Iresda 131334691930. ARMOUR TECH NEWS Page Three earnestness ~ scum arrears rat/iota, 65-61 Nose Out: Eh Runners in Last Event of Meet » moi. AND swan eras The Armour track team suffered its first defeat this year at the hands of Wheaton College at stagg Field last Tuesday afternoon, by a score of 65 to 61. Armour had better than a ten point lead in the early part of the meet, and still had a four point lead down to the last event, the broad jump, in which the oppo- nents scored a “slam," throwing the balance of points in their favor. As usual, Hess won the two events in which he competed. This time he won the mile in 4. 30.4 and the half mile in 2:063. Paul and Sturm made as many points as ever. Paul took first place in the shot put and high jump, and a second place in the discus. Sturm ran exceptionally well, taking first place in three events, the hundred yard dash, the two hundred and twenty yard dash, and the quarter“ mile. Summaries loo—yd. Dash—let, Storm, A; 2nd, Tillman, W; 3rd, Wiley, W. Time, :10.5. 220—yd.Dash-—1st,sturm, A; 2nd, Wiley, W; 3rd, Hirsch, A. Time, '2 2. 440-yd. Dasha—lst, Storm, A; 2nd, Crawford, W; 3rd, H. L. Fox, A. Time, :51.5. silo—yd. Dash—1st, Hess. W; 2nd, Evans, W; 3rd, Iverson, A. Time, 2:06.11. l-milc Runwlst, Hess, W; 2nd, Sademan, A; 3rd, I-verson, A Time, .3 5. 2-mile Run~1st,Hoeldtke, W; 2nd, Sademan, A; 3rd, James, A. Time, 10:33.8. 120-yd. High Hurdles -— lst, Stough, W; 2nd, Kara, A; 3rd, Ed. Ransel. Time, 1:60 220-yd. Low Hurdles—lst,'1‘ill- man, W; 2nd ‘1: A‘; 3rd,Hirsch‘ W. Time, 2:6..7 Pole Vault—4st, Luckett, A; 2nd, Tied by Landis, W and Aldrich, W. Height, 10 it. Discus—lst, Walvoord, W; 2nd, Paul, A; 3rd, Burns, W Distance, 107 ft. 10 ins. High Jump—1st, Paul, A; 2nd, Aldrich, W; 3rd, Kara, A. Height, 5 ft. 4 ins. Broad Jump—1st, Tillman, W' 2nd, Davies, W; 3rd, Swink, W. Dis— tanco, 20 ft. 4 ins. Shot Put—451;, Paul. A; 2nd, Evans, W; 3rd, Kara, A. Distance, 44 ft. 7% ins. Javelin—let, Cordcs, A; 2nd, Ed. Ransel, A; 3rd, Fredman, W. Dis- tance, 143 ft 4 ins. Glee fluid Prepares For Spring Concert Several important announce- ments were made at the last re- hearsal of the Glee Club, Thursday, May 1, by the president of the club, W. R. Manske, ’30. At that time it was made known that the rehearsal for this week would be held tonight at 5:00 p. in, instead of this Thursday. The rea- son for the change is that Dr. Prothroe cannot be in town to» con- duct the Glee Club’s rehearsal on Thursday. The rehearsal is in direct prepa- ration for the Spring concert which will be held in the gymnasium at 7:00 p. m. on Thursday, May 15. Those who have been in the choral group for one year are en- titled to a watch charm and those who have already gotten a charm are entitled to an additional star on the emblem. President Manske has the charms for the deserving ones and he should be seen con- Wmdmfidflfi LETTERHEADS, ENVELOPES. BUSliNESS CARDS, ETC. 24 HOUR SERVHCE PIONEER PuiN'rINs SERVICE 107 W. VAN BUREN ST. ROOM 203 - WABASH 2158 Aoiflgo Heath i 1 Student Turtles ‘ - Two talks, each given by stu- dents, were the feature of the reguw lat meeting held last Thursday afternoon in Science Hall by the Armour Branch of the A. I. E. E. at 1:00 P. M. The first talk was given by Frank Sanford, ’30; on “Electric Refriger— ating." Last summer Sanford worked for the Commonwealth Edison Company in connection with servicing refrigerators. From the experience gained at this time, he described the refrigerating ap— paratus and told of an interesting incident which happened while he was on a servicing job. “Electric Tabulating” was the title and substance of the talk given by J. Taylor, which followed next. By means ‘of a wiring dia- gram and an illustrated card, Tay- lor explained the operations and functions of the electric tabulating machine. The machine, though complicated, is used in a multitude of