56th Year uj Publication ME(2Ct_D '"L LVI I MV KICS IT V Ol OKKi.ON, EUGENE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1955 SO. If 188 Gordon Rice Is New Emerald Editor Segregation Problem Discussed by Marshall By Nauthaba Husain Emerald Reporter There In no moral, scientific or leKal basis for the aggregation of Negroes, ami the only reason it continues to exist is because it has been going on for so long that people do not want to change it, waul Thurgood Mar* shall, chief legal counsel for the NAACP, at a University assem bly Tuesday. In the Mouth there are legal statutes requiring segregation but even in the rest of the U.8., including the North and the West, Negroes are differentiated against, said Marshall who ad dressed an audience of about 300 without a microphone. Speaking of the civil rights of Negroes Marshall said, "a child born to the blackest, most il literate, poorest sharecropper in Mississippi, by breathing Its first breath in a democratic gov ernment, by being born in a dem ocratic government, is entitled to the same rights as the John V. Rockefellers." No Full Rights Yet nowhere in the US. are the Negroes given their full rights, rights granted to them by the constitution. Marshal] as serted. To show the lengths to which segregation can go Marshall gave the example of a Negro boy's dog which was refused burial in an animal cemetery be cause its owner was colored. In some states books belonging to Negro school children are stored separately from those of the white children, Marshall said. Segregation laws In the South are so disgraceful that they should not even be repeated, Marshall claimed. As long as these laws exist the Negro prob lem can never be solved, he said. Approximately feg percent of the Negroes and 75 percent of the whites rejected for mental deficiency in World War II came from the South, said Marshall. "The only way to keep Negroes in the gutter is to get down there with them," he said. To the contention that white and Negro integration can never prove successful Marshall re plied by giving the example of the armed forces. During both the world wars there was strict segregation in the services, he said. Service Integration The Navy was the first to abolish it under Secretary James Forrestal. During the Korean war there was complete integra tion in the Navy and the Air Force, and later in the Army. This resulted in increased battle efficiency. Cases of violence between whites and Negroes decreased, and it proved more economical to run the forces without duplica tion of facilities, Marshall ex plained. The Supreme Court decision that segregation was unconsti tutional has been called the most important event in this direction (Continued on page three) ASUO Committee To Investigate Millrace The ASUO millrace committee made plana Tuesday night for an extenaive engineering study of the Millrace from the intake to the outlet pipe. This study wiir be undertaken this summer. The committee called for spe cial attention to be directed by the engineers to the intake dam, situated near Judkins Point. The Willamette river has washed around the north dam of this diversion structure, and drillings must be made in order to find the depth to which a dam must be sunk in order to rest on bed rock. Canal Problem Another problem which must be overcome involves the diked canal from the dam to the rail road underpass. Late in the 1940’s high water caused the col lapse of part of the retaining wall; and instead of repairing the break officials put in a pipe which carries the water. Engineers will investigate this and make estimations and rec ommendations of either repair ing the damaged section or re placing the entire canal with pipe. Other Considerations / Among other major considera tions are determining the mini mum flow for sanitary conditions on the race, raising the water level, and studying methods of getting the water out of the race faster. The other major item of busi ness concerned discussion and ac tion in order to secure canoes and “Temporary Anchorage." I. 11. Wright, head of the physical! plant, stated that students could ! probably use University land near the physical plant for the “Anchorage," and Si Ellingson, said that the operations of this "Anchorage" would fall underI the direction of the Student Un- i ion program. “Anchorage" Investigation Jerry Maxwell was appointed chairman of the “Anchorage” committee, to work with Mr. Wright in the construction of this~Tacility. Chairman of the millrace com mittee is Sam Vahey, and faculty members working with him are Ellingson, SU director; Wright, superintendent* of the physical plant; Fred Cuthbert, professor of architecture, and J. Orville Lindstrom, University business manager. Student members include Sally Jo Greig, Maxwell, Kip Whar ton, Darrel Brittsan and Bob School ing, co-chairman of this year’s Canoe Fete. The Student L'nion Hoard present* the jazz group of Karl Bostic tonight at 8 p.m. in the Student l'nion ballroom. Bostic, who has enjoyed na tionwide popularity among jazz enthusiasts and is currently on a tour of the Pacific North west, will have with him in concert his recording group of ■even musicians and a vocal ist. The Bostic concert is pre sented as a special attraction for Oregon students hy the SI’ Board. Rally Board Calls For Duke Petitions The rally board is now calling . for „ petitions for yell dukes. ASUO forms may be used and the petitions will be due Tues day. May 31, at 5 p.m. in the Student Union. Applicants will be interviewed and will try out before the board Tuesday at 7:30 in Gerlinger annex. SPECIAL MEETING There will be a meeting June 2 at noon in the Student Un ion of all members of the rally board and new fally squad to decide on definite plans for the program for next year. It has been decided by the board to have organized white shirt and white-blouse sections next year. Also pom-pons will be sold to the women's section, and pom-pon stunts will be featured. Lesch Will Give Shakespeare Talk The last browsing room lecture of the current academic year will be given tonight by Dr. E. C. A. Lesch, professor of English and one of the leading experts on Shakespeare, in the browsing room of the Student Union. "Anthony and Cleopatra” will be the play discussed by Dr. Lesch in the 7:30 lecture. Dr. P. W. Souers, head of the English department, will act as discus sion leader. Only Three Mere Emeralds for '55 Regular publication of the Emerald will end Friday. Copy deadline for the paper will be Thursday afternoon at 3 o’clock. One additional Emerald will be published on June 2. The final edition of the term will be a special Commencement edition. Donna Runberg to Be Manager Second Time Gordon Rice will be next edi tor of the Oregon Daily Emerald and Donna Runbcrg will again serve as business manager. Both are juniors in journalism, and were chosen by the Student Pub lications Board Tuesday. Rice is now news editor of the campus daily, and has been a reporter, night editor, sports writer and assistant news editor, as well as serving as sports edi tor the first half of this year. Major Campus Posts Other major campus positions he has held include being soph omore class representative, jun ior class vice-president and vice- ! president of Campbell club. He j Music School Concert Tonight Three student soloists will be featured in tonight’s school of music-sponsored concert with the University orchestra. Audrey Mistretta. contralto, Donna Peterson, pianist and Nel son Tandoc, conductor, are the three students who will berform. First on the program, which begins at 8:15 p.m. in the music school auditorium, is Symphony i No. 8, Opus 93, by Beethoven. Tandoc will conduct this num ber, which will be played by the orchestra. Miss Mistretta will next sing "My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice,” from ‘Samson and Delilah” by Saint-Saens. A trumpet quartet composed of James Albert, Vondis Miller, Glenn Benner and Gary Donnell will play "Quartet for Brass and Tympani,” by Tice. Donna Mc Queen will be featured on the tympani for this number, which Ira Lee will direct. Donna Peterson's piano solo will be featured in a Schumann composition, “Concerto for Piano j and Orchestra in A Minor,” opus i 54. * won the Maurice Harold Hunter scholarship award for outstand ing junior man during Junior Weekend. Miss Runberg, who is currently business manager, was formerly advertising manager and nation al advertising manager of the Emerald. She is president of Gamma Alpha Chi, women’s advertising honorary, and is a member of Theta Sigma Phi, women’s jour nalism honorary. Groth Is Consultant Carl Groth, superintendent of the University Press, was named business consultant for campus publications for next year. He succeeds Jack Weber, who held the post this year. An important decision con cerning personnel was made fol lowing a recommendation and repoijt from a special committee investigating the plausibility of having only one editor and busi ness manager per year for the Emerald. The committee, composed of chaii-man Jim Light, Jerry Har rell, current Emerald editor, and Gordon A. Sabine, dean of the journalism school, favored hav ing only one editor a year but recommended leaving the organ ization as it is, with re-selection twice annualy. Urged to Re-Petition A corollary of this, which was adopted in entirety by the board, was that they strongly urge all editors and business managers to repetition for their posts in mid-year. Concerning this year's selec tion, Rice was the only petition er for editor and Gordon Ross the only other petitioner for busi ness manager. Birger Brandt and John Ra dich had formerly submitted pe titions for business manager, but Brandt withdrew his com pletely and Radich withdrew his conditiqnally in favor of the se lection of Miss Run berg. He will serve as advertising manager for next year. Legislature Approves New Building for Art School The state legislature has ap proved an appropriation of $550. 000 for the building of a new unit and the remodeling of the Architecture and Allied Arts building, J. O. Lindstrom, Ur.i Mortar Board Officers Told _i___,_ Barbara Bailey was elected president of Mortar Board, na tional honorary for senior wom en, for the coming year at the recent initiation of new mem bers. Other officers are Janet Gus tafson. vice-president: Inga Ship stead. secretary; Ann Erickson, treasurer: Patty Fagan, histor ian. and Anne Hill, editor. Miss Bailey, as president, will attend a tri-annual national con vention this summer in Ehst Lansing, Mich. The initiation was held last Wednesday night at the home of University President O. Mere dith Wilson. versity business manager, has announced. One fifth of the appropriations will be invested in a wing to be connected to the architecture building and annex. The remain der of the funds will finance the rehabilitation of the old build ing. Among the features that will be added to the building are new libraries, sculpture studies, painting areas, laboratories and a new auditorium seating 225. Work on the new wing will com mence August 3, with construc tion lasting approximately 18 months. It is being built on a contract basis so it will be fin ished ahead of the remodeling of the old building. S. W. Little, dean of the school of architecture and allied arts, announced that because of the difficulty of connecting the two buildings, architecture and art students will be encouraged to submit ideas and designs for con struction of the unit. Erwin Wright, physical plant superintendent, will supervise the remodeling of the old build ing.