a. Tuesday, January l2, I937 .hkllldllk tldhkd llldllilth tildll‘ ill dilllhll Will Entire Tech Team Steps into Scoring Column, Lead by Heike FINAL SCORE, 30-19 In what was probably the finest ex— hibition of ball—playing this season, the Techawk basketeers swamped the Beloit Goldmen, 30-19, on the loser’s home court last Thursday. The Ar- mourites took command of the ball at the opening whistle and did not re- linquish it for the duration of the contest. In keeping with a resolve made earlier in the day, the Techmen kept the scoring well distributed, each man sinking at least one basket. Heike and O’Connell led the list with three hoopers apiece. Tamulis led the Gold— men with eight points gleaned from three baskets and two free throws. Merz Takes Tip-off The game opened with Merz taking the tip-off, but Beloit nabbed the ball in a scramble under the basket, and the game sec-sawed back and forth with both teams playing good ball. After a couple of missed free throws, O’Brien scored with a run-in shot and was followed by Tamulis with the opening basket for the local lads. Some plucky ofl’ensive work by ‘Tech put O’Connell in a position raise the tally another two points. After a time-out, Beloit seemed 1: control the ball for a time, but/inacA curacy accounted for many missed opportunities. Armour, on the other hand, placed two nice ones, l-Icike and O’Brien coming in for the tallies. The locals boosted their end of the score with two gratis tosses and", a basket by Brown, and were followed by a beautiful long shot by O'Connell and a tip-in by Heike under the hoop. Klein sank another counter. After a good free throw by Williams, the half cnded, 13-9, in Armour’s favor, Shukcs in For O’Brien Shukes came in for O’Brien in the second half, and the scoring started with Brown of Beloit sinking a has i ket, followed by l-Ieike with a nice twist shot, and Shukcs with a stop- in shot. Heike sunk a free throw on a personal and Mars made a long shot to bring the tally to 20-11. From here on the game was plainly Armour's meat. with the Techmen hanging on to the ball and rarely let a scoring chance go by. Shukcs made a free throw and Tamulis followed with a nice long shot. Here both teams missed free throws and Heike pushed in .a counter, after which Beloit threw the ball to the waiting hands of the Techmen, who passed to Henriksen to score. After another time-out, Fleming of Beloit counted, but Armour recipro- cated with points by O‘Connell and Shukes. Fleming again scored and, as the game came into the closing minutes, Tamulis also placed one. In the last minute, Armour kept the ball in play and the game ended without further scoring, 30-19 Beloi’t (19 Armour (30) ) . B F P B F P Berke, f 3 4 2 Williams. I _. 0 l 1 0 , 2 0 3 rown, f 2 0 2 M‘erz. c. l 0 l Tamulis. c ‘i 2 l O tunnel] g 3 l 1 Anderson, 1; 0 0 1 Henriksen. g l 0 2 Fleming 1 0 2 ell, f 2 1 1 Saekcr. it D 0 1| Klein, f 2 0 3 12 6 10 8 8 10 Swimming Meet to Be Held at U. of C. On Wednesday, January 13, Bart— lett pool at the University of Chi— cago will be the scene of the annual interfraternity and intel‘class swim- ming meet. The events are sched- uled to get under way around seven o’clock, with the interfrat swim being run off first. Seven events will go to make up this first part of the meet. The swims and the order in which they will be run off are the 160 yd. crawl relay (4 men), the 40 yd. crawl, the 40 yd. backstroke, the 100 yd. crawl, the 40 yd. breaststroke, the 200 yd. crawl, and the 120 yard medley re— lay (three men—40 yd. back, 40 yd. breast, and 40 yd. crawl strokes). Only two events have been sched- uled in' the interclass division, the 160 yd. crawl relay and the 120 yd. medley relay. In both of these di— visions trophies and medals will be awarded. BOXING TOURNEY DRA WS PROMISING TEAM MATERIAL With nine freshmen out of twen' ty entrants, the intramural boxing tournament held its first round bouts last Friday night, and its fin. als last night to determine champions in five weight