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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
i_ Another 'First' . Plan Obedience Training School For Popular L.L Boxer Club r #C he\ DOG TALK - Helmut F. Allmann, of Oceanside, talks to his dogs like m father would to his son. Allmann, training difector of the Long Island Boxer Club, is shown telling his dogs what he wants them to do and putting his dog, Thor, through a routine jumping workout. The Boxer Club is starting an obedience school Tuesday in Westbury. \Marcune, 7-5 Underdog, \sss! _ | Noses Salas in Spiit c. s With Plaudits On Rookie Crop By GEORGE C. BURTON ... BT. PETERSBURG, Wis. -Css ey Stengel moves over to the reg- ular training camp of the Yankees tomorrow from the rookle instruc- tion school at Lake Wales content that the future of the Bronx Bom- bers is not being neglected. O1\ Case and his comchés, Jim Turner, Prank Croselti and Bill Dickey, have been supervising the Lake Wales school and the Yankee pllot was at his oratorical best yes- terday when the writers covering the champs flew over there for a look at the Yankees - of - tomar- row. Of course, Stengel has his fav orites among the young hopefuls and he was eager to point them out, NORM BIEBERN, Bill skowron, Art hult, Tom Kresbach, John mentioned quite frequently by the talkative manager, He's especially high on Slebern, a sx - two 190 - pound outflelder who toiled mt Joplin in the Western As- sociation last year. 'He has ® good eye and doesn't swing at those bad balls,\ Stengel commented And Siebern promptly proved the point by drawing bases on balls in his first two . appearances . at the plate in an informal game Siebern walked 139 times in 137 games at Joplin while hitting .324, scoring 118 runs (lops in the lea« gue), gelting 150 hits, 38 doubles (best in the clecult), six triples and 13 home runs for m total of 234 bases, In addition, he drove in 95 runs. Skowron, is the billiant Kansas City outfielder who won Rookle of the Year honors in the American Association. A former Purdue star, Bkowron led the Association in homers with 31, total bases with 344, runs batted in with 134 and was up among the leaders in hitting at B41. The abundance of outlelders on the Yankee roster obviously is the only thing keeping Skowron from and probably would be able to make most of the other teams in the Majors. ® BCHULT is on the roster and will be brought over to St. Peters- burg. He's been in the Army for two years but boasted a .303 bat- ting mark for Binghamton in the Enmstern League in 1980, A six four Westchester lad, Schult bad 24 homers that season and stands an excellent chance of belng re tained as a reserve. Aprea, a 19 - year - old outfielder | who . graduated from Brooklyn's Samuel J. Tilden High School last Wednesday with a spike wound on his right foot. He's due to report for training with the Binghamton Club on March 20 at Orangeburg, |8.C.; and should be ready for full- {bas got the makings of a long - ball hiter. Aprea was a member of the Glenridge Farmers of the Queens Alliance in 1949 and '80 and last spring led the Tilden nine to the New York City PSAL crown, the first such title ever won by that school. Japan Gives Yale Bust of Kiphuth NEW HAVEN, Conn. (M - Amid! boxer dogs will open on Tuesday at the Raceway Inn on Post Ave. mue in Westbury. By MURRAY ROSE Game little Pat Marcune racked up his sixth straight and most important victory of his career last night when he nosed out former lightweight champion Lauro Salas of tige i history of the: Long I! \ . at “mulling: Chi; 1:11:11 h“: w»: Mexico in a ten rounder in Madison Square Garden. Mar- sored a training school. The club CUNC. a 7 to 5 underdog, won by split decision. The Brooklyn was formed in Babylon eight years DOV weighed 129 3.4 to Salas' 130. mgo but since then the members, Referee Pete Scrlzo voted for have moved their meeting place Matcune, 84-1 while Judge his opponent, be laid back in to Nassag County. Monthly meet. Aldala scored it 6-3-1 for Ping-he first two rounds making Mar- Ings are held at Pelice's Restau- Judge Prank Forbes had. it eXMCHY/cune come to him. He did the rant in Westbury, even, 8-5 in rounds and 6-0 in points/same thing m several o\ the mid- Twenty five owners have regis. Th® AP score card had Sains ahead dle. rounds. tercd to enter their dogs for the 9\ I® strength of a strong f1Dish. Aner two slow rounds. the boys s4-1 training course, Joe Sweeters: of > opened up in the third as Salas It was the fifth time in the last y took the lead for the first time Babylon will be in charge Of 4D® seven weeks that the Garden MAID!working in close andescoring with elass. Helmut Allmann of event was decided by a split vole side in the training director of the|gix of eight boxing writers polled/ngag® the awarthy Mexicen ap. elub, at the ringside thought the blA¢k-ipeared to have gained the upper The L 1. Boker Club, which haired Mexican had won, \hand in the thizd, fourth, and fifth has 80 enrolled mmbrs. is had., Sains, very - downcast, sM14 \I rounds, ed by President Donald Booxbaum, thought I won the fight easy, 1).