical center which will- include a $3,- 000,000 research center, a $10,000,- 000 medical and nursing educa- tional building, and a $2,000,000 children's hospital and the new maternity hospital. Mrs.:Philpot Forbidden To Discuss Case IHospital Official Steps Into Case By JAMES GREGORY Mrs. Louise Philpot, University Hospital employee who accused a discharged hospital staff member of hitting and insulting her, re- vealed last night that she has been forbidden to discuss the alleged attack while on duty. Robert H. Silk, 51L, also said last night that he had attempted to speak toMrs. Philpot yesterday afternoon while she was at work, but was prevented from doing so by a man riding with them on the elevator which Mrs. Philpot op- erates. SILK HAD previously helped Mrs. Philpot, a Negro, prepare a notarized statement which charg- ed that Dr. Neil H. Sullenberger struck her in the eye and made slurring remarks about her race during an altercation Jan. 20 at the hospital. As a result of the altercation, Dr. Sullenberger was fired from the hospital staff. Mrs. Philpot's notarized statement was prepar- ed after Dr. Sullenberger was discharged. At work last night, Mrs. Philpot was reluctant to speak about the alleged attack. "I don't want to talk about it on my job because they're watching me now," she claimed. BUT SHE admitted that the man who prevented Silk from speaking to her yesterday was Philip J. Olin, University Hospital personnel officer. She also declared she had seen Dr. Sullenberger in the hospital a week after his discharge. How- ever, Dr. Sullenberger has not been rehired by the hospital and is no longer on its staff, The Daily learned last night from Dr. Albert C. Kerlikowske, Univer- sity Hospital director. Mrs. Philpot was laid off for a week without pay soon after the attack. This was done becuase she "talked back" to Dr. Sullen- berger at the time of the alter- cation, she told The Daily. * * * CHUCK BISDEE, Grad., co- chairman of the Inter-Racial As- sociation, said last night that his group would seek to have Mrs. Philpot reimbursed for the time' she had lost. "The IRA will send a delegation to talk to Olin as soon as possible," he declared. Douglas K. Reading, Washtenaw County prosecutor, has ordered a police investigation of the alleged beating. Holiday Plan On SLAgenda pave Belin, '51, Student Legis- lature's one-man "Subcommittee to End Classes on the Thanksgiv- ing week-end" will outline a new compromise holiday plan at SL's first meeting of the semester at 7:20 p.m. today in Rm. 141 BusAd Building. The legislators voted late last semester to ask the University to suspend classes on the Friday and Saturday following Thanksgiving Day. But officials have steadfastly refused to grant the request unless the Christmas vacation is reduced or classes are begun a day earlier each semester. BELIN IS "hopeful," however, that his proposal for extending classes through the Saturdays be- fore the Christmas and Spring va- cations will meet with their ap- proval. "The big stumbling block has been the reluctance of the Univer- sity to lose two full teaching days but this plan would provide the +naMifnni n.1r mcwihout nne..s- Aimed to Preveni Jap Imperialism MOSCOW--()-The Soviet Union and Communist China signE a 30-year alliance in the Kremlin last night and came to an unde standing on Manchuria. At the same time the Russians agreed to grant the Chinese $300,000,000 credit with which to buy industrial and railway equipme: from the Soviet Union. The agreement was concluded after 60 days of negotiations. Prig Minister Stalin and Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vishinsky participati in the talks for Russia with Chinese Communist leader Mao Tze-Tur and his Premier and Foreign Minister Chou En-Lai. Representatives of the two nations decided that after a pea treaty has been signed with Japan, or not later than the end of 195 the Russians will turn over to Red China without compensation a Soviet rights in the administration of the Chungchun railway. This -Daily-wally Barth HIGH ROAD-LOW ROAD-A quartet of students demonstrate the difference of opinion which developed yesterday as to the best method for getting to classes. Some, like the ones clambering over the ,car's bumper, followed all sorts of detours trying to avoid puddles, while others, like the ones on the right, just sloshed merrily on through the muck. Both groups, according to one report, got soaked. Males Prefer Soht To Galoshes, Poll Finds By RICH THOMAS The old story that college stu- dents, particularly males, have. high IQ's but low common sense quotients may have an element of truth in it if an informal galosh survey conducted by The Daily yesterday has any bearing on the case. Alumni Board To Advise U' Phoenx Group An advisory committee of seven University alumni has been formed to counsel and advise Michigan Memorial-Phoenix Project admin- istrative officers, Chester H. Lang, national executive chairman, re- vealed. Chairman of the committee is Dr. Harvey M. Herker, Detroit public library commissioner and superintendent of manufactur- ing for a Detroit pharmaceutical house. 1MEMBERS ARE Harry G. Kipke, former regent and head football coach at the University and now president of a Chicago bottling company; Dr. Harold I. Lillie, surgeon at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn. E. H. Ravenscroft, chairman emeritus and director of the board of a North Chicago, Ill., laboratory; John G. Searle, president of a Chicago, Ill., company. Dr. Leonard A. Scheele, Wash- ington, D. C., surgeon general of the U.S. Public Health Service; Fred M. Zeder, Detroit, vice-chair- man of the board of an automo- bile manufacturing company and a trust company. THE PHOENIX Project, a war memorial to the University dead of World War II, is a $6,500,000 research project into the peace- time uses of atomic energy. Of 500 pairs of masculine feet observed sloshing through the icy pools of watery snow in campus streets, only 24 per cent were clad in ankle-high galoshes or better. An additional 33 per cent, how- ever, were wearing rubbers. * * * THE REMAINING 43 per cent apparently didn't know enough to come in out of the rain for they were slopping through the sludge in ordinary street shoes. Women students, showing an extraordinary amount of horse sense or an acute eye for fash- ion, were comparatively well equipped with sporty boots of all shapes and hues. Meanwhile, local