HEC20LD V<»1. LVI Dnlvmlty of Oregon Kugone, Tup*., May 8, 1955 No. 122 Juniors, Millrace Will Divide Profit One half of the net profit of thin year's Canoe fete will go toward restoration of the Mill rare which means the project will receive approximately $528 if the 1955 budget proven accur ate. The other half of the estimated $1058 net profit will be turned Fete Participants To Receive Passes Participant* In the Canoe Fete and person* riding on the float* will not be required to purchase ticket* a* wa* re ported in Monday'* Kmeruld. The original *tory stated that all person* would be re quired to buy tleket*. .Member* of the Cnlverslty orehestru, the Cni\er*lty Sing er*. usher* and student* riding on the float* will lie admitted without charge. over to the Junior class to help finance Junior Weekend activi ties. Income from ticket sales is expected to reach *4 187.50. with expenses estimated at *3122.50, according to the budget released today by co-chairmen Bob Schooling and Jim Light. Insurance Coverage Included In the expenses is $262 for rain insurance. If .05 inches of rain falls between 5 and 6 p m. the night of the fete, coverage is provided. Rainfall Workshop Entries Deadline Friday Friday at 5 p.m. ia the dead line for students to submit orig inal work for the annual Cre ative Arts Workshop sponsored by the Student Union board. Student art work of all types, poetry, one-act plays, short stories, photography, choreog raphy and short musical com positions are acceptable for judging by the creative arts committee for use in the final program. The Workshop will be present ed May 19 in the SU ballroom at 8 p.m. Admission will be free. Work submitted should be turned in to Bernice Rise in the SU browsing room. Mayr to Talk On Species' Dr. Ernst Mayr, noted evolu tionist, will lecture here tonight on "The Origin of the Species” in 123 Science. The lecture will begin at 8 p.m. Mayr is a professor at Harvard university and has written sev eral books on evolution. A fellow of the Linnaean soci ety of New' York and of the New York academy, Mayr was assist ant curator of the Berlin zoology museum before he came to this country. He was made curator of the Whitney-Rothchild collection in the American Museum of Na tural History in 1944. Mayr’s lecture is sponsored by Sigma Xi, national science honorary. will be measured at the U.S. weather bureau at Mahlon Sweet Airport, net at the fete site, according to insurance specifica tiona. Alao included In expenaea la $500 for conatruction of the floata. Schooling points out that this expense will not be aa great In future canoe fetes since the same barges will be used. This should increase fete profits In the future and provide more funds for Race restoration. Tickets On Sale Tickets for the Canoe Fete are on sale now at the Student Union, the Co-op, through Old Oregon and at certain downtown locations. Bleacher neats are available for $1.25 and seats on the ground between the bleach ers and the Millrace are 50 cents. Allan Receives Fulbright Award Kenneth Allan, senior in arch itecture and allied arts, has re ceived a Fulbright award for study in France next year. Allan will study city planning at the Institute of Art and Arch eology at the University of Paris. The award Is one of approxT mately 247 grants for study in France. These grants are includ ed within a total of 1000 grants for graduate study abroad in the academic year of 1955-56 un der the United States Education al Exchange program. All stu dents are selected by the Board of Foreign Scholarships, the members of which are appointed by the President. Students are recommended by the campus Ful bright committee and by the In stitute of Internationa] Educa tion. Quentin to Talk At SU Assembly Robert Quentin, an English play director and lecturer, will speak in the Student Union ball room today at 1 p.m. at a campus assembly. Quentin, who was recently ap pointed director of the Shapes pearean Festival Theater School at Stratford-on-Avon, has di rected plays in many cities across Europe. He has also di rected plays in South Africa and Australia. Elston to Lecture On Mozart, Opera “Mozart and Da Ponte’s opera Don Giovanni’’ will be the topic of the browsing room lecture held Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the browsing room of the Stu dent Union. Arnold Elston, associate pro fessor of music, will be the lec turer for the evening. Follow ing the lecture there will be a discussion with Herman Gel hausen, associate professor of voice, the discussion leader. 