PAGE EHGH’E‘ TECflNULOGY NEWi-l mm-v,mmmwwwmrmwmwmm ~ UCTQBEMR ‘71, 319% fierlreihell ileum filter llilore $2;in e; greener? Quilt? firoonol $5.226 intolerance Soon the sound of the basketball swishing through the hoop will resound throughout the 168th En- gineers armory. This music will greet youthful Remie Meyer as he begins his second year as Illinois Tech's varsity basketball coach when the boys start the 1941-42 season. The date set for the initiation of future basketeers will be around November 3, and will mark the beginning of the second year of llT’s New Deal. There will be a meeting called before the third of November for all prospective basketballers, so watch this paper and the bulletin boards for the announcement. As was the case last year, due to the limited time that the Techmen have for extra- curricular activities, practice ses- sions will be comparatively short and intense. Every minute will be well spent, so all red—blooded 'l‘echmen are urged to report. Meyer is really after a winning team this year. For a Better Record Last year’s record of five wins against ten losses, though not at all impressive, was a definite im- provement over previous Tec- hawk teams. It must be remem- bered that only one major letter- winner, Captain Honk Sllwa, re- ported for the team, and it was around him that an entirely new team had to be built. So, going into the 1941—42 season, Coach Meyer will have not one, but six major lettermen and four minor letteran to form a solid nucleus around which to build a winning combination. Returning lettermen will be Captain Howie Pendlebury, the Valparaiso flash, who was runner- up in scoring last year with 101 points. Ambidcxtrous Jackie Byme, hook shot artist, and lend- ing scorer with 104 points Will 3150 be back, flanked by Ray “Goose" LaGodney, Bob Neuhaus, Harry Sieg, and Mike Carey. After scanning this impressive list of angers, your scribe feels safe in predicting that the 1941-42 Tee. hawk basketball squad will not only win three-fourths of their games, hut nill also knock off Chicago university in the feature game of the year on December 6. Fourteen Gilll'lflfl Scheduled Thus far, a schedule of fourteen games; has been booked by Coach Rcmie Meyer and Manager Ed Collamler, and Meyer is‘ looking forward to booking at least two more games to fill in his sched- ule. The 1941le schedule will be printed in Technology News; next week. Noviee Eoorholll Rule: glows flown {inmost Last fall a group met in the east to in football rules; John Schommor was a member of that committee. This is the first season under these new regulations. All of these rules have proved to be beneficial except the one allowing unlimited substitution. 1 ‘ f1 intake some radical chanbos Good for Small filchools “Uncle John” states that this rule was passed for the small col lege coaches who have limited Squads, Under this ruling a coach may substitute as many players as he wishes and as often in a quarter as he desires. The result has: been football games twice as long; as; they used to be. Games fl‘oo Long “The public goes to football games: to see a good fast sport in a relatively short time. But, when games take three hours there is lees; interest and people think the sport is elowing up,” so says vet» cram umpire Schommer. *4; 1% f. a" r’ /:,’V// A .1 M, “A/% 1 ' rimmewfour ' fl dfimW-m-mfi new» .mr— llly ‘an‘om Spitz To say that our rantings and raging about a fieldhouse and pro- per athletic facilities are unimpor- tant compared to other issues at lllinois Tech reminds one of the ostrich hiding his head in a sand pile. You can‘t maintain an educa- tioual si'tcnl without providing ample space and ctlulmnont for the relaxation of thooo minds and bodies which crave a deviation from the tedious pounding away at books. ‘Wc advocate, a "fieldlmnse fund. 1%. epcclal fund, disconnected from the general program of Ellinoin 'l‘cch oxpano‘ion. Let it be started by small contributions hacked by on launch publicity on possible. We tan hold ilzuncce and bcmolitn, any- thing if the nutrients are willing. The government. reports colobri» lice. your uncles, cniployorow «all must he approached. it has been done, and only re.- cenlly. Our friendly sports rival, Wheaten college, last year obtain- ed a new athletic fieldhousc, not through a large endowment, but by a campaign instigated and sup. ported by the students. Several hundred thousand dollars were Shooters» Shorpenlng Sights For Shooting Sweeping the country like wild- fire is the mounting fever of na- tional defense. lit has even crept into the obscure cornoro of the physios building basement. Here the lads of the Rifle club are sharpening up their eyes in prepnu ration for the fateful day when the little notice will arrive from Uncle Sam and inform thorn that their day has come. At a meeting held late last year the members of the Rifle club elected a new staff of officers to lead them through the 1941-42 season. These men are: president, Raymond Smith; secretary, Rob» ert Cwiak; treasurer, ’l‘ed Dumetz; captain of the team, George Borre; range officer, Robert Bell; and executive officer, Roy Peterson. ruined because every faculty mem- ber, student, alumnus and friend of the school worked to collect ov- en the most trivial sums, which in their sum total produced a field- house. No, it can’t be done in a day. It will take years, but if the enthusi— asm is there it can be done. It has hecn'clone and it miner. be done if the officials, n u p p o r t e r s and friends of the Illinois Institute of ’l‘ecl‘inolog‘y want to find healthy as well as educated men and wom— en coming out 01" our school. Slit, SEVEH enter: UN In 852 no men can broochev—and h’ve/ Motors-now even prior: art: "gonorrhea-god.” On the stationary bicycle (above) Marshall Hen-tile, chief test pilot of Lockheed, brmthes pun.- oxygen for 30 minutes before a test flight in heraldic-ode new interrogates. ”Elie ginning oi oinwerhnrning demeln centralize indenendeni ocien‘li.‘c tools oi: the: sanitize Pilot l'imdlc cl pocket oxygen fl Milli curios ll lfilhifi till lilil’illl’liE. *E'hcycollhef‘loighming.” minors into the cockpit, rwitches from at l: to his cabin supply, and streaks; for the stratosphere. He's tent-flown 300 different planes. But when he tends, it’n always; . . ."Now for a. Camel." CAM e113 3 lioeii’ M... llltlilll Will llflW @lfiifi lS PLENTY OKAY were me. i sure so Foe. THAT FULLF’JCH iggailélljg iii; Will Willi”? 5%? WM up there. You can scarcely hear the hum of hit motors. T hen his voice comes into the radio tower: “I‘Ieadle—‘SSSOO icet~diving now." And you inst loom! Seconds laterw'yes, seconds»he’s landing. And here he is (ohm/e) cool, calm, lighting up in Carmel. “lees nicotine in the sectarian menus more mildneoo to use,” enye test pilot ifinrehnil iteeaile (arrow). on he lights; on hie. . .ond Emmerica’o . . .levorite cigarette HERE may be little traffic at 35,000 feet, but testvdiving; any new, . untried plane is no Sunday joy-ride. No, not even for a veteran like BY BURNING 25% SLOWER than the average of the 4 other largest-selling brands testedmslower than any of them- thels also give you a smoking grim equal, on the average, to Elf? Eli'l‘liilll §%§@%%E% Marshall Headle (above). , Naturally, Cigarette mildncos is important to Marshall Headlc. And in the slowcrubuming cigarette of costlier tobaccos...Camcls...hc gets extra mildncmmwith lose nicotine in the smoke. What cigarette are 3/on smoking now? Chances are it’s one. of the five included in the nicotine tests reported above at the left-465m which trace Camels advantage right down to the actual smoke itself. Obviously, the smoke”: the thing! Try Camels. For convenience—mcconomy—buy the carton.