HYPOCRITICAL WEATHER CRITIC See Page 4 i rJ7, r 4 , tr i CYi 41F at.tu 1 U gf4l e { \ , fifib' Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LX., No. 81 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JANUARY 15, 1950 WARMER, RAIN PRICE FIVE CENTS Chinese Reds Seize 1 rri rican Consulatc. isconsin Wh ips Wolverine agers 3-4 'K') 13,000 See 'M' Dropped Into Second Suprunowicz' 13 High for Losers (Special to The Daily) MADISON-Michigan's basket- ball team fell right in line with three other Western Conference quintets playing away from home last night when it succumbed to Wisconsin's Badgers before a par- tisan throng of 13,000 persons here. The score was 53 to 41. * * * IT WAS THE first Michigan defeat in three league starts, top- pling the Wolverines from first BOX SCORE ON PAGE 3 place and leaving them in a three way deadlock for second with Wisconsin and Northwestern. Don Rehfeldt, center and act- ing captain of the Badgers, dem- onstrated his most brilliant brand of play to lead the scor- ing with 21 points. He was held to only one point during, the initial ten minutes of play when Michigan threw up a tight zone defense around him. He reverted to expert playmak- ing, setting up numerous Wiscon- sin scoring plays, and when the other Badgers, paced by forward Ab Nicholas, began pouring in baskets over the top of the zone, the Wolverines abandoned it, leaving Rehfeldt free in scoring position. * * * ' MICHIGAN sharpshooting was at its worst. The losers cashed only 16 of 68 field goal attempts r, for a frigid percentage of .205, while the Badgers were hitting at a .344 clip. Mack Suprunowicz led his team with 13 counters. The winners built up an early lead which they never relin- quished. They led, 28-16 at halftime. Michigan took more shots but they were mostly of the long, des- perate variety, while the Badgers were capitalizing on openings in their opponents' defense at closet range to the basket. THE FIERY rebounding which marked the Wolverines' victories was totally absent as Wisconsin held control under both back- boards. Michigan's play appeared loggy against the smooth, sharp Badger style. In the second half the losers failed to close the gap tighter than nine points. Michigan plays Ohio State at Columbus tomorrow night. THE BUCKEYES currently top the Conference as a result of their 61-51 triumph over previously un- beaten Northwestern last night. They routed defending champion Illinois, 83-62, in 'their only other loop contest. Biggest Ohio threat is 6 ft. 5 in. Dick Schnittker, a forward, who is averaging 25 points per game so far this season. If the Wolverines have no more luck with him than they encountered against Rehfeldt they will return to Ann Arbor with a .500 record. MICHIGAN is faced with the necessity of winning at Ohio to remain in the race for Big Ten honors. The Buckeyes, however, are always tough on the home floor, as evidenced by the crush- ing defeat absorbed there by the Wolverines last year. Students Get Phoenix Posts Four students, not listed in yes- terday's Daily, were named to the STUDENTS IN DANGER: Rooming House Fire Peril Cited (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second of a series of articles on fire pre- cautions in local student boarding houses.) By DAVIS CRIPPEN Many students are living in rooming houses which have sub- standard fire precautions without even knowing it. The place I live in is a good example. If fire strikes this house, I have a very good chance of getting burned alive or smothered by flames, or badly injured before I can get down from my third floor room.. * * * * THERE IS NO FIRE ESCAPE from the third floor, even though state law requires it for a boarding house of this type. A ladder going from the front third floor room to the roof of the porch is the only way out, aside from the stairs. From the porch roof to the ground, some 20 feet, there is no lad- der. Evidently we roomers are supposed to be gymnasts enough to jump down without injuring ourselves. But the saddest feature of this example is that it is not an isolated case, but is typical of many - too many - buildings where students live. In fact, my landlady stoutly maintains that her house is above the campus average as far as fire precautions go. If you look, you can walk into almost any student rooming house and pick out features of the 1 "a Five Killed as Buses Collide t tr Near Gaylordb GAYLORD, Mich. -(P)- A bus collision in a howling blizzard yes- terday killed five persons and in- c jured a score of others. i A chartered bus returning 20 h members of the Michigan Tech l g hockey squad from East Lansing to Houghton, Mich., crashed head- on with a southbound GreyhoundS passenger bus. The dead includ-T ed Richard Loutit, the student s manager, and Robert Getgen, a a member of the team, t THE ACCIDENT