V«L. LVI IMVKIWITV OK OKKOON, KIGKNK, .MONDAY, FKBIll AKY 21, IMS., NO. Hfi Sit, Dream at Evening' Theme for Canoe Fete "As I Sit and Dream at Even ing" will be the general theme of the 1955 Canoe Kete, the Fete steering committee announced to day. The theme was chosen to em phasize the revival of an old Ore Symphonic Poem Given at Concert The fourth In a series of five concerts will be presented tonight in the Eugene high sehool audi torium, by the Eugene-Spring field Symphony. Featured on the program is the symphonic poem, "Over the Plains" by George Antheil. An theil, currently working on mu-, sic for the movie version of "Not As a Stranger" will lecture on campus March 3 a* part of the Festival of Arts program. Other selections of the pro gram will la; Charles Ives' Third Symphony and the Second Indian Suite by Edward MaeDowell. Admission to the concert is $1. Tickets will be on sale at the door. !gon tradition. Themes for indi vidual floats will be chosen by the houses from a list of themes used by Junior Weekend and win ning canoe fetes of past years. Living organizations will have an opportunity to choose their theme from the list Wednesday. A total of 15 floats, including the queen’s and comic floats will enter the Fete. The list of possible float themes includes: The Spirit of the Sea, taken from the 1921 Canoe Fete: Babes Ir. Toy land, from 1037; The Lure of the East, 1923; Of Thee I Sing. 1942; Arabian Nights, 1941; Alice in Wonderland, 1939; La Fete Moderne, 1931. Forest Fantasy-from the 1920 Fete; Venetian Nights from 1932; Where Rolls the Oregon, 1934 Junior Weekend theme; La Fete Fantaatique, 1933; and Float of Songs. 1935; One float will de pict the 1955 fete. Sally Jo Greig and Darrel Brittsan, float chairmen, will send the list around to the houses, who will list their preferences in order. Author from Indio Assembly Speaker Surindar Suri, foreign corres pondent, lecturer, and author from India, will deliver a Uni versity assembly address Tues day at 1 p.m. in the Student Un ion ballroom. Suri will also lie on campus in conjunction with the Oregon In ternational Relations league con ference here this weekend. The Indian will address several of the conference sessions. A reporter for several Indian periodicals, Suri is also a re search consultant for Hast Asiat ic studies at the University of California. He was at one time editor of the magazine, “New Life," in Lucknow, India. His journalistic experience has given Suri great contact with many of the underlying currents in In dia's social and political life to day. The correspondent is a gradu ate of the University of Punjab in India and received hla M A. : from the Univeraity of Lucknow. He holds a Ph.D. from N’orth j western university. Browsing Room Holds Open House An open house will be held Thursday from 3-5 p.m. in the i browsing room in the Student ; Union. Special displays will be on j exhibition. Purpose of the open house is to better acquaint students with i the facilities of the room, accord I ing to Miss Bernice Rise, librar ! ian. The browsing room, located on the second floor of the SU, con tains book collections and con temporary literature that is available to students. Wednesday evening lectures and Friday cof fee hours are held there also. JuniorWeekend Petitions Called Petition* for chairman of | Junior Weekend committee* are due at 5 p.m. Tuesday In i Htudeiii t'nion 303, according to Hud tllnkson, junior class president. Special Junior Weekend forms are to tie used, and may he obtained in HU 303. Kegu lar A8UO petitions Mill not be j accepted. Members of all classes are eligible to pjetition for the posts, Hlnkson reports, but preference will lie given to jun 1 iors. The petition* are to be turned In to a special box in the Co-op or to Junior Week end headquarters. Chairmanships open include publicity, terrace dance, all campus cleanup, all-campus luncheon, promotion and public relations, junior prom, queen j contest and coronation and all ! campus sing. Kach petitioner is to submit i a theme for the weekend on the I back of the petition. DO Men Named To Academies j Carl Gnoth, Jr.. Richard Ram , sey and Robert Wadman, all Uni versity students, received ap-; ’ pointments to the three service | schools from Senator Wayne j Morse on the basis of prelimin ary qualifying examinations. Groth. a sophomore in liberal; arts, received a second alternate j appointment to West Point Mili tary Academy. He is a member | of the University rifle team and is from Eugene. Richard Ramsey, also a E^i- ; gene student, is a freshman in j i liberal arts. He received a prin cipal appointment to the naval academy at Annapolis. Md. A principal appointment to the Air Force Academy was received 1 by Robert Wadman, sophomore in liberal arts. The three will all take entrance examinations to the respective academies, which will determine ■ whether or not they enter the schools. Co-ed Groups List Candidates Mates have been announced for the election Thursday of officers lor the three campus women’s organizations, the Associated Women Students, YWCA, and the Women’s Recreation Association, \\ omen voters will be able to meet all candidates at a meet ing preceeding the afternoon elections at 12:15 p.m. in Ger linger hall. Voting will continue until 6 p.m. AWS candidates are president, Janet Gustafson and Sally Ryan; secretary, Helen Johnson and Marcia .Maunev; treas urer, Mary Gerlinger and Margaret Tyler; sergeant-at-arms. Gloria Bcgenich and Jean McPherson, and reporter, Joan Kraus and Ann Pettcrson. I