Page Four lid ’ l” Std-EMMA Elli A ”W to THE Teams From UniveT-sficgies Throughout Middle West Will be Represented On Saturday, May 2, at 2:30 P. M., Stagg Field will be the scene of the Second Annual Armour Outdoor Invitational Track Meet. This meet will bring together some 300 rampant young men from various colleges and universities throughout the Middle West who un'll run, jump and throw things for the glory of their several Alma Maters. At least 20 institutions of higher learning are expected to be repre- sented. The University of Chicago, Loy- ola, Crane, Chicago Normal, Lake Forest, Mooscheart, Wheaton, Mar- quette, Beloit, “Y" College, North Central, Concordia, Knox, and Elm- hurst have already signified their in— tentions of competing and several more schools will, no doubt, be on hand when the starter’s gun booms for the first race. Invitations have also been sent to Butler, De Paul, North Park, Wisconsin State Teach- ers, Illinois State Teachers, Morton, and James Milliken. Records Will Be Broken Judging from past performances many fast times should be turned in and it would not be at all surprising if many old records were broken and discarded. And while we‘re on the subject of records let‘s consider some of the present records and their holders. The most interesting record, to Ar- mour students, is Don Paul’s mark of 46 feet 101/.- inches in the shot. While not the most outstanding of the records created last year, per- haps, this mark should stand for some time. Taylor Expected to Compete Then there is the record of 9.7 seconds hung up last year by Taylor l Armour Tennis Team I To [West Lake Forest E Lake Forest will be the second l team to be met by the Armour ten~ l, nis squad. Although the Lake For- l est aggregation has given trouble in the past years, the team is confident of victory, and interest of the mem— bers is at high pitch. Last year I early in the season the Techmen lost 4 to 2, but came back later in the season to win, 5 to 2. The previous year they tied Laloe Forest, 3~3 in a hard fought match. The squad is composed of Cap- tain R. Eddy, W. Schirmer, R. Tim- inermans, S. Lind, H. Hendricks, and R. Krauss, Manager. Winners of semi-finals in the tournament are looked upon to furnish material for the Varsity. The tournament has progressed rather slowly, and from a field of 32 hopefuls, Timmermans, Skoular- inos, Curran, Waindlc, Pilgrim, Lind, Hendricks and Manson have won .their matches. The co-operation of all entrants is urged. so that the tournament may be finished by May 6 at the latest. Tennis Schedule, 1931 April {IL-Armour at Valparaiso. May 2--Lake Forest at Lake For— est. May 6—-—Armour at Y. M. C. A. College. May 12—Notre Dame at Notre Dame. May Iii—Loyola at Armour. May 20—Valparaiso at Amour. May 23-Armour at Loyola. May 29—Y. M. C. A. College at Armour (tentative). of Knox College in the 100 yard dash. He will be back this year to look after his record and to better it if possible. . Dale Letts of Chicago University last year stepped a quarter mile in 49.4 seconds. Letts probably will not compete this year. So with only one of last year's three outstanding champions back to defend their laurels the meet this year should develop a lot of hard competition. Armour at the present time has no record holders in school but with the team flashing real form and strength since the opening of the outdoor season three weeks ago Ar- mour should be able to give any team a strong run for points. Men In Good. Condition Cap’t. James, Sademan, Nelson, and Ivefion make up as good a quar~ tet of distance runners as is usually found on one team. These men are all in excellent condition at the pres- ent time. Cap’t. Fox, A. Jens, and Hirsch will hold up Armour’s prestige in the shorter dashes and Nelson will give a good account of himself in the hur. dle race. C. Jens, Manson, Cordes, and Hen— dricks will take good care of the weights and the javelin. Amour finished seventh in the team standings last year but with all the old men in good form and as— sisted by Nelson and Manson they should do much better this year. SENEOR CHEMKCALS iii/IN Two clashes between the Junior and 'Senior Chemicals last week proved the Seniors to be the better indoor baseball players. The chal- lengers (Juniors) were defeated ‘24 to 6 and 11 to 4. Four pitchers for the Juniors were BASEBALL SQUAD HAS TWO GAMES FOR THIS WEEK Coach Krafl‘t and his assemblage of baseball proteges will change their scene of battle in their next two cum. counters when they invade the haunts of Lake Forest College on Thursday and North Central College on Saturday, May 2. In meeting Lake Forest, Armour will be obliged to compete with the second of its