San Bernardino Sun, Volume 61, Number 178, 26 March 1955 — Page 21

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Pomona

Prom Pacific High slipped out of a tie for first in the Citrus Belt League when Pomona combined a three-hitter by Mel McGavock and some erratic Pirate fielding to post a 7-0 victory Friday on the losers' diamond. The Red Devils, who tallied three runs in the first and two in

SPOUTS

SBHS Nine Tops Fontana, 10 to 3

Coach Walt St. John's San Bernardino Cardinals broke loose for three-run rallies in both the seventh and eighth innings to coast to a 10-3 decision over the Fontana Steelers Friday afternoon in Fontana. The Card outburst broke up a tight, 4-3 game and handed the Steelers their third straight CBL loss. San Bernardino now is deadlocked with Pacific for runnerup honors, each with 2-1 marks. Honky Morana twirled five innings of hitless ball in relief, striking out nine, to get the victory. Jim Turner started for two frames with a charley horse. With the Cards well ahead, Jim Jolliff flipped the final two innings. Fontana went ahead in the second when Orv Carey singled in two tallies. The Cardinals quickly took over with three in the third and were never headed. A walk, passed ball and successive singles by Steve Menkel and Dick Jolliff, coupled with a Steeler error counted the SBHS scores. Dick Poole scored another run for the Redbirds in the fourth when he walked and scored on an outfield error. Fontana moved to within one run, 4-3, as Tom Otterman scored on a- Card error ORANGE SHOW OPENS; FINALS San Bernardino's -Jimmie Burns Loungers and the Riverside AllStars gained the semifinals in the Open Division, while Calvary Baptists, St. Paul Methodists and the Latter Day Saints advanced in the Church Division of the first annual Orange Show Basketball Tournament sponsored by the S.B. YMCA Friday night at the SBVC gym. Saturday's schedule opens at 8:30 a.m. with the City B champion Dominoes battling the Ontario Police, followed at 9:30 by CYO against Four-Square Gospel, then Pratt's Sporting Goods meet the Pomona Mis-haps in a 10:30 a.m. feature. At 11:30 a.m. Calvary Baptists play St. Paul; at 12:30 p.m. it's Jimmie Burns vs. Riverside; at 1:30, LDS vs. the CYO-Four-Square winner and at 2:30 the DominoeOntario - winner meets the PrattPomona survivor. The Church title will be decided at 3:30 p.m., with the Open championship following at 4:30. All games are in the SBVC gym, of 9minute quarters and 15-cent donations are asked at the door. The YMCA is sponsoring the trophies, Director Bob Henley states. Feller Sparks Cleveland Over S.F. Seals, 8-2 SAN FRANCISCO (IP) Bob Feller retired 13 batters in a row and allowed only one hit in five innings Friday night as the Cleveland Indians defeated the San Francisco Seals, 8 to 2, before 19,862. Making his third appearance of the training season, the veteran outpitched Gene Bearden, a former Cleveland hero in the pennant winning season of 1948. The Indians clubbed Bqarden for half of the Cleveland runs, two of them resulting from a homer by rookie Rocky Colavito. The Indians got their other runs off Ed Chandler in the sixth inning.

Lone Pine, Yrona

Win AII - Louis Osuna of Lone Pine High, who led the Southland's schools with enrollment of less than 1,000 students in scoring with a sparkling 21.6 average, received the most votes of any eager to gain 1955 All-CIF small schools honors, Helms Athletic Foundation announced Friday. Osuna, who stands six feet and weighs 147, poured in 410 points in 19 games for Lone Pine, which wound up second in the Desert-Inyo League to Trona. Osuna also made the All-CIF team last year. The championship TrOna Tornadoes landed guard Raul (Ruly) Queseda on the second 10-man team. The 5-10 Queseda, one of

