fit trayMlctyr 0 EMERALD Election Reform Now that the smoke has cleared trom the freshman election and everyone can lean back and objectively view the results, we would like to make a few comments about the ASUO election board and the prob lems which are now facing its jurisdiction. THERE ARE THREE basic flaws which become evident from the experience of this fall term election. The first of these is the difficulty the board must face in enforcing its rules right down to the letter. The candi date's word must be believed in almost ev ery case because it is next to impossible to check each purchase made by each candi date in the race. Anyone can report that he has spent less than the expenditure limit. SECONDLY, it must be decided how strong the board’s punitive measures should be. If a candidate were to go a nickel over the limit set by the board, would he be dis qualified or is some other less drastic pun ishment in order? In other words, the board must make a definite decision as to how close the expediture limit should be adher ed to by the candidates. Another factor, which results in the third problem, is the possibility of another party seeking the elimination of a candidate by spending money for that candidate while claiming good intentions. THE ELECTIONS board is stuck with the expense limit. The difficulties in the fall election are tlie natural result ot experi mentation of a new system. We would like to see the elections board learn from the mistakes which showed up in the election and define the system more clearly for the spring election. The board should make it quite clear ex actly what will and will not be considered campaign expenses. For instance, the board must decide what to do with expenses in curred during coke dates which are used to influence female votes. Should gas used in cars in the noise parades be counted as an expense? Is it fair for some candidates to obtain materials of equal value for less mon ey than their opponents because of influ ence or connections they possess? The prob lem of gifts should also be resolved. That is, must materials given to the candidates free of expense be included in the candidates’ ex pense account? ALONG THIS LINE the board should decide what to do when a fraternity house buys materials and then gives them to its candidates free of cost. These questions boil down to this: should the money spent for or bv the candidate be the “expenses incurred" or should the actual value of the candidate’s campaign be considered. We hope the elections board will either find solutions to the problems which arose during and after the fall elections or seek to change the system. The American Negro (Editor’s note: The following article is the second in a series taken from the Daily Kansan, University of Kansas.) The Supreme Court decision of 1954 baf fled the Negro. After centuries of indoctrin ation in the spirit of inferiority, he was slow to assert himself. He could not fully real ize that the decision of the court represent ed the apex of a century-old movement to ward racial tolerance as a guaranteed right. The Negro looked about him fearfully and hesitated long—but at last he began to act. THERE WERE THOSE of his race who had studied integration in detail, prepar ing themselves for this day. They were his leaders. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People led the assault on the bastions of prejudice. They did not seek so much to change attitudes as to force them to conform with the decis ion of the court. They felt, and still feel, that if equal opportunity and the removal of conditions which lead to feelings of in feriority became reality, then hostile atti tudes could be overcome. But they said this last could not be done unless equality and integration in the broad sense were estab lished, even though protests were vehement. The NAACP was aggressive. Its lawyers brought scores of cases before the bar in many states, and began to extend the court decision to any and all matters involving separation of the races. Often they were wrong, or their accusations were unfair; but they also exposed many an injustice. The South, its heritage and entire way of life threatened in the eyes of its citizens, fought back. The Klu Klux Klan, long dead as an influence in the South, enjoyed a brief revival, but soon lapsed back into vir tual inactivity. The people of the South had advanced beyond use of the Klan as an ac ceptable arm of action. Instead, the com munities of the South organized White Cit izen’s Committees, dedicated to the idea that the mixing of the races was unnatural and evil and contending that the Supreme Court overstepped its bounds in forcing on the people of one area a decision that they alone had the right to make. Some of these committees operated with perfect sincerity and conviction; others became sounding boards for men like John Kasper, who hid sick hatred tor the Negro behind a veil of states-rightisms and implications of racial inferiority ordained by the almighty. All of them led their communities in maintaining segregation in the face of mounting pres sure. The battle was joined. IT WAS NOT LONG before the massed power of the federal judiciary and execu tive branches began to weigh on the South. In 1955, the Supreme Court reaffirmed its decision of the previous year, and warned that the law at all levels must be made to conform to the idea set down by the origin al decision. This reaffirmation led to a pro cession of cases brought before the courts, cases involving segregation in eating plac es, on public transit systems, and, of