two demon opponents. Western State proved to be a thorn but Coach Kraift is seriously deter— mined to make amends for this dc. feat by defeating a team of equal caliber, such as Lake Forest. Tech Favored to Win With one victory already collected in a game against North Central Armour is bent on making the in- vasion result in a second triumph. If the results of their last meeting with this team bear any significance in the way of predicting the prob- able outcome of Saturday’s game, it is safe to say that Mr. Krafi‘t’s book- keeper will tabulate the results in line with those obtained in the Crane College and the first North Central E ame. Since good pitching has featured in the previous games, that phase of the baseball warfare is sure to hear the same significance this week. The slugging part is still somewhat unde— veloped but may be better under- stood after the team crosses bats with Lake Forest. Captain Robin Heavy Hitter The presence of Captain Robin affords Armour a chance to garner at least one hit each game, but the average seven hits required to win ball games must be collected by the lather team members whose identity , as real hit‘ters has not as yet been l revealed. l PM Pt" PM and 1 Kappa flatter Tau Win Bull Games The Phi Pi Phi‘s opened the inter- fraternity season by defeating Rho Delta Rho, 9 to 2. It was a bad day for baseball because of the cold weather. The game was featured by snappy playing, the pitchers allow- ing few hits, and the infields back- ing them. Ott held his opponents to two runs, repeating his victory of last year when he held the Triangles to the same score. D’Alba, of the losers, made a freak double play un- assisted. Phi ri Phi—9 code, Li'. Rho Della Rho—2 D'Albu, ss. Fishmsm. en * 1b. Grundstmm, 1b. "innegrall, 2b. ..eiclnenbers. 3b. synch. c aimpson, r.i‘. Htxrthuucr. so. Goldstein. i'.i'. Feinberir. ss. Molevsky. 1“. Meyer. c. it. p. Carlson, c. Kappa Delta Tau vanquished Sig- ma Alpha Mu by the score of ll to 7, with Tuchinsky pitching for the victors. They took the lead in the first inning, annd kept adding two and three runs in every inning but the third. Sigma Alpha Mu strove valiantly to keep up, but the absence of one player handicapped them con- siderably. The pitchers were hit freely because of poor support, but by tightening up in the pinches, the score was kept down. Kappa Deltu Tau—ll Sigma Alpha Mix—7 ' Stahm. lb. Winopu'nnd, 2b. Edclman. 3n. Aucrbneh. Li. :trnett. c. . l‘uri WISE, .r. ‘ ' ion ,2 , p. ’l‘uchlnaky. a Morris, c. Itoncnthul. c. Fraternities to Meet in Tennis Tournament The opening day for the intei'fra- ternity‘. tennis has been set for May 6. On that date two games will be played. Each team will play three matches, two singles and one double. The winner of two out of the three is to be considered the victor. 0n the days of contest play: May 6, 7, 1.2, 18, and 28, the Armour courts will be reserved from 3:00 P. M. on for the sole use of scheduled tourna— ment games. The games must he played on the above dates according to the schedule, for these are the only times the courts can be reserved. In the event of bad weather, the con- testants will be obliged to see Pro— fessor Colvert and arrange for new dates. Inter-fraternity Tennis May 6 1. Kappa Delta Tau vs. Phi Kappa Sigma. 2. Sigma Kappa Delta vs. Delta Tau Delta. May 7 3. Rho Delta Rho vs. Theta Xi. Ll. Beta Psi vs. Phi Pi Phi. May 12 5. Triangle vs. winner of 6. Sigma Alpha Mu vs. match 2. match 1. winner of May 18 Semi-finals 7. Winner of match 5 vs. match 3. 8. Winner of match 6 vs. match 4. winner of Winner of May 28 Finals 9. Winner of match 7 vs. match 8. W against Lake Forest while Lynch may face Naperville. Moskowitz, Summers, Mago and Omiecinski have added some punch to Armour’s offensive power and are looked on to continue their effective— ness. Massier is again the probable choice for North Central’s mound duties. “r His work against Armour in th last vame was quite baffling and winner of pitch Force r are 55:3 , By: of green mohair with un— usua‘l- sheen, a Chicago movies palace has made its seats “visible in the dark.” Log rafts on the west coast of l Emcee; p... l l i l ARMOUR TECH NEWS I @fii-loor 5&3 i XX) @433)? Q K. Add“). Big Week of Wins Tech enjoyed a rather successful week in sport when the varsity base- ballers won two games and the track team won two meets. In the truck meets the varsity scored a total of 160 points while the opponents gathered 86. Al- though Armour scored slams in sev- eral events a general team strength was shown in all events. Chicago Normal was showered with 12 firsts out of a possible 14. Crane came next. and were swamped by a 71~50 score. in the latter meet, where the competition was more severe, better times were made in most of the run— ning events. The Ogden Field track is anything but helpful for record breaking performances. However, as the season advances, the track will be put in better condition. . . “Y” College Today This afternoon varsity truckmcn meet “Y" College at “Y" field. Last year “Y” nosed out Tech by the slim margin of seven points. What the physical ed. boys have this year we wonder? On May 2nd the Second Annual Outdoor Invitational Track Meet is to be held at Stagg Field. Old man cold weather caused the baseball game with Lake Forest to be postponed until later in the sea- son. The game was scheduled to be played at Lake Forest last Wednes- day. Western State played at Ogden Field on Friday, and yesterday, the postponed Morton game was played. The outcome of these games was not known at the time of this writing. Awards to H20 Men Awards have been recommended for the 193}. swimming team. Ac— cording to inside dope one man has been awarded a major letter. The tennis tournament has been advancing rapidly. Several men have already reached the third brac- ket. Varsity tennis will open the sea- son with the Lake Forest match on May 2. Weather conditions have allowed golf to complete the spring tourna~ ment in several weeks and has per- mitted the playing of several dual, matches. The schedule calls for a duel meet with the faculty within the next few weeks. This should prove interesting for it is the one time when the students might become one up on the faculty. Sing, Song, Sang Interfraternity sports always cre- ate interest on the Armour campus. The rivalry is intense and often the cry is down with so and so. Perhaps the most unusual of these compe- titions is the interfraternity sing which is held in conjunction with the Spring Concert. At that time the boys attempt to work as one unit. Some are successful, while others come very close. lndoor baseball, golf, and tennis championship cups are trying; to find places to rest for the coming year. These tournaments have not ad‘ vanced far enough to predict to whom each of the above will be giv— n. m FRESHMEN PLAY INDOOR The crucial baseball game between the Freshman Civil amd Chemical students was won by the latter 20 48, in a game crowded with spec— taeular catches and comical errors. If Coach Krafi't needs to sign up any “two-base” men, it is only necessary to see the respective managers for a couple of their players. These hefties belted home runs over the fence with a soft indoor. Mid emails chasm. Edith l. d b M l“ ii WESTERN Whit Eighth inning Rally Fatal to Home Team FlRS’ll‘ DEFEAT An eighth inning rally, netting Western» State Normal three runs, spelled defeat for Armour in the 6-3 conflict staged last Friday. Up un— til that devastating inning Armour and the visitors were knotted 3-3. Each team had collected six hits and each featured with timely hitting and good pitching. That eighth inning rally incident- ally resulted in the first defeat that Armour has suffered this season and the only defeat that Stehno has re- ceived in the last three years. Captain Robin’s collection of three hits, one a double, together with Omiecinski's home run over the deep center field fence served as an inn- portant factor in Armour’s struggle for victory. Although Stehno al- lowed eleven hits, his collection of eight strikeouts in the crucial mom- ents helped to prevent many of these hits from becoming runs. His two successive strikeouts in the seventh inning while bases were full showed that his pitching was up to stand— ard. First Inning Woods popped to Moskowitz. Dec- ker followed with a pop fly to Mago and Dcnncr retired via the strikeout route. N0 RUNS, N0 HITS. Moskowitz flied to short. Pepe re» ceived a free pass to first but was caught between second and third af- ter Robin singled. Mag-o follower] Robin and hammered the ball over the right field fence, scoring Robin with the first run. Stehno grounded out to first base for the third out. ONE RUN, TWO HITS. Second inning Stehno struck out Thomas, walked Cooper, and then struck out Bailey for the second out. A double to Federal Street by Johnson scored looper. Phelps was retired with a Strikeout to end the inning. ONE RUN, ONE HIT. Michalski f a n n e d, Omiecinski pounded the sphere for a home run while Sommcrs grounded out to third base. Link took three cuts at the atmosphere to retire the side. ONE RUN, ONE HIT. Third Inning Black doubled. Woods grounded to Robin. Decker singled, then ad— vanced to second on a fielder’s choice and scored on Thomas’ smashing double to Machinery Hall. Cooper popped to Pepe. THREE HITS, TWO RUNS. Moskowitz struck out. Pepe popped