he \\ KA -late consists of Prudy Ducich and Roberta Mulkey, president; Molly Carr and Olivia l haraldson, secre tary;, Pat ( ushnnie and Pam Rabens, treasurer; Louise Rob inson and Kleanorc Whitsett, custodian; Margaret Holman and Lois Olson, sergeant-at-arms. Candidates for theY \Y CA offices are Germaine I.aMarche and Jean Sandine, president; Barbara Bailey and Anne Hill, second vice-president; Kathy Holloway and Barbara Wil liams, secretary; Joanne Jolley and Karen Kraft, treasurer; Xan Borrjuist and Georgia Hemmila. chairman of sophomore cabinet, and Sue Jewett and Lee Blaesing, secretary of soph omore cabinet. I he defeated presidential candidate will automatically be come first vice-president. BA School Hosts Real Estate Meet ivt-ai r-siaie wppraisai i ses sion of the American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers opened in the school of business admin istration this morning with the enrollment of participants. The Institute's courses are de signed to give the broker, de veloper, builder, mortgage man. or appraiser a thorough knowl edge of the basic principles of appraisals as a constant training in the interpretation of trends that create and destroy real es tate value. There will be a minimum of 40 hours of lectures in this course, with basic theory and principles explained in detail. Illustrations will be used to show how practical application of these theories and principles is made. The rest of the time will be spent on field trips, dem onstrations, appraisals, etc. The faculty for the two-week tiaining course consists of David Montanna, M.A.I., of Cape Vin cent, New York, and Willian Abelmann, M.A.I., of Glendale, Calif. Montanna is a nationally known lecturer and teacher with ARMISTICE VIOLATION UN Officer Formally Charges Reds KOREA (AP) — The United Nations Command in Korea has formally charged the Reds with violating the Korean armistice by bringing MIG jet fighters into North Korea. Maj. Gen. Leslie D. Carter, member of the Korean Armistice Commission, made the charge at a special meeting called by the U.N. Command. Carter declared Red air activi ties in North Korea since the armistice "have mounted from zero in increasing magnitude to a high tempo.” Carter immediately demanded tha: three neutral nations mobile inspection teams — made up of Swiss, Swedes and Communist Czechs and Poles — go to North Korea to look for evidence of the MIGs and their arms and ammunition. MIG Incident Cited Carter said the allied charge grew out of the February 5 inci dent in which 8 Communist MIGs attacked an American RB45 jet reconnaissance bomber and 12 es corting Sabrejets over the “inter national waters” of the Yellow Sea, west of North Korea. Two of the MIGs were shot down and the rest fled. No Amer ican planes were damaged. Carter Monday called the at tack “unprovoked and unwar ranted.” Carter told the Commu nists they had acknowledged own ership of the MIGs in a commis sion meeting February 9 in which the Reds protested the air inci dent, claiming an allied violation of North Korean territory. Charges Formal At that time Carter accused the Reds of illegally having MIGs in North Korea, but Monday’s charge was specific and formal. There were no MIGs in North Korea when the armistice was signed July 27, 1953, Carter said. He told the Reds the base of the attacking MIGs “is estab lished by positive radar tracks which followed your attacking aircraft from their takeoff to their return.” Denied Charge Carter denied the Communist charge that the allied plane in truded over North Korean terri tory and that allied planes at tacked first as the Reds had charged. He said the RB-15 “at no time'1 came within the territorial limits of North Korea. He said "this was confirmed by the navigating log and the accurate tracking of our radar.” Carter charged “The fact of the attack proves from that time of the armistice signing, your air operations from North Korea have mounted from zero in in creasing magnitude to high tem po.” “By your own statements you have condemned yourselves be fore the world to be a violator of your own solemn commitments,” lie said. wide experience throughout the United States in appraisals cov ering all types of property. A realtor-appraiser, Abelmann spe cializes in right-of-way, special purpose properties, and has had extensive experience in condem nation and mortgage loan ap praising. Macy to Lecture At Oxford Meet C. Ward Macy, head of the department of economics, has accepted an invitation to par ticipate as lecturer in the 1955 Fuibiight Conference on Amer ican Studies to be held at Ox ford university this summer. The conrerence, in Oxford, England, is sponsored and direct ed by the United States Educa tional Commission in the United Kingdom. This year’s will be the fourth annual conference of its type, with sessions from July 11 to Aug. 14. “The United States and the Atlantic Community’’ is the main theme of the conference. Ten or more American specialists in various fields will lecture and lead discussions. Macy will lecture on contem porary American economic poli cy. Comic Books Forum Topic “Comic Books: Menace, or Harmless Entertainment’’ will be the topic of an Oregon radio forum tonight at 8:30. The forum will be broadcast over station KOAC in Corvallis. Charles Dunccan, professor of journalism, will moderate the forum. Other forum members are Leona Tyler, associate professor of phychcology; Herbert Bisno, associate professor of sociology, and Donald Tope, director of the Kellogg Project in the school of education.