- i1WT FZ . Physical Ed's Win 1-M Swim Championshipl Victors Take First Two Places In Final Event For Narrow Triumph By CHRIS VIZAS By taking both first and second in diving, the final event of the meet, the Physical Education tank team managed to nose out the Wolverines by one point to capture the Independ- ent swimming championship 39 to 381 last night in the Intramural pool. From the 200 yard relay which opened the meet, and which the Wol- verines won, down to the last event, the meet was a nip and tuck battle between the Phys. Eds and the Wolves. Fletcher Hall took third with 18 points, Robert Owen fourth with 3, and the entries from the Senators failed to take one place which would garner them any points. Gearhart Takes 220 With the exception of the 220 yard free, style, which Dick Gearhart of Fletcher Hall captured, all first places went to the first two. teams. Maurice Reizen took individual scoring honors by capturing first in the dive, second in the 50 yard back stroke, and third in the 100 yard free style. The real hero for the winners was Joe Cole, who, after trailing Fordyce Hartman, Wolverine, by four points going into the final dive, a back-jack,. scored five points to take second and cinch team honors for his squad. Earlier in the evening Hartman had captured the 100 yard free style to give the Wolverines a two point lead, which they did not relinquish until the final event. Hackett Places In 100 Herb Hackett of Robert Owen House scored the only points for his outfit by taking second in the 100 yard free style. The only other second that did not go to the first two teams was the 50 yard breast stroke which Emmett Conway of Fletcher Hall captured. First place honors also went to Phys. Ed's Al Jaslow, who won the 50 yard breast stroke, and John Ban- oski, who copped the 50 yard free style, and Art Blumberg of the Wol- verines, who paced the field in the 50 yard back stroke. PRESS' PASSES By BUD BENJAMIN A.L. N.L. is Dickey. Rolfe takes no hack seat, New York Cincinnati Gordon Henrich, and Crossetti are Boston New York trouble, and when you add such Detroit Chicago Cleveland Pittsburgh classy rookies as Charley Keller, Bud- Washington Boston dy Rosar, and Joe Gallagher, I be- Chicago St. Louis lieve you have a repeater. St. Louis Brooklyn The Red Sox bandwagon is find- Philadelphia Philadelphia ing support, notably by the Chicago Amid threats of war, the cataclys- Daily News' erudite John Carmichael, mic upheaval of Spain, German ex- and Yawkey's product may well turn mi upheal rSp , the American League into a close pansion in central Europe, and con- race--at long last. tinued economic distress throughout~ the world-death, taxes, and baseball hold fast as the only inevitable fea- I tures of a hurly-burly 20th century civilization. Shaded a pretty cocoa and inflat- ed by a deluge of their own press notices, the representatives of 16 cor- porations enter the 100th year of Abner Doubleday's national past- time with a single battlecry: "We're the boys to do it. this year." Of the 16, however, there are really only about six "haves," the others merely reaping the gate receipts and going through the formality of playing 154 games. In the senior circuit, the touted R1eds, the ever potent Giants, and Phil Wrigley's Cubs are the likely front runners. In the junior league, tifose Yanks, a streng- thened Boston Red Sox team, and dynamic Detroit's own-the Tig- ers-cain taste the pie. Hot stove chatter advocating the break-up of the Yanks has consider- ably subsided since the scribes have started to cram the sport sheets with lusty yarns of the strength of the other seven teams. Chief hope for the demise of those dam' Yankees are continued reports of Lou Geh- rig's hopeless inadequacy at first, base. 13 years of diamond pound-, ing has taken its toll, and you'll hear stories of Columbia Lou's sadly slow reflexes, the woeful slowness of the Yankee captain, and the contribut- ing effects. But this corner can't forget