9rc THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAYNOVEMER 8, 1950 'Ix WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 195@ _________________________________________________________________________ I _____________________________________ YEARBOOK HIGHLIGHTS: Two Freshmen Win'Ensian Contest, s * * * By the 'time the school year ends Sue Trometer and Don Hill, '54, will probably be shot from every possible angle. Winners of the Miss and Mr. 'Ensian contest yesterday, they will be pictured throughout the '51 yearbook. 1 * * EACH SECTION division page will show them engaged in some pertinent activity, according to Paul Sage, '51, managing editor. They will also be seen in various cutout snaps in the book. Chance ruled their selection. Miss Trometer was the 100th woman to pass the flag pole af- tr 12:05 p.m. yesterday. Hill passed through the front door of the Union at the right time, becoming the 100th man to do so after 2 p.m. The hours and locations were set by the contest managers, Sage and associate editors Dave Led- dick and Sally Frost, '51. It was the first' time that the 'Ensian has conducted such a con- test. "We feel that the selection was very lucky," Sage said. "We wanted to find "typical" Michi- gan students, preferably unknown freshmen, and we succeeded on both counts." I PHOTOGRAPHERS began to shoot pictures of the models yes- terday. But thy met with some skepticism from Miss Trometer,- who thought the whole thing was a hoax, even after some publicity shots had been taken. "I had read about the con- test but I thought that the win- Jers had already been chosen," she said. "When I was ap- proached this afternoon, I was so 'surprised, I nearly fell over, and I didn't know whether tof 'believe them or not," she said. "But I finally was convinced that it was true," she added. Hill, a Sigma Chi pledge, could not be reached for comment. He was reportedly at the library,1 studying. U' Officials, Principals To ConferToday he 22nd annual Principal-s eshman Conference will start at O2:0 p.m. today with a meeting inE te Union between the visiting 9tihcipals and teachers and rep- resentatives of the University. This meeting is something new for the conference, according 't. Registrar Ira Smith. It is designed to answer specific questions that the visitors may have about the best methods of preparing high school students for college, he ex- plamned Erich A. Walter, dean of stu- der:ts, will open the meeting with a. brief talk on the subject. Follow- ing this there will be a question period in which the principals and teachers queries will be answered by a panel of University "experts" Smith said. This year's conference will be attended by principals from 150 Michigan high schools. In addition there will be conferees from five other states: Illinois, Ohio, New York, Indiana and Wisconsin. The conferences between stu- dents and principals will take plae tomorrow morning. At noon tomorrow there will be a luncheon for the group which will be ad- dressed by Dean Ivan Crawford of the College of Engineering. '* * * , Adams To Open Citizenship Parley The Sixth Annual Citizenship Conference for high school stu- dents will be opened today by Pro- vost James P. Adams in the Rack- 'ham Lecture Hall. After Adam's. speech, M. Bar- rett Vorce, chairman of activities of the Michigan Secondary School Association, will make a report on out-state activities of the as- sociation. The students and faculty advis- 'ers will then divide into groups to discuss the problems and proce- dures of different student gov- erning b o d i e s in secondary schools. This topic was chosen by the schools as having the great- est interest to their student re- presentatives Approximately 250 high school students and faculty -advisers from 65 high schools in the Lower Peninsula are expected to attend. ENSIAN COUPLE-Mr. and Miss 'Ensian (Don Hill, '54, and Sue Trometer, '54) look at dummy proofs of the 1951 'Erisian, in which they will appear on each section page engaged in various activities. BOLSHEVIK BIRTHDAY: U.S. Receives Sharp R At Communist Celebration Napal King Replaced by Young Heir NEW DELHI, India - (A') - A three-year-old grandson of King Tribhuvana Biar Kikram of Nepal has supplanted him on the throne of that Himalayan nation ad- joining Tibet, the Nepalese em- bassy announced last night. A palace revolution was implied. * * * THE KING, 44, took refuge at the Indian Embassy in his capital at Katmandu Monday. The Indian Foreign Ministry said he wants to came to India for medical treat- ment and his government object- ed. Other sources reported the king wants to get out of Nepal because of a mounting demand from his 6,000,000 subjects for a change from the present au- tocratic, feudal-type government 'to a democratic setup. The sources minimized the influence of Communist China's invasion of Tibet on his decision. The Nepalese embassy said the grandson, left at the palace when the king and other members of his family sought asylum at the Indian embassy, was installed as king today on the throne "sud- denly left vacant." * * *, THE PRIME MINISTER, Ma- haraja Mohun Shamsher Jang Bahadur Rana, tried twice this week. to obtain an audience with the king to ascertain the reasons for his projected move to India, described as "incomprehensible and unconstitutional," the Em- bassy statement said. Music School Will Present Concerts Two concerts, one by faculty members and the other by guest zorganist Squire Haskin will be presented by the music school to- 1day. Prof. Benning Dexter, pianist, and Paul Doktor, violist, will per- form Schumann's "Marchenbil- der"'*and sonatas by Dittersdorf, TMilhaud and Hindemith at 8:30 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn. T Haskin, who his organist of the First Presbyterian Church, Buf- falo, and pianist of the Buffalo Symphony Orchestra will present his concert at 4:15 pm. in Hill Auditorium. Among the works scheduled for his program are compositions by Bach, Gabrieli, Couperin, Cop- land and Franck. Both concerts will be open to the public without charge. NO FINAL EXAMS FOR PARTY MEMBERS: Communists Attenipt