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The San Bernardino County Sun from San Bernardino, California • Page 16

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San Bernardino, California
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16
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1-2 THE SUN-mEGIUM Svn6ay, 0t. 11,1170 SMI 72 What a liiffrn'iicc a Year Makes for John Itulston Stanford coach was weeping in defeat a year ago in Coliseum Strikes: Ducks 4L Bruins 40 i V'" v- v. Trojan Upvndvd USC's Rod AlrNfill is liiniHl upside down by Slanford de-fpners Jack Scliult, (44) and A Lightning LOS ANGELES (AP). Oregon's astonishing Webfoots scored 20 points in less than five minutes and defeated UCLA with only 30 seconds remaining, 41-40, in a wild Pacific-8 Conference game last night. Trailing 40-21, Oregon suddenly caught fire when senior Tom Blanchard came off the bench and fired touchdown passes of 29 and 40 yards to Bobby Moore to narrow the gap to 40-35.

Sensational sophomore Dan Fouts delivered the executing blow with a 15-yard scoring strike to Greg Spccht. A crowd of 44,722 was on hand and few left the Coliseum as Oregon abruptly turned Hie game around. The victory gave Oregon a 3-1 record in the run for the Hose Bowl and left. UCLA with a 1-1 conference record. Marv Kendricks of UCLA opened the scoring early in the first quarter with a 62-yard run from scrimmage.

But Fouts mounted drives of 60 and 80 yards for a 14-7 lead in the first quarter, personally scoring on 14 and one-yard runs. UCLA narrowed the gap with a 24-yard field goal by Bruce Barnes but a 15-yard run by Moore made it 21-10 and the half ended as Dennis Dummit scored from the one for the Bruins. UCLA cashed in on two grave Oregon errors in the third quarter. Dummit passed 31 yards to Gary Campbell for a touchdown after UCLA recovered a fumbled punt by Oregon. Fouts quickly led his team to the Bruins one but on fouilh down the snap from center was fumbled and UCLA recovered on its four.

College Foolhall Scores Grossinont Knocks The Bruins traveled 96 yards and scored on a Dummit throw of 26 to Terry Vernoy. The lead lengthened to 41-20 on a Dummit 15-yarder to Campbell. It was then that Oregon began its frantic scoring burst. Oregon controlled the ball through most of the first half, but UCLA kept the score close by scoring two touchdowns and a field goal. The first half score was 21-18 with Oregon leading.

28 points in the first half en route to the victory as Bob Durbin score on a two yard run and Tom Madigan on a three yard jaunt. Madigan then passed 11 and seven yards to Steve Dandutis for the halftime margin. Valley College came back in the second half with a fired up offense and Mike Richardson finally got the Indians on the scoreboard with a 59-yard scamper. Brazilian kicker Dave Wilson added the extra point to make it 28-7. Grossmont came right back and Durbin scored on an 11-yard pass from Danny Read.

The Indians narrowed the margin to 34-13 as fleet Donnie tVeslay scored from 12 yards out. Larry Jackson scored with less than a minute remaining to make it 34-20. The middle of the Indian defense, led by Kenny Smith, Sammy Davis, and newcomer Willie Thoma sstopped the Griffins running attack in the second half. One That Caused a Fuss 1 iff'. 3 sJ.j.

DPI Ttlephole Mike Simone (50) as he scorps Trojan's first touchdown in the third ppriod. Stanford won. Newbprry Col. 41, Concord Colleqe Fayetteville 20. St.

Paul's Col I Fisk Univ. 42, Alabama Slate 8 Morehead Stale 24, Kearney St 22 Presbyterian Col. 35, Elon College Sheoherd Col. 34, West Va. Tech.

12 Virginia Union 40. Eliiabeth City 28 West Liberty 17, West Va. State Bluefleld St. 29, Mars Hill 14 Maryville Col. 12, Emory Henry 0 Bridgewaler, Va.

34, Gallaudet Col. 0 Florida AiM 34, Alabama AA.M 16 Furman Univ. 23, Richmond 9 Glenvllla State 19, West Va. Wesley 14 Louisiana Stale 34. Pacific Univ.