occurred ats 10:15 a.m. (EST), on U.S. Route 27 seven miles north of here. Allo available ambulances and state police cars were rushed to thef scene from here and neighboring cities, a Drivers of both buses appar- t ently were blinded by wind-driv- t en snow at an "S" curve. The is impact ripped the metal plating off the left sides of both vehicles. g The Michigan Tech hockey a squad was returning from East a Lansing where it had won a two- f game series from Michigan State h College. * * * a THE NORTH-BOUND bus car-C rying the team encountered ex- tremely low visibility just befored the crash, witnesses said. A snowE plow had just passed and sent up t clouds of powdery snow. At the tr same time the falling snow was whirled about by a gale-force wind. . The Greyhound bus apparently s had swerved to avoid hitting a car'r parked at a curve and the driver v failed to see the oncoming bus carrying the hockey team. in building which could turn it into death trap. * * * BOTH UNIVERSITY and city fficials concerned with the sit- ation realize that far too many ocal rooming houses have not met he fire precaution standards set by the state. But they are hampered by a lack of money and manpower to carry out an inspection pro- gram to correct the situation. What a thorough fire inspection an do was shown clearly when inspectors came to my rooming ouse recently. The house has been sold to a group who asked both the Univer- See COLLEGE ROUNDUP, Page 6 ity and the city to inspect and pprove it before purchase went hrough. C. S. WOOD, Ann Arbor's as- siastant building inspector went ver the house thoroughly. He ordered: 1. Installation of a fire escape rom the third floor. 2. Encasement of rear stair areas in plaster and the installa- ion of a fire door at the head of he stairs to the third floor. This s to cut to an absolute minimum he help the stair-wells would give a fire. 3. Covering of the furnace room nd basement hall with lathing and one half inch of plaster to urnish protection against the heat of the furnace starting a fire. BUT THIS HOUSE has far from complete set of fire weak points. City Fire Chief Ben Zahn, in a alk with me, listed a few other danger spots that this structure eems happily to lack, but that oo many other Ann Arbor room- ing houses have in abundance. For example, the electrical wir- ig seems to have passed the in- pection but Chief Zahn assured me that circuit over-loading is very common in rooming houses. (Tuesday: What can be done to improve fire precautions?) Governor s Post Sought By Byrnes Throws Hat in S. Carolina Ring SPARTANBURG, S.C., -W) - Former Secretary of State James F. Byrnes announced last night he would be a candidate for the Democratic nomination for gover- nor of South Carolina this year. Byrnes, once known as "assist- ant president" to Franklin D. Roosevelt, has served in both houses of Congress. HIS STATEMENT said: "I will be a candidate for gover- nor. I will seek the nomination of the Democratic party of South Carolina. "When I left the service of the national government in 1947 I fully intended not to return to actual participation in politi- cal affairs. I adherred to this in- tention until last spring when the trend of political events caused me to express my views of policies affecting the state and nation. "During the last six months I have been urged by, many people in all walks of life in the state to be a candidate for governor. The people . of this state have been good to me, and I have decided to be a candidate, in the hope, if elected, I can be of service to them." * * * SIMULTANEOUSLY Byrnes re- peated a previous assertion that he would not be a candidate "for president or vice, president on the ticket of any party under any circumstances." The primary will be held July 11. Byrnes is the fourth candidate to announce for the Democratic nomination, which is equivalent to election in South Carolina. Leiris Defied As Supplies of Coal Dwindle By The Associated Press A big bloc of striking United Mine Workers yesterday defied tradition and voted down John L. Lewis' suggestion that they go back to work tomorrow, as Michi- gan coal supplies dwindled dan- gerously. Exact figures are not available, but at least nine locals represent- ing more than 11,000 bituminous diggers balked at their union leader's order to end a week-old strike. "Five days or nothing," their spokesmen angrily declared. * * * INTERPRETATIONS of the miners' action differed. A few ob- servers close to the coal situation regarded the move with some suspicion. But to the majority it is sim- ply a months old rebellion in their contract fight that finally burst through the traditional shell of miner silence. Meanwhile, faced by prospects of one of the winter's sharpest cold waves, Michigan was reported nearing the bottom of her coal