WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 1942 T HE MICHIGAN DAILY _______________________________________________________________ U U MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS: Bosox Threaten Yankee Lead; Win Two As Champions Split rr The Cracker Barrel By Mike Bann '., Daily Sports Editor By HALE CHAMPION (From Associated Press Summaries) The best thing that could happen to either major league this season seems about to happen in the junior circuit. It is the American League, strangely enough, that threatens to have a pennant race. With the Yanks unable to pull out of their tail spin, and Boston's Red Sox continuing their blistering pace the glorious Fourth may yet find the pennant by no means decided. Not just Boston and New York are in the picture. Detroit and Cleveland have hung in close re- markably well and at times have shown enough potential strength to warrant consideration. The up and coming Red Sox pulled to within 4/2 games of the faltering World Champions yesterday as they whipped the Washington Senators twice while the Ruppert Rifles could do no better than split with the sev- enth place A's. It took a ninth in- ning rally to do that. Boston Beats Bums BROOKLYN, June 3.-Hugh Casey, Brooklyn's cheif relief hurler, failed in his first starting assignment of the year today as the Boston Braves pounded him for three runs in four innings and then went on to whip the Dodgers, 4 to 3. Boston ........020 110 000-4 11 0 at Brooklyn .. 102 000 000-3 10 0 Donovan, Salvo 4 and Lombardi; Casey, Webber 5, Kimball 7, Rowe 9 and Owen. Yanks Split PHILADELPHIA, June 30.-Relief pitcher John Lindell won his own ball game today by driving in the winning run with a single in a three-run ninth inning rally that brought the New Bottle-Neck Seen In Lack Of Engineers "An extreme shortage of men with technical training may well prove to be as dangerous a bottleneck as the shortage of materials," Prof. Alfred H. Lovell, secretary of the College of Engineering, said yesterday. "Industry, Army and Navy demands for engineers will exceed the 200,000 mark for the next year as compared to a normal graduating class of about 110,000,",according to Professor Lov- ell, who has just returned from the 50th annual summer meeting of the Society for the Promotion of Engin- eering Education at Columbia Uni- versity. He chaired a committee on junior collegep which studied the operation and effect of the acceler- ated program. Dean Ivan C. Crawford of the En- gineering College also attended the meeting and then went to Washing- ton to do some work in connection with his post on the Advisory Coun- cil for the Military Training of the Ordnance Department. Dr. Richard T. Liddicoat present- ed a paper on "The Falling Bar Prob- lem," and Prof. Frank L. Schwart, one on "A Survey on the Type and Content of Cause Material in Mech- anical Engineering Lab Instruction." York Yankees a 4 to 3 decision over the Philadelphia Athletics in the sec- ond game of a doubleheader after the World Champions lost the opener 8 to 5. New York . ... 300 002 000-5 8 1 at Philadelphia 300 003 02x-8 11 0 Borowy, Murphy 6, Branch 8 and Kearse; Besse and Swift. New York ...... 010 000 003-4 9 0 at Philadelphia 000 000 300-3 8 1 Donald, Lindell 7 and Dickey, Kearse 9; Wolff and Wagner. * * * Red Sox Take Two BOSTON, June 30.-The Boston Red Sox won both ends of a twin bill from the Washington Senators today, 9-8 and 5-2, to gain a full game on the league-leading Yankees, who split with the Athletics. The Red Sox now are only four and one- half games behind New York. Washington .. 210 030 002-8 10 4 at Boston ,... 010 111 41x-9 14 1 Wynn, Carrasquel 8 and Early, Evans 1; Newsome, Ryba 5 and Pea- cock. Washington .. 000 002 000-2 6 0 at Boston .... 000 311 00x-5 12 1 Hudson and Evans; Hughson and Conroy. * * * Night Baseball CINCINNATI, June 30. - The Cincinnati Reds whipped the Chica- go Cubs 4 to 1 tonight to cap a pro- gram which netted the Army-Navy Relief Fund more than $36,000 and rubber-armed Ray Starr his eleventh victory of the year. Chicago .......001 000 000-1 6 1 at Cincinnati .. 100 000 12x--4 5 0 Lee and Hernandez; Starr and La- manno- CHICAGO, June 30. - Manager Lou Boudreau made four of Cleve- land's five hits, including his sea- son's first homer, and scored all his club's runs to give Jim Bagby a 3-1 decision over Ed Smith, the White Sox' hard luck lefty, before 11,071 tonight. Cleveland .......101 001 000-3 5 1 at Chicago .... 000 001 000-1 7 0 Bagby, Dean 9, and Hegan; E. Smith and Turner. ST. LOUIS, June 30.