0 Norfolk State 21, No. Carolina Can. 7 Salem College 20, Fairmont 9 lampa 18, Norm Texas St. 7 MIDWEST Michigan 29, Purdue 0 Notre Dame 51, Army 10 Iowa 24, Wisconson 14 Kansas 21, Kansas State 15 Minnesota 2.1, Indiana 0 Northwestern 48. Illinois 0 Ohio State 29, Michigan State 0 Oklahoma State 34.

Texas Christian 20 Nebraska 21, Missouri 7 Ohio 17, Dayton 14 Bethany, Kans. 28, Casa Inst. Tech. 4 Illinois College 17, Concordia Col 8 SW Memphis Principia Col. 10 Bullrr 21, Wabash 21 Washmqtnn 4.

Jellerson 14, John Carroll 2 Kent State 2S, West Michigan 22 Marietta Col. 28, Miiam Colleqe 10 Illinois Wesley 57, Millikin Univ 7 Kenvon Colleqe 39, Lake Forest 0 Knox Colleqe 21, Coe Colleqe 13 Marietta Col. 28, Hiram Colleqe 4 Muskmqum Col. 23, Ashland A St. Procnplus Col.

56. Northwest Wis. 0 Wayne Mich. 34, Bradley 17 Wittenberg 30, Danlson Univ. 0 Wooster 14, Ohio Wesleyan 13 Adrian 41, Olivet College 13 Albion 27, Kalamaron Col.

14 Alma Colleqe 3V, Hope College 7 Capital Univ. 16, Heidelberg Cul. 0 Cincinnati 42, Xavier 0 Gustav Adolphus 24, St. John's, Minn. I Hamllno Univ.

41, Augsburg 12 Hillsdale Col. 17, Ohio Northern 7 Jamestown 12, Dickinson Stale 7 Manknto Slate 49, Parsons Colleqe 13 Michigan Tech. 26, St. Cloud Stat 22 Minot State 49, Mnryvllle Slate 7 Nebraska Wesley 6, Huron Colleqe 0 North Dakota 36, So. Dakota Slate 3 No.

Dakota St. 45, Auguslana, S.D. 7 SOUTHWEST Texas 41, Oklahoma 9 Texas Tech. 21, Texas 7 I'ARWEST California 31. Washington 28 Montana 44, Idaho 26 Oregon State 31, Utah 21 Stanford 24, Cal 14 Colorado 61, Iowa State 10 Air Force 24, Tulane 3 New Mexico 40, San Jose State 25 Wyoming 16, Colorado Stat 6 Triumphs In left field Tolan home.

for a single that brought Tolan gut things started for the Reds again in the third when he led off by drawing a walk on a 3-2 pitch. He stole second and two outs later rode home when May lagged an 0-2 pitch over the left field fence just inside the foul line. Suddenly, however, the momentum seemed to shift and it was the Orioles tagging Nolan. Paul Blair, the slender center fielder, started it for Baltimore by beating out a roller down the third base line with one out in the foufth inning for the the fourth inning for the Orioles' first hit. Powell then lugged his over 250-pound frame to the plate and sliced a 20 pilch to the opposite field.

The ball cairied over the left field fence for a home run. Hendricks, who weighs almost 100 pounds less than Powell, then tied it in the fifth inning by drilling Nolan's first pitch over the right field fence for his homer. Palmer, who posted a 20-10 record imL APWnephoto Oreqeo 14 7 1041 UCLA 7 740 UCLA Kendricks 62 run (Barnes kick) Or-Pouts 14 run (kick failed) Ore Fouts 1 run (Moore pass from Fouts) UCLA FG Barnes 24 Ore Moore 15 run (Woodv kick) UCLA Dummit 1 run (Kendricks run) UCLA Campbell 31 pass from Dummit (Christiansen pass from Dummit) UCLA Vernoy 26 pass from Dummit (Barnes kick) UCLA Campbell 15 pass from Dummit (Barnes kick) Ore Moore 29 pass from Blanchard (Woody kick) Ore Moore 40 pass from Blanchard (Woody kick) Ore Specht 15 pass from Fouts (run tailed) Off SBVC Valley College outrushed the Griffins with 125 to 113 yards. However, Madi-gan's first half passing was too much for the Indians to overcome and their season record is now 1-2. Grossmont is 2-1.