stockpiles. Cities all over the southern half of the state warned that a severe cold snap might bring suffering within a few days. *, * * FORECASTERS at the U.S. weather bureau said such a snap might be developing. The bureau warned that "one of the worst cold waves of the winter" was ex- pected to hit Michigan Tuesday. Unless the cold front veers be- fore it reachesthe state, tempera- tures may drop to near zero in State Dept. Recalls All Personnel Lawmakers Hit Comnimunist Act WASHINGTON -1')- In con- tempt of American protests, the Chinese Communists yesterday swarmed in and took over the Uni- ted States Consulate office in Pei- ping. American patience snapped. The State Department immedi- ately ordered all .its official per- sonnel out of Red China. It re- portedly acted with President Tru- man's direct approval. * * * IT BLASTED at the Commun- ists' latest anti-American move as "a flagrant violation of our treaty ights and of the most elementary standards of international usage and conduct." Angry U.S. lawmakers denoun- ced the invasion and seizure of American property in the strong- est terms. Republicans redoub- led their criticism of theAd- ministration's handling of Far Eastern affairs. Several said this latest insult should rule out all possibility of U.S. recognition of the Chinese Communist regime. * * * SENATOR KNOWLAND (R- Calif.), riled for months by the State Department's handling of the tense Far Eastern situation, de- manded the resignation of all Ad- ministration officials responsible for American policy there. He said he was thinking prin- cipally of W. Walton Butter- worth, assistant secretary of state for Far Eastern affairs. Knowland added, however: "If the policies of the Far East- ern division are approved by Sec- retary of State Acheson, the shoe fits him, too." THE STATE DEPARTMENT broke the news of the Peiping Con- sulate seizure in a lengthy an- nouncement, documented with the copies of protests filed in advance with Chinese Communist generals. Orders for the seizure of some French and Dutch property in Pei- ping also were reported to have been issued by the Communists. West German Rearmament -Daily-Herb Harrington EUROPE, HERE WE COME!--Getting ready to open the NSA Travel Bureau at Lane Hall tomor- row to give out information on travel abroad this summer are Lee Winneg, Travel Bureau chair- man, Mary Curtis, co-chairman of Student Religious Association's Summer Projects Committee, and her assistant Ann Jackson. The Travel Bureau will be open 4 to 5 p.m. starting tomorrow and continuing through the second semester. i' Hager Cites I Trips A broad Outlined By NSA Travel Bureau 'Favoritisnm' In Petitions By MARY STEIN Charges of favoritism in pick- ing Women's Judiciary Council candidates were leveled yesterday by Adele Hager, '51. Miss Hager, vice-president of Student Legislature and an SL ad- visory member of the League In- terviewing Committee for Judic positions said that the committee had asked women already peti- tioning for other League jobs whe- ther they would be interested in serving on the women's court. The NSA Travel Bureau will open tomorrow for all students in- terested in work, study and travel abroad next summer. The- Bureau, a project of Stu- dent Legislature and set up as a part of the Summer Projects Com- mittee of Student Religious As- sociation will be open from Jan. World News Roundup ROME-Alcide De Gasperi, the 16 to 20 at Lane Hall and will open again for the second semester Feb. 13. HEADED BY Lee Winneg, '51, the Travel Bureau will welcome any student planning or hoping to ~o anywhere from Mexico to Yu- goslavia this summer and will offer information on more than 100 travel and study programs cover- ing 35 nations. One of the biggest assets to the potential globe-trotter is the Work, Study, Travel Abroad booklet put out by the National Student Association. Copies will be available at the Bureau for 25 cents each. General information will be available on the travel programs, as well as inside dope on air and sea transportation, commercial "They got only a handful of ap- leader of five Italian postwar gov- plicants for the three Council posi- ernments, was trying last night tions, so they approached othert petitioners when they came to be interviewed," she said. * * * MISS HAGER called the action "unwise and unfair." "The com- mittee should have re-opened pe- titioning on a campus-wide scale if it wanted more try-outs for the jobs." "The job of selecting members of a group as powerful as the Women's Judiciary can't be tak- en lightly," she declared. Patricia Reed, '50, chairman of the 11-woman Interviewing Com- mittee, admitted that her group had asked League applicants whe- ther they would like to serve in "other positions." It's true that Judiciary Council was the only group that lacked enough