SL 'PROCRASTINATION' See Page 4 La test Deadline in the State :4) ait:I; CLOUDY, WINDY VOL. LX, No. 60 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS U. . Rebukes Chinese f-r Shelling of Dorm Fire Kills Three In Oklahoma Flame Destroys WoodenBuilding NORMAN, Okla.-()-A flash fire in a wooden dormitory at the University of Oklahoma burned to death three students yesterday. Three others were unaccounted for and 21 were injured, two criti- cally. * * * MORE THAN 300 escaped un- injured. Two of the dead have been identified. They are Sammy La- Rue of Clinton, Okla., and Maur- ice Ahearn, Killingsworth, Conn. There were 349 men students in the dormitory. Awakened suddenly in the early morning hours, many of them jumped from the windows of the sprawling two-story wooden struc- ture, formerly used as a Navy barracks. LONG AFTER the flames had died away, leaving only the build- ing's concrete supports standing like tombstones in a graveyard, university officials worked fever- ishly to identify the dead and missing. It was a tedious job because an unknown number of dormi- tory residents had departed for the week-end. Firemen continued to dig through the ruins, while university workers sought to contact the missing students or their families. Anxious parents were swamp- ing the university switchboard with telephone calls from all over the country., WITH THE origin of the fire, which enveloped the building in less than ten minutes, still unde- termined, estimates of the damage ran beyond half a million dollars. Critically injured were David M. Clary, Buckner, Ark., and John H. Sorensen, Brooklyn, N.Y. Campus fire chief Claude Sum- mers said the fire apparently started in the No. 1 wing of the dormitory. There are five wings. * * * THE FIRE STARTED about 1:30 a.m. Students ran through the halls shouting that the building was afire. Many thought at first it was a practical joke, but the roaring flames and intense heat soon af- firmed the warning. Many students were cut when they were forced to break the glass in the windows. They later said the dormitory had been painted last month and the windows were stuck by the paint. 'U' Students Arrested for Stealing Car Picked Up in Detroit During 'Joy Ride' Three University students are being held by Dtroit police for stealing a car from Ann Arbor yesterday morning. The Associated Press reported that the students, William Law- rence, '52E, Hiram Nicolson; '51, and John Benner, '51, were ar- rested in Detroit's Palmer Park section at 3:45 a.m. yesterday for driving without headlights. VI!' C ages Nose ut Spartans, 52-49 'hips Nationalists Slapped With Protest Note a X t Y -Daily-Burt Sapowitch NEW STUDENT CHAPEL - Dedication services for the new $275,000 Lutheran Student Chapel will be performed today. University students raised about $25,000 of the chapel's total cost during a year-long fund drive. Ground was broken for construc- tion in November, 1948, and the chapel was opened for services in September. * ** * Lutheran Student Chapel To Be DedicatedToday Dedication services for the new $275,000 Lutheran Student Chapel at 1511 Washtenaw will be performed at 4 p.m. today. The dedication completes a year-long fund drive to build the new chapel. University students raised about $25,000 of the total cost. * * * * THE RITES OF DEDICATION will be performed by the Rev. A. Zeile, of Saginaw, president of the Michigan district of the Luth- eran Church - Missouri Synod. The Rev. Oswald Hoffman, national director of public re- lations for the church, will preach the sermon. The dedication Morrili's Top Of 16 Points Paces Opener VanderKuy Hits For 13 inVictory By BILL BRENTON (Special to The Daily) EAST LANSING--Fighting an uphill battle most of the way, Michigan's Wolverines success- fully opened their 1949-50 basket- ball season by downing the Spar- tans from Michigan State, 52-49, at Jenison Field House last night before 12,337 fans. Hal "Lefty" Morrill pushed 16 points through the nets and cen- ter Leo VanderKuy tallied 13 to lead the Wolverines on their hard trail to victory. * * * IT WAS the Michigan State's show throughout the first half and mid-way into the second as the Spartans cashed in time after time on long set shots and effec- tively worked their screen plays to drive under the basket for lay- up shots. The Wolverines, employing their standard slow, deliberate type game, made good use of their height advantage and con- trolled the backboards with 6 ft. 5 in. Leo VanderKuy leading the way. Breaking the scoring ice first on Hal Morrill's foul shot, the Michigan offense then sagged bad- ly and the Spartans took command of the lead, Sot to lose it until there were 12 minutes gone in the second half. ** * * MICHIGAN STATE had piled up a commanding 36-24 lead in the early minutes of the second half before the Wolverine offense caught fire. Two baskets by VanderKuy and another by Don McIntosh cut the Spartans lead to 36-30 and after a see-saw battle Jim Skala's hook shot brought the Wolverines within one point of the East Lansing cagers. Then with eight minutes to play in the game, Captain Mack Su- prunowicz dropped a one-hander through the nets and the Wol- verines went into the lead for the See WOLVERINES, Page 6 Sale of NSA Cards Will Start Tuesday NSA purchase cards wil be on sale from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tues- day through Friday in the Ad- ministration Building lobby, ac- cording to Leonard Wilcox, NSA Purchase Card chairman. The cards will sell for $1, and will be honored at 42 stores in De- troit. Discounts up to 25 per cent are possible on merchandise from clothing