In another Mission Conference game, newcomer Saddleback tripped Chai'fey College on a 27-yard field goal by Dick Rothrock, 16-15. In the Desert Conference, Victor Valley upset favored Mt. San Jacinto 13-7 in a game at Hemet High. Chaffey scored 15 points in the first period, but a late game drive was halted by an interception. SBVC 11 7-20 Grossmont 14 14 fj 34 SBVC TD Richardson S9-yd.

run; Wilson kick; Weslay 12-yd. run; Jackson one yard run; Wilson 'kick. Orossmont TD Durbin 2 run; Wilcox kick; Madigan 3-yd. run; Wilcox kick; Dandutis 11 yd. pass from Madiqan; Wilcox kick; Dandutis 7yd.

pass from Madiflan; Wilcox kick; Dubin 11-yd. pass from Read. own three. UCR then went 97 yards in 12 plays with Hooks scoring. With 10 seconds in the half, Highlander quarterback Pete Fulton passed to former Chaffey High star Bob Olson for a 16-yard touchdown to make it 21-13.

Nevada, Las Vegas 7 UC Riverside 7 14 19 021 Nevada TD Buzickl 2, and 9 yard runs) Gilchrist, e-vard run. PAT Hart, kick. Riverside TD Behrens, 32 yard run; Hooks. 1 yard run; Olson, 16 yard pass from Fulton. PAT Carter, 3, kicks.

Medics Lose Tuff Tille in S.13. Arena The Medics lost their tag team title at San Bernardino Arena last night, when Referee Jerry Murdock chose to give Goliath and Black Gordman the deciding fall when two pins were being applied simultaneously. Goliath meets Freddie Blassie next Saturday at the arena. Takachio downed Rocky Montero in the semi-main, Oregon Lumberjack drew with Don Morrow and Don Duffy stopped Silent Earl in 16:11. ROLLER DERBY Hawks vs.

Birds, 2 p.m., Channel 13. DRAG RACING-Special AA fuel altered card at Fontana Raceway on Foothill Boulevard, 4 p.m. KID FOOTBALL Junior All American Conference games at San Bernardino Kirwan Field, 1 p.m. and at Pacific High, 1 and at Ri-alto Colt Park, 1 and at Bar-stow High. 1, 2:30 and 4 p.m.; and at Apple Valley, 1 and 2:30.

SUNSET TOURNEY San Bernardino Colleglates vs. S.B. Padres at 1 p.m., winners of yesterday's game at 3:30, South Colton Park. ALTO RACING Speed Sport News, national roundup, 7 p.m., KCKC (1350). VCR Upsels Nevada, 21-19 Behind Ty Hooks, Canada Trnn SIhIp 28, ('(illtc ,1 Syniciisp Maryland 7 liartinnuth rrinccton (I ('oliinil)ia 2R, Hanover Col lege 21 Cornell .12, Pennsylvania .11 Yale 28, Hrown 0 University Massachusetts HI Pitlshurh Navy 8 Colgate 21, Holy Cross 1.1 Columbia 28, Harvard 21 Delaware 30, Lafayette 20 Dickinson Col.

41, Hv-(ord Col. 1 Maine Marilim 28, Rrlriqpwater, Mass. 30 Npw Hampshire Maine 9 Newark SI. 34, Slony Brook SI 4 Shiopensbtrq 42, Lork Havpn 7 Trenton Stain 28, Curry Collet! 21 Williams College 31, Mlddlebury 14 Rowdoln 34, Amhent 21 Rhode Island 40, Vermont 1.1 West Cliesler 42, Bloomsbuig 0 Adephi 7, F-ordham 7 Central Conn. St 18.

Montclalr 14 Moravian Col. 1, Wagner Opsula Colleqe 32, P. MX. Colleaes 7 WoiChester lech. 19.

Bates Colleoe 12 Call! State, Pa. Sliopory Rock 0 Coast Guard 10, Wesleyan Delaware Val. la. Wilkes Colleoe 10 Stroudshurg 47, Cheyncy State 2 Hamilton Col. 20, Hobart Colleoe 0 Kings Point 17, Drexel Tech.

0 Lebanon Valley 21, Muhlrnberq 8 Milelrsville St. 21. Manslield St. a Rochester 6, Union Cotleqe .1 Snrinqbeld 49, (olhy Colleg 7 Villanova 1, Rulfalo 7 rdmlmio St. 10, Clarion Grove City 14, Juanlla Collefle 14 3d.