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L Lead, the third and then coasted, took advantage of 10 misplays by Coach Bob Websters' Bucs during the nine frames. Bob Greer started for Pacific and gave up only four hits in six innings before tiring. Reynolds Wright finished up, allowing only two base knocks. The southpawing in the fifth, but San Bernardino then broke loose and sewed the tilt up. . Menkel opened the seventh with a double and scored on Turner's two-bagger. Don Chipman walked and Poole then singled both runners home. In the eighth, Morana singled, Menkel walked and when Gene Schaff's single was misplayed, both runs scored. Schaff then wound up the day's scoring by coming in on a wild pitch. The Cards, who played everyone on the squad, will meet Pacific Tuesday night at Perris Hill in the first meeting of the two clubs in history. Both nines lost to the same team, Pomona, in league play. SAN BDXO. Womack, II Morana, p-rt J. Jolliff. p Menkel. cf D. Jolliff, c Schaff, c Turner, p-rt AB 1 4 0 5 3 3 4 H FONTANA 0 Carey, lf-cf 1 larman. 2b 0 Johnson, lb 2 Regis, lb 2 Branch' ti. m 1 Foust 3b 2 Burns, rf 0 Wilson, rf R H Chipman, lb 4 M'cadante. lb 0 Weiland. 3b 4 0 B'r'ghs. 3b-ss 4 1 Naro. c 3 0 Freitas. cf 2 M'Gregor. 3b Poole, rf-lf Stone. If Alonso. 2b Martinez. 2b Camp, ss Cisneros. M 2 D'gherty. lf-p 1 0 Otterman. p 3 0 Rnjak. U 1 0 1 1 Total 41 10 13 SCORE BY INNINGS; Total 32 3 5 San Bernardino 003 100 33010 13 3 Fontana Hisrh 020 610 000 3 S 7 YM TOURNEY IN SBVC GYM Coach Dean Small's Loungers looked like the team to beat in the Open Division with its 65-29 win over the S.B. Independents. John Henderson of Mt. San Antonio hit 17, while Sam Gardner had 12, Dave Smith 10, Bryce Smith 8, Jim j Doherty and Blake Neal 6 each for Burns. Andy Rodriguez tallied 13, Jim Gorcelin 8 and Chuey Mendoza 7 for the losers. The Riverside All-Stars won over Harrison's Sporting Goods by forfeit when the latter failed to floor a full team. Bill Weischedel hit 12 in an exhibition, backed up by Tom Gunderson, Tom Ricketts and Tyree Ellison with 6 each. Pratt's, led by Bob Edmondson, Bob Rosenberger, Al Endeman and Tom Brown, is given a strong chance of gaining the finals at 4:30. Pomona averaged over 100 points per game during its season. The Baptists, led by Gene Mueller's 20, Ivan Learned's 11 and Bill Heinlein's 10, trimmed Church of Christ, 47-36. Gene Fisher tanked 17 and Lambeth 9 for the losers. St. Paul's, paced by Loren Marshall's 20, Roger Schmidt's 13 and Ted Palmquist's 12, rolled over the Home of Neighborly Service, 53-32, as Leo Gomez hit 8, Chuey Negrete 8 and Pete Campos 6 for the HNS five. Carroll Nichols pumped in 15, Monty Merrill 14, Arvil Hale 11 and Bob Webster 8 to lead Al Guhin's LDS quintet to a 70-37 victory over the Presbyterians, who had won the Church title earlier. Bill Munson had 15 and Jim Valentine 10 for the losers. Chicago Relays Boast 6 Defending Champions CHICAGO (UP) Defending champions will compete in six events in the 19th annual Chicago Daily News Relays Saturday, but only two of them, miler Wes Santee and Mad Whitfield in the 600 yard run, are choices to retain their titles. , FBI agent Fred Wilt, twice a winner of the 2-mile run, will meet another double winner in Horace Ashenfelter. CI the top all-round athletes in recent desert history, was considered the defensive standout and play-maker on offensive for the champs. The first team had Osuna, James Gates of Citrus, Ned Eckert of Beverly Hills and Bob Espinoza of Mary Star of the Sea, at forwards; Arrillaga and Don Walker, Marshall of Mission, Don Barry of Morningside, Ray Sims of Hemet, and Larry Boyd of Mar Vista, at guards. The second team had Jim Quast of San Jacinto, Tom McEacheron of Santa Maria, George Daech of Laguna Beach and Vic Wallace of Calexico, forwards; B. J. Schaffer of Tustin and Pat O'Brien of

