Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 08, 1954, SECTION TWO, Page Seven, Image 11

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    Segregation, Teachers Topic of NAACP Meetina
1
Souther n school* that have I
, cn desegregated a* a result
<ii the recent Supreme Court de- i
I ision will not canxe a noticeable j
decreeHe In the number of Negro:
.teacher* employed thl«i was the
general consensus of opinion at
National Association for the
People
dvancement of Colored
meeting Thursday night.
H. D. Clark, assistant dean of
1 he college of liberal art* and
■moderator or the panel discussing
jglhe question emphasized that
Sr'ono of the early Justifications
for segregated schools was that
It he Negro teacher would not be
i^out of a job.”
Mark .Smith, deputy eommis
jgsloner of the Fair Employment
■Practices Commission Division of
■Labor, stated in his opening pan
el address that the lack of quali
jgjfied teachers on a nationwide
ggrcale would alone be enough to
irove that theory.
“We Hear... of Kr let Ion”
We hear more about the cases
■of friction than about the
■smooth-running situations,” he
Jlsald. ”Hn<’ ’l,p appalling need
alone would Indicate that preju
dice and fear will not interfere
with meeting that need ”
The question of attitudes was
brought out by A. C. Hearn. Unl
isity associate professor of
(education, who said that yoting
■eople’s extreme viewpoints are
[easily modified and the trend
Is toward more Negro participa
tion In everything, including
sports and music activities.
Short, Ismg flange llestlfts
Short and long range results
were the keynote of the discus
[Sion, and J. V. Berrernan, pro
at 6:30
M-G-M’s love story ot the
year with the world’s greatest
love music In color by
TECHNICOLOR!
mipsom
ELIZABETH TAYLOR
Bullet for Bullet!
JOHN PAYNE
LI2ABETH SCOTT
DAN DURYEA .
SILVER LO
Two Top Hits
Sunday
UWVIIMI mWHADCtfUU
JASMIN
ROCK HUDSON
BARBARA RUSH:
MOO**MtAD i
OTTO KRUMN W
«rnm
p
MEN ARC
SO BASTI
A »»»*♦! IACI
A RAtR O# lin.
ANO TMI t Kill
fOR YOUt
Si
. JOa McCREA
Tf VERONICA LAKE
f PRESTON FOSTER
DON DeFORE
XL
]
RAM fiOb
Deadlier than Steel
ZMOWIllAMEUl
4.4152
iWHi
DRIVE-IN THEATR
fess<tr of .sociology, expressed
the opinion that "while many
Negro teachers rnay lose Jobs
now, the eventual condition will
be one of more equality of op
portunity.’’
The general public will follow
the lead taken by people in re
sponsible positions, according to
.Smith, whose Job in FEPC in
cludes enforcement of fair
practices and public education.
Examples cited by Smith in
WSC Still Holds
Grads' Diplomas
PULLMAN, Wash. - <AP) -
Washington State college has
ariiiouneed ’(hat it has about
200 unelaimed diplomas dating
back to 1001 sitting In the
registrar’s offlee eollectlng
dust.
Itegistrar Claude Simpson
said one diploma, filled out in
1033, is marked "hold for dlsei
pline" but thut he figures the
man must la* cleared by now
and can eome get it.
I cluded that of the Army, where
segregation of Negro and white
troop* within divisions has re- i
! eently been broken down, and an
overall social trend whieh in
cluden more Negro participation
in arena formerly ‘all white.’
One difficulty pointed out by
Berreman watt that the tenden-1
cy in moat communities was "to
cater to the moat vocal objec- \
tors, especially when initiating
a change." Especially when the j
' opposition has access to the
presa, he continued, is their ob
jection the controlling factor
even when they are in the minor
ity.
An optimistic note on the over
all Negro-teacher employment
situation, explained by Smith,
was that the first Negro teacher
; in Portland was hired in 1945, |
and there are now more than 30
Negro teachers in that city.