Olassboro Slala 0 l.ehiqh 7, 0 Moiwich Univ. 21, Tufts 7 Swarlhmore 14, Franklin Mar 12 Westminster, Pa. 51, Waynesburg 0 Allied 23, St. Lawrence a W. Post 10, Cortland SI.

7 Ithaca IS. Susquehanna 7 Baldwin-Wallace 24. Hnlstia Univ. Tempi 41, Connecticut 23 SOUTH Alabama Vamlerbilt 11 Florida 38, Florida Slate 27 Mississippi 31, C.eorgia 21 South Carolina 35, North Carolina 21 Tennessee 17, Georgia Tech 6 Citadel 10, William Mary 7 Miami, Ohio 10, Marshall Univ. 12 Virginia 40, Virginia Military 10 Wake Forest.

211, Virginia Tech 9 Louisville 14, Tulsa 8 Auburn 41. Clemson 0 Duke 21, West. Virginia 13 Houston University 31, Mississippi St. 14 Ulna State 33, Kentucky Buf knell 21. Davidson Col 20 rrosibtirq St.

1ft, Maryland State 0 Washington. Mo 24, Centre College 13 Hampden Svd'iev 19. Washington Let 0 Baltimore From li 1) alive a season-ending winning streak thai now stretches to 15 victories. And so, when Kohinson came to bat In the seventh it was still 3-3 and the Orioles, who had won their last 11 regular season games and thiee playoff games against Minnesota, needed a run. Robinson got it on a 0-1 pilch, golfing a Nolan serve over the left field fence for his homer.

Palmer, a 6-fool-3, l'JC-pound righthander who usually eats pancakes for breakfast before he pitches, got off to a shaky start but shared the first game heroics with Robinson as he pitched five-hit ball before being relieved by Pete Richert with two out in the ninth. But. before the young righthander, who will be 25 next Thursday, settled down, Hie Reds had struck for I he three runs. The Reds opened up in the first inning with one out when Bobby Tolan lined a 1-2 pitch to right center field for a double. Tolan cruised into third when Tony Perez flied deep to right.

Johnny Bench, the No. 1 bomber in the Cincinnati arsenal, then lined the next pitch By ItYAN REES Sun-Telegram Sports Writer EL CAJON San Bernardino Valley College may have lost the game, 34-20 but the Indians could claim a moral victory by winning the second half by a 20-6 margin. Powerful Grossmont, the defending Mission Conference champions, scored afterward. "The umpire was in the way and later Hendricks blocked the plate, too. "I thought I dragged my arm and leg and I thought I touched the plate, but 1 didn't know." "1 tagged him," contended Hendricks.

"I looked at the ball and prayed it would hurry up and come down. I intended to go to first base with the throw, but I heard Palmer yelling 'here he comes, here he "Then I saw Carbo coming at me. To my mind, there is no doubt I tagged him." The Associated ITess sequence of four pictures, depicting the play from start to finish, shows Hendricks definitely tagging with his gloved hand while holding the ball in his right. Burkhart, a former big league pitcher with the St. Louis Cardinals and Reds, insisted Carbo was tagged.

"It was one of those tough calls," Burkhart said. "I had to call the ball fair or foul first. It was fair by this much (he gestured to indicate about four inches). "I didn't see Carbo coming in. Carbo hit me on the leg.

I fell." Asked how he saw the tag looking over his shoulder, the umpire said, "I don't know it happened so fast." He said Sparky Anderson, the Reds manager, came out and argued that Carbo was not tagged. pared to pilch, the ball trickled out of his hand to the side of the mound. Burkhart ruled the pitch, made to Nolan, a ball. Weaver argued briefly but lost, of the dugout again when Rose was awarded first base after Hendricks had interfered with his bat. Weaver didn't win that argument either.

But neither call resulted in any further difficulties for the Orioles. BALTIMORE CINCINNATI lb III ab Ruford If 4 0 10 Roe rf 3 0 0 0 Blair cf 4 110 Tolan ct 4 110 Powell lb 3 1 1 Peret3b .3 0 0 0 F. Robinson rf 4 0 0 0 Bench 4 0 11 B. Robinson 3b 4 1 1 1 L. May lb 4 12 2 Hendricks 4 111 Carbo If 10 0 0 D.