-- The opening will mark the first {expressions of closer international telations between the United States, and Jaban, Yale accepted yester- 'dry from the Japanese people a [bronze. lifesize bust of Bob Kin- buth, its famed swimming coach. In making the presentation, Ja- panese counsul General Hisanaza| | Shamadru of New York said Kip- huth was being bonored \for the! 111m: and consideratin be has so generously bestowed on the Japs-| nese youth and for the spirit of 'good sportsmanship he has helped to instill in our peonle Dodger P Casey Bubbles Seton Hall Bags Kucks and Sal Apres were names) i The best basketball team iu five, $4-718. the N a new cutive South shead never Big gling 6-11 center, paced Be- tou Hall «ffensive with 21 points while Richie (The Cst) megan added 18 tallies, At Durham. N.C. Dake closed out another successful campaign with a 8154 verdict over Frank McGuire's North Car- Thursday but did not werk out, Mayfield Near Houston Lead HOUSTON (A- Mike Homa, who has not finished higher than advancing, He's apparently rendfimuenm place during three wint-| 'er tour campaigns, fired a three- under-par 80 to tle Cary Middle: coff for the 36-hole lead at 139 as the field swung into today's third round in the $20,000 Houston Open | goif tournament. | A couple of Long Islanders, Shel- [ley Mayfield of Cedarhurst and Al \Brpsch of Garden' City, were with- |tn shouting distance at the end of [Snead, White Sulphur Springs, W. ‘Vl « go. IL., at 142, month, has been sidelined since! 705ch. the Cherry Valley red- head who lead the Mexican open |for three days before blowing sky 'high last week, was further back grouped at 145. .._ = [ime duty by then. Stengel says he! THE 2-¥EAR-OLD Homs was \in trouble on only one hole while Middlecof! was scrambling for a {par 72 on the 7150 - yard Memor- c Middlecoff, _ from . Memphis, Tenn., had shared the first round lead. Thursday with Al Besselink, Grossingers, N. Y., with a five- under 67 Besselink Jumped to a 74 for a 141 that was matched by Bill Nary, Los Angeles and Jim Perrier, San Francisco. Homa shared the day's low score honors with Bob Inman, Tul sa, Okla., who posted his 69 when only nine players remained on the course. Inman had a 74 Thursday. The New Yorker thought be had both his woods and putter work Ing pretty well. ''This was . my {best round this winter,\ he said. \The greens were a bit slow but did not give too much trouble.\ I Scholastic Results Central 83, Preeport 64. Hempstead 54, Sewanhake 44 Lawrence 50, Mepham Oeernaide 86, K. Recki - hfim a Levitt 'snarr HUNTER Worms (Long Retsh 11 | SAN BERNARDINO, Calif, n Sy \ \ Billy Munter, shortstop who cost the St. Louls Browns a reported $145,000 in cash and player talent, [looks \sharp\ to manager Marty Marion, curt sa, mesin 56. Glen Cove #7, Mazhamet #1, Port Washington \58 Mineoia 49. of Westbury, Mrs. Lena Ludwig, dON'! know when the referee and of Bt. Albans, who is Will give me & decision In dog how circles, is vice-presi. M*TCune'® a good fighter but he- dent and Mrs. Tinky Jaffe of West.30°5N't punch hard. Most of his bury is secretary. Mrs. Dee Mais. punches hit me on the arms. 1 was never burt.\ el of Baldwin is the lrevurtr. Marcune, as bappy as Salas was By CHARLEY FEENEY Barbara Romack In Golf Finals ORMOND BEACH, Fis, \A - Barbara Romack, medalist and do-i tending champion from Bacramen- to, Calif., won ber second shot mt) South Atiantic Women's gol) title. yesterday. alight, 20-year-old | Randolph, Colum- 4 and 3, in an who!” over the Ellinor Qountry Club course. l / least six rounds. His style purzled me for a while but I thought 1 had him from the fifth round om \I GOT him a good lefrigh combination in the fifth round and thought he was going to go from then on. But he takes a good punch \* j Marcune said he would like to fight lightweight champion Jimmy Carter soon. When be heard this, Balas said \he's crazy. Carter will murder; him.\ Westerner) Balas won once and lost twice} to Carter in tiile fights. | BALAB, generally a very aggres- sive mauler, fought a pecultaz fight, at times, Instead of mwarmingaall/ PHOENIX, Aris. - Leo Dur- ocher fatly mtated today he - wants Alvin Dark, the Giants' captain and shortsiop, to play second base this season, \Till be for the good of the team,\ Leo maid. \We'd be much stronger with Alvin at second and with this kid (Dary!) Spencer at short.