I 
do not k now if you have seen this obituary. This is a GREAT obituary of Murray! 
The best I have seen. They made one mistake---they said he went to UC (Cal), not 
USC. I corrected it here.
Notice 
the Vegan reference. We called him the Green Death. You could cut his farts with 
a knife---the worst, but the NICEST guy! 
Ken
A 
USC Classmate Passed Away Earlier This Year
At one time, Murray Rose held the world 
swim records for 200 m., 400 m., 800 m. and 1500 m. Absolutely amazing.
Jack
Murray Rose, 
Legend, Passes Away At 73
Craig 
Lord
Apr 15, 
2012
Obituary
Murray 
Rose, legend of distance freestyle swimming, died today at the age of 73. He had 
been battling Leukaemia since Christmas. 
A sad 
loss to his family, Rose will be much missed in the world of swimming. Born on 
January 6, 1939, he grew to be one of the all-time greats of his sport. His name 
will be among those commemorated as Olympic icons at renamed tube stations 
across the British capital this summer. 
Born to 
British parents in Nairn, on the coast of the Moray Firth at the foot of the 
Scottish Highlands, Rose emigrated with his family as a one-year-old and learned 
to swim in Double Bay, a fashionable Sydney resort with a shark-netted beach at 
the back door and an inspiring view of Sydney Harbour. 
Veteran 
and pioneering coach Forbes Carlile recalled: "I first saw Murray Rose, a slim, 
fair-headed boy from tthe Bondi Club standing on a starting block at the North 
Sydney Olympic Pool more than 60 years ago. Quietly spoken, reserved and caring, 
Murray, hero of the Melbourne Olympics, ranks with the greatest ever. His crawl 
stroke technique was a model, world over, for two generations of swimmers. 
Murray was a reserved, hugely respected caring person. Sad news. He'll be much 
missed."
In 1956, 
at 17, Rose became the face of the home Olympic Games in Melbourne a month 
before the Opening Ceremony when he clocked a world record of 17:59.5, becoming 
the first to race the 1,500m freestyle inside 18 minutes. 
Iain 
Murray Rose also went by the name “the Seaweed Streak”, courtesy of his 
specialised diet: no meat, fish, poultry, refined flour, sugar, chemical-infused 
foods, but plenty of seaweed, honey and wheat-germ. The Olympic canteen could 
not cater for Rose, and so his parents were allowed to take their son out for 
meals. 
On the 
radio programme You Bet Your Life hosted by Groucho Marx on March 17, 
1958, Rose was asked what he attributed his three gold medals to. He told Marx 
that veganism was the answer.
The Rose 
family traces its origins back to Hugh de Ros, a baron whose name appears as a 
witness to the Charter of Beuly Priory in 1200. The Iain before the Murray takes 
a Gaelic spelling in honour of ancestors who fought for Prince Charles at the 
battle of Culloden Moor in 1746. The family has its own tartan, coat of arms and 
motto: "Constant and True".
In 
Melbourne, Rose, coached by Sam Herford, opened his Olympic account with a relay 
gold and world record (8:23.6) in the 4x200m alongside Kevin O’Halloran, John 
Devitt and John Hendricks.
The day 
after, he raced to an Olympic record of 4:27.3 over 400m, to become the first 
Australian to lift the eight-lap title, 3.1sec ahead of Japan’s Tsuyoshi 
Yamanaka, with American George Breen third. Not since Norman Ross in 1920 had a 
man won both distance freestyle crowns, while no one as young as Rose had ever 
won three gold medals in the Olympic pool. 
The tide 
seemed to turn against the Australian, however, when Breen sliced 6.6sec off the 
world record (17:52.9) over 30 laps in the third heat, two heats after Rose’s 
18:04.1. In the final, thin air could hardly separate Rose, Breen and Yamanaka 
at 800m. Rose then built a lead of some five metres. With 100m to go, Yamanaka 
began to sprint. 
The 
crowd leapt to its feet, but Rose held on for a 17:58.9 victory over Yamanaka, 
on 18:00.3, and Breen, who took bronze in 18:08.2, completing a match of the 
400m podium. Rose and Yamanaka would later become students at the University of 
Southern California (USC). 