-Mort Coop- er missed his fifth consecutive shut- out tonight, but he did toss his ninth consecutive victory, as the Cardinals downed the Pittsburgh Pirates, 4 to 2. Elbie Fletcher's first-inning hom- er snapped Cooper's scoreless innings at 33. Pittsburgh .... 100 001 000-2 9 2 at St. Louis .... 000 020 10x-4 9 0 Sewell and Phelps; M. Cooper and W. Cooper. NEW YORK, June 30.-(P)-Lefty Cliff Melton attained his tenth vic- tory of the season tonight by holding the Philadelphia Phils to seven hits as the New York Giants eked out a 4 to 3 decision which was made close by Stan Benjamin's two-run homer in the eighth. Repatriation Resumed VICHY, June 30.-(P)-The Ger- mans have resumed the repatriation of French wounded and war prison- ers, it was announced in the occupied zone today, following the campaign to send French workers into the Reich to work in factories. i Nine To Start Soon BETWEEN 35 and 40 hopeful base- ball players turned out for Coach Ray Fisher's diamond practice yes- terday afternoon. Very few of the boys looked like Big Ten caliber al- though there were a number of prom- ising freshmen. Fisher is wasting no time, despite this lack of grade A material, and will probably have his boys play- ing regular scheduled games with- in 10 days. Four local teams: King Seeley, American Broach, Bell Tele- phone and Blue Front will be the first nines that the Wolverines will face. DESPITE your columnist's story last week pointing out the tre-' mendous success of Tom Harmon in the Army Air Force Ann Arbor rum- or mongers are keeping the wires humming with the tale that Tom was "washed out." In fact, when Harmon went into a Santa Ana broadcasting station several weks ago to do an Army pro- gram, some of the announcers offered their condolences. Harmon nearly blew a fuse because that very day he had been commended for excellent work. Your columnist's final word on this subject is that if all the Allied pilots were as good as Harmon the English would still be enjoying their tea and crumpets in Tobruk. WE'LL BET dollars to doughnuts that the coaches are getting more of a workout than the students in the new PEM program. Normally the coaches are getting more of a work out than the students in the new PEM program. Normally the coaches never had to work too hard. They used to teach an hour or two in the morning and then coach their differ- ent sports in the afternoon for sev- eral hours. Now all that's changed. The mentors have to get up before 8 o'clock every morning and toddle down to Ferry Field to start their classes. They work all day except for a short rest at the noon hour. It's a tough grind and don't think for a minute that they aren't tired when they get home. We heard Biggie Munn say the oth- er day, after putting several hundred boys through a difficult routine, "I think I'll take. a leave of absence from this and vacation with the Ma- rines for several weeks." THERE ARE no greater sport fans in An1n Arbor than five cab com- pany executives who go by the names of Don, Ed, Bill and Carl. Being con- structive critics of the Daily sport page (whatever that may be) they feel horse racing should receive a more prominent play in the paper. So for their benefit I will pick the win- nerskfor today's races at the Detroit track' First race: Shantytown all the way. Second race: Valdina Alden-a stab in the dark.. Third race: Polaris-money in1 the bank. Fourth race: Swell Chance-all alone (won't pay much).1 Fifth race: Samborombon-not a safe investment. Sixth race: Sea Marriage-out of the hat. Seventh race: Valdina Groom- from a great stable. Eighth race: Good Taste-if you have any money left. Pat Mullin, the former Detroit Tig- er outfield star, will play on the All Service team against the Major Leag- uers July 7. It was first expected that Mullin would not compete for the same reason that Hank Green- berg won't-too involved in military training. But the deeply tanned sol- dier made his way from an Army re- ception center at New Cumberland, Pa., yesterday and promptly joined in a workout with his future team- mates at Great Lakes, Ill. Big names that will dot the Serv- ice team lineup are Don Paggett (Cardinals), Sam Chapman (Ath- letics), Joe Grace (Browns), Morrie Arnovich (Giants), and Frank Baumholtz, (Cincinnati Reds). Coach Mickey Cochrane arranged today a test for his entire service team by scheduling a game for Fri- day with Sutherland of Kalamazoo. Saturday the Great Lakes team; aug- mented by the Navy men on the All Star team, will play Fort Custer, which will use the Army stars, at Detroit's Briggs Stadium. Huge New Budget May Bring Closure On Private Debts WASHINGTON, June 30.