course, in schools. The South (and parts of the North) were watching their powers of self determination chipped away by the court. Tension increased. In 1957, schools in Little Rock, Ark., were shut down in a desperate attempt to fore stall integration. In Virginia, Gov. J. Lind say Almond, declaring he would never per mit integiation, slammed the doors of schools in that state in the faces of the pu pils. There had been a brief lull in the ad vance of integration, but now the choice was clear—integration forced upon the South by the government, or failure of the govern ment to enforce it, leaving the field to the individual states in matters involving sep aration of the races. Footnotes Not to be outdone by the United States Olympic team, Oregon cross-country men will leave Saturday morning with torches in their hands for Oregon Cow College. The last two men will carry the torch 10 miles. That is a long ways. Maybe it would be a good idea if all of us would run over there and all the Oregon Cow students would run over here. That way everyone would be so tired there would be no danger of the vandalism which sometimes accompanies Civil Wars. Little Man on Campus 'tOU COA6 ID OUZ KX7TVM.L —WE JU^T THOT W&fr lZE$Ft»JD PV 6HOW1S6 A UTTL6 itfTEKE$T IMTVi’ ATT Prof Rates Other Props: Names Three Categories (Reprinted from the Ohio State University laintern.) By CHARLES B. WHEELER Assistant Professor of English Wynken, Blynken, and Nod are the names I shall give the three professors on this campus whose portraits are briefly sketched here. The men are fic titious but not imaginary. BY A long - standing tacit agreement, every student who enrolls in one of Professor Wyn ken’s courses is spotted a “C” to b<*gin with, and only in cases of flagrant ahsence or failure to turn in assigned written work is there any danger of a lower grade. "A's” and "B’s" are common. Professor Wynken is not a fool: he knows that his students, by and large, are nothing to get excited about, but he is a kind ly man who believes in live-and let-live. He is also a great sports fan and unsparing in his crit icism of sloppy playing on the football field. Luckily for his peace of mind, our athletic de partment enforces the highest standards of performance. PROFESSOR BLYNKEN is not the drooling petty sadist portrayed in “Little Man on Campus,” but he manages to harass his students quite as ef fectively by simply being ob tuse to their feeling. He never stops to make sure that his as signments have been understood after he gives them. When he lectures he goes so rapidly that note-takers are left hopelessly behind, and when he holds a class discussion it usu ally turns into a tete-a-tete be tween himself and some fa vored student. He adheres to his office hours so literally that he is almost inaccesible. THOUGH he insists that pa pers be turned in on time, he never returns them when prom ised. He habitually comes into class late and then holds it with his glittering eye until 30 sec onds before the final bell for the next hour. He is a very prominent man in his field. Professor Nod is not a boring lecturer, droning over dog eared lecture notes compiled twenty years ago. His method is entirely different. It may be called ‘teaching the text," that is, sitting in front of the class and reciting the text out loud, with interpolated comment*, while the student* slump, numb and disgusted, working on their arithmetic under pretense of reading the Lantern. HE NEVER assign* paper* that require more than a sen tence or two of consecutive or iginal writing, and the paper* are returned bearing grades but no mark* or comments on their faults. He will pan* Illiterate writing if the technical content is satisfactory. He is very fond of multiple choice tests, though now and then he will extend himself by giving a *hort-an*wcr test to see how well the students have memorized "facts” (a word that he would never dream of putting in quotation mark*, i He believe* that his courses are intellectual ly demanding. THESE men are faculty fail ure*. They are not localized in any one department or college— they can be found all over t h o campus. Perhaps we faculty members might turn, for a change, from criticizing the shortcomings of our students to considering how far short we fall of meeting the challenge that they present. This challenge is not only In their numbers: it is in their se riousness, their receptivity, their candor, it is in their woe ful inexperience, their confused aims, their clumsiness at ab stract thought all their quali ties, good and bad, call for the best in us. We cannot succeed v.'ith less. OREGON DAILY EMERALD rhe Oregon Daily Emerald ia published four times in September and five day* a week during the school year, except dur mg examination and vacation periods, by the Student Publications Hoard of the University of Oregon. Entered as second class matter at the post office, Eugene, Oregon. Subscription rates: $5 per year, $2 per term. Opinions expressed on the editorial page are those of The Kmerald and do not pre tend to represent the opinion of the ASUO or the University. KERNAN R. TURNER, Editor STEVE Ml ELI KIN, Business Manager JIM BOYD, Managing Editor TED MAIfAR, News Editor LOUIS TURK, Advertising Manager DULCY MORAN KEITH POWELL Assistant News Editors AL IIYNDING. RON BIH5L Sports Editors BARBARA CHANTRY, Women’* Editor HAVE SANDS, I’hoto Editor FRED CRAFTS, Entertainnuent Editor editorial hoard -II *r,nn Tu,rnt'r. Tod Mahar, Feith Pow ell, A1 Hyndtng, Marge Langenea, Fred Crafts, Jim Boyd, Ron Buel, Gary Salk Howard McGlasion, Sue Hut,ter.