Pacific

7 to duo struck out nine and walked only four but the fielding lapses more than gave the Red Devils the edge they needed. Charles Holmes was the big man at bat for the Devils, slapping out a single, triple and homer in five trips. Centerfielder Bob Guzman, ex-grid and cage star, had 2-for-5 while John Lightfoot garnered the only other hit Ray Cimino's single in the third was the first Pirate hit while Greer added an infield bingle and Gordon Sloan slammed a last-inning triple to complete the Pacific hitting. Pomona, tied with Riverside for first in the loop, got three in the opening frame on a walk, error and triple with a bobble on the hit. The Devils added two more in the third on a single and three misplays. Holmes' homer accounted for another tally in the seventh while the final run scored on a hit batter, an error and a passed ball. The Pirates tried to rally in the final frame when Sloan opened with a triple. Danny Hayes got a walk but both died on the base paths. Pacific, who will meet crosstown San Bernardino Tuesday night at Perris Hill in the first clash between the two nines, has a non-league fray with Palm Springs set for 2 p.m. on the Buc diamond. Ernie Gonzales will probably get the pitching nod for the Buccaneers. POMflNA Turpin, 3b AB 3 5 5 5 4 1 3 2 4 R H PACIFIC AB R H 1 0 Johnson, lb 2 0 0 1 0 Sauceda, rf 2 0 0 3 3 Cimino, cf 4 0 1 Brimhall, ss Holmes. 2b Guzman, cf Brooks, c Wyman. rt Whyt. rf Besse. If Lightfoot lb McGavock. p 0 2 Sloan. 3b 3 1 0 Ohrmund. If 4 0 ,0 Wi-t. rf-lb-p 3 0 0 Hayes, c 1 0 Curtis, ss 0 1 Parese, 2b 0 0 Greer, p Lusk. lb S Totals 34 7 6 Total SCORE BY INNINGS: 29 0 3 Pomona 302 000 1107 1 Pacific 000 000 0000 3 10 Trucks Swats Pair of Homers LAKELAND, Fla. (UP) Vir gil Trucks hit two home runs and Chico Carresquel smacked one with the bases loaded as the Chi cago White Sox snapped a sixgame losing streak to down De troit, 14-5, Friday. Trucks, pitching before 1,200, held the Tigers to three hits in five innings, one of them a 2-run homer by Al Kaline. Harry Dorish and rookie Kelly Jack Swift finished, giving up three Detroit runs and two hits. GIANTS CLIP CUBS PHOENIX (UP) Johnny Antonelli and Marv Grissom com bined on a 7-hitter as the New York Giants whipped the Chicago Cubs, 6-2, before 2,248 fans. Catcher Wes Westrum and rook ie outfielder Bob Lennon hit home runs for the champions. Antonelli, the Giants' top southpaw, pitched six frames, showing hurling that made him a 20-game winner last year. Bernier Reports to Stars, Promises to Be 'Good Boy' ANAHEEVI (IP) Carlos Bernier, speedy slugger who was banished from the league last season for slapping an umpire, reported for training at the Hollywood Stars camp and said he'd be a "good boy" this year. Bernier, described as "repentent and completely different" by teammates, was greeted warmly by Manager Bobby Bragan. The Puerto Rican player, whose absence was a factor in the Stars' losing the pennant, said "I'm a good boy now. I'm playing for my family." : U.S. Oarsmen to Pull For Cambridge Crew LONDON (UP) Two American oarsmen will pull for the same crew for the first time in the history of the Oxford-Cambridge boat race Saturday when these tradi tion-laden universities renew their classic for the 101st time. Philip M. DuBois, 23, of Ridgefield, Conn., will be at the No. 2 oar and Robert A. G. Monks, 21, of Washington, D. C, will row No. 6 for Cambridge in the famed eight-oared crew race on the winding Thames River. Cambridge has won 54, Oxford 45 with a tie in the 100 races. tars