divisions. Fifteen Bouts Fought On Friday, eight bouts were run ed“ for the preliminaries, while seven were to be run off yesterday to de~ termine the champions. In the 135 pound class, Allegretti met Fowler for the tilt. The former won his first round fight with a technical knockout over S. Grygas in the sec- ond round, while the latter took a close decision over Winslow. The next division at 147 pounds brought together Bacci and Little. Bacci en- tered the finals by turning back Winkler with a technical knockout in the third. Little won his first bout by outswinging Collins. Three Bouts at 160 Three bouts had to be fought in the finals of the 160 pound class, the winner of the Calhoun-Popper bout meeting the winner of the Mankc— Bush bout. Calhoun fought his way into the finals by scoring a technical knockout over Berrstrom in the sec- ond round while Popper came out of his mad scramble with Rothcnv berg after three rounds of a com» bination of boxing and Wrestlinr. The other two in this class fought for the first time. In the light— heavyv'..rnt division Simeon met Simeon entered the finals by Rehwald’t. who, al- Balm. outpunching ARMOUR TECH NEWS l l l l 1 Well, it’s a bit late—almost a month late in fact—but records are records and must be kept complete. December 15 saw Beioit trim the Techawks at the Armory, 44 to 34 . . . Bill O’Brien led with four buck— ets and three free shots . . . Beloit kept close to the ball in the first half but the home lads weren’t far behind . . 21-19 at the half . . . Beloit’s free throws helped boost the score . . . The Armour cagcrs were fouling too often . . . The Goldmen took the lead at the half and were never headed . . . With the game in the last min— utes, Coach Stengcr tried out his new men . Kubic, Sheehan, Russo, Brown . . . They all look 0 K. . After filtering the Armour grunts from the Wheaten groans on Decem- ber 15, it developed that the Tech grapplers had beaten the Little Nine— teen champs . . . The score was 20% to 11y2 . . . Jimmy Dunne had very little trouble taking down Hess of the Ministers . . . Holding the advantage throughout, he won by a pin . . . The Mu not meet the farmer’s easy goinv style. His opponent, Balai, drew a bye to the finals. The other bout of the finals brought together two heavyweights, Paionis and Hock. The former defeated Vandcrkiei‘ after three rounds of nice clean boxing, and Hock outpunched E. Gryglas in his prelim bout. M“ u w” though he put up a good fight, could 1 m, H le l .1 40 Copyright, 1937, n. J. nmulsa Tobacco Company. Winston-Salem. “Proxy” Oakie, the distinguished Hollywood educator, photographed in the full glory of his academic robes, ready to dish out a lecture. Ail catered for your entertainment by ltlllflE resin Flhlfili, WMRE EXPENSWE F®BAG$®S time was 7:03 . . . Kreml made quick work of his opponent to win with a keylock . . . McIntyre made up for his previous defeat by riding Han— son for the entire period . . . That makes two wins and no losses for the matmen. The following Saturday saw the Tech quintet lose a close fight to Chi- cago, 33—28 . . , Scoring honors went to O’Brien and Fitzgerald . . . Twelve points each . . . Heike was held inl check by Rossin . . . Amundsen, Chin cago's gangling center, took the jump continuously . . . After trailing,r for a time, Armour went on a sustained scoring spree to lead, 18-14, at the half . . . Chicago retaliated with a rally that overtook this lead, 26—22 With a last‘minute dill‘erence of only two points, a free shot and a bucket cinched the game for the Mai-eons. As for future business, it’s De Kalb for the wrestlers and Macomb for the cages this coming Friday. Both away from home. BOX SCORE Armour (1M) Belolt (M) I) I“ P I} F 1’ Hell“.- 1 5 ll Kline (i 2 ll u l c 0 ll 0 am 1 2 4 O'Brien 4 3 4 Reynolds 1 ll 1) lirnwn 0 ll 0 Tamil us G D l e r. 4 0 0 Crawford 0 0 0 Sheehui 0 0 0 nlker 0 l 3 'lcm'lknon l 2 2i Fleming 4 0 3 sm) 1 0 l‘Chl‘lstenNen 0 2 2 Shukun fl 2 2 Baum-3mm I) 0 l mznvr 0 D l __.