May 1;, yoga; lllnais institute or technology, chairman to, tliinnis huge W The ill" dialling team is sponsoring or Chicago area regatta at the Colwmi’rier yacht Clair on May ti anal 3°. Schools entering will he Northwestern, (U at 6' 9 Norm flame, Washington, Wrecaraaarr, Minnesota, and Militants Tech. ' iiilllilllill . mmanm . M to By Sonny Mann The netmen bid for their third victory in four starts when they meet George Williams on Friday, May 5. The following day, the Techawks will travel to Peoria to meet Bradley. But the day the Techmen are waiting for is Tuesday, May 9, when they seek revenge against Lake Forest who beat them 6—3 last Saturday. The law of averages and sharp playing upset the Tech aggregation as the Foresters tasted their first victory against Tech in three years. ’ It was the fourth match before the Scarlet and Gray could on» tor the win column. By this time chh’a Norm Taxman had dropped two sets to Ted Broc- Charles Kannewaurt 6—4, 2~6 and 6—4. Fleet footed Bill Mattern tied the score as he went three sets be fore whipping Jerry Kosner of Lake Forest 7-5, 5-7 and 6-4. Things began looking brighter as the doubles teams took the court. Then the ax, or rather the rackets of the northern school fell. When the smoke cleared our cher 6~0 and 6-2, Forest’g tennis team had suffered'its first Frank Yore had overcome Capt. 1035- 5505111“ and Taxman Harry Zeitlin ‘6-3, 6-4 and our couldn’t seem to get together and s James Skipper fell before Dick IOSt “1 “V0 toot sets 5‘? mid ‘ Larson’e speedy racket 6-3 and 6'3- Then SW'Sh'SWI§h Techs 5mg. fate was sealed. Skipper and Having seen enough of a losing V3133 could d0 “0 better than score, Dick Vana staged a rally in their predecessors and looked up the third set, after spliting the two from the small Side Of 6'2 and previous sets, to whip Harry Gold~ 9'7 15°01'05- srnith 7—5, 4-6, 10~8. Not to be outdone, Bob l’oluchowshi kept up the Techawks’ hopes as he bested match was ness and oh Saturday. Ill fillg'i’ EEEE .~ . . you can prove to youroelt Width mmlllhlld it definitely lie-fig irritating -- theretore MQRE ENlm‘t’Ahth than the hrund youha now amoitingy’“ By Marv Feldman Proving that baseball is America’s favorite pastime, entries continued to pour into the Technology News office, even after the contest deadline had passed. Not wanting to disappoint these contestants, the sports department has continued to hold the contest open for these entries. These latecomcrs seem to be following the some general opin— ion of their predecessors in so» lecting the pennant winners. The consensus. this Week, fiuda WW Brooklyn still leading in the Na- tional League, not too closely followed by the Cardinals, Phil- lies, Braves, and Giants, with the Cubs, Reds, and Pirates trailing in the distance. In the American League, the Red Sox are holding a slim lead over the Tigers and m m . light up your present hrnnd Do exactly the some thingwowr Innate. Notice that loite, their oting? ‘Quite a difference tram rump monmm innate» means 6%,, “MEN, loci lake or pull—'DGN’F taunts-and o—lno-w—l-y let the smoke come through your note. how, isn’t it? And NOW . . . By Sid Doppelt , Coming from behind with a stirring rally, the Phi Kappa Sigma ping~pong team captured the championship cup by downing Alpha Sigma Phi, 3-2. The Alpha Sigs jumped off to the lead when Roger Krafit downed Bill Mat~ tern, 3—2. Roy Veich, of the win- ners evened it up immediately by shutting out Ozzie Rudolph by a 3—0 tally. Once again Alpha Sigma Phi took the lead as George Hot- tinger won the third match to put his team within one game of the championship. Lou Mam then evened it up by narrowly squeez~ ing out a 3-2 victory over Claude Herrick and the doubles match loomed as the deciding factor. Mattern and Veich faced Krafft and Hottinger and the red hot Phi Kaps took the match in three straight games, and with it, the cup. Third place was taken by Tri- angle Fraternity as they downed Theta Xi by a 3—1 count. Next week, Alpha Sigma Phi will put its IF track trophy up for grabs. No Walkaway is ex— pected this time with both Theta Xi and Delta Tau Delta turning in sensational pre—season workouts to loom as serious threats to the de- fending champs. The rneet will consist of the following events: 100 yd. dash, 220, 440, 880, broad- jump, high jump and 4 man single lap relay. Al Ashurst, veteran Varsity cinderman, will conduct the pro- ceedings. The softballers will try it again this Sunday, with the Grant Park diamonds as the battleground. The games which were scheduled for last week will be rescheduled at the end of the season. Yankees, in that order, with Cleveland rounding out the first division, at distant fourth. Phila- delphia, the White Sox, Browne, and Senators brings up the rear. This week’s winners of a carton of CHESTERFIELDS each are Howard L. Philippe and William Spehn. Howard, 3. 6th semester ME, seems to believe in under- dogs. He writes: “Detroit has a seasoned pitch- ing stall, the best in the league, and good consistent-hitters. New York has an improved infield, good hitters, fair pitchers, and an in- spired leadership.” William, a 4th semester ME, in order to win his carton of CHES- TERFIELDS, went along with the favorites. He wrote: “The American League pennant goes to the Red Sox. Detroit has a well—balanced squad, but won’t be able to stand the pace of Williams, Stephens, DiMaggio and company. anaerae rune ”la 55”.??? TKO/WM- flfié'éfllflfi fig! I/A‘éfif MEX/EVE (YE/{MIG -- 60077753 fiflfl/l/l/VG l duo/waters? , may . F llddllth him Wildlfilith . . . @nly pm cigarette in erogniaed r in; eminent medical unthoriliee as delinliely Lag irritating. 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