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Santa Clara, center; Queseda, Bob Dean of Coronado, Bob Magaw of St. Francis and Larry Lankford of Cirrus at guard. Awards will be presented Saturday, April 2, at 10:30 a.m. at Helms Hall, 8760 Venice Blvd., Culver City, when trophies also will be given Coach Ed Smyth of Citrus and Coach Al Greenleaf of Morningside for mentoring the title sectional quintets Arrowhead League ballots were not mailed to the Helms board, so none of that loop's cagers were given consideration, Secretary Braven Dyer Jr. stated. Joe Seals of Victor Valley just missed landing second team honors.

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GOLF LEADER SLIPS TO THIRD First-day leader Peter Thomson, British Open champ from Australia, skidded into a third place tie with Gene Littler in the Miami Beach

Open tournament Friday. Thomson, blasting from the trap on the 14th, added a 70 to Thursday's 65 for 135. Story on page

23. (AP wirephoto)

Santee Huns .4:04.6 1C of C Indoor Mile

CLEVELAND (UP) Wes San tee, the confident Kansan out after a new world indoor record, came within one second of that goal Friday by runninig the mile in 4:04.6 in the Knights of Colum bus meet at Cleveland Arena. Gil Dodds 8-year-old mark was 4:08.6 It was Santee's third best indoor mile of the winter. The world record of 4:03.6 was set Feb. 5 by Gunnar Nielsen of Denmark, who barely edged Santee in New York City. A week ' earlier, Santee had lowered the world mark to 4:03.8. Santee was paced for the first half by fellow Kansan Art Dalzall. Santee took the lead after running a half of 2:04.5. For the next two laps he was closely pursued by Bob McMillen of Los Angeles. Santee finished the third quarter in 3:00.6 and from then on, he ran the race alone. He finished a half-lap ahead of the Army's Joe LaPierre, while Lowell Zellers was third. McMillen finished fourth in the field of six. Harrison Dillard won his 10th straight championship in the 45yard high hurdles. His winning time was 5.7, three-tenths second off his best since he started racing here 11 years ago. Glenn Davis was second and Joe Savoldi of Michigan State was third. The same held true in the 1,000yard run, in which Arnold Sowell of the University of Pittsburgh ran away from the field to win in 2:13.0. Sowell, regarded as one of this country's finest young track hopes, was not pressed. Syracuse University's crack 2mile relay team won its 10th SBVC Downed By Sania Ana Nine, 15io11 San Bernardino Valley College yielded nine runs in the eighth inning to Santa Ana Friday to drop a 15-11 battle to the Dons for the third straight Eastern Conference baseball loss for the Indians. Coach Ray Blake's Braves, trailing 6-4 in the top of the eighth, tied it at 6-6 when Merle Reed pinch hit for pitcher Sam Gardner and drove in two runs. Chuck Weaver took the mound In the bottom half and walked five men before he was relieved by Lee Branneman. In Santa Ana's 9 run frame the Dons had only 4 hits with 7 walks and 2 errors. Dick Parque led the 14-hit SBVC attack with 3-for-6 (including a double. Roger Ferguson hit a triple in his 2-for-5, Bill Enz two-bagged in his 2-for-6 and Bob Donnelly had one In his l-for-5. Bob Crabtree hit 2-for-4, while Mai DeWeese, Jack Crabtree, Clare Copleman and Reed singled. Grinell led Santa Ana's 13-hit attack with a triple and single. Valley College entertains ML San Antonio next Friday in its first EC home tilt. San Bernardino 013 000 07511 14 4 Santa Ana JC 2(10 310 09x 15 13 4 Gardner, Wearer (8). Branneman (8 rerxnson: Banks Davis.