___ lelnsun (l 4) D‘, 17 10 17 it c-l ll 0 0) ll l2 13 Chll'utw 133) l Armour (28) I! [c l' B F I’ Etmomcyer, f. 2 O 1 ll Mu] ins l' 2 0 0 0 Console. 1'. 0 fl 2 0 Amundsen. c ll ll 1 0 Meyer, L (I ll 2 Ttoflsin. x: l 2 15 Wilt! L1 0 2 Fitz rnld, y: (i ll llllonrickscn. I! 0 2 1) «um-a— Jnnlcck. fl! 0 (l (l 9 l0 1) M 5 12‘ @d‘idhllh@di ning a college. opponents, 37-26, in a return meet, ERE’S college life, not as it is, but H as it ought to be, according to Jack Oakie! Imagine Jack Oakie run- Think happen—and tune in on this notable occasion—uthe first radio series of this popular screen star. Along with Jack, Page Three Techno/vice Turn in flecieiue ill/{crow @ver Lathe Forest. By 3%26 Score Armour‘s Tochawks marched to a From the scramble around A1“ decisive victory last Tuesday when mour’s goal, O’Connell dribbled in they outpointcd their Links Forest for a quick shot. A basket by Hen— riksen and a toss by O‘Connell edged maintaining the lead throughout the the score to 26-17. entire game. . Henrlksen Counts High scoring honors went to O’Brien, who collected thirteen I-lenriksen took the next set—up for points, and l-Ienriksen, who reaped a basket. From O’Brien, across to in eleven more for the Techawks. Heike and back to O’Brien gave Henrikscn was first to hit the basket Tech another score. Heikc snatched after both teams had made a slow the next jump and dribbled it down start, when he dropped a long one ahead of the guards, passing it to from outside the free-throw circle. O’Brien for a set-up. O’Brien lined one in and Niery fol— The next five points were free lowed with a spectacular bucket throws for both sides. Henriksen from the side. technically fouled, tossing the ball oli' the floor. Lake Forest took the _ toss. O’Brien sank a bucket and A free throw 10" each team and Rouse slipped in a shot and a toss. a shot by Home under the basket set The final two scores were m‘Id b c e y the score at 94. .llerc, Behrens and Christensen, which brought Lake House stopped m Wlth a bucket Forest up to the short end of the Bohr-ens and Rouse Score apiece. Tech gamed a free throw 36—27 score. and a bucket, while three more sinks by Behrons and Boyle broughtl _ “ox SCORE the score to 11-12. Armour (gar "l Lake Forest g7)“ r ,. . - , Haiku, 1" l o ()Chrlstonscn. r 2 o 0 After Armour gamed two baskets, 01“an o 1 1l “mu“. f 0 2 3 Eiserman sank a long shot on the swullmul,f (Z) 11 glsgylle,lf 1 3 1 «m. u 4 isles, r n o 2 run from the center of the flour. WWW“ o 1 allouso, c o o 2 . . . .- - . ‘mnllcl, 1: l l '5llchrens.c 4 0 1 Hennkgen tipped in a rebound, lam-noon.“ 4 a hiltousc. n. 2 1 2 Bohrens digested another for Forest, Knhicku. 1: 0 0 ‘ilngrmun. It (1) 111 1 ‘ ' — ~~~~~ amino. 1! 0 and Henriksen sang a free toss to Totals 14 a 11Lnruon,p; 0 o 1 end the half, 19-15. 10 7 is Mary Diletto Restaurant 3253 Princeton Ave. Menu changed daily. Home ooolo ing. Complete steak or chop dinners, 35c. Spocinl 30c dinner THE BOULEVARD CAFE illlll) S. Mlolliunn Ave. 'Jl‘ol. Victory $11554 Invites You to Try Our Special Ilnlf Milk Foul Chicken or Sirloin Stank Fried in Butter with French Frlcd Potatoes bread and butter for on v and Cole Slaw. ltudishcs, Sculllon, 356‘ Artur 8:00 P. M.. Luncheon are; are steam little mmhetdewmhde with Wanderer are this been“? dime WEWMW dddhdhllhh/dlhlhl9@ “@Ws'rsg” mermaids @Tdhllrdfifi dormers @r'edsesrswg Motdrpweeod eerrreddmrce, corset summing? steers mamdmspeeimd tenderer dream the (goddesses energy Tuesday arteries? you get Benny Goodman’s “swing" rhythms, George Stoll’s concert orch- estra, guest stars broadcasting direct from Hollywood, and—~here's news—— special talent from the colleges every week. A sparkling full—hour Show that you won’t want to miss. what would EVERY THESEBAY Name's 9:30 pm E. S.T., 8:30 pm C. S.T., 7:30 pm M.S.T., 6:30 pm P. S.T. WABC— CBS Network. jACK OAKIE, BENNY GOODMAN, GEORGE STOLL. Hollywood comedians and singing stars. Special college talent every week. w'i‘lllhlifii’l ans WEWESTEC ”Edith llil‘l’ @‘l’l‘lififi Nifilkdtt Eddfifi