Page Four lllllgli; lihh fillillll llllll lllllll. lillllll. run refine Vote and Two Sub Squads! BOXERS ALSO STRONG With a backbone of returned vet- erans, the Tech wrestlers are an» ticipating their first meet of the season, the one with Lincoln-Bel— mont Y during the first week in De- cember. For the first time in the last few years Armour has a team composed of eight regulars and sev- enteen alternates. Captain Sumner has plenty of competition in the freshman, Tullm‘en. who is going to bear watching in the future. The schedule is rather crowded and will include weekly meets from the beginning of January to the end of March. Most of the matches will be fought against the local junior col— leges and those in the Little Nine- teen. These schools do not have a freshman ruling but, nevertheless, Couch Weissman is not going to use a freshman, unless the situation ab- solutely demands it. Weight Classes Full The 115 pound division will be manned by Marjetic and Basile, Mc- Daniels and Ropek will emit the grunts for the 125 pounders, and Dunne and Wiley will crawl the mat to take on all comers who tip the scales at 135.. A quartet in the 145‘ pound class composed of Patterson, Korcher, Jade, and Machulis is sure to get someplace. Schmidt, Boberg, and Schuman comprise the 155 poundcrs, with Kreml, Popper, and Schlifke holding the fort for the 165 class. Capt. Sumner, Berquist, and Tullgren will uphold the honor of the light powerhouses, and Peter- son, Rest, and Chelgrcn, will finish the listing of the present time bone~ crushers. The Wrestling situation is really very promising, all the more so when we realize that although our first team will be practically ruined by Commencement, we will still have a team of men who will have had ex- perience, and who will be able to carry on the work which we are cer- tain will be done this year. Boxers Show Promise The boxing team is a very prom- ising one and is composed of over fifteen men of experience and previ— ous training. Most of their matches will be with junior colleges, but the season will be ended by bouts With Culver and Loyola. Seidenberg, Lin— dahl, Moore, Sramek, Stobcr, Mahn- ke, Norris, Chapin, Krok, Jornis, Way, Allegretti, Burnam, and Ditt- man, comprise the present working squad, but others will be added. It is to be hoped that this will be the beginning of a new era of boxing at Armour, and that in the future the boxers will be as successful as the wrestlers. Swimming Candidates Have Initial Practice Following the meeting held at school, twenty-five men have reports ed to coach McGillivarry at Bartlett pool for swimming practice. Accord— ing to the coach, there are about five very good prospects, one of whom is Savadis, a freshman breast stroker. This year, as in previous years, there is a shortage of divers, and anyOne having any ability at all in this particular event is urged to come out for the team. Within a few days another meeting will be called to set definite dates for prac- tice. As yet no definite schedule of meets has been set up, except for a date with DePauw University of Greencastle, Indiana, at Bartlett pool. Further meets are being ob- tained by manager Millevilfle, who has drawn up a tentative schedule for the ensuing season. swim“ WGRM’ED AS CA or runner/r FALLS T0 TWENTY The second year of Tech occup- ancy of the 108th Engineer's Armo- ry began inauspiciously last Friday with a cage turnout of nineteen men. Nineteen men—vets and hopefuls. The coach is worried. Possibly the fact that he cannot cut with such dreadful effect would bother any coach—but nineteen men, uncut, is not so happy. Last year, Coach Krafft put a team on the hardwood of the new- ly acquired home floor that copped four straight wins before they lost in a last minute deflation to Lake Forest. They went on to win eleven of sixteen in great style. Of this team, five men of seven dominat— ing last year’s prop-ram, return for the coach to wrap a team around. Now that could be worse! Forty Out Last Year Of last year’s losses, possibly two were directly due to weak support on the bench. Although some forty men doubled this year’s response, the mild season situation did not »permit~-u bewildering influx of sub— stitutions. So what the heck coach, get used to it early. Possibly the fact that the captains missed first call is bothering? The candidates generally included the men who demonstrated poten- tialities in the interclass tourney, o In a single day people from ten different states visited our Chesterfield factories. ARMOUR TECH NEWS Fall Tennis Tourney Entering Final Stage After a month of hard fought matches, the fall tennis tournament is entering its final rounds .Many of these have been very interesting and have brought forth talent for next year's tennis squad. Of the forty- cight who started, there are now, in the third round of play, but ten men left. This group will be furth- er cut down by November 10, the date set for the completion of the third and fourth rounds. In the third round G. Biddle is paired with M. S. Herr. and J. Gauz— er is scheduled to meet G. Amory. Also J. Kubik is matched against A. YLe, and G. Palka is to meet R. Boehme. The bracket is completed with the W. Penn-ll. Nachman match. and we might say, generally includ- ed men that tried for the team last year. The general complaint against these men is that their heads are too close to the ground. Boll handling ability is lost when size is missing. 