IS THERE A SANTA CLAUS? See Page 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State 43at Q COLD, SNOW FLURRIES VOL. LX., No. 69 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DEC. 15, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS y 'M' Cagers Upset Bulldogs, 73-48 Un iversity To Seek $19,915,000 Appropriation From Legislature I 4- Suprunowicz Hits for 18; Skala,, McIntosh, VanderKuy Get 12 Each By BILL BRENTON Hitting 35% of their shots, Michigan's Wolverines reversed form last night to hand a good Butler club a 73-48 basketball defeat before 3500 Yost Field House fans. Butler, respective two and four point losers to strong Ohio State and Illinois fives, came to Ann Arbor a decided favorite, but watched four Wolverines led by Captain Mack Suprunowicz hit double figures , in the scoring column for a comfortable victory margin. e COACH ERNIE McCoy's club hooped 29 of 83 tries from the field, hawked the ball on defense, and controlled the backboards to reverse " last week's 57-36 loss to Toledo. Packing Plant Blast Claims Sixteen Lives Iowa Explosion Blamed on Gas SIOUX CITY, Ia.-(P)-Sixteen persons-including two women- were killed yesterday in a bomb- like explosion at the Swift & Co. packing plant. As darkness fell, hours after the blast, rescue workers braved gas fumes to continue digging into the debris for possible addi- tional victims. * * *I Israel Moves Government To Holy City JERUSALEM - (R) - Israel brought her government to Jeru- salem yesterday in defiance of a United Nations order for inter- national rule over the holy city. Premier David Ben-Gurion de-. Glared "We have entered upon the greatest political struggle in the history of our people." "Israel is aligned against the whole world," he said. THE PREMIER moved his min- istry to this city from Tel Aviv following approval by the Parlia- ment (Knesset) of a decision to speed the transfer of government offices to Jerusalem. He made his pronouncement upon the gravity of the situation *.vin accepting the freedom of the city from Mayor Daniel Auster. The blue and white flag of the 4 young republic was run up atop the Eden Hotel, a stone building K in the modern section less than a s- quarter of a mile from the old walled city still patrolled by the Arab legionnaires of HashemYite Jordan. BEN-GURION took offices in the hotel. "Today's courageous move by the Israeli goverfiment comes as a great relief," the Palestine Post said editorially, "But it is only the first step and it will need de- termined and well considered ac- tion in the future to protect it against all outside intervention." Tribute Paid To Muyskens By Students Prof. John H. Muyskens of the l speech department spoke last night before students and friends, who had. gathered to pay tribute to the distinguished bio-linguist for his work and the help he has .given them. Words must be lived with and studied carefully if real meaning x is to be conveyed through them Prof. Muyskens advised in his speech, a lecture of highlights from his'famous talk "Beware of the Dog." AT THE conclusion of the pro- gram he was presented with a 4 tae recorder and a wiring of his talk. "Beware of the Dog," a lec- ture in semantics, has been giv- en by Prof. Muyskens since 1910 in talks all over the country. His talk was chiefly a recital of personal experiences and ex- amples, which he feels carry across meaning more effectively F than just words alone. * * * PROF. MUYSKENS warned against the concealed meaning of words. "There is a dog in words," he said, "beware of it, it may bite." He particularly condemned the foreign "-isms" that have crept into this country recently. In our attempt to take them over we fre- quently fail to comprehend heir whole meaning, which only results in friction and misunderstanding, he declared.e Train Ticket The winners played aggressive defensive ball in holding the fast- breaking Bulldogs to their lowest score of the season. Ralph "Buckshot" O'Brien,I Butler forward-guard lived up to advance notices by notching 20 points, 15 of them in the sec- ond half, to pace the scorers. Michigan's Chuck Murray checked the diminutive shot- maker in the opening stanza, but O'Brien found the range in the final half largely against substitutes. Murray also con- tributed seven of eight free throws and a fielder for nine points. Mack Suprunowicz paced a Wolverine offense which took command at the opening gun and was never headed. "Supy" count- ed, eight fielders and two free throws for 18 markers, rising to the heights with three straight one-handers to check the Bull- dogs' only second half bid. * * * JIM SKALA, Leo VanderKuy and Don McIntosh all played the pivot position for a time and each tossed in 12 points. McIntosh was especially clever around the mid- dle with the six-foot-five Vander- Kuy dominating the board for follow-ups. Showing promise of things to come, sophomore Skala proved an effective