\ For the first time, Durocher revealed that he had a personal talk with Dark during the winter about the awlich. \I didn't ask him to gtve me an answer right away,\ Durocher said. \Natural ty, I could just tell Alvin to play second and that would be that. But % wast him to .be content TAIv—fin Reluctant to Change Position a $ Durocher's Persuasiveness Tested in Dark Case talk with Dark when he arrives [young Rye, N. Y., professional) [yesterday's round. Mayfield, young [Rockaway Hunting Club profession Jul. finished in a tie with Sam and Jackson Bradley, Chica- A TRIO OF new arrivals at the Yankee camp engage in limbering up exercises for the first time wader the warm Florida sun. Leff io right Loren Babe, infielder; Ed Lopat, Y and catcher Charles Silvers. Babe and Silvera reported for the first time yester INP Photo. Niagara With 18-5 In NIT Field, 3 Open Niagara University joined the field for the,National Invitation Basketball Tournament yester- day, leaving three open berths which tournament director Ass fore the weekend is over. Schools which earlier accepted bids. to the 1?-team tourney at New York's Madison Square Gar- den March 7-14 are La Salle, Seton Hall, Western Kentucky, Manhattan, Louisville, Duquesne, Tulsa, and St. Johns. This will be the second N-L-T appearance for Niagara whose 1952-53 record ahows 18 victories, five defeats and three regularly» scheduled games left to play. Name Russell Coach of Year John (Honey) Russell, coach of undefeated and top - ranked Seton Hall, was named \coach of the year'\ today by the Metropoli- tan Basketball Writers Association. Beton Hall, No. 1 in the Associ- ated Press poll for the last six weeks, is trying to finish the regu- lar season without a loss, giving the team a 30-0 record. It's the only undefeated major quintet in/ the country, © Russell, who is just rounding out his 11th year as coach at the South Orange, N. J., institution, had a perfect record in 1939 - 40 when his boys won 19 in a row. The team also had a perfect 19 - 0 mazk in 1040 - 41, but lost in the second round of the National Invi- tation Tournament. An outstanding professional play- er, Ruésell went to Seton Hall as basketbail mentor in 1936 and| coached there through 1943, Af, ter a period in the service apd a brief coaching fling In the Profes- sonal Basketball Association of America, he rejoined the Piratesi in 1949. Russell's present team, built around the six-foot-11 Walt Dukes, ° (has compiled a 76-11 record in three seasons. Russell has | been Inamed East comch for the annual East-West all - star game at Ma- dison Square Garden March 28. Winner of last year's award was 'Dudey Moore of Duquesne, boast my original offer,\ the Gi- ants\ president sald. \It's up to awitch \from short to second ds Dark's arrival ia uncertain purp u,, » not hari \Dark has the speed he's reported to be a stubbare Dark with Vice and he shou)d make 15 less er- beldont. “as.” “PM tors,\ Lee said. \The only thing But, nevertheless, Dark will Feeney on “M he has to learn is the pivoi. That sign soemer or and that's L“!- . They fated agree won't be bard for him '* when Leo plane to wpen it time to Durocher is firmly cenvinced nI-m-d-flnd-z «pen up a that Spencer can handle the job Lake: Charles, Lo., the import- captain, at shortstop. But his immediate ance of his secomi hase. “if-Ml\: problem is to convince Dark, the As tar as a memey prob contract Giant's lone holdewt, that he will- 'lems, Durocher is leaving that The Olants' best offer Bot be reducing himself by mev- wp to the front office. 333,000. ing to second base, L2) President Horace Stomcham Fut. eventually Like all ball pisyers, Dark yesterday sald ho and Dark were Dark will get togother. takes pride in his play. Dark silll \far apart\ on terms. Stgme- lew with the problem is Duroch- may feel that by meving ovec. ham said Alrin is petting 100 per or. And #. will for a rookle, he's losing prestige. cent more than he racefred when shrewdness to Durocher plans to hage long he was with the Braves, \I wen't second base in 27th Victory. (0) Def Bushnell said would be filled be-) § southpaw ace, y. Lopat reported By WILL GRIMSLEY son at Madison Square Garden. meter champion, % {mile relay team, Tn the first two races, Whitfield, 509 meters. « 800 meters and the * these events are: 500 meters, 1:04. Short and Whitfield: 800 meters in 10472. relay . will be - Andy - Stanfield, George Rhoden and Herb McKen- ley, Olympic veterans all. ' Whittield's chances of a record- shattering performance have been heightened by the mppearance in the field of Reggle Pearman, the 28 - year - old Jamaica, L. cam- paigner who holds the National AAU outdoor 300 meter title. Pearman has served notice that he will run in both the half - mile and the Casey 600 ana that if mar- velous Mal wins the latter he'll have to do it in less th \That's what T'll run it in, Reggie. 