Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (March 11, 1960)
Northern division meet UO swimmers grab second HV ICANNV (UCKKN Kmoruld News Editor Oregon's vurslty swimmer* gar nered S«'a points at the North cni I>1 vIkIoii rhd: ipionship* l ist weekend to nm off with a sur ptislng second place finish. THK HHKPKIHINO men of Don Van lioesen were picked by most Northwest swimming experts to finish in third or fourth. Top honors were won once ih' do by Jack Torney’s Washing ton club which finished far ahead of tiie second place Ducks with Jt*8’a points. Following is t he list of Oregon finishers in the meet, which was held at Leighton Poo]: 1500 meter freestyle: Dick Moody and Torn Herman grabbed fourth and fifth flare finishes re spectively. 200 yard Individual medley: Ron NukulOregon junior, aw am to a fourth place finlHli. 100-yard butterfly:' Nakata again finished In fourth place. 100-yard freestyle: A1 Taka shhna, the lone senior on the squad, finished second. 100-yard backstroke: J'-rry Reece, a sophomore, garnered a fourth piece finish. 440-yard freestyle: Fere the Ducks showed their power. Fred McGinnis took second and Moody •ind Merman tied for fourth. TURKU MKTKK diving: Rick I'Til erg and Boh Watts gained AT Os win cage crowns Alpha Tau Omega made it a complete sweep for the 1960 In tramural basketball ir-ason by I Uink both tho A and 11 League championships. I.\ Till: A tourney, Alpha Tan Omega, unbeaten all year long, clowned a go-for-broke Young Hall squad 3-S-30 after tieing tied up in a clone contest most of the way. At halftime the AT Os held a slim 21-IS margin and were con tinually threatened by the Young Hall quintet. 1 UK TAt'K appeared to get stlonger as the game progressed, and pulled away in the fourth quarter. As he had all season, forward Ron Anderson led the ATO at tack with 12 points and some strong board play. THK YOUNG HALL group, a freshman group, was led by Kver ett Jackson who hit for 13 points to lead game scorers. In the B league contest. Alpha Tau Oniegis did it again when they squeaked by a fighting Mc Clure five 25-24. It was the sec ond straight B league champion ship playoff for the Tau's. Last year they made it to the final berth only to lose to Sheldon Dorm. The ATOs thus climaxed an up hill fight in which they had to come from behind in several regu lar Bc.uon content* to- take nar row one, or two point win#. second and third place finishes respectively.. One meter diving: Friberg and Watts once again furnished two, three respectively. 200-yard butterfly: Reece fin ished fourth, 50-yard freestyle: Takashima gained a third place finish arid Dick Grover finished fifth. (Continued on pane J6j This ad worth 15% off on all • seat covers • rugs • repair work • convertible tops Al's Auto Upholstery 14th & Oak DI 4-2504 1338 Hilyard N*\i tu Omipun Hhell Service Dl 4-1B21 "Fresh as a flower in just one hour,t 3-Hour Shirt Service* gj(*ciCSSdt2PS2**DJ UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII 1960 Summer Session JUNE 20 TO JULY 29 A dozen conferences, workshops, and institutes to stimulate campus life in education, Asian studies, science, math, aviation, semantics, and others. I Graduate and undergraduate courses with emphasis on regional and Far Eastern studies. Distinguished resident and visiting faculty Write Dean of Summer Session LWVERsn V OF HAWAII Honolulu 11 Men who face wind and weather' m -sj. • | @6/$A 9 choose the protection of... $pice AFTER SHAVE LOTION Skin protection, that is. Old Spice refreshes and stimulates, guards against the loss of vital ■ skin moisture. Feels great, too. Brisk, bracing, with that tangy Old Spice scent. It docs seem to attract female admirers, hut what red-blooded man needs protection against girls? 1.00 rimiax S M U L. T O N KERNAN TURNER LOOKS AT While our ASUO Senate de bates racial clauses in living or ganizations. the United States Senate finds itself doing the same thing, but on a larger scale. Its debate concerns racial “clauses” in the southern way of life. The latest issue of LIFE re ports by pictures and print the filibuster over civil rights. Harry Golden, publisher of the famed Cariiliiw Israelite and author of two best sellers, gives his philo sophical interpretation and rec ommendations of the Southern situation. Recent Negro strikes, •hurch meetings, and student demonstrations are covered thorougHly by picture. The Sen ate is tied in with an explanation of the filibuster technique and pictures of Sei.atofs sleeping and talking on the Senate floor. REMEMBER THE students at the University of Detroit who banded together and filled the campus jukebox full of silence? Well, they are still angry with ‘orchestrated noise” and have come up with an idea which might prove popular, although it does not apply to our symphony band and orchestra. Recently they held a concert of silence. A noiseless singer performs with a back ground of muted anvils. A chorus dances with feet clad in silent sneakers. AT THE same time the stu dents of the U of D are campaign ing for noiseless jukeboxes and concerts, one of their foes has returned to civilian life. Our own Student Union music lovers can expect some jiew discs spun by ex-sergeant Elvis Presley. In a picture story containing the “girl he-left-behind," his certificate for good soldiering, and a head al ready showing signs of forgetting its army haircut, Elvis returns. NIKITA THOUGHT it was “naughty.” In vivid color and sensuous poses, the cast of the movie “Can Can” are pictured on five pages of this week’s LIFE. Hollywood thinks “K” may have reached his decision when watch ing the show as a result of a whisper from his wife. Kow we can make our own decision. WITH THE “King and I” a hit 'it the University, a photographer Tamed Jones is staging another day with royalty. Ex-photog -apher Armstrong - Jones sur prised Britain when.he announced his engagement to Princess Mar garet. Some call him the youngest photographer ever to retire. Five pages are filled with his own photographic work. He may or may not be a great photographer, but one thing is sure: he is now the subject of many, many photo- . graphs. AFTEK A successful musical based on A1 Capp's “Li! Abner,” Broadway has turned to another type of humor in producing “The Thur'oor Carnival.” LIFE catches photos cf James Thurber at home and the play on the stage. Thur ber’s ever - present wit and 1 "barbed shafts” fill the pages. He comments sagely on such sub jects as drawing, women, death, mildness, and love in the U.S. Many of his famous cartoons are reproduced in the article. LIFE HAS many twists. This week a full-length article, ac companied with pictures, tells the story of an ex-GI and the Army's search for gold. The man. Robert Jones, found gold in Arizona while stationed t l^e r e during World War II. Eighteen years later"he has decided to go back and find the lost mine. The story vividly describes the man’s per sonality and’ the troubles which both he and the Army undergo to find the gold. SOMETIMES WE complain of school rulings, but there are some who are concerned with a lack of them. A religious sect in the hills of Pennsylvania complains schools are too worldly. They have their problems and un doubtedly we have ours. It's all a oart of LIFE. This week's, that is, March 14, 1960.