Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 21, 1957, Image 1

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    Oregon Daily
\»l. I.IX
1 N*' K*WITV OK OKKiiON, t.\ (JENK. MONDAY. OCTOKKH 21, 1957
No. 19
Cougars Fall, 14-13, Despite Rallv
KIX<• IN<» Ol T I Ii»: mi MI1U IIKU- Sunday morning were then*- four I niverslty «tu<tent», among
t <■ xr<mp e! Oregon rotifers meeting the returning H-tifoot eleven at the Ettgene train depot. The
.•nrl\ morning rally re'pbrated the DueUs’ 14-IS win u»er Washington State Saturday at Pullman,
from left on their rom • rtlhlt- pereh are Boh Napier. Koeltard T. trie, Kills OWin and Ernie Tuseas.
• Emerald photo by Louis Farkeri
Five Students Injured
In Car-Truck Collision
Five University of Oregon stu
dents. three freshmen anti two
sophomores were hospitalized
with serious injuries following
an automobile accident with n
truck in eastern Oregon early
Friday evening.
They were identified as Donald
Yokum, Delta Upsilon, sopho
nioie; Judith Merrill, freshman.
Susan Campbell; Dale McKrola,
freshman. Hunter Hall; all of
John Day; Carol Louise Jordan,
ficahmon. Sherry Ross; an<l Carol
Smyth, sophomore, Dan Clark,
of Burns.
Details of the collision were
Profs to Discuss
SE Asian Problems
"South Hast Asia Is Indeci
sion the Keynote?” This is the
question which a group of pro
fessors recently returned from
•SK Asia will attempt to answer
at the second open meeting of
the International Relation! Club,
luesday at V p.m. in the Student
Union. The room ^timber will be
posted.
A general discussion will fol
low the discussion, and the pro
gram will conclude at 9 p.m.
'Mth slides of SR Asia, and re
freshments.
The Executive committee mem
bers of the IRC this year are
Mike Zimmerman and Betsy
S wabe. program; Barbara Grant
and Sue Devoe, social; Jerry
Lde, publicity, and Pe$gy Mc
Intosh and Ann Diffenbacker,
treasury.
nut Hear. One unofficial source
reported that the truck had stop
ped when the car crashed into it
The accident took place on
Highway 20 about f>0 miles west
of Burns near the town of Hamp
ton.
The truck driver, Forrest
Daniels of Portland, whs said to
be the most seriously injured.
Interviews Set
For Betty, Joe
Interviews to determine the six
finalists for Betty Co-ed and six
for Joe College will be held to
night. Candidates must wear
dressy clothes, according to Sally
Ferguson, selection chairman.
They will be interviewed separate
ly, according to the following
schedule by two different panels
of judges:
Bill Alfrey and Marrianne
Crabtree, 6:45; Dave Bosworth
and Nancy Denton, 6:5G; Diane
Duncan and Tom Creager, 7:07;
Sharon Hewitt and Harry Cure,
7:18; Judy Littlehales and Stuffy
Deschamps, 7:29: Karen Mnuney
and Darrel Hansen. 7:40; Mar
lene Perkins and Gene Nudelman,
7:51; Gail Kahkola and Gilbert
Rodgers, 8:02.
Andrea Rees and Pete Strag
nola, 8:13; Rita A. Shields and
Roger Turk, 8:24; Pat Treece and
Frank Weigel. 8:35; and Denote
Yoast and Chuck Weller, 8:46.
Room numbers will be posted
in the S.U.
Planning Director
To Give Address
Julius Jensen, managing direc
tor of the Oregon State Hanning
and Development Commission,
will address the first assembly
for the School of Business Ad
ministration at 1 p.m. Tuesday
ir. Commonwealth 138.
Jensen recently has completed
a tour of the state with Gov. Rob
ert D. Holmes to learn of Ore
gon's problems in attracting new
industry. He has been in the in
dustrial development field for 12
years, coming to the West Coast
in 1953 from Iowa. He directed
industrial development planning
in the state of Washington for a
four-year period.
A member of the American In
dustrial Development Council.
Jensen has been active as speak
er and panel-member in the or
ganization.
Shanley, Morris
Pace Vital Win
For 3-0 Record
By TOM CHAPMAN
Emerald Sports Writer
And now we ran whisper ROSE BOWL!
Oregon’s greatest sot of running backs, Jim Shanley and Jack
Morris, raced Washington State’s defense for gold-plated yardage
Saturday, and the Ducks had their season’s finest hour with a tense,
almost heartbreaking 14-13 victory over Jim Sutherland's Cougars
at WSC's Rogers Field in Pullman.