to third. Robin singled. Mago was retiredshortstop to sec- ond. ONE HIT. N0 RUNS. Fourth Inning Bailey popped to Mago. Johnson grounded to Omiecinski and was fol- lowed by Phelps who struck out. NO RUNS, NO HITS. Stehno sent a fly ball to Johnson. Michalski fanned for the second time. Omiecinski fouled to Denner. N0 RUNS, N0 HITS. Fifth Inning Woods and Black grounded out, while Decker flied to Pepe. NO RUNS, NO HITS. Moskowitz hit to short, Sommers struck out while Link flied to third. NO RUNS, NO HITS. Sixth Inning Denner and Thomas singled. Cooper hit to Stehno, who in turn figured in a double play which put out Deuner and Cooper. Bailey was retired on a ground ball to short. TWO HITS, N0 RUNS. Tuesday, April 28, l93l Armour to Most if". M. CHAN. College This afternoon the Chicago Y. M. C. A. College will furnish the opposi— tion to the Armour Tech track team. f our men can win this meet they will have downed all opposition so far. In the previous meets they have met Crane College and Chicago Nor- mal and easily defeated them by running up scores of 71—50 and 8936. Last year when Armour and Chi- cago “Y" met, the “Y” team came out victorious after a hotly contest ed meet, winning by a score of 62‘55. But with our team burning up the cinders as they have done lately. Armour should avenge its defeat of last year. Art Jens, Fox and James are back to repeat their victories against the “Y" team this year, in their respec- tive specialties, the dashes and the half mile, the mile and the 2 mile runs. Then with the addition of Nelson, a freshman, and incidentally the high point man, to take care of the hurdles, the broad jump, and the high jump, and with -C. Jens throw- ing the shot put, Cunningham pole vaulting, Manson throwing the dis— cus. and Cordes the javelin, Armour wil. furnish a team hard to beat. it may be interesting to note mat in the previous meets, out of a pos- sible 28 first places, Armour has taken 21. If they ,will only keep this up there will certainly be a chain» pionship track team around these Pepe led off with a strikeout. Rob- in received his third hit by clouting a double. Mago filed to right field. Stehno doubled to score Robin. The inning ended when Grundstrom, bat— ting for Michalski, grounded to Bai- ley. TWO HITS, ONE RUN. Seventh Inning Johnson grounded out. Phelps and Black each received hits. Mega fumbled Wood’s pop fly causing bases to be filled. Stehno then struck out the next two batsmen. TWO HITS, NO RUNS. Omiccinski and Link flied out while Summers went out with three strikes. N0 RUNS, NO HITS. Eighth Inning Thomas doubled. Cooper grounded out. Bailey was sent to first on a wild pitch. Johnson and Phelps col— lected hits. THREE RUNS, THREE HITS. Moskowitz struck out. Pepe hit a single. Robin and Mega were re- tired on ground balls. ONE HIT, NO RUNS. Ninth Inning Woods struck out. Decker and Donner grounded out. No RUNS, NO HITS. Stehno and O’Connor each ground— ed out to the second baseman while Olmiecinski flied to left field to end the ball game. Armour—3 ab r h. p a Moskowitz, s.s, ..... 4 O 0 2 5 Pepe, rf ........... 3 0 1 2 0 Robin, 1b ....... 4 2 3 9 2 Mega, 3b .......... 4 0 l 3 0 Stelmo, p ..... . . 4 0 1 3 3 Michalski, lf ....... 2 0 0 0 0 Grundstrom, 1f . . . . . 1 0 0 0 0 O’Connor, li ........ l O O 0 0 Oniiecinski, 2b ..... , 4 1 1 0 3 Summers, cf ........ 3 0 l) 0 0 Link, c ............ 8 0 0 S 0 33 3 '7 27 13 Western State ——6 ob r h p 3 Woods, 2b ......... 5 0 0 2 2 Decker, cf ......... 5 1 1 0 O Denner, 3b . 5 0 l. 4 1 Thomas, c .. 4 1 2 6 0 Cooper, 1b . 3 1 0 9 0 Bailey, ss .......... 3 1 0 2 4 Johnson, If 4 1 2 2 0 Phelps, rf . . 4 0 :2 1 (l Block,p.... .41 2 10 3’7 6 10 27 7 Special Student Rate a mourns for ease i for all standard makes. Remington No. 6 Noiscless $7.50 Remington Portable 3 mo. $27.58 AMERECAN WRITENG 5 mo. Chief Stehno is exhibiting as much prowess with his bat as he is with the throwing arm. His hits in the Alaska contains up to 1,100,000 feet of logs each. unable to compete with L. V. Melcarek who pitched both games for the Seniors. A good display of teamwork, , MACKENE $9., his. (Established 183.9) made by the Seniors who were handi- l Crane and Western State games, The University of Southern Cali- an or“ . q rm. delivery. Satisfaction. 51mm. capped by never havmg played as i played an important part in the Ar- forms, a Methodist institution, was HOKMDAYB EMUX'E. 32g, So. Eemhom Simfit a group before, enabled them to de. l moul triumph. Krafit Will no doubt founded by a Catholic, a Jew, and 55.3,ng Rana , Telephone Harrison 35,“ fl 35m‘83. A}? MICHIGAM ~.. m... W feat the Junior Schmiers easily. select Stehno for mound duty an Episcopalian. ... $1,?