0f the seniors here again, Dollen- maier and Warner, as regulars, lead Ikenn, Malinowski, and Shukes. Heike and Merz, as junior regu- lars, have a fair chance for com- pany. Bacci, Bliss, Skuza, Stoneh- cli, and Taradash are the prospects. Sophomores returning from last year’s squad are O’Brien, Brown, and O’Conncl, and the new aspir— ants of ’38 are Wagner, Rodkin Hebenstreit, and Hoffman, a form— er Loyola student who shows prom- 159. 8,200 visitors during the Past yea: saw Chesterfields made. (9 1955, Lxccn'rr dz Myrna TosAcca Co. Junior Schindler's, Sonic cruel Senior Metrics Victors in JR. anMswaz; JR. ClVlLS——0 SOPH Thirty-two to nothing was the tell-tale score in the touch grid bat- tle waged last Thursday morning between the junior chemicals and and civils, from which a strong chem- ical ttam emerged on the heavy end with five touchdowns and a safety. Frank l-lackman made the first touchdown early in the game by in— tercepting :1 civil pass and running three fourths of the field to score. Two passes from midfield, both neat- ly completed in the end zone, netted two more touchdowns for the chem- icals during the remainder of the half. Civil; Fumble Bull The civils, pressed to their own and zone in the second half, fumbled and recovered behind the line to yield two more points. Forced to punt the ball into play behind their goal line again, the civils again fumbled which strategy enabled Poul Schultz to pounce upon the ball for rnothor score. A short pass over scrimmage to Schultz preceded a run fully two thirds of the field through the opposition, to capture the final score of the game. The civils, captained by Jack Stern, opened a vicious attack in the last few minutes of play, sail- ing: the ball to the two yard line, but yielded possession because of downs. Gaining the hall at midfield they completed two successive passes down the five yard line in the two concluding plays of the game. Their laterals and clever plays, however, failed to bring; them any score. Touch Football M. E.———18; SOPH F. P. E.o~0 In a rough and tumble game which is commonly called touch-foot— ball, the sophomore mechaniculs sucn coeded in downing their classmates, 1thc fire~protects, to the tune of 18 | to 0. “The first half was started in a see— saw fashion with neither team mak- ing much ground. A threat of scor— ing by the fire-protects, the first sign of real action, came when the mechanicals fumbled on their own goal line. The ball was recovered by the actuarials, but the threat fell short when their two passes dropped inside the goal giving the ball back to the mechanicals. In the last few minutes of the half the mechs suc~ cecded in scoring the first touch down of the game on a nice pass, Siedenberg to Simeon, who dropped just over the goal line for the tally. The half endcd with the mechs lead- ing six to nothing. F ire Protects Threaten The second half started with an- other threat by the fire-protects when Sheohan intercepted Eng‘el» thalcr’s pass. Some nice line work on the part of Roach and Faust smothered this offensive. On a long pass over the goal the mochs again scored, Sicdonberg making a nice catch, Engelthaler’s toss, against the fence. The final score followed Engelthuler's flashy' running; catch of Siedenberg’s pass, and the game closed soon after with the mechs still controlling the ball. Tuesday. November 5, lid/3;: SR. mucus—26; seems. E.—~c Bowing to a well—organized senior mechanical touch~ball team, the sophomore clectricals were elimin- ated from the tournament by a score of 24-6. In the first half a soph pass at the goal line was intercepted by Auler to prevent a touchdown. Greenberg then passed to Nzichmsn and put the seniors in a scoring posi— tion. The mechanicals lost the ball but regained it shortly by intercept- ing another pass. Nachman then re— ceived a long heave and carried the ball over the goal for the first score. Soon after that point, Auler inter— cepted another scph toss and ran through the whole team to score. Engelschall Scores Near the beginning of the second half, Greenbcrg- took a long pass to score again. After several minutes of see-saw play, Engelschall inter- cepted a toss at the mechanicals’ goal line and outrun the entire senior team, to chalk up the first: and only touchdown for his team. The meclmnicals soon retaliated by passing to Greenberg who pointed again. Next Tuesday a variation of this comparatively mild form of sport will occur in a real tackle football game between the sophomores and the seniors. Football has long been absent from the halls of Armour and this revival should prove interesting and entertaining. moron ems run BANQUETS A SPECIALTY “We Cater to Students" Moderate Pricey—Big Variety 33rd and Michigan all} to crowd with, we who tobacco nude THEN AS A SECOND STEP—- Wc blend this homcngrown tobacco With spicy, aromatic Turkish tobaccos from across the seas. These Turkish tobaccos, you may know, have a flavor and fragrance entirely different from our own. AS A THlRD STEP—n These robaccos are crossablendcd-w— welded togethern-thc best way we’ve found. to get a more pleasing flavor from; our own Southlaotlm mild ripe tobacco with lots of natural flavor but no harshness or bitterness. better taste in a cigarette. THAT’S WHY CHESTERFIELDS ARE MILD AND YET THEY SATISFY