And with the victory, the Ducks now loom above everyone in the
Pacific Coast Conference with a perfect 3-0 record.
Oregon, never behind and never thieatened until those biting,
eight final minutes, was the perfect ball-club for three and a half
U. of 0. Explodes
At Crack of Ball
On Goal Upright
The Oregon campus was quiet
Saturday afternoon so quiet
you could hear the crack of a
football against a goal post
some 500 miles away. But after
that, the campus and Eugene
- rioted in the long-distance
splendor of Oregon’s "Little
Hose Bowl" victory over Wash
ington State College in Pull
man.
The celebration started slow
ly with a scattering of car horn
blasts in the Student Union
Lynctte Gotchy, Delta Gamma
junior, is resting comfortably
after she fell from a moving
car during Saturday's spon
taneous victory parade.
Miss Gotchy was taken to
Sacred Hospital for observa
tion. She was released Sunday
noon.
area. A man with a trumpet
supplemented the noises from
one car and was soon joined by
other men with the Webfoot
Victory Bell on the back of a
convertible. A light sunshine
and shower rainfall did not
slow the tempo of the rally’s
growth.
The parade circled the SU
block and stopped at women’s
dorms to add personnel. The
rain stopped and a rainbow ap
peared over Carson Hall as a
flood of women poured out of
the dorm into ears in the tem
porarily stalled parade.
The mobile rally, gaining
forces at eath turn, whirled
through "Greek Row’’ and
wound down to Willamette
(Continued on page sez en)
quarters. Yet, WSCs almost pre
dictable pair of touchdowns in
those last clock-winding minutes
set the stage for a near-llolly
wood-authoredfinish.
VVSC Finishes Fast
Bobby Newman, the nation’s
second best passer before kickoff
time, geared his Cougars to one
score, and after end Don John
ston intercepted Shanley's leap
ing pass on the VVSC 29. Newman
started his second masterful
drive.
He shot to end Don Ellingsen
for 24 yards via the air. and WSC
pushed on the ground for 10 more
plays to creep within a point of
the defense-minded Ducks. New
man scored the touchdown with
a plunge from the Duck two, with
less than a minute remaining.
Sutherland, without hesitation
at the game's near climax, rushed
his ace fullback Eld Stevens from
the bench to get the tieing point,
hut Newman waved Stevens back
to the bench and took the re
sponsibility himself. That he
missed the point by the margin
of a skinny, obsolete goal post is
history. It was Oregon's victory.
The Ducks won by doing what
they had to do.
Like the proverbial blanket,
they shunted Newman's passing
arm for three quarters, and New
man's fine replacement. Bunny
Aldrich, had little more success
against an Oregon six-man pass
defense.
Shanley, Morris Ramble
And while the Ducks cornered
every Cougar move, Shanley and
Morris were silently moving the
ball against two alternate WSC
forward walls. Morris ran the
oval 19 times for 85 huge yards,
and Shanley carried another 18
times for 52 yards, plus catching
the winning touchdown pass from
his left-half teammate Leroy
Phelps.
Almost unnoticed were Morris’
two extra-points that had finally
won it. The senior fullback punted
with finesse, too, and was his
usual blocking, charging self
(Continued on pane five)
Leaders View Preview Ban
The recently-abolished Duck
Preview put too much emphasis
on social life, without orienting
high school students to scholas
tic life, summarized chairmen of
last year's preview committees.
A large proportion of the visit
ing high school seniors came
just for the parties, seldom went
to the meetings, he feels.
Last year’s general co-chair
man, Fred Nunn, stated, ”1 am
quite in favor of discontinuing
the Preview, There are too many
events happening at the same
time,” Nunn said, adding that
“houses gave very little en
couragement to their guests to
go to the meetings on education.”
Helen Simon was chairman of
last year's assembly committee
which attempted to present the
education benefits of Oregon in
an interesting way. She believes
that improvement in the assem
blies had been made in spite of
failure by living organizations to
encourage attendance.
Mike DeVore, last year’s Vod
vil co-chairman, thinks individual
invitations should be sent to pro
mising students for a week-end ;
visitation during falT term "be-!
fore the students have already
made up their minds where they
are going.” Such a program is
being instituted at Oregon State.!
Miss Simon felt that the Uni-1
versity’s best hope for acquiring
outstanding students lies in »*e
"Greater Oregon Program",
which is designed to find out
standing students and athletes
throughout Oregon during the
summer. These students could be
invited to the University during
fall term, and presented with a
more accurate picture of Univer
sity life.
From now on, the chairmen
said orientation will probably be
on a quality rather than a quan
tity basis, so that Oregon will
not only have many students,
but many four-year students as
well.