Johnson 2b 3 0 10 Helms 2b 4 0 10 Belanaer ss 3 0 10 Woodward ss 2 0 0 0 Palmer 4 0 0 0 Cllne oh 10 0 0 Richert 0 0 0 0 Chaney 0 0 0 0 Stewart ph 10 0 0 Nolan 2 0 0 0 Carroll 0 0 0 0 Bravo ph 10 0 0 Total 1 4 7 4 Total 31 I I 1 Rose awarded first on catcher's Interference. Baltimore MO2lVlOO 4 Cincinnati 102 000 000 3 Robinson, Hendricks. DP Clnclnnentl 1. LOB Baltimore Cincinnati I. 2B Tolan, D.

Johnson. HR L. Mav (1). J. Powell (1), Hendricks (1).

B. Robinson (1). SB Tolan. Nolan. IP ER BB SO Palmer (W, 1 0) 12 3 3 3 5 2 Richert 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 Nllan (L, 0-1) 23 5 4 4 1 7 Carroll 2 13 2 0 0 4 Sav Richert.

WP Palmer. 2.24. A 11,531. (Continued From 1) provoking an excited protest from Manager Sparky Anderson of the Reds and other members of the Reds team. Here was the situation: The score was 3-3, one out in the bottom of the sixlh and Carbo was on third, Tommy Helms on first and Ty (line at bat, pinch-hitting for Woody Woodward.

('line tapped the ball in front of the plate. The ball bounded 30 feet in the air. Hendricks moved out to grab it as Jim Palmer, the Baltimore pitcher, moved in from the mound. Burkhart came out from behind the plate and positioned himself astride the third base foul line in order to see if the ball was fair or foul. At the same time, Carbo made a dash Tor home, sliding at the plate and upending Burkhart.

Hendricks, blocked from a clear tag by the fallen umpire, caught the ball in his bare hand, and according to the photos, reached out with his glove hand to tag Carbo. The sequence shows that Hendricks never changed the ball to his gloved hand. Also, it. appeared that Carbo never touched the plate. Burkhart also seemed to have looked at the tag only after Carbo had passed the plate.

"I never saw the plate," Carbo said in Opener during the regular season, allowed only the sixth inning single by Helms after the first three innings and got the first two outs in the ninth by striking out pinch hitters Jimmy Stewart and Angel Bravo. But when he walked Pete ltose Manager Earl Weaver decided that his right-handed ace had gone far enough. Richert got the call in the bullpen and ended it with one pitch by inducing Tolan to hit a soft liner to shortstop Mark Belanger. While Palmer was getting stronger, Nolan seemed to be weakening and he left when the Orioles threatened again in the seventh following Robinson's homer. The 22-year-old right-hander was charged with all four Baltimore runs, surrendered five hits in his 6 2-3 innings and struck out seven while walking one.

Besides the disputed play at home when Burkhart fell down, there were two minor flurries of excitement created on decisions made by the umpiring crew, working for $7,500 under terms of their new contract. In the fourth inning, as Talnier pre- RIVERSIDE Rich Canada intercepted three passes, and Tyrone Hooks rushed for 110 yards last night to spark UC Riverside to a 21-19 upset win over Nevada, Las Vegas, at the UCR field. Canada made a game-saving pilfer on his own five-yard line with 1:48 remaining in the contest and the Highlanders clinging to a two-point lead. Hooks, a junior will o' wisp, scored on a 19-yard jaunt after a 97-yard drive by the Highlanders in 12 plays in the second period to put the Scots on top for good. The hosts opened the scoring with the game only 18 seconds old.

UCR recovered a fumbled kickoff return and on the second play Bob Behrens ran 32 yards on a wingback reverse for the touchdown. Nevada came back with a fill-yard drive in 13 plays with Steve Rusick hulling over from the seven with 3:37 remaining in the period. The Vegas invaders went ahead 13-7, moving 40 yards in five plays with Mack Gilchrist scoring from five-yards out. Nevada drove deep into UCR territory again before Canada intercepted at his SporlSccuc BASEBALL World Series, 2nd Game; Baltimore at Cincinnati, 9:30 a.m., Channel 4. FOOTBALL Inside Football with George Allen, 10 a.m., followed by NFