OREGON DIVER DAVE CIOCHETTI
Second in Three-meter Competition
USC swimmers
wallop Oregon
University of Southern Cali
fornia broke eleven meet rec
ords and one Leighton Pool
mark as they walloped Oregon
86-27 Friday night.
The Trojans won every event
except the two dives in their
record-smashing appearance.
Tom Speight won the one
meter diving event for Oregon
while Dennis Hartman took first
in the three-meter competition.
Speight compiled 272.80
points to edge teammate Dave
Ciochetti who had 252.50.
Hartman, a junior from Den
ver, held a wide lead in the
three-meter event. He totaled
297.10 points to outdistance
Bowling Deadline
The deadline for living organ
ization entries in the IM bowl
ing league is today at 2 p.m.
instead of last Wednesday as
previously reported in the Jan.
8 Emerald.
Please contact the EMU rec
reation department to pay lane
fees and get time assignments.
Dick McDermott of USC who
collected 257.05. Wayne Sch
wandt took third for Oregon.
The Ducks took second places
in the 100-yard freestyle and
200-yard backstroke and 400
yard freestyle relay.
Portland stadium
could have rug
PORTLAND (AP) — The
state of Oregon, without artifi
cial turf on any athletic field
now, conceivably could have
three such fields before long.
The University, Oregon State
and now Portland’s Civic Sta
dium are the possibilities.
Frank Ivancie, the city com
missioner in charge of the stadi
um, estimates the cost of the
rug—the trade names are Astro
turf and Tartan—at §500,000.
“Pressure from football games
has increased heavily,” said
Ivancie, "and the field just can’t
take that kind of beating.
“Besides, Oregon and Oregon
State have plans to install Astro
turf and that would make our
stadium more antiquated if we
didn’t do something.”
Noecker paces
Oregon fo win
in gymnastics
By JOHN ANDERSON
Of The Emerald
A balanced scoring attack, led
by senior captain Wayne Noeck
er, paced the Oregon gymnastics
team to a season opening win
over visiting Central Washing
ton State College at McArthur
Court Saturday. The score was
138.375 to 125.975.
Noecker, who won the all
around title with 44.925 points,
picked off second place finishes
in side horse, long horse and
horizontal bar competition.
A trio of Oregon sophomores
were among the individual event
winners. George Shoemaker’s
sterling performance on the
mats earned him 8.75 points
from the four judges and a vic
tory in floor exercise. Nimble
Brian Lassalle whirled through
his sidehorse routine for 7.40
markers and Dean Hale, an all
around gymnast from Seattle,
scored in the horizontal bar to
edge out the Ducks’ Noecker,
Bob Leach and Dave Olson, who
finished second, third and fourth
in that event.
Olson, a junior and the big
gest man on the team at 6-3.
led another Oregon sweep in
longhorse vaulting with a 9.10
score. Moecker and Hale follow
ed him.
Jim Lambert’s 8.55 took the
top spot in still rings, with Jim
Pittman taking third.
The only event in which Cen
tral Washington had an edge,
was the parallel bars, won by
Wildcats’ captain Roger Smith,
with a score of 6.95. Olson was
second with a mark of 6.85. A
pleasant surprise for Oregon
was the fourth place finish of
5-2 Dick Fernandez, a transfer
seeing his first varsity action
with a 6.60 score.
Head Coach Dick Smith, in
his seventh year as gymnastics
coach at Oregon, was pleased
with his team’s performance,
but not entirely satisfied.
“We did all right for the first
meet of the season,” Smith said,
“but we’ve got a lot of room
for improvement.”
Vikings defeat
Oregon matmen
Rick Mailloux, Randy Noah
and Kip Gorton salvaged the
only wins for Oregon as they
lost a 20-11 wrestling match to
small college power Portland
State in Portland.
Oregon’s junior heavyweight,
Henry Muller, lost his first
match of the season to Steve
Doster in a close 2-1 decision.
Muller now stands 4-1-1.
Noah was the only Webfoot
wrestler to win by a fall as he
pinned Terry Carragher of PSC
at 1:41 of the third round. Mail
loux took an 11-5 decision from
Bob Bergen at 137 pounds and
Kip Gorton won from Flip
Reade 7-4 at 167.
Tim Wilmarth, the Ducks 191
pound Pac-8 champion edged
the Vikings’ Don Austin 2-1 in
the only exhibition match.
Oregon, now 2-4, faces arch
rival Oregon State in a Mc
Arthur Court showdown Satur
day night.
Order of O meeting
Order of O will hold a pizza
feed tonight at Pietro’s at 6:00
or thereafter. Alll Oregon let
termen should attend. There
will be a short meeting after
the feed to discuss upcoming
initiation.
IM Schedule
BASKETBALL
3:35—Court 40—Adams A vs. De
Cou A; Court 43—Young A vs. Dy
ment A.
4:20—Court 40—Dunn A vs. West A;
Court 43—Watson vs. Boynton A.
5:00—Court 40—Phi Delta Theta A
vs. Beta Theta Pi A; Court 43—Delta
Upsilon A vs. Kappa Sigma A.
HANDBALL
3:35—Stafford vs. Campbell.
4:00—Phi Kappa Psi vs. Carson II.
All matches will be played on
courts 42, 44 and 46.
Volleyball
Ducks take title
Oregon now has its first championship in volleyball competition.
The Ducks defeated Portland’s downtown YMCA for the Puget
Sound Invitational B division title in Seattle Saturday.
The scores were 15-13, 15-10.
The Ducks downed three other clubs on their way to the top.
They knocked off Portland Volleyball Club 15-12, 15-8, and 15 6
in their opening match. Portland Community College, Marc Volley
ball Club of Canada, and Tacoma YMCA were Oregon’s other
victims.
Oregon Coach Carl McGowan cited Ned Schafer as the Ducks’
outstanding player in the tournament. Schafer is physical director
of the Central Lane YMCA.
Washington Athletic Club captured the A division crown. Ore
gon beat the University of British Columbia’s number two team
and then lost to Multnomah Athletic Club.
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