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straight, posting a new meet record of 7:37.3, only 3.4 seconds off the world indoor mark set in 1942

by Seton Hall. Notre Dame was second. The Rev. Bob Richards, unde feated this winter, cleared the bar at Id feet to win the pole vault. Don Laz, former Illinois star, placed second. Another meet record was set in the mile university relay. Indiana, which set the old mark only a year ago, won in 3 minutes, 19.2 seconds, seven tenths seconds faster than in 1954. Pittsburgh. Daced by a 48:0 anchor performance bv Sowell, finished third in 3:20.1. Vic Fntts won the high jump with a leap of 6-8. OAKLAND TOPPLES PADRES, 6 TO 3 SAN DIEGO (IB The Oakland Oaks won their exhibition series opener from San Diego here Friday night, 6-3. Art Cuitti homered for the Oaks in the first inning after Joe Brovia doubled in George Metkovich. Russ Rose homered for the Oaks in the third and Tommy Munoz belted one over the right field wall for the visitors in the seventh. Oakland 301 000 101 It San Diego IKI INK) 3113 4 0 Drews. Reamnn ) Herrent (8 & Neal; Erantt, dmunds (8 & Gladd. UCLA Horsehiders Blank Santa Clara WESTWOOD (IF) Don Nichols of UCLA fashioned a fancy 4-hitter Friday to defeat Santa Clara, 7-0, in a CIBA game at Westwood. Bill Heil supplied the Bruin batting punch with a bases-full homer. It was the second win in two PCC starts for both the Bruins and righthander Nichols. UCLA and Santa Clara meet again Saturday.

OHIO STATE LEADS NCAA'S SWIMMING WITH 43 POINTS

OXFORD, Ohio (UP) Ohio State University practically swept the diving boards Friday in the 32nd annual NCAA swimming champions to take a big lead over top contenders Yale and Michigan. Led by Fletcher Gilders, who was nearly flawless in retaining his one-meter title, Coach Mike Peppe's Buckeyes finished 1-2-4-3 in the event to pile up 17 big points in Ohio State's efforts to defend its team title. Yoshi Oyakawa, Ohio State's spirited Hawaiian backstroke ace, notched his fourth consecutive win in the 200-yard event for the only other Buckeye win in the 6-event program held at the 25-yard Miami University pool. Ohio State had a total of 43 points at the halfway mark in the meet to finish Saturday, to have a big lead over Michigan with 28 and Yale 27.

Phillips Nips Olympic Club Cagers, 53-51 DENVER (UP) Jim Walsh, a former Stanford gTeat, flipped in a 40-foot shot at the final gun Friday to nullify an amazing individual effort by Ken Sears to send the Phillips Oilers into the finals of the National AAU Basketball Tournament on a 53-51 victory over the San Francisco Olympic Club. Walsh and his Phillips mates from Bartlesville, took the ball out of bounds with just eight seconds to play after Sears, a Santa Clara senior, had tied the score with two free throws for San Francisco. Phillips passed the ball around nntil, with one second showing on the clock, Walsh let fly bis game-winning shot. The Olympic Club players and the crowd of 7,000 which mainly supported the West Coast team were stunned by the sudden crashing of a great comeback effort. ' The Olympic Club trailed all the way, by as much as 11 points. Sears, a 6-9 blond giant, scored 28 points and led a San Francisco rally that cut Phillips lead in the last five minutes from 50-42 to the 51-51 standoff. OILERS STAY CLOSE Walsh and Arnold Short, a hotshooting star from Oklahoma City, kept Phillips abreast of the Olympic Club crew with 16 each. The Olympic Club inner defense of Sears and Jim Loscutoff kept Phillips' great Chuck Darling hemmed in and limited to 10. Colorado University's seniors, playing for Luekett-Nix of Boulder, lashed the U.S. Marine champions, in an overtime, 63-56, to meet Phillips at 9 p.m. (CST) Saturday in the finals of the AAU tournament. Guard Charley Mock hit seven points during the 5-minute overtime to send the unseeded collegians into the finals. Mock scored the first six points while the Marines were getting only two, giving his team a 57-53 load with two minutes left. A 51-51 knot at the end of the regulation 40 minutes was brought on by Bob Yardley's field goal. Lnckett-Nix, with the Marines bottling up star center Burdette Haldorson, fought uphill most of the way. The Marines moved out front, 51-49, before Yardley's layup. Yardley, with 13 points, was Colorado's tops. For the Quantico, Va., crew, Dick Guerin was high with 19.