1:10. says THE PIONEER CLUB veteran beat Whitfield in the Metropolitan AAU 600 early in the season but lost to him in a virtual dead bent in the National AAU, although he ran his best race at the distance In 1:10.4 A great deal of Interest will be centered, too, on the mile and two- mile runs, where records also will be in danger. Horace Ashenfelter, the FBI ag- ent who won the Olympic steeple chase crown, will be gunning for the two mile indoor mark of 8:60.1, set by Pred Wilt a year ago. His main opposition will come from (Germany's greatest distance run- ner. Herbert Schade, beaten sound- ly by Ashenfelter in the National AAU three - mile. Another contend- ler will be Georgetown's 104A champion at the distance, Joe La- Plerze. rast Arnold #2, Kings Point HL (OT). Poet bees t wires o. To. Rew ave an oC '~ Marvelous Mal To Seek Triple The fluid - running Olympic 800 prime cond- ton, bas outlined an ambitious eve- for himself, beginning - with the half - mile rm at $:36 P.M. CEST). An hour lter he'll run jn the 600 - yard event and at 11:10 P.M. climax his mighty effort as a member of the Grand Street Boys with seven straight victories to his credit, has announced he'll also be shooting for the world record in the THE PRESENT world marks for 4, set by Wesley Wallace, 1839; 600 yards, 1:10.2, set by John Borl- can, 1941, later equalled by Hugh 1:50, and 880 yards, 1:50.5, both set by Borican in 1942; and the mile relay, 3:17.2, set by Georgetown Whitfield's running mates in the ably certain of going 'with four starters certain Btrictly on past performances in the majors, not in the minors, the (Dodgers do have a quartet that figures to win 60 games. PREACHER ROE, who won 15 jor more for three straight years before dipping to 11 last season, can be spotted properly to win 15 again with this year's staff, Carl Erskine won 30 games the past two seasons so he should again be good for 15. Billy Loes won 13 his first year and with that season under his belt can be counted on to add at least two more. Rounding out the quartet is Russ Meyez, an estab lished winner for several seasons. All this and Joe Black, too. He won 15 as a relief specialist last year and is there any reason to believe he won't win that any again jas a starter - reliever this season? That's 75 wins right there and 96 was good enough for the charm» plonship last year. If he carries 11 pitchers, as he probably will, Dressen need get only 21 more from the remaining sox to equal last year's total. In that remaining group of six will be ove 1 Ralph B , Mal Whitfield's fron man triple assignment, in which he'll go for five world records, promises the main excitement today in toe Knights of Columbus games, clos- Ing the Indoor track and field sea- Clem Labine, Ben Wade, Johnny Rutherford and Jim Hughes, who accounted for 32 wins and all but Hughes had a disppointing year. ONE THING is sure. The club will not let a bunch of young pitch- ers waste away on the bench, When cutting down time comes someone will have to go and it will prob- aby be most of the kids. Then if 'a weak spot should develop later, Dressen can always put in a quick call for one of the kids who impres- sed him in spring training. Last year, when the pitching weakened in the stretch, Charlie had to bring in such unknowns as Joe Landrum, Ron Negray and Jim Hughes. This year if the same situation develops, he'll know some- thing about the guys he will be \ {asking for. Of course, one or two of the youngsters might stick but when [Dressen launched the intra squad game here yesterday he was think Ing, too, of the future. He got quite an eyeful. ,| Milliken ang Mickens put on quite a show as the team managed , by Roy Campsnella nipped, Duke 8nider's team, 1 - 0. Dick Williams' homer decided the game. event ° | Connecticut Team Wins The Connecticut Women's Swimming League {eam was awarded the National Junigr 150- yard medley relay title last night at Brooklyn Tech High School ms an fMegal breaststroke kick disqualified the winning Wom. en's City Club of Detroit, Mich, The Connecticut entry won the forfelt decision by a touch over the Ohrbach A.A. combination of - Gloria - Rosky . (Maspeth), Margaret Landers (Bay Ridge) and Katherine Laughlin (Patch ogue) in the time of 1:42.3. In the Metropolitan Junior championships, the Women's Swimming Association splashed home with three titles, Nancy Lynch of Ridgewood finished six yards in front of Susa Rebbins to annex the breaststroke event, clocked In 3:13.3. Gloria Fincher of Kew Gardens Hills scored a hairsbreadth victory over Elaine Gini in the 200-yard backstroke and Jean Murphy captured the 200-yard freestyle event in 2 min- utes, 47 seconds. Deama Collings of the Fiush- Img YMCA paced the field in the 100-yard freestyle novice race to win in the time of 1:14, defent- Ing Carol Engelbrecht of the Or- bach squad. Rangers Im\.MOrhhy in Toronto