'TOAST OF THE TOWN* Ed Sullivans Revue . To Appear at 8 Tonight Kd Sullivan, who hosts CBS television'* oldest entertainment program every Sunday night, will present seven act* in his Toast of the Town Revue tonight at 8 p.m. at McArthur court. Tickets are available in the north bleacher section at $2, and a few arc still left on the main floor for $2.50. Sullivan, who has won numer ous awards as television’s top ED SI IJJVAN, well-known master of ceremonies of the Toast of the Town television show, will appear at McArthur court at 8 tonight with seven acts from his show. A few reserved seats to the show are still available at the athletic department. Tickets On Sale Now For Mom's Breakfast Tickets will be available to day for the Mother's Weekend breakfast to be held May 14 in the Student Union ballroom from 8:30 to 10:30. The tickets will be sold at the main desk of the SU, according to Susan Ry der and L^ee Lorenzen. chairmen of the ticket committee. The deadline for picking up the tickets is May 11. The break fast is to be for the mothers only. It is the only time that the mothers can get together for a general business meeting in which officers for the coming year will be elected. Sub-chairmen for the promo tion committee which is head ed by Peggy Gathercoal and Gordon Summers have been cho sen. They include Sue Ramsby and Joan Rainville, who are in charge of .flying speeches. Bev Landon, who is in charge of handbills; Mary Jane Alexan der, in charge of letters: Jerry Scarborough, in charge of post ers and sandwich boards, and Priscilla Bollam. in charge of promotion over the radio and in the newspaper. entertainment host, ha» kept the entertainment value of his pro gram at a consistently high level by his efforts to discover new acts and techniques. Much Travel Last year he traveled over 150,000 miles in search of new and different talent. It has paid off as Toast of the Town con tinues to win honors as the na tion's top television variety show. Mata and Hari, international ly famous dancers, will star on tonight’s show. Richard Heme, an outstanding British comedian, will be fea tured. He is the “Mr. Pastry,’’ star of the English Music hall. Valli to Sing Songstress on tonight’s show will be lovely June Valli, vocal ist on the Lucky Strike Hit Pa rade television program for two years. Miss Valli gained fame with her recording, “Crying in the Chapel.” Her other hit songs include "Tell Me, Tell Me,” “Young and Foolish’’ and her newest, “Unchained.” She currently is vocalist on husband Howard Millers local television show in Chicago, five nights a week. Comedy impressionist Will Jor dan will be featured. He became famous when he appeared on Toast of the Town as a mimic of the show's host. Trampoline Act The Rudells will present their well-known trampoline act to night. Their previous engage I ments include thirteen consecu tive months at Ken Murray’s Blackouts in Hollywood, a six week hold-over at the London Palladium, and appearances in Belgium, Switzerland, Germany, Canada and the United States. Joe Jackson, Jr., internation ally famous pantomime act, will be here tonight after recently returning from his seventh tour of Continental Europe. Jackson, of breakaway bicycle fame, has frequently been nom inated as “America's worst ! dressed comedian," a clowning 1 tramp with a tattered black cos tume and red fringed wig. He has appeared in command per formances before royalty in Eu | rope. The Amin Brothers, Egyptian acrobatic marvels, will be fea tured. All acts on tonight's show have appeared on Sullivan’s Sun day night Toast of the Town television program at least twice. End of Test Files as ASUO Project Probable on Approval of Senate The ASUO test files, a rem nant of the now extinct honor code system at Oregon, may be discontinued immediately as an ASUO project. Head Librarian Carl W. Hintz, who had been in charge of their administration in the library's reference room, was not to have been in permanent charge of them. He told the senate winter term that their administration was becoming too large a job for his staff and asked the sen ate, through its test files com mittee headed by Loris Larsen, to investigate another location for them. SU Board Suggests The Student Union board, to whom the subject was taken for suggestions, recommended that the files be placed in the brows ing room, which is also under the administration of the University library. Beginning April 1, a survey was conducted by the commit tee, through the ASUO sugges tion box in the Co-op, to deter mine the extent of student con cern about the files. One result was placed in the box, that of Zeta Tau Alpha, who recommended that they be continued. The committee then assumed that they should be continued. Y Office . . . Maybe! The YMCA office, under the administration of executive sec retary Russ Walker, may house the files in their office in the Student Union. Under the new president, Dave Roberts, Walker said, a com mittee may be appointed to ad minister them, keep them up to date and complete them. All that remains now is the official approval of the new sen ate, at its first meeting May 12. The committee will recommend that the files be abandoned as an ASUO project and that the YMCA be given the files to ad minister as they see fit. This is the end of the Oregon honor code. The system was abandoned, all but the test files portion, fall term because of lack of student interest.