ways. The U. 8. Bureau of Standards first developed the out- fit for use in the taking of the census. Since then it has been in- valuable in accounting and other fields. Several important announce— ments were then made by the pres- ldent, Pallcnmeier, ’30. On May 13 a banquet is going to be given by the Chicago section of the A. I. E. E. at the Sherman Hotel. In the past the Armour Branch has al— ways been represented, and this year expect to be more so, for home talent is going to make itself known in a short skit. The price will probably be $2.00. The A. I. E. E. expects to conduct two more meetings this semester. One on May 22 and the other on May 29. A speaker from the Bryant Elec- tric Company will probably talk on May 22 and election of officers will be held May 29, along with the re- ports of the outgoing officers and committees. The joint meeting which had been scheduled with Lewis Institute has been deemed impractical be~ .causebtadrerse.conditions. Math Professors Attend Convention Dean Palmer and Professors Kratnwohl, Teach, and Haggard, attended the Eleventh Annual Meeting of the Illinois Section of the Mathematical Association of America at Lake Forest College last Friday and Saturday. Some of the topics of the pro- gram were as follows: The Reign of Probability, Fractional Derivatives, Illustrated Lecture of the New Chi- cago Planetarium, and Axial Co- ordinates. ceming this as soon as possible. Business Manager J. H. Kovarik has charge of ordering the white trousers which must be worn on the night of the concert. Members not possessing a pair and wishing to get them through the school must see Kovarik for details. The Glee Club has made arrange- ments to sing over the radio through station WCHI. on Wednes— day, May 21. Some of the men about the Insti— tute have been asking why Armour did not offer a course in Architec— tural Engineering as did many of the other colleges. they thought they would prefer to study in a course which offered half engineering and half architecture. The reason for the course not ban ing offered is best explained by the office in that they consider that a man should not do two things at once. It is better for him to put his mind down to one thing at a time. The fundamentals of the cum gineers’ profession are given along with the complete course in archi— tecture and the relating subjects, in the existing course. Peter Dalise, ’33, can afford to feel proud now. In the judgment of the freshmen composition plates be was the only one to receive a First Mention. The Seniors and Juniors are courting, “Charret—Pochc," again. This is a subtle one. Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of the upper- classmen. Their problem is nearly done, therefore there will be a lot of “niggering” going on. Don Hougen, ‘30, was around vis- iting his old haunts from his home in Wisconsin Rapids, Wis. We won- dared why he did not spend more time here—and then we found out. Don is engaged to Miss Yolanda Bacci, sister of Hugo (Al) Bacci, '26. Here is a second instalment in the list of books selected by the Committee on the selection of books for the Bumham Library as their choice for the foundation stones for an architects library. Kimball, Fiske—“Domcstic Archi— tecture of the American Colonies and of the Early Republic." 1922. Latham, Charles—“In English Homes.” 3vols. 1904—1909. Letrouilly. P. M.—-“Ediflces de Rome Moderne." 3 vols. 1874. Major, Howard—“The Domestic Architecture of the early American Republic," and the ‘ Greek Reviva J” 1926 ' Moore, Charles—“Daniel Hudson Bumham.” 2 vols. 1921. Architektur von Ober-Italien und Toskan." 6 vols. 1886-1894. Parrot, Georges and Chipiez, Charles—“Histoire de l’Art dans l’Antiquite." Translated by Arm» strong. (ivols. 1883-1894. Pray, J. S. and Kimball, T.-—-“City Planning." 1913. Prentice, A. W.——“Renaissance Ar- chitecture and Ornament in Spain." 