Trojan Nine Trims Stanford, 8 lo 1 - LOS ANGELES (IB SCs Tro jans scored their first win in the young CTBA season with a sound 8-1 victory over the Stanford Indians Friday. The Trojans exploded for five runs in the sixth to chase Ray Young. The same clubs go at it again Saturday. Walt Payne starts for Stanford and Coach Rod Dedeaux has named Ralph Pausig as the SC hurler. Eight Irish Jumpers Enter Grand National LIVERPOOL. England (UP) Ireland, which supplied the last two winners of the Grand National Steeplechase, had eight entries among the 32 horses Saturday in the 119th running of the world's most spectacular jumping race. Never before have the Irish made such a strong challenge to win this gruelling race over 30 fences and water jumps at the ancient Aintree course. Trailing the leaders were Har vard with 10 points, Iowa 9, Oklahoma and Iowa State 8, Stanford and North Carolina State 7, Cortland (N.Y.) State 5, Georgia, Springfield (Mass.) and Indiana 4. Saturday's closing program in cludes the 3-meter diving, 440-yard freestyle, 100-yard backstroke and 130-yard invididual relay where Ohio State abounds in strength, along with the 100-yard free style. 200-yard butterfly and 300-yard medley relay. WRESTLING Tonite at 8:30 ATTRACTION . YEAR Brazil's Lai? Aspearane in San Bcrnardin BOBO BRAZIL V. JUNGLE BOY TAG MATCH I vA f 3 Falls Sandor SZABO VIC CHRISTY VS. JUAN HUMBERTO Pat FRALEY special Anracno L. . j f a . . . i-. On Fall 30 Mia. BRANILLO (Local Boy) Ralph ( Dr GRANILLO Vl. I 6ALLAGHCR Johnny I vDEMCHUK j General AdmMsiM f I 00 Rinss-da I.S0 4 $2.00 Children S0 (Tax Incl.) For Reservations Phono 9-6523 SAN BERNARDINO ARENA 137 So. G Phono 8-9169

