INEI20LD EUGENE, MONDAY, APRIL IK, 195.5 ASUO Primaries . . . . . . and Oregon’s political parties arc discussed in ap edi torial entitled “Why the Pri mary?” See Page Tw o. NO. Ill Work to Start On Canoe Fete rirst const ruction work for the 1955 Canoe Fete will begin April 28 with the netting up of 3000 bleachers to seat part of the thousand* of people ex pected to attend the event. Jerry Maxwell, property t*et-up chairman, announced Thursday that men's living organizations will be contacted next week to Nolicll help for the building proj ect. “Tht* Canoe Fete involves a tremendous amount of work and we'll need help from every man on campus to build the huge stage and the bleachers," Max well stressed. The plan for setting up the bleachers, lighting, platform, and stage calls for each men’s liv ing organization to send their freshman class to the work area for a four-hour shift. Definite time and date will be arranged by the house at their own con venience. A chairman from each organization will be appointed and will be oriented in the work ing procedures. He will then act as supervisor of his working group. Help Needed "We hope the fellows will be anxious to cooperate in this plan," Maxwell said. "We also can use some extra help on the set-up committee.” Anyone In terred should contact Maxwell, Jack -Marsh, or Don Smith, as sistant chairmen. "This Canoe Fete isn't just a substitute for the afternoon float parade usually held during Junior Weekend.” Bob Schooling, gen eral chairman emphasized at Wednesday's meeting. "This is one of the largest projects the students of the University have ever undertaken.” Feature Kvent The Fete is to be the feature event of Junior Weekend this year and will he held Saturday at 8:30- p.m. on the 'Race. Thir teen competitive floats and two special floats will be propelled down the millrace to be judged on design, color, originality and quality of workmanship. The three winning floats will receive trophies. « Long range planning is being done on this year's Canoe Fete In expectation at continuing the once famous tradition for many years to come. Living organiza tions have started plans for their individual floats. The physical plant built 16x18 foot barges which the houses will use for their float base. The barges will be kept for succeeding Canoe Fetes. Chairmen Named Committee chairmen organiz ing and laying plans for the fete are as follows: Bob Schooling and Jim Light, general chairmen; Janet Wick and Jacqueline Jack son. program; Sally Jo Greig and Darrel Brittsan. floats; Joe Gard ner, state publicity; Susan Lamb, campus publicity. Other chair men are: Andy Berwick, Kip Wharton, Ward Cook, and Bob Maier, public relations. Jerry Maxwell, property set up; Len Calvert, finance; Lewis Blue and Dick Kyder, promotion. Helen Ruth Johnson is in charge of tickets. Gordon French is tech nical director. Bob Funk will co ordinate the public relations and publicity campaigns. Ann Black well is secretary. Junior class officers representing the Junior Weekend committee are Bud Hlnkson, president, and Gordon Rice, vice president. Artist Guest Today at SU A -coffee hour for Mrs. La Veme Krause, whose exhibition of drawings opened Sunday in the Student Union art gallery, will be held today at 4 p.m. in the gallery. Mrs. Krause, who lives in Kugene, graduated from the Uni versity in 1946 with a degree in drawing and painting. She has taught children's painting class es at the Eugene Art center, and is president of the Oregon chap ter of the Artists Equity associa tion, a national organization dedicated to improving the eco nomic status of the artist. Rules, Pairings Given for Preview Exchange Dinners Rules and pairings for Duck Preview exchange dinners have been released by Karen Rice and Connie Kennedy, co-chairmen of the event. Dinners will be from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Saturday