In answer to a question about
' the treatment of southern Negro
children by white teachers there,'
Smith said that "the blind can't |
lead the blind... it has to be
done on a teacher-education
level."
Have Your Friends and Relatives Stay at...
THE
HOFFMAN
HOTEL
• Courteous • Comfortable
• Clean • Economical
Rates:
2.50 without bath — 3:50 with bath
The HOFFMAN HOTEL
Broadway & Willamette Phone 5-4319
J. E. Hurley, Manager
Student Church Directory
■fJI Iff
rTrrmnvmn
First Congregational Church
Invites University of Oregon Students
To The
9:30 a m. University Class—leader Dr. Paul Trueblood
Theme: "Great Personalities of Religion"
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship
Dr. Wesley G. Nicholson will preach
Sermon: "Glorifying God"
SUNDAY SERVICES—8:45 a.m. & 11 a.m.
Sermon: "The Christian Sabbath"
Bible Class: 10 a.m.—Dr. E. S. Wengert, Leader
Gamma Deltans meet at 5 p.m. at 1343 Mill Street
Welcome!
Grace Lutheran Church
Eleventh and Ferry Streets
W. B. Maier, Pastor Kenneth Streufert, Assistant
First Christian Church
1166 Oak — Phone 4-1425
Dr. Caroll Roberts, Minister
Layman Sunday
Mr. A. W. Mortensen, Guest Speaker
Two Services 10:50 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
9:30 a.m. Donut Hour & Sunday School
Dr. Victor Morris, Teacher
5:30 p.m. Study and Fellowship Hour
Visit Christian House—Our Student Center
736 E. 16th Avenue.
First Church of Christ, Scientist
A Branch of the Mother Church, The First Church of Christ,
Scientist in Boston, Massachusetts
14th and Pearl
Sunday Services 11 a.m. and 8 p.m.
Sunday School 1 1 a.m.
Sermon: Are Sin, Disease and Death Real?
Nursery Facilities During All Services . . . Reading Room 86
West Broadway . . . Organization at University of Oregon
Tuesday 7 p.m. First Floor Gerlinger
St. Mary’s Episcopal Church
166 13th East Phone: 5-7452
SUNDAY SERVICES:
8:00 — 9:30 (Family Service) — 11:00
Canterbury Club—6:00 p.m. in the Parish Hall
WEDNESDAY
The Holy Communion, 7:00 a.m. Gerlinger Hall
Rector: The Rev. Perry Smith
Chaplain to Episcopal Students: The Rev. Robert Ellis
HEAR DR. TORREY JOHNSON
and Straton Shufelt
Sunday at 9:45 and 11 a.m.
Rev .John Henderson will speak at 7 30 p.m.
University Fellowship at 6:30
First Baptist Church
Broadway at High Dr. Vance H. Webster, Pastor
First Methodist Church
1185 Willamette
Wcrsnjp Services—9:30 and 11.00 a.m.
Sermon: "An Unceasing Quest"
Dr. Rector Johnson
Ministers: Rector W. Johnson, S. Raynor Smith,
Dorothy Harding, Kenneth W. Peterson
Wesley Foundation — Student Center — 1236 Kincaid
Fairmont Presbyterian Church
15tl] & Villard Sts.
Reverend John E. Canteion, Minister
Church School 9:45
, Morning Worship 1 1:00
Westminster Presbyterian Church
Washington School — 616 Harlow Road
Reverend David B. White, Minister
Church School 9:45
Morning Worship 9:45 & 11:00
Central Presbyterian Church
10th & Pearl St.
Reverend Paul S. Millish and Reverend Don S. Ryder,
Ministers
Church School 9:30 & 11:00
Morning Worship 9:30 & 11:00
Springfield Presbyterian Church
7th & A St.
Reverend Alfred J. Stenner
Church School 9:45
Morning Worship 11:00