mate for Supruno- wicz at forward with his drive- ins and clever passing, and per- formed ably at center when called upon. Meshing a long one-hander for his only field goal, Hal "Lefty" Morrill put the Wolverines out in front to stay in the first minute of play. Butler kept it close until double baskets by Suprunowicz and McIntosh gave Michigan a 16-6 lead at the 10-minute mark. Four dogshots by Vander- Kuy along with steady scoring by the starting five widened the mar- gin to an impressive 40-16 at half-time. Butler came out strong in the second stanza, narrowing the lead to 16 points before Supru- nowicz' spree iced the verdict. Both teams substituted freely in the final 10 minutes with the See 'BUCKSHOT' Page 3 World News Roundup By The Associated Press TAIPEH, Formosa- The United States approached Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek about the de- fense of Formosa last month be- fore he went to Chungking, diplo- matic sources disclosed yesterday. * * * SOFIA, Bulgaria-T r a i e h o Kostov, who got next to the top in Bulgaria's post-war Commu- nist revolution, was sentenced last night to die on the gallows by a supreme court which found him guilty of a pro-Yugoslav, anti-Soviet conspiracy. AT LEAST 76 persons were known to have been injured. The blast was attributed by city fire officials to natural gas, but it was not known what touched it off or precisely where. An area a block and a half in each direction from the scene was roped off. Gas masks were used by the rescue workers. * * * THE RED CROSS sent disaster workers and supplies here from Omaha, Kansas City and St., Louis. The Iowa National Guard made all of its facilities avail- able. Shortly after the blast, which occurred just before the noon lunch hour, company officials and civil and mliitary authorities es- timated the number of casualties might reach 200, including 30 to 35 dead. HOWEVER, three and a half hours later the head of the naval reserve unit here said 13 bodies, four of them unidentified, had been taken to the naval reserve armory. Patrolman Tony Bilunos, one of the first officers to arrive on the scene of the disaster, said "it was a terrible sight." "We found debris which rose four feet high in front of the building," he said. "Several per- sons were running around with blood streaming down their faces." NLRB Asks Court Order WASHINGTON - (R') - The National Labor Relations Board, which ordered the AFL interfia- tional typographical union in Oc- tober to stop insisting on the clos- ed shop, decided yesterday to ask a federal court to enforce its order. Elisha Hanson, general counsel for the American Newspaper Pub- lishers Association, had complain- ed to the board that the union was disregarding the .order. He said instructions sent out by the un- ion's officers to local officials Nov. 14 made it clear that the union intends to "ignore the board's orders until such orders are enforced by a court." -Daily-Wally Barth IFC SANTA-Santa Claus (alias Buzz Durant) distributing gifts at yesterday's IFC Christmas Party for Ann Arbor youngsters. Santa was kept busy listening to the requests of the childreft for dolls, games, paint sets and such oddities as three Hula dancers, the Eiffel tower, and, "two years with- out school." Besides the visit from Santa Claus, children were treated to an exhibition of magic and a showing of movies. -- -4-- - - - - * * * BY CAB, CAR AND BUS: Transportation to Airport Assured for 'U' Students More than 400 students today were assured adequate transporta- tion facilities to Willow Run air- port tomorrow afternoon, follow- ing two hectic days of preparation by the Wolverine Club and local bus and taxicab companies. Earlier, travel authorities had expressed fear that dozens of stu- dents would be unable to make ITug Week' To Continue Next Fall Under SL Move To Cut Tugs Of War Defeated Student Legislature will spon- sor a revised "Tug Week" next fall. Revisions, as the result of a proposal overwhelmingly passed last night by the Legislature, will be to shorten the week to two days on a weekend, during which a combined freshman-sophomore rally will be held at Hill Audi- torium Friday, a talent show im- mediately after, a tug-of-war theJ next day and a party for every- one Saturday night. * * A MOTION to take the tug-of- war out of the program was soundly defeated 23-9 in a roll- call vote. Members who left early and were absent in the voting were: Tom Cramer, Bill Duerr, Adele Hager, Walt Hansen, Sally Hughes, Paul McCracken, Gordon MacDougall, Pat McLean, Jo Mis- ner and Bob Vogt. Members absent at the entire meeting were Larry DeVore, Ray Guerin, Polly Hodges, Chuck Murray, George Qua, Irviag Stenn, Joe Stone and Joan Wil- lens. SL's National Student Associa- tion Committee will invite NSA to the University for its annual con- gress next summer. University officials gave the committee the go-ahead to use facilities