to jewelry at these stores, Wilcox declared. He pointed out that cards will be good until Sept. 1, 1950, and will be honored for Christmas shopping. No stores in Ann Arbor were contracted this year, Wilcox said. OLD ROADS UNCOVERED-Shrinkage of water in Westchester county's Kensico Reservoir brought to light again two old roads buried beneath water when the reservoir, north of New York City, was filled. The present road is at upper right. New York City's reservoirs now are only about 37 per cent filled due to a long drought. The parched town of Roosevelt, N.J., which has depended upon port- able tanks and purifiers for the past week, was relieved yesterday S near the hard-hit community. BY MUTUAL REQUEST: Segregation Voluntary In. Villa when well-diggers struck water " V New Contract Talks in Coal StrikeHinted Mine Owners Blast a Government Policy By The Associated Press PIKEVILLE, Ky. - The first crack-some new contract talks- in a solid operator front against John L. Lewis and his United1 Mine Workers Union appearedE here yesterday. But a top Southern coal opera- tors' spokesman labeled the action' "practically a shotgun wedding with a small group of smaller-I type operators."' * - * * A UNION official announced that 34 truck mine coal companies of the big sandy area are con- sidering a contract which may put them back on a five-day work week basis after next week. Meanwhile in Washington, the National Coal Association ac- cused the Truman Administra- tion of "playing politics of the cheapest sort" in John L. Lewis' deadlocked coal negotiations with the soft coal industry. In a weekly bulletin edited by executive vice president John D. Battle, the industry official said "it must be remembered that John Steelman has injected himself in- to these wage negotiations over, a period of years, always maneu- vering against management." BATTLE referred to Presiden- tial Assistant John R. Steelman,' who is with the President at Key West, Fla. Alen on ta .ha,.f,..o n ... Sichang Labeled As NextCapital WASHINGTON - (A) - In a strong note of protest, the United States has demanded that the Chinese Nationalist government warn its warships that they can- not fire illegally on American ves- sels running the China coast blockade. The state department disclosed yesterday that the rebuke was delivered Friday to Chinese For- eign Minister George Yeh in Brit- ish Hongkong. * * * WHEREAS Secretary of State Acheson had emphasized in a news conference Wednesday that he wished all American ships would stay out of the "hazardous" Shanghai area, yesterday's note hammered the reverse side of the case-insistence that Nationalist warships should not illegally atL tack American vessels. The protest was directed spe- cifically against the attack Mon- day on the Isbrandtsen line's vessel, the Sir John Franklin. At the news conference Wednes- day Acheson had said that he con- sidered the latest attack in some respects at least aviolation of American rights. Therefore he considered that if the Isbrandtsen line wanted to claim damages the American government would back it up. * * *' rite is part of day-long services beginning with Matin Commun- ion at 9:30 a.m. At 10:30 a.m. the Rev. R. W. Hahn, of Chicago, head of the Lutheran Student Service Commis- sion, will be the guest speaker for the festival service. THE REV. ALFRED Schieps, pastor of the Lutheran Chapel, will be liturgist for all services. Joan Zapf, '52SM, will be solo- ist and Tom Friewall, '53SM, Guin- evere Dorn, '52SM; and Helen Ko- pela, '51SM, will be organists. The dedication. service completes, a year-long fund drive to build the new chapel. Ground was brok- en November, 1948, for construc- tion. The chapel was opened for services this September. Stauffacher Will Speak on Budget Charles B. Stauffacher, assis- tant director of the Federal Bur- eau of Budget, will speak on "TheI Problems of the Federal Budget" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Hen- derson Rm. of the League. By DON KOTITE Housing segregation at 3,060- family Willow Run Village is not practiced "as a designated area," Walter Funkhouser, acting general housing manager for the project, declared yesterday. His comment followed a govern- ment announcement Friday, from New York, that future housing projects cannot expect federal aid Segregation Ban Will Start In SixtyDays WASHINGTON - (RP) - Gov- ernment housing officials indi- cated yesterday it will be 60 days or more before the government in- vokes its new rule against writing race and religious barriers into federal-aided housing. They said it will take that long to print and distribute the neces- sary documents providing for the changes in regulations announced Friday. * * * THE NEW rule will bar federal home mortgage guarantees where written restrictive covenants are placed on record after the ef- fective date. When the new anti-discrimina- tion policy goes into effect, it will cover: (1) FHA financing guarantees for single homes and housing projects. (2) GI loans for veterans housing. (3) Slum clearance and re- development projects authorized in the multi-billion dollar hous- ing bill which Congress approved last summer. if they write caluses against ten- ants of any race, color or creed. ONE SECTION of Willow Village is inhabited completely by colored families, Funkhouser admitted. "A difficulty in placing whites and Negroes together necessitated such . move," he explained. And in one section a "check- erboarding" system -- alternate white and Negro units - has been in effect, he said. "But no segregation, as such, exists anywhere in the Village. Wherever members of