booteries were having a field day. Trilled one Ann ArDor mer- chant: "We've sold more boots in the last two days than we have all winter. My only regret is that no one warned me of this snowy windfall and I've run out of the popular sizes." * * * THE CLEANING establish- ments were reported equally cheer- ful. Although the sniffles are un- doubtedly running rampant, Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, director of Health Service, reported "There has been almost no increase in the number of students coming to Health Service. "The old association between weather and illness is overworked," Dr. Forsythe said. "People can contract colds and other infec- tions in the best weather just as easily as they can in the poorest." Puddle jumping pedestrians can hope for little respite, according to Walter Roth of the Building and Grounds Department, for clogged sewers present the Uni- versity its greatest maintenance headache. Although there was extensive breakage of Ann Arbor tree branches, campus trees suffered slight damage because of heavier trimming of the trees on campus, Roth said. Big Powers TruceAsked ByChurchill EDINBURGH, Scotland-(P)- Winston Churchill last night urged a new Big Three confer- ence to reach a truce in the hat- reds between the eastern and western worlds. If Conservatives win Britain's general election nine days hence, the participants in any such con- ference presumably would be Churchill, Joseph Stalin and President Truman. * * * - LABOR Prime Minister Attlee a year ago, in his latest statement on the question, said he saw no reason for inviting Stalin and the President to London for such a conference. Making his first election speech in Scotland, Churchill revived the talk of another Big Three conference which has never died completely since the last one--at Potsdam in 1945. Churchill said: "Still, I cannot help coming back to this idea of another talk with Soviet Russia upon the high- est level.. "THE IDEA appeals to me of a supreme effort to bridge the gulf between the two worlds so that each can live their life, if not in friendship, at least without the hatreds of the cold war." Truman Signs Korea Aid Bill WASHINGTON-(A4)-President Truman yesterday signed a bill which will pour up to $88,000,000 of American economic aid into. Korea and Formosa within the next four and a half months. The President's action beat by one day the deadline of Feb. 15 when all aid to the Chinese Na- tionalist Government was due to end. It also makes available $3b,000,- 000 from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to continue the flow of raw materials and goods into the republic of South Korea. The economic help will flow in- to the fight against the spread of communism in these two vital far eastern areas. The aid bill cleared Congress last week after the House once had rejected aid to Korea by a one-vote margin. an important line which Trans Siberian trans use to secure a ice-free terminus on the Pacific. 2. Soviet troops will be with, drawn from the "jointly use naval base" of Port Arthur i Manchuria, upon the conclusior of the peace treaty with Japan o not later than the end of 1952. 3. The question of Dairen, term inal city of the Chungchun rail. way, will be considered after the signing of a Japanese peace treat! although administration of th city "belongs entirely to China" IN ADDITION to the mai agreements auxiliary notes wer exchanged at the same time be- tween the two countries. Thes provided: 4. Confirmation of Chinese recognition of the independence and sovereignty of the Mon- golian People's Republic (Out- er Mongolia). 5. Thatthe Soviet Union wil return to China without cost al property Acquired by Sviet 'E ganizations from Japanese pro- perty owners in Manchuria. * * * Finally the two sides hav signed a treaty o f alliance friendship and mutual aid. These various vital agree ments brought to an end the Chinese - Soviet negotiations which began when Mao Tze- Tung, leader of Communist China, arrived in Moscow in mid-December just prior to Generalissimo Stalin's 70th birthday. They also bring to a formal en the treaties signed by Russia an the Chinese Nationalists on thes subjects on Aug. 14, 1945. * * * THE AMERICAN diplomatii colony had gone to bed before th news was released and was no available for comment. Western diplomats here had expected the agreements, but no western experts had suggest- ed that they might be as sweep- ing as those which actually have been signed. By their treaty, Russia and Re China pledged themselves to ac jointly to prevent any violatioi of the peace by "Japan or an: other state which directly or in directly would unite with Japa in acts of aggression." Russia and Red China also de lared their readiness to take par "in all international actions whic have as their object to ensur peace and security throughout th entire world." Sittler Ordered To Be Deported WASHINGTON-(R)-The Co ernment yesterday ordered the de portation of Edward D. Sittle former teacher at the Michiga College of Mining and Technolog in Houghton, Mich. Sittler is a former America who went to Germany before tl war and became a German citi zen. He worked for Nazi radio sta tion Debunk during the war. Captured in Berlin by the Al lies, he was brought to this cour try to testify in treason tria against various American citizen While here he obtained teachin jobs at Northwestern Universit; Evanston, Ill., and at Michiga THAT 'MICHIGAN LOOK': U' Men Charge Coeds' Beauty Goes With Time 'V By EVA SIMON The shades of beauty seem to be falling fast. Several University men, who asked to remain unnamed, have charged that though coeds look beautiful the. first few weeks of school, they gradually "fade out" +nr scttha niriffn oak in" MEETING TODAY: Daily Opents Doors to Tryouts but in the men, he commented. Men react to the principle of adaptation to a stimulus, he ex- plained. Those who come to the University from small backwoods towns are amazed at the beauty of their female classmates, he said. ' k * If you can slush your way over to 420 Maynard St. today, you can become a partner in the big- gest student enterprise on cam- niig gain snme valuable husiness tracurricular activities to work on The Daly; ence is necessary. . is eligible no experi- some experience, he becomes el- igible for one of the business staff's junior positions, which in- clude jobs -as Local Advertising Business staff experience leads