1893. Pugin, A. W. and A. W. N. “Examples of Gothic Architecture Selected from Various Ancient Edi- ficcs in England." 1825, 1850. Pugin, A. C.——“Gothische Orna- mont." E. C. K. Dr. Daniel Protheroe, leader of our choral society, led the Ilinois Bell Telephone Glee Club in a series of numbers that, according to the critic of the Chicago Tribune, was “unusually well done for an ama- teur singing group." Dr. Protheroe was praised very highly for his suc- cess with this group. able prices? artisan assay stand in line and juggle a tray for your meal when we serve delicious food at reason— Weniworth at 318i ananawnawr 235 E. ONTARIO ST. 56BR®@H®N” FRATERNITY JEWELERS DANCE PROGRAMS AND FAVQURS CLASS RHNGS AND MEDALS ~.,._ ENGRAVED CALLING CARDS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS GIVE us A CALL AND WE WILL CALL SUP. 8656 CHICAGO They said that ‘ “Palast _ neurons; mums straw arms are ‘ m7 raters arrears , The Tech racket men received their second setback last Tuesday .When they met the Loyola team on our home courts to tune of 5 to 2. Spencer took one singles match for the home team, and the other point scored was secured through the well placed efforts of Eddy and Schir- user in one of the doubles. Results: Singles—Zwikstra (L) defeated Winkler (A) 6~3, 7—5; Dwyer (L) defeated Eddy (A) 6—0, 64.; O’Connor (L) defeated Scott (A) 6-3, 7-5; Frisch (L) defeated Schirmcr (A) 5—7, 6—4, 7-5; Spencer (A) defeated Le Mar (L) 7—5, 6—4. Doubles—«Zwikstra and Dwyer (L) defieated Winkler and Scott (A) 6—0, 6—2. Eddy and Schirmer (A) defeated Frisch and O’Connor (L) 6—3, 0-4. Final Score—Loyola S—Armour 2. On Wednesday the noted Notre Dame racqueteers defeated Amour by a 6-1 score. Scott was the only Armour man to win a match. The “Y" College not men also joined the van guard and defeated Armour last Friday to the tune of 6~1. The men had an off day this time, and really should have done better. Results: Singles—Back (Y) de- feated Winklcr (A) 6~2, 7—5; Chu (Y) defeated Scott (A) (5-1, 6-2; Eddy (A) defeated Westphal (Y) 7—5, 6-4; Cary (Y) defeated Schir- mcr (A) 7-5, 6—4; Shaw (Y) de- feated Timmcrmans (A) 6~2, 3v6, 6-i. Doubles—«Beck and Chu (Y) de— feated Winklcr and Scott, 6-1, 6-0; Cary and Westphal (Y) defeated Eddy and Schirmer 6-3, 3-0, 6-3. Elites/Rica! Engineering imagines (Given at Garnet! To meet with the demand for men trained in chemical engineer- ing, the Department of Chemistry at Cornell has arranged with the College of Engineering to offer a joint curriculum leading to the de~ gree of chemical engineer after five years of required and elective work. During the first four years, the stu- dents are registered in the College of Arts and Sciences, and on com— pletion of the term will. receive the degree of Bachelor of Chemistry. During the fifth year of residence, the student will be registered in the if College of Engineering, and will re- "" ceive the degree of Chemical Engi- ,% neer upon the completion of add tional work made up of lecture and. laboratory courses in chemical, me- chanical, and electrical engineering, supplemented by certain electives and work in machine design and chemical-plant design. The degree of PhD. may he obtained, as at present, by the completion of two additional years of graduate work. At the University of Oklahoma, a complaint was filed against two churchgocrs church.” for “necking in JORDAN SEDAN, 1925, SE Good condition, driven 20,000 miles. Price $175 on terms or less for cash. Those interested see Editor. mmm. 6 M5”? MIKE STREET Wmmfitnoients FOR YOUR PROMS AND AFFAIRS Tuaeoiosmiinii Dress“ and getaways CQMPLETE LINE OF FURNISHINGS FOR [WE-WT: DRESSED MEN SPECIAL STUDENT RATES OPEN EVENINGS AND SHNDAY BY ”ladies a lion THE COLLEGIATE HOUSE. DEARBORN 6940 WE RENT THE SMARTEST A PPOINTMENT ROOM 304 We Tattle Measurements for ire at the Americana Friday, May @tirw@tti to Ezfifi