Rose 
made history again at the 1960 Games in Rome, when he became the first man ever 
to retain a distance freestyle title, over 400m (4:18.3). Once again, Yamanaka 
took silver in 4:21.4, precisely the same 3.1sec gap between the two as there 
had been in 1956. 
In the 
1,500m, Rose, Breen and Yamanaka placed next to each other, but Australian John 
Konrads, another of European (Latvian) parentage, got the better of them 
(17:19.6 to Rose’s 17:21.7 and Breen’s 17:30.6). 
In his 
career, Rose held all freestyle world records from 200m to 1,650yd, including 
six standards over 400m (3), 800m (1) and 1,500m (2). 
From 
Athens 1896 to Athens 2004, no man was able to win an Olympic crown in the pool 
at three successive Games, and if Johnny Weissmuller stopped Duke Kahanamoku in 
1924 before an underwear contract and the call of Tarzan stopped Weissmuller 
himself in 1932, then the next nearly man was Iain Murray Rose, with bureaucracy 
the barrier to his tantalising tilt at the triple. 
His 
penultimate world record, of 17:01.8 at the US championships on August 2, 1964, 
failed to sway selectors after Rose opted not to travel home from America for 
trials. In his absence, the title went to his countryman Robert Windle in 
17:01.7. 
Rose 
appeared at the Canadian Olympic Trials in Vancouver in 1964. They were held in 
September and marked Rose's last shot at convincing the Aussie jury of the day. 
The meet, SwimNews founder Nick Thierry recalls, was in a 55-yard pool at the 
University of British Columbia, the pool that hosted the 1954 Commonwealth 
Games.
Rose won 
the 220, 2:01.90, 440, 4:16.60 and 1650, 17:14.10 and swam a special solo 880 
record attempt. He was successful in the latter at least, his 8:55.50 the last 
world record ever set in the 880 yards before that yardstick was no longer 
recognized for global standards. Rose raced inside the 8:59.6 at which the 
record had been held by fellow Australian and long-time opponent, John Konrads. 
Yards records were no longer recognised after April 30, 1969.
An 
avenue at the Sydney Olympic complex was named in Rose's honour in 2000 and he 
was one of the eight flag-bearers of the Olympic Flag at the opening ceremony of 
the Sydney Games.
In his 
life beyond swimming, Rose, who spent 30 years living and working in the US, 
acted in the 1964 surf movie Ride the Wild Surf and in the 1968 drama 
Ice Station Zebra. He was the patron of the Australian charity "The 
Rainbow Club", which teaches disabled children how to swim.
Appointed a Member of the Order of 
Australia for services to swimming and granted the Australian Sports Medal in 
2000, Rose was awarded the Centenary Medal in 2001.
Married 
to the former Jodi Wintz, a ballerina, choreographer and dance teacher and 
contest adjudicator, Rose is survived by his last wife, their son Trevor and 
daughter Somerset by a former marriage.
President of Swimming Australia David 
Urquhart described Rose's passing is a great loss for the sport. "The name 
Murray Rose is synonymous with success in the sport of swimming, and his 
achievements in Melbourne in 1956 will go down as the stuff of legend," he said. 
"Murray Rose is part of the Swimming DNA in this country. His success inspired a 
generation and our thoughts and prayers are with his family and close friends 
during this difficult time."
In a 
joint statement, Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard and the nation's Sports 
Minister Kate Lundy said Australia had lost one of its greatest 
Olympians.
"Murray 
was a true pioneer of Australian swimming and his impressive feats in the pool 
helped to shape Australia's destiny as a successful sporting 
nation.
"Murray 
will be remembered fondly as a sporting legend who inspired the next generations 
of elite athletes and helped to propel Australia's sporting success in future 
Olympics.
"There 
is no disputing that the Olympian was a champion in the pool, but Murray also 
made an immense contribution to the community through charity work and as patron 
of the The Rainbow Club which teaches children with a disability to 
swim."
Our thoughts are not only with this 
he leaves behind today but with the man who made his mark. Go well Murray Rose.  