candi- dates, she said. *' * * MISS REED said she hoped matters might be rectified after the beginning of next semester. How they might be "rectified" would be decided by top League of- ficials, she said. (Official interviewing ended this week, and all petitions were due Jan. 6.) Miss Reed added that this was the first year she could remember in which coeds failed to apply in numbers for Judic positions. In part, she blamed the lack of re- sponse on the fact that the Lea- gue activity award for sororities was recently abolished. tto form a sixth. The 68-year-old chieftain of the majority Christian Democrat par- ty was asked by President Luigi Einaudi yesterday to submit a list of cabinet members for the new government. * * * MADRID-Spain appealed to "any country whatsoever" yes- terday to ship her 500,000 tons of grain to ease a wheat famine. Besides the public appeal for food grains, issued in the official organ of the Spanish commerce and industry ministry, it was learned that Spain has ap- proached Soviet Russia in a des- perate attempt to bolster her shortening food stocks. WASHINGTON - Angus Ward. former U.S. Consul General at Mukden, said yesterday the Soviet Union apparently has revived - and expanded - the old Czarist imperialist aims in China. Russia's pre-Communist policy in the Far East, he told a news conference, included a "dream of ice free ports and a hookup with the economic resources of Man- churia." WASHINGTON - Reduction of Army National Guard strength in all states and territories except Alaska was announced yesterday by the Defense Department. The cut involves 6,515 members of the guard. (non-student) ships, pass ports' and visas, paying for travel ex- Talks Denie penses by working and scholar- ships. * * * FRANKFURT, Germany, - (A) THE GENERAL programs are - Secret talks on the rearmament divided into three sections: work, of West Germany were reported study and seminar, in which un-' dergraduates and graduate stu- dents can work in study groups, help rebuild parts of Europe de- stroyed in the war and study cul- tural, political and social aspects of foreign nations. The NSA groups will provide comprehensive tours of European and other nations, including everything from art centers to music festivals. The programs will last through- out the summer, and will range in approximate price from $300 to $800, the average cost being $500. Initial expenses will go down if the student works during part of his tour. * * * OTHER NON-NSA groups' ex- penses are slightly higher. One such group will study Holy Year activities in March and April in Rome. Many projects include study for the summer sessions at any num- ber of European universities. 1950'S 'LACE IT UP': Union Opera Issues Call For Male Chorus Girls and denied yesterday. At the same time a military as- sistance pact between Eastern Germany and Russia was reported to have been signed. This, too, was denied. ALLIED AND German sources said a group of former German generals has submitted plans for a West German army to the West German government of Chancel- lor Adenauer. The plan was said to call for at least one infantry division by June and an armored corps by next year. Paul Bourdin, Adenauer's of- ficial spokesman, said "there is not a shred of truth" in reports that Adenauer had discussed the plan with a group of former German generals. A newspaper's declaration that Russia hasaconcluded a military pact with Eastern Germany was called a "complete fabrication" by a spokesman for the East Ger- man Communist government in Berlin. The Ruhr Nachrichten of Dort- mund, in the British zone, said a mutual friendship and defense pact signed with Russia Dec. 17 guaranteed the defense of Eastern Germany for three years in case of war or civil war. J-Hop Open Sales Begin Tomorrow Men who have long had a de- sire to be a chorus girl will soon get their big chance. Union Opera, the traditional all- male musical comedy, has begun its big drive to recruit a cast for "Lace It Up," the 1950 production of the opera. ** * MEN (AND MEN ONLY) who are interested in principal roles, the singing chorus or the dancing E York director William R. Hol- brook will survey potential cast members. Holbrook will direct the pro- ceedings of "Lace It Up." He is no newcomer to the college show field, having directed seven of Har- vard's famed "Hasty Pudding" shows, as well as one Princeton Triangle revue. pp r AVVLAR*W1 Try l'FkT of QUARTET VIOLINIST SAYS: Youth, Modern Music Go Hated in Hand By PHOEBE FELDMAN Young people appreciate con- temporary music more readily, ac- on-.H +n to Jot f nisman. first tion with chamber music, Roisman felt that the term was about 10 years behind the times. "Morea nA mnr neonle have ten to it," he explained. "But listen to chamber music as cham- ber music-to be played by strings i .i ,I