-(P)-A new fiscal year began tonight with a war budget so huge that the Treas- ury raised the possibility that citi- zens may have to be given a mora- torium on their private debts so that they will be able to pay commensur- ate taxes. The budget for the new year calls for the spending of $67,000,000,000 for direct war activities; about $6,000,000,000 more for other gov- ernmental programs, and $4,000,000,- 000 for financing governmental cor- porations primarily engaged in sup- plementing the war effort. Against this proposed cash outlay of approximately $77,000,000,000, tax receipts from existing statutes would provide only about $17,000,000,000. A new tax bill now pending in the House Ways and Means Committee is designed to raise about $6,000,000,- 000 a year. At the turn of the fiscal year, Randolph E. Paul, tax advisor to the Treasury, made public a memoran- dum to Congress in which he said that the problem of drastic tax in- creases upon persons who spend a large part of their income to pay debts, particularly to buy homes, "could be dealt with from a wider point of view by some sort of more or less general moratorium on debt payments, at least for home owners." Soldiers' Grid Squads To Play FullSchedule' WASHINGTON, June 30.-UP)-A { schedule of big time football for soldiers was outlined at the War De--' partment today after the appoint- ment of Grantland Rice, sports col- umnist, as head of a civilian cor- poration set up to handle details of the program. Eight contests with teams of the National Pro League, five for the Army's western squad and three for the eastern soldiers' outfit have been booked for next fall. Rice said his corporation, War Football Fund, Inc., would advise the Army on the gridiron program end would handle the financial end. All receipts from the contests will go to the Army Emergency Relief Fund. Members of the squads will be drawn from the 1,000 or more profes- sional and collegiate players now in the Army. Officers and enlisted men alike will be eligible. Each squad will number around 50. "'We're going to get the two best head coaches we can find," Rice said. "If men in the Army are unable to serve because of military duties, then we will find top-ranking civilians to handle the job." Rice said Major Wallace Wade, now stationed at Fort Bragg, and Lieut.-Col. Bob Neyland, with the field artillery, would be "ideal" choices. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE DENVER, June 30. -(P)- Busily ing of a considerable number of blackboarding new and revised cours- schools next year, to say nothing of es for wartime education of American Itheiow ering of teaching standards youth, the National Education Asso- Critical, he added, is the expected ciation learned tonight that more shortage of mathematics and physics than 50,000 teachers have quit their teachers in secondary schools and classrooms for duty in armed forces colleges. or for higher salaried jobs in war in- "The Army and the Navy have dustries. been urging a greater emphasis upon An impending teacher shortage, the teaching of these subjects as the John W. Studebaker, U.S. Commis- underpinning for mechanized war- sioner of Education, said in a speech fare and for the technical specializa- written for the NEA's 80th annual tion of the armed services," Stude- convention. "may result in the clo. baker said. 11 New York .... Boston Cleveland .... Detroit ..... St. Louis ... . Chicago Philadelphia Washington W L .47 23 .42 27 .41 33 ... 41 35 .33 39 .30 39 ....30 48 .... 26 46 Pct. .671 .609 .554 .539 .458 .435 .385 .361 GB 4 8 9 15 161% 21 22 Tuesday's Results Philadelphia 8-3, New York 5-4 Boston 9-5, Washington 8-2 Cleveland 3, Chicago 1 Only games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Brooklyn .......48 20 St. Louis ........38 27 Cincinnati ......39 32 New York .......37 35 Chicago........36 38 Pittsburgh ......32 36 Boston .........33 43 Philadelphia ... .19 51 Pct. .706 .585 .549 .514 .486 .471 .439 .271 GB 8% 10'% 13 15 16 19 29% Tuesday's Results Boston 4, Brooklyn 3 New York 4, Philadelphia 3 Cincinnati 4, Chicago 1 St. Louis 4, Pittsburgh 2 11 rl _ .' t Tw' I. 'I ON . _X XN G:y, r >f STEIN BLOCH Summer Clothes CLOTHES in lightweight the key to a COOL and i M i JlA. r z . ......rI Ii%/ "A 49. ' 9, : STEIN BLOCH fabrics offer you $50,000for one 90-millimeter anti-aircraft gun sounds like a lot of money, doesn't it? But this type gun is a real "plane-crasher"-one shell from it can smash a half- million dollar Jap bomber quicker than you can swat a ffty. COMFORTABLE summer. SLACKS ... $7.00 and more COATS . . . $19.50 and more I1 I I 11