BRAZIL

Saturday, March 26, 1955

HORWET SPIREMES TOP SBVC, 76-55

Durable Danny Schweikert raced to a triple victory, including a blazing 1: 56.8 halfmile, to pace the Fullerton spikers to a 76-55 decision over Coach Jim Brasher's San Bernardino Valley College trackmen Friday on the Indian oval. Schweikert, winning the 880, mile and 2-mile, was the big difference as the Redskins dropped their first dual meet of the pastern ConferChaffey College Cindermen Cop The Chaffey College track team notched its first Eastern Conference victory Friday when the Panthers ran away from Riverside, 8648, on the Tigers' ovaL Coach George Colbath's Panthers won every running event and two of the field events. They now have a 1-2 EC record against 0-3 for Riverside. Dale Bunch and Frank Corsaro were double winners for Chaffey. Bunch took the 220 in 21.5 and the 440 in 53.4. , Corsaro ran a fast 9.9 in the 100 and 25.4 in the 220 low hurdles. Other Chaffey winners: Paul Beloud in the 880 (2:10), Bob Lee in the mile (4:56.3), Bob Gates in the two mile (11:11.2, Dale Crompton in the 120 high hurdles (16.8), Dean Smothers in the broad -jump (21-9), and Stewart Kushin in the pole vault (11-7). ANGELS OUTSLUG FT. ORD; SEATTLE DRUBS PORTLAND FULLERTON (UP) Los Angeles battered the Ft. Ord Warriors with three home runs in 6-run fifth inning Friday, and went on to post an 8-4 victory. Bill Bohlender and Herm Reich slammed homers on successive pitches with the sacks empty, but Tommy Brown's came with two on. Dutch Van Burkleo homered for Ft. Ord. The Angels meet Port land Saturday at Long Beach. SUDS STOP DUCKS PALM SPRINGS (UP) Pitcher Vic Lombardi's work was the bright spot again for the Seattle Rainiers who Friday defeated Portland, 5-1. Lombardi worked seven innings, yielding one run in the fifth his first in a total of 14 innings pitched. Lombardi also led the at tack along with Seattle shorts top Gene Verble, both getting 2-for-3. Longest hit came from the bat of catcher Ray Orteig of Seattle, a triple. Seattle will divide into two teams Saturday, one meeting Ft. Ord at Palm Springs and the other playing Sacramento in Yuma. Celtics Slight Favorites Over Syracuse in TV Game BOSTON (IP) The Celtics, trailing the Syracuse Nationals, 0-2, in the i 5-game playoff for the National i Basketball Assn.'s Eastern title, i are slight favorites to stay "alive" I by winning Saturday's contest on: their home court. i The game, which will be tele vised, begins at 3 p.m., EST. The ! Nationals scored 110-100 and 116-i 110 triumphs over Boston at Syracuse. The Fort Wayne Pistons and Minneapolis Lakers resume the 5-' game Western playoff finals Sunday at Minneapolis. Fort Wayne holds a 2-1 lead.

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THE DAILY SUN 21

ence season. Earnest McMurray captured two wins in the hurdles for the Tribe. The ex-SBHS timber topper w-ent over the highs in 15.2 and the lows in 25.2. Other Valley College winners were Jim Burright in a 10.2 century, Lynn Tolman in a 12-0 pole vault and Junior Singh with a 6-0 high jump. In addition to Schweikert's speedy 8S0, which is believed to bt the fastest in San Bernardino ever. Jim McCIoud of the Hornets sped to a sharp 51.5 410. Dick Glasgow of the Tribe was second with his fastest mark, 51.9. Fullerton's relay quartet ran 3:33.1 with San Bernardino running their fastest of the year 3:39.0. Mlle Srhweikert F), Proctor F, Baynes (SB. JilHI.S. 440 MrCloud F), Glasgow SB), Wh F, 51.5. l(IO-BurrUht (SB), Hoax (F), Walter F. M.S. 130 HH McMurray (SB), Cibsoa F), Hpzmalhakk F. 15.1. KXO Nohweikert (F), Walton (SB), Rites (SB). i:5.8. KO-Mcdoud (F), Burrisht (SB). Boas (F), K.H. ! mili-Schwelkert (F), Proctor F), West SB), 11:37.4. Ml LH McMurray (SB), Gibson (F), Walters (F. S5.2. Javelin I'lonkett (F), Brown (SB), Ree (SB). WH-Z. Shot Put Chase (F), Kres (SB), Plunkett (F). 43-8. Pole vault Tolman (SB), Rohrbach (SB), Gerhold F), 12-0. HiKh Jump Singh (SB), Isaae (SB), Gerhold (F). 6-0. Broad Jump Hlmcinhotham (F), Isaae (SB). Tolman (SB). 20-10. Discus tartwrieht (F), ChaM F), Brown (SB). 131-1. Mile Relay Fullerton. 3:33.1. Final score: Fullerton 76; San Bernardino 55. HEADQUARTERS FOR LITTLE LEAGUE BASEBALL GLOVES Major league models endorsed by star players for durability and performance. High grade leather. Priced to nt any budget from J3M to $2500 OFFICIAL BASEBALLS See Us for Little League Shoes Z?X Green Stamps OPEN SUNDAYS PRATT BROS. SPORTING GOODS The Valley's Largest 381 Highland Ave. Ph. 3-2275

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