on campus for the 900- odd students and educators who will attend the congress. * * * THE LEGISLATURE announc- ed that five students have been their afternoon flights from Wil- low Run because under a special license, only one local cab com- pany can operate on the airport run with a maximum of 12 cabs. * * :* JOSEPH S. SCHIROS, president of the cab company, said yesterday, however, that he has received per- mission from the Michigan Public Service Commission to add four more cabs to the Willow Run fleet tomorrow afternoon. "And we will seek emergency permission to add even more units if the need arises," Schiros added., Previously, he had guaranteed students transportation to the air-j port if they made reservations by noon today. "As yet we have re- ceived only 11 reservations," he said. MEANWHILE, Don Greenfield of the WolverinerClub reported late yesterday afternoon that his club has six cars available to take students out to the airport and ex- pects students and faculty to vol- unteer several more by tomorrow afternoon. At the same time, Greyhound. Busline officials announced that special buses will leave the Union for Willow Run at 3:05 and 4:05 p.m. tomorrow and promised that extra buses will be thrown into use if the demand is great enough. In addition, Greenfield said that if more students register for rides to the airport than can be handled by the regularly scheduled Grey- hound buses and by volunteer cars, the Wolverine Club will charter special buses. He urged students to sign up for rides from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 5 p.m. today at the Club's booth at the Union ticket desk. =hose riding in private cars will be asked to share gasoline ex- penses, while busfare will be 35 cents. Santa Patys Call to IFC XmasParty Yearly Children's Fete Held at Hill Santa Claus played host to al- most 4000 Ann Arbor youngsters yesterday at IFC's annual Christ- mas party, held in Hill Auditorium. A bearded, gloved, padded Santa sat on the stage and beamed down on the thousands of happy young faces. * * * "HAVE YOU all been good boys and girls?" he shouted. "Yes," they screamed back and jhurried up to the stage clutch- ing their lists of hoped - f or Christmas gifts. A tiny little girl was one of the first in line. "I want a mule train with Frankie Lane driving," she whispered. Six television sets, the Eiffel tower, one hundred million dollars, two blondes and a red-head, were other requests. After the talk with S a n t a Claus paper bags brimming with candy, peanuts, gumdrops and, peppermint canes were handed out to the children. Most of the children tore open their bags and sampled the tasty contents. * * * OTHER entertainment featured a balancing act by Bob Shetler, songs by the Vaughn House trip, and an animated movie cartoon.' Some of the supplies for the party were donated by local mer- chants but most were bought with funds from the IFC treasury. Students will be given another chance to place their orders for 1950 'Ensians, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. today in the lobby of Angell Hall, according to Gor- don Sakstrup, '51, assistant sales manager. WashedUp! VIENNA-(AP)-Viennese laun- dry owners yesterday held a protest meeting and accused two American businessmen of stealing their customers. The Americans, Kenn Rogers and Louis Satz, both of New York City, opened a 27-machine self service laundry here five weeks ago. They have been do- ing a big business ever since. Urey Urges Internatioial Government WASHNGTON= -(')--Western Democracies were urged by atomic scientist Harold C. Urey last night to take the first steps toward a world government as the only al- ternative to future wars. He recommended that a limited political union be formed by At- lantic Pact nations now linked in a defensivenalliance to bulwark free nations against what he call- ed the world-conquest ambitions of Communist Russia. * * * UREY ADDRESSED a meeting sponsored by the local chapter of the Atlantic Union Committee. The committee is supporting a resolution now before congress asking President Truman to call a convention of seven sponsor- ing nations of the Atlantic Pact to explore the possibilities of a federal union. The seven nations-the United States, England, France, Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg and Can- ada-would be authorized to in- vite: other democracies to partici- pate. Urey, who helped develop the atomic bomb, said neither it nor other modern military weapons can be counted to give peace and security. "Eventually," he said, "there is no satisfactory solution to modern military problems ex- cept a universal government." But he contended that objec- tive cannot be realized until "dem- ocratic institutions are established in those countries where tyranny now exists." ** * * Says Russia Aided at Cost Of U.S._Lives CHICAGO - (-1P) --Vivien Kel- lems, outspoken critic of federal withholding taxes, contended yes- terday that the United States sent atomic equipment to Russia during the war at the cost of thousands of American lives. The Connecticutt industrialist said the Roosevelt wartime admin- istration "stopped production of tools and munitions for our own armies and made full equipment for four huge atomic factories for Russia." She said cables, generators and other electrical equipment car- rying "the highest priorities" were shipped in 1943 and 1944 on "dir- ectives right out of the White House." Miss Kellems, of Westport, Con., has been in the public eye for several years, chiefly because of her refusal to collect federal income taxes from her firm's em- ployes by withholding sums from employe paychecks. $1,440,000 Drop from Last Request New 'U' Hospital Clinic Planned By JIM BROWN State Budget Office officials yes- terday revealed that the University will seek a $19,915,000 appropria- tion from the Legislature for oper- ating expensesnand capital-Im- provements during the 1950-51 fis- cal year, which begins next July 1. This represents a drop of $1,440,- 000 from the amount requested last December by University officials for the current fiscal year. Included in the $19,915,000 fig- ure is a $13,870,000 operating ex- penses budget and $6,045,000 for capital improvements. THE ANN ARBOR NEWS re- ported yesterday that Frank M. Landers, acting state budget direc- tor, and possibly Robert F. Stead- man, state comptroller, would meet with University officials in Lansing, "sometime next week" to study de- tails of the appropriation request. Here in Ann Arbor, University Vice-President Marvin L. Nie- huss confirmed details of the budget request but said the time of the meeting had not been dis-' closed to him. Last year the University request- ed a $12,500,000 operating budget but this figure was slashed to $11,- 436,315 after a stormy three-way fight between State administrative forces led by Governor G. Mennen Williams, the House and the Sen- ate. POINTING OUT that this year's operating budget request is well over $2,000,000 more than that granted by the Legislature for the current fiscal year, Landers said the. increase was based on pay in- creases for University staff mem- bers and for additions to the fac- ulty. "The University has been try- ing to adjust its student-teacher ratio to compare more favorably with that of other major colleges of the nation," he explained. "The ratio now is' one faculty member for every 18 students. the big Eastern colleges have a ratio of one professor for every eight to 12 students." * * * INCLUDED in the $6,045,000 re-' quest for capital improvements is a $2,800,000 appropriation for a University Hospital Out-Patient Clinic for the medical school. Plans and specifications for this building were drawn up this year. Another $2,700,000 request is for an addition to the General Library. University officials sought an appropriation of $,- 500,000 for this same purpose last year but were turned down by the Legislature. Balance of the appropriations asked for 1950-51 capital improve ments is made up of requests for $295,000 for the Natural Science Building, $120,000 for the West Engineering Annex and $130,000 for the School of Architecture. Group Living StudyPlanned The Human Relations Commit- tee of Student Legislature, in its effort to increase understanding among racial groups on campus, has commissioned four students to make a study of three university international houses during the vacation. The students are Roma Lipaky and Flo Barron who will study the house at Columbia University in New York; Peggy Nimz, University of Chicago; and Janet Pierce, Uni- versity of California at Berkeley. * * * DON'T BLOW YOUR TOP! Seamen Hear Nautical Advice from Prof. Peek By DON KOTITE An even temper, coupled with a sense of humor, is often the key to overcoming a ticklish situation aboard ship, George A. Peek of the political science department told NROTC banqueteers last night. Campus NROTC midshipmen and area Naval officer personnel swapped sea stories and "perti- saw action in the South Pacific Solomon Islands' campaign. He commanded a destroyer escort and was discharged with the rank of lieutenant-commander. Capt. Homer B. Wheeler, chair- man of the naval science depart- ment, pointed to the "continuous education process" necessary in building a crackerjack Navy offi- WATERED-DOWN VACATION: New Yorkers Face Dry Holiday Ann Arborites from the New York area who had been planning to take their washing home dur- ing vacation period would be wiser to leave the soiled clothes in a observance of a shaveless-bath- less day tomorrow. As airplanes and trains carry hundreds of University students to the Big City, New York dwell- THE CITY HAS issued a re- quest for all veterans familiar with methods of water conserva- tion used in the army to lead the citizen effort to cut down the use