different races have been separated, it has always been through mutual re- quest," he asserted. FUNKHOUSER said a policy of segregation "might have been in effect here just after the war's end, but if so, only as an inheri- tance from wartime rulings." All traces of segregation have disappeared since that time, he stressed. In Ann Arbor, local real estate operators have taken both nega- tive and positive stands on the new government policy, disclosure of which was authorized Friday by President Truman. * * ALTHOUGH HE doesn't think much segregation is practiced at this time anyway, realtor F. A. Sergeant declared himself in favor of the government's action, calling it "the proper measure to take." On the other hand, realtor Floyd Stanley maintained that he feels, as "at least 75 per cent" of the American people would, that housing should be segregat- ed. And he condemned public hous- ing in general, saying "it handi- caps private enterprise, which can take care of the housing problem without Federal aid." World News Round!-Up By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Congressional investigators got orders yesterdayC to check into broadcast charges that the late Harry Hopkins help- ed the Russians speed large ship- ments they called uranium and "bomb powder" out of the United States by air during the war. * * * YPSILANTI - Rep. Joseph E. Warner, 78-year-old state legisla- tor from Ypsilanti, accepted today the post of chairman of the pow- erful house ways and means com- mittee. The key legislative post was va- cated Friday by the death of Rep. John P. Espie. * * * NEW YORK - Philip Barry, 53, noted playwright, died today of a heart attack at his Park Avenue home. The dramatist's physician, Dr. Dana Atchley, said Barry had not been in ill health. * * * LAKE SUCCESS-The Nether- ands won an overwhelming vote of confidence in the United States today for its intentions of pro- moting peace and independence in troubled Indonesia. Stevens Will 9 MEANWHILE, reports from Hong Kong said that a rapid Com- munist advance through China's far West raised the prospect yes- terday that Chiang Kai-Shek soon may abandon the mainland for his island fortress of Formosa. There seems little to stop the Red rush in the West, which rapidly is being cut in half. Even the best Nationalist armies left, those of Gen. Pai Chung-Hsi, are being driven into an ever- shrinking corner in the South. And from Chengtu came word that a small party of minor offi- cials have made a survey flight to Sichang to prepare for the ar- rival of Premier Yen Hsi-Shan's mobile Nationalist government. Sichang, a town of 20,000 in- habitants, is in the high moun- tains of Sikang province 225 miles southeast of Chengtu. The government won't' move again until Chengtu is actually threatened. Train Tickets To Go on Sale Tomorrow Reduced-rate tickets for two special holiday trains will be sold beginning tomorrow. The eastbound train will leave at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 16, for New York and Boston. The Boston car will be switched at Albany. Inter- mediate stops will be made wher- ever there is a request by 25 stu- dents. THE WESTBOUND train will leave at 4 p.m. Dec. 16, for Chi- cago. Rates to all destinations are reduced approximately 15 per cent, according to Vulcans, sen- ior engineering honorary, spon- sors of the trains. Vulcans requestedall interested students to make their reserva- tions from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. to- morrow through Friday in the Ad- ministration Bldg. A deposit of $5.00 will reserve a seat for those unable to pay the full fare at this time. Editor To Talk On Journalism Benjamin H. Reese, managing editor of the St. Louis Post-Dis- patch, will discuss "Newspapering Sing Dec. 12 Rise Stevens, Metropolitan Op- era soprano scheduled to sing to- morrow at Hill Auditorium as the sixth artist in the regular Choral Union Series, will not appear un- til Mon., Dec. 12. The postponment was necessary because of a rearrangement of her Metropolitan Opera performances, according to Charles A. Sink, president of the Choral Union Society. TO SPEAK HERE TOMORROW: Winfield Lauds U.S. Aid to Chinese Students THEY WERE model carowned1 Finanof 210 N.' riding in a 1939 by Mrs. Margaret Thayer St. * * * i F t Detective Ray York, of the Detroit Police Department, said the students, all roommates, ad- mitted stealing the car from in front of Mrs. Finan's home about 1 a.m. yesterday. They claimed that they "only wanted to go for a joy ride." By HERB ROVNER Enabling Chinese students to study in America is a most ef- fective means of ending Commu- nism in China, according to Gerald F. Winfield who will give a University lecture at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Ampi- theatre. Winfield, recently returned from loans which Congress has ap- propriated for Chinese students in the United States, Winfield stressed the desirability of con- tinuing these loans as an im- portant weapon against Chinese Communism. "We have lost the physical bat- tle for democracy in China, but ,upa nd.moit a ,in.A mra, n n - Communists will greatly aid their cause," he continued. Americanized Chinese students are taking back to their native country many American ideas and can be instrumental in teaching the Chinese Communists the truth about America, Winfield ex- plained. * * * fluence and would like to get us so aroused with incidents like the Angus Ward case that we would refuse to have any relations with the Communist Chinese govern- ment. "WE MUST get out from behind our defensive position and learn new creative techniques that can