To Influence Students In India By MARGARET THOMAS "If you join the Communist Party, you won't have to take final examinations." This is the type of promise which the Communists in India make to some college students there, according to the Rev. Blaize Levai, who spent three years teaching at Voorhees College of Vellore, South India. * * * MR. LEVAI, now minister of the Willow Run Community Church, saw the Communist tactics in ac- tion during his stay in India. "On- ly two schools in the southern area, Voorhees College and the University of Madura, were able to withstand this Communist threat," he said. Voorhees College, which has a student body of about 500, is located some 80 miles from Ma- dras. It is largely supported by government grants but is also partly mission-supported with. funds from American churches. While Mr. Levai was teaching at Voorhees, the Communists came into the school and stirred up the students to strike. They refused to come to class or to take final exams. "THE COMMUNISTS used force to lock up some of the students to keep them from going to class," he ,declared. "We got the students to re- turn to school by sending mime- ographed letters to their par- ents," he continued. "The Com- munists were guarding the post office, so we had to send the letters special delivery through a former student who lived in a small outside village. "The parents' response was such that some of them even came to the school and stood over the stu- dents while they took the exams. It would be a great loss -to the parents if their children did not take the finals because education mean$ such a great deal to the people in India." * * * t MR. LEVAI cited a vocational school run by an American mis- sion in Katpadi, near Vellore, which was forced to close because of Communist demands. "We are living in 'Hell' near- ly every day," the principal of the school wrote. "When there is a lull we are always anxious MOSCOW - (P) - Soviet dis- approval of United States inter- vention in Korea was emphasized sharply today in the celebration of the 33rd anniversary of the Rus- sian Revolution. The Soviet armed forces were ordered to increase their vigilance and combat readiness. Tanks, guns and troops of 'the Moscow garrison paraded across, Red Square in foggy, drizzly wea- ther which grounded the Soviet warplanes that usually do forma- tion flying on such occasions. * * W' MARSHAL Semeon Budyenny, a World War II hero and member of the Presidium of the Supreme] Soviet (parliament), declared ini an address from the reviewing stand atop Lenin's tomb that west- ern "imperialists" are preparing for a new war. "The Anglo-American imper- ialists have now passed from Belmore Inn To Be Razed Old Belmore Inn, the former University Hospital out-patient residence, will be torn down this week to allow for the construction of thegKresge Medical Research Building. Built in 1893, the Inn, 1142 Ca- therine St., is being razed to make possible the extension of Forest Ave., north from E. Ann St. to Catherine St.,rUniversity officials announced yesterday. Under the University's plan, Clark St., which runs parallel and in close proximity to the proposed Forest Ave. extension, would be closed. The Kresge structure, part of the University's Medical Center, will extend in an east-west direc- tion from the western end of Uni- versity Hospital to a point approx- imately where Clark St. now runs. University officials have not yet announced plans for beginning construction of the Kresge Build- ing. f t - l lest further violence break out. Thefts are the order of the day. In short, this is a place where no Christian atmosphere can be maintained." Two different ideologies-Com- munism and Christianity--are vy- ing for position in India, Mr. Le- vai explained. "They both promise a new kind of life, but the Coi' munists promise it 'here and now' and they promise material things. The Christians emphasize the spiritual values," he added., The Communist idea has tre- mendous appeal to the masses, Mr. Levai noted. "For example, the students feel that their purpose in going to school is to get jobs to be able to feed their families." As one of his students put it,' "Who can read Shelley o an empty belly?" preparations for aggression to direct acts of aggressions, evi- dence of which is the bandit in- tervention of the United States in Korea," he said. "The Soviet people, together with other freedom-loving peoples of the world, brand the American aggressors with shame and express their sympathy with the Korean people who are conducting a -he- roic struggle for the freedom and independence of their mother- land." * * *. SIMILAR EXPRESSIONS came in orders of the day to the army and navy. These were issued by Marshal A. M. Vassilevsky, army minister, and Adm. I. S. Yuma- shev, naval minister. "The American and British imperialists are pursuing the policy of instigating a new world war," Yumashev said. "From the threat of war they have gone over to open aggression in Korea. While the Russian press has charged beforethat the United States government intends to un- leash a new war on the world, it has never been said quite so au- thoritatively or quite so repeated- ly. : Western diplomatic observers in Moscow, therefore, are studying the phrases carefully. They indi- cate that they consider the words significant and serious. Prime Minister Stalin was not mentioned in this dispatch as tak- ing any public part in the obser- vance of the Soviet national holi- day. Presumably he is taking fall vacation. Pre-Med Society To Hear Schmale Prof. Herbert T. Schmale of the psychiatric department of the Medical School, will discuss "Psy- chological Factors in Medicine" be- fore the Pre-Med Society at 7:30 tonight at 1400 Chemistry Bldg. Pre-med students and all other interested are invited, according to John Harper, '52, president. Club 1 £ ve4 lain! FREE BUS TRANSPORTATION RoundiTrip Chartered Bus to, J. D. M's Cafeteria Leave Business Administration Bldg.-12:01 P.M. Leave Engineering Arch-12:05 P.M. North on East University-West on North University Follows Same Route Returning at 12:45 P.M. Monday thwu Fiday