preceding the dance. Living organizations are lesponsible for having their ex change guests home by 7 and must provide their transporta tion. Short entertainment by the living organizations is optional. Houses must contact each other in order to plan for the same number of guests and agree on meantime. Dorm presidents are responsible for their guests and for getting them to the lobby on time. * Dress for the dinners will be cotton dresses for the women and slacks and sport shirts for the men. Pairings for women’s exchange dinners are Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Phi; Alpha Delta Pi, Car son 4; Alpha Gamma Delta, Del ta Zeta; Alpha Omicron Pi, Car son 5; Chi Omega, Pi Beta Phi; Delta Gamma, Kappa Alpha The ta; Gamma Phi Beta and Delta Delta Delta, Susan Campbell: Highland house, Ann Judson house; Kappa Kappa Gamma, Hendricks; Rebec house, Univer sity house; Sigma Kappa, Car son 3; Zeta Tau Alpha, Alpha Xi Delta. Men's pairings are Sigma Al pha Epsilon, Alpha Tau Owega; Beta Theta Pi, Phi Delta Theta; Chi Psi, Phi Gamma Delta; Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Sigma Kappa; Phi Kappa Sigma, Pi Kappa Phi; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Delta Tau Delta; Tau Kappa Ep silon, Pi Kappa Alpha; Delta Upsilon, Kappa Sigma; Campbell club, Philadelphia house. Women's, Men's Vodvil Audition Times Listed Audition* for the WUS Vodvil show will be held Tuesday and Wednesday nights. Women's groups will appear Tuesday at I Gerlinger hall for their auditions, j and the men will audition the ; following night it the Student ' Union. Five groups will be selected j each night to perform at the I Vodvil show Friday. Women’s houses and their au | dition times are: Delta Zeta and Rebec house, 6:30; Kappa Kappa Gamma, 6:45; Pi Beta Phi, 7; Gamma Phi Beta 7:15; Alpha Omicron Pi, 7:30; Alpha Phi. 7:45; Kappa Al pha Theta, 8; Zeta Tau Alpha, 8:15; Susan Campbell, 8:30; Orides, 8:45; Chi Omega, 9; Del ta Delta Delta. 9:15; Delta Gam ma, 9:30; Alpha Chi Omega. 9:45. Men’s houses and their audition times are: Sigma Phi Epsilon, 6:30; Sig ma Chi, 6:45; Beta Theta Pi, 7; Chi Psi, 7:15; Delta Tau Delta. 7:30; Phi Delta Theta, 7:45; Phi Gamma Delta, 8; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 8:15; Phi Sigma Kappa, 8:30; Phi Kappa Sigma, 8:45; Campbell club, 9; French hall, 4tr45: Delta Upsilon. 9.30; Lamb da Chi Alpha, 9:45; Alpha Tau Omega, 10; Theta Chi, 10:15. TV to Preview Vodvil A preview of the 1955 Vodvil show will be seen tonight at 6 over Eugene station KVAL-TV, channel 13. The Beta Theta Pi skit will ap pear on the "Red Reynolds Show.” The act is directed by Ken Kesey, sophomore in speech. Communists Fire Premier BUDAPEST. Hungary (AP)— ! Hungary's Communist Party an nounced Monday it has fired Pre ; mier Imre Nagy from his top government job and stripped him of all his party posts. The purging of the 58-year-old government chief had been ex pected since the party’s Central Committee five weeks ago ac cused him of “right wing devia tionism.’’ He had been the spokesman in Hungary for the “new look" em phasis on consumer goods produc tion which the Communist coun tries abandoned with the demo tion of Georgi Malenkov from the Soviet premiership. Einstein Dies PRINCETON, N.J. (AP)— ’ Albert Einstein, who became internationally famous at 26 for his theory of relativity, . died today after a four-day ill i ness. The 76-year-old world-ac I elaimed scientist died at Princeton Hospital at 1:15 a.m. of inflation of the gall bladder. A man who shunned publicity, he had entered the hospital Fri day with only his intimates knowing he was ill. Oppenheimer T o Speak Tuesday J. Robert Oppenheimer, the scientist who headed the group that developed the atomic bomb, will give two lectures at Oregon Tuesday and Thursday, as the 1955 Condon Lecturer. Oppenheimer will speak on "The Subnuclear Zoo; The Con