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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 4, 1950)
Ducks Riddled by Iowa (Continued from page five) the speed and accuracy showed by the Iowans. Hawkeye Guard Bob Clifton hit 5 of his 6 attempted field goals. Oregon’s shooting was compara tively mediocre and the Ducks were decidedly outrun on the floor. The absence of Sowers in this game was more notable than in any other dur ing the trip. Warren’s cagers had their closest scrape with victory in the second Iowa game when they went into an overtime before dropping the con test, 70-69. At the end of the regu lar playing period the score was knotted at 60-60. Oregon led at half-time in this game by a 33-29 score, and was ahead in the last two minutes by a 60-57 count before the Hawkeyes began their final blast of scoring. TKE Receives Notional Awards The University of Oregon chap ter of Tau Kappa Epsilon frater nity was recently awarded the “Outstanding Chapter of the Year” plaque by the national of fices of that fraternity. Beta Kappa chapter was given the award for the academic year 1948-1949. The plaque was pre sented to the local chapter by field director Ralph Frickenstein. A similar award is made each year by the fraternity national, based on scholarship, activities, and house efficiency. Beta Kappa chapter also currently holds Tau Kappa Epsilon’s scholarship su premacy plaque, which goes each year to the highest scholastically of the fraternity’s 79 chapters. Junior Writes, Designs Book About College Life Vic Flack, a junior majoring in drawing and painting, has au thored “I Just Had to Before I Was 20,” a hook of 23 poems, three short prose works, and three radio monologues. They're available at the co-op for $1 a copy. Flack, who designed the cover himself, stated that the material might be tagged as largely repre senting college life out of class. Of the book, Flack said, “Since the subject matter of the book is usually unpretending, I think there are things in it that would have popular appeal. But for those who will know, the material at its worst naturally lapses into juven ilia, marked, as juvenilia usually is, by a ‘sentimelodrama’ sort of thing. “I've been told that it was ‘pretty direct’ and that it had a ‘shrewd naivete’—whatever that is —but most important to me was the remark that it showed a devel opment in physical structure. My personal favorites are poems 9, 12, 13, 14, and 17 and possibly the last three.” Flack, who has had a poem ac cepted for the Annual Anthology of College Poetry, last year pub lished an unusual dedication to the Erb Memorial Union. New Men's Co-op Started on Campus Philadelphia House, a new men’s cooperative living organization, has been established on the Oregon campus. The house, located on Alder Street near the Millrace, was for merly occupied by the Pi Kappa Phi men’s fraternity. The co-op is interdenominational. Jim Cummings, sophomore in architecture and allied arts, is president. Other officers are Price Roop, senior in chemistry, vice president and business manager; Jim Hunt, senior in architecture and allied arts, secretary; Evan Skersies, senior in business, treas urer; Bill Portis, senior in busin ness, sergeant at arms; and Dick Pearson, senior in architecture and allied arts, chaplain. FRANCHOT TONE Famous Cornell Alumnus, says: \ “Every time I open a pack of MILDER j CHESTERFIELDS I know that every one will leave a clean, fresh taste in my mouth. No other cigarette does that (or me. That’s why Chesterfield is MY cigarette.*’ c: \crv^-^ STARRING IN "THE MAN ON THE EIFFEL TOWER" RKO RADIO RELEASE HESTERFIELD — MM/t rtm r vr -rstnn / /MAMfMCA'S confers /Aey're Jn/Wfn/% eyre TOPS/ C«p>nphi 19>0, Liccin & Mm» Tomho Co By Recent National Survey