those other boys. Pitching by Gomez, Ruff-, ing, Pearson, Hadley, Ferrell, and eccentric Oral Hildebrand, a new ac- quisition. Di Maggio is still aces as IT'S CLEARNESS TELLS YOU IT'S A DELIGHTFUL DRINK y ARBOR SPRNGS O WATER DELIVERED IN BOTTLES FOR HOME, FRATERNITY, AND SOIORITY Phone 8270 The Sox, who actually outhit the Yanks last year .299 to .276 and split even with the champs in 22 games, have added pitching strength without weakening V themselves doing it. They say that Jim Tabor will make them forget Pinky Higgins with Ted Williams giving Ben Chapman a similar treatment. Whereas last year "Lefty" Grove was the only dependable hurler, the Sox now have Eldon Auker, Jake Wade, and Dennis Galehouse after a winter's barter. Jim Bagy, who d won .15 games as a freshman, h Jack Wilson and his fireball, 1 Fred Ostermuller, and a sensa- a tional rookie named Woodrow Rich will add plenty of mound strength. Hitting by Foxx, Cram- er, Cronin, Doerr, and Vosmik spells plate power. In fact the only Boston vulnerability seems to be behind the bat where Gene DeSautels and Col. Moe Berg hold sway. I can't see the Tigers for better, than third-if they do that well. w Hank Greenberg will be back, but I Charley Gehringer is 36 and not as fast as in those golden days; untried C Frank Croucher holds the short-stop i answer with fading Bill Rogell on deck; and Rudy York was such a poor defensive catcher last year that his batting power was almost nulli- p fied. The outfield of Pete Fox, Fredt Walker, and Chet Laabs, a strike- f out king, is nothing to write home about. Returning veterans Bridges, Coffman, Eisenstat, Kennedy, Law- t son, and Gill, will need help, and here's the rub. Should Schoolboy Rowe come back, should the publi- C cized Hutchinson, who has shown signs of being a floperoo, and Dizzy Trout come through, the Tige's may be tough. The other side of the fence finds Bill McKechnie's lads get- ting most of the play, chiefly on the strength of the old adage that pitching is 90 per cent of the game. The Reds under cagy Bill leapt from last in 1937 to fourth last year, and a further rise seems in order. A pitching powerhouse featuring revived Lee Grissom, Johnny (Double No Hit) Vander- meer, Paul Derringer, Bucky Walters, Whitey Moore, big Jim Weaver, "Peaches" Davis, Gene Schott, and r oo kie Junior Thompson is mighty potent stuff in any league. Ernie Lombardi and Willard Hershberger should provide the best catching in the circuit and talent like Frank Mc- Cormick, Ival Goodman, Harry Craft, Wally Berger, and the tempermental newcomer, Bill Werber round out a top-notch ball club. The Giants and the Cubs have a lot of "ifs." The Bartell, Leiber, Mancuso for Demaree, Jurges, and O'Dea swap may help both clubs and may conceivably backfire. Competent observers claim the Cubs stripped their gears when they released Jurges. The Cubs must rely on a mediocre pitching staff with only Clay Bry- ant and Bill Lee rated as depend- able starters. They still need a first baseman that can hit. They have to worry about Dizzy Dean's arm along with the stability of "youngster" Mancuso and Hartnett behind the plate. The Giants still have Hubbell, Schumacher, Castleman, a n d Melton-none of them improved by Wear-plus rookie Manuel Salvo. Fat Zeke Bonura is a ques- tionable jewel at first, and I can't see Frank Demaree turning the tide. Sudden thought: Will Pittsburgh and Cleveland rally and die before the Fourth of July? Add sudden thought: Didn't I pick the Cubs to win the series? (EDI- TOR'S NOTE-Yes). York's Home Runs Pace LAKELAND, Fla., March 29.-(P)- Catcher Rudy York got two home runs and a single in three times at bat today as the Detroit Tigers de- feated the Boston Bees 9 to 8 to gain an even break in the spring ex- hibition series. Even with the big Indian's slug- ging-he batted in four runs and scored three times himself-the Tig- ers had to stage a ninth inning rally to win. 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