stitution of Matter” on Tues day. For his second talk on Thursday, he will speak on "Ele ments of Order.” Oppenheimer attended Har vard university and Cambridge university. He received his doc Chemists Lift UW Boycott The American Society of Bio logical Chemists has ended it§ boycott of the University of Washington for its treatment of J. Robert Oppenheimer. The scientists, attending a convention in San Francisco, voted to "resume normal rela tions'' with Washington because the university has taken steps j to avoid similar incidents. Oppenheimer, under fire as a security risk last year, was barred from lecturing at Wash ington earlier this year. The bio I logical chemists refused to take part in a symposium from which the atomic scientist had been dropped. I tor’s degree from Gottingen uni ! versity in Germany in 1927. From | 1927 until 1929 he was a Na tional Research fellow and an In i ternational Education Board fel ' low. He was appointed assistant 1 professor of physics at the Uni | versity of California and the Cal ifornia Institute of Technology | in 1929. Worked at Los Alamos From 1943 until 1945, Oppen heimer was director of the lab oratory at Los Alamos, N.M., ’ where the atomic bomb was de | veloped. Since 1947, he has been director of the Institute for Ad vanced Study at Princeton, N.J. Oppenheimer is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and ! Sciences, American Physics soci ; ety, and a member of the Na : tional Academy of Sciences, Am i eiican Philosophical Society. Oppenheimer will repeat his I two lectures at OSC on April 26 and 2S and at Portland State col iege on May 3 and 4. Lectures Date to 1944 The Condon Lectureship was established in 1944 by the Ore gon State Board'of Higher Edu cation on the recommendation of the late John C. Merriam who was a member of the faculty of : the University. The Lectureship was named in honor of Thomas j Condon, the first professor of j geology at the University. The purpose of the lectures is | to interpret the results of sig | nificant scientific research to the nonspecialist. Donations Determine Oregon's Ugliest Man WHO WILL BK 195o’s Ugliest Man? The “dinner” of the title will be selected this week by contributions to World University Service. Past Uglies include the fixe men pictured above. The annual search for the Ug | liest Man on Campus will begin Monday, with glass jars in the Student Union and Co-op to be available for donations to World I University Service. The candidate with the most ; money placed in the jar with his name on it will be named Ugly , Man, and all proceeds will go to ! the WUS fund. Candidates are Roger Somer, Alpha hall; Ed Bingham, Alpha Tail Omega; Jerry Pool, Beta Theta Pi; Bruce McCoy, Camp bell Club; Vance Taylor, Chi Psi; Walt Henningsen, Delta Tau Del jta. Dave Chambers, Delta Upsilon; Jerome Stonebreaker, Kappa Sigma; Fred Hogg, Hale Kane; Jerry Maxwell, Lambda Chi Al pha; Tom Bourns, Phi Delta The ta. Daniel Lees, Thi Gamma Del ta; Pat Viles, Phi Kappa Psi; Reed King, Phi Kappa Sigma; I Les Sanders, Phi Sigma Kappa; Ron Mount, Pi Kappa Alpha; Don Rotenburg, Sigma Alpha ' Mu. Howard Page, Sigma Chi; Paul Johnson, Sigma Nu; Trent Huls, ; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Jerry Mad den, Tau Kappa Epsilon; Nick Collips, Theta Chi, and Howard Hedinger. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. First eliminations wall end Wednesday at 6 p.m., and the semi-finalists will be men with the largest donations in their jars. Voting deadline for finalists will be Friday at 4 p.m. Winner will be presented a trophy during intermission of the Friday night Vodvil show for Duck Preview. The Ugly Man will receive "Herman,” the moose-head traditionally given. Sponsoring organization for the man will receive a plaque. Jim Light, Phi Delta Theta, was the 1953 winner, and Delta Upsilon’s Lowell Shuck was Ugly Man last year.