56th Year of Publication VOI,. LVI I MYKKXITY OF OREGON, EFOENE, TI'KSDAY, MAY 24, 1055 NO. 137 Bostic Group to Play In Ballroom Wednesday The Karl Bostic Jazz group will appear In a concert Wednes day at 8 p.m. in the Student Union ballroom under the aus pices of the SU board. Bostic, who has enjoyed na tionwide popularity among Jazz enthusiast a and is currently on ft tour of the Pacific Northwest, will have with him his record ing group of seven musicians Hnd a vocalist. Tickets for the concert are still available and may be pur chased for 75 cents at the SU main desk or nt Thompson's mu sic store in downtown Eugene. Marshall Is Chief Counsel for NAACP Thurgood Marshall, chief legal counsel for the National Asso ciation for the Advancement of Colored People, will speak at 1 p.m. today In the Student Union ballroom. Soph Honors Ends Third Year By Anne Hill Emcntd Auiilant Ntwt Editor The Sophomore Honors pro gram will finish its third year on the Oregon campus Thursday with th»* last comprehensive exam this year. Two exam*, one in history and one in study of society, were given to freshmen and sopho mores taking the courses last week. The other two, literature and physical science or biologi cal science, are being given this week. The Honors progranj was | started at the University fall tyrm of 190>i when only (our courses were taught. These four w«-re literature, biological scl-! ence, physical science and his tory. Study of society was added to the curriculum the following year. The top 20 percent of the fresh men class is eligible to take the j courses. Sophomores who have not completed 93 hours may also enroll In the program. Customar ily, two courses are taken each year. Ijower Division Program Sophomore Honors is a lower division program In general edu cation. It is concerned not with specialized training but with the Student's cultural growth and i the brorfd foundations of liberal 1 study. Although many colleges have special programs in general edueatlon, they are not designed, as the Oregon plan is, for su perior students along. , The program has two main aims. The first is to offer a more stimulating and profitable ex perience to superior students. Barbara Wilcox Wins Ad Contest Barbara Wilcox, junior in speech, won a three-minute ad vertising speaking contest laBt weekend which will entitle her to appear at convention in Port land. Miss Wilcox spoke in the an nual Ayres speaking contest sponsored by the Advertising Association of the West. The contest was part of the weekend meeting of District No. 3 which was held in Eugene. Hhe will speak in the finals at the annual AAW convention in Portland during the last part of June. Miss Wilcox is head of the Bon Marche College Board and a member of Phi Theta Upsilon. Too oftjn the most promising students are lost in the crowd. The second atm is to experi ment with new methods of teach ing. Twenty people have completed the program so far. Fourteen of these finished the program last spring and six more this fall. The names of these people will appear on commencement pro grams. Several more people will prob ably finish the program with the exams thiR year. Change*, Considered Some changes are being con . sidered in the program by the Sophomore Honors committee, i according to K. S. Ghent, chair man of the committee. One of these changes is in the present arrangement of letting students who have not taken the courses take the comprehensive exams and thereby get honors. The commltte is considering ar ranging conferences for these students with instructors throughout the term to see how they are progressing. I Several high school students have shown interest in the hon ors program for more capable students. "We think this program serves a good purpose in attracting out standing students to the Univer j sity,” Ghent said. Druids to Meet, Elect Officers New /members of Druids, jun ior men's honorary, will meet at 4 p.m. in the Student Union to day to organize, and elect of ficers. Offices to be filled a>? president. vice-president and secretary-treasurer. Newly-tapped Druids are Doug Basham, Darrel Brittsan, Bill Mainwaring, Thil McHugh and Don Peck. Orchestra to Give Concert The last major group musical event to be sponsored by the school of music this year will be Wednesday evening at 8:15 in the school of music auditorium iwhen the University orchestra will perform. The program will be presented entirely by students with the exception of Ira Masters, assist ant orchestra leader, who will direct the orchestra in two num bers. Nelson Tandoc will lead the orchestra in “Symphony No. 8, \ Opus 93,” by Beethoven. Audrey Mistretta is featured contralto soloist in the perform ance of Saint-Sacns’ “My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice” from "Sam son and Dalila," and Donna Pet erson, pianist, will be presented in the soloist spot for Schu mann’s “Concerto for Piano and Orchestra, A Minor, Opus 54.” Subject, of his talk will be seg regation. Since 1938, Marshall has been special counsel for the NAACP. He is in active charge of legal cases to secure and protect full ! citizenship rights for Negroes. , Marshall has appeared before the U.S. Supreme Court and fed eral and slate courts, particular-1 ly in the South. He has argued or prepared briefs in all NAACP j cases affecting constitutional rights of Negroes since 1938. He , has won 11 of 14 cases in wjpieh J he has appeared before the su preme court. Segregation nf Schools His most recent victory was the Court's decision of May 17, 1954, which held that "separate but equal’’ facilities in education were unconstitutional. Marshall’s other victories in clude the right of Negroes to vote in primary elections in the South and the right of Negroes Coffee Hour Today at 4 A coffee hour forum will be held today at 4 p.m. in the Dad’s Lounge for Thurgood Marshall, j legal counsel for the NAACP and | today’s University assembly j speaker. The coffee hour is sponsored by the Student Union coffee hour : forum committee. Free coffee! will be served. Weekend Hours Given By Libe Changed library hours for the coming holiday weekend have been announced for the general library, the art museum library and that of the architecture school. The iqain library will be open Saturday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., will be closed all day Sunday and will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday. The art museum’s library will be closed completely all three days. The architecture school’s library will be open Saturday from 9*a.m. to 12 noon, and will be closed the remainder of the weekend, including Monday. . . . CAMPUS AS A BACKGROUND . . . Oreganos to Be Distributed Friday; Feature Innovations In Look, Content By Anne Ritchey Emerald AtlitOnt Newt Editor The 1955 Oreganas, featuring innovations in both content and appearance, will be ready for distribution Friday. Business Manager Bob McCracken has an nounced that students need give only their names, and may pick up copies at the Student Union from 8 to 5 Friday. "With the campus as a back ground, with the faculty as a guide, students of the University this year evolved a story of ’55 . . .” so reads the book's pro logue, written by Editor Bob Southwell. Continuity . . . Cartoons One of the many elements of continuity expressed within its pages is done through the device of cartoon work, featuring build ings and figures throughout. Some of the figures are of the ■ symbolic Oregon Duck, others I are of individual students and , faculty. But they are in each section equally, treading a path, so to speak, across the campus and cross-sectioning all the ele ments of it. Silent Historian . . . From the cover, which has a simple Oregon seal on embossed white leather, to the back of the book stands as a reflection of the campus and a silent historian of the year’s events. Most dramatically showing this purpose is a section called “Cam pus in Retrospect," where ran dom pictures of campus life, catch characteristic moods of that life and symbolize it. A new approach to student government, representing it as more than just another activity, is the section entitled "Student Administration." Included in this all-important section are all of ficial bodies of the ASUO, with living-organization groups in cluded. The introduction presents the year in narrative form, begin ning with the arrival of Presi dent O. Meredith Wilson and his family. Events, and not places, are emphasized here, the book's editor points out. Graduates are pictured in al phabetical order, not catagorized according to department of ma jor. And each school, in the fol lowing section, features its two lop scholars from the 1956 class. Narrative Style The book is organized in the "narrative yearbook style,” Southwell explains. All events are merged, and are presented chronologically beginning with fall term and including each term’s athletic events separately in this way. Probably one of the most de lightful and unique features is the emphasis on individuals, gained by using cut out figures . . . for example, each president, of each group, is cut out from the background and thus stands alone. traveling between states to be free from local Jim Crow laws. A graduate of Howard univer sity law school, Marshall v/a» admitted to the Bar in 1933, in Mainland. In 1934, he became le gal counsel for the Baltimore City branch of the NAACP. From 1936 until 1938, he served as as Bob Summers, 1954-55 ASUO president and a member of the University Assembly com mittee, deserves considerable credit for the fact that Ore gon students will have an op portunity to hear Thurgood Marshall in TWsday’s assem bly. It I>. Horn, chairman of the committee, reported that Sum mers suggested early in the year that students would be interested in hearing Marshall. Marshall was invited to lec ture here, then arranged a speaking tour of the entire West coast, Horn said. sistant special counsel for the NAACP. He was appointed full counsel in 1938. In 1951, Marshall w»ent to Ja pan and Korea to make a first hand investigation of court-mar tial cases involving Negro sol diers. Marshall holds honorary Doc tor of Law degrees from five uni versities and colleges. Concert-Lecture Russian in Theme "An Hour of Russian Songs” will be presented tonight in a recorded concert-lecture by Her bert Bowman, assistant profes sor of Slavic languages. The informal discussion and listening session is free and will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the music listening room of the Student Union. Coffee will be served aft er the program. Plans are being made for the new high fidelity system to be used for the recordings during the discussion, according to Craig Clark, chairman of the SU recorded music committee. Final Browsing Talk Wednesday "Anthony and Cleopatra” is the title of this week's browsing room lecture to be held Wednes day night at 7:30 in the browsing room of the Student Union. The speaker for the program will be E. C. A. Lesch, professor of English. The discussion leader will be P. W. Souers, head of the English department. This will be the last browsing room lecture in the series given this year. Registration Ends For Conference Registration for the Y-spon sored Seabeck conference, to be held on Hoods Canal this sum ' mar, ends this week. The conference is an inter denominational Pacific North west college conference to dis cuss local, national and interna tional affairs with Christian prospective. Registration blanks are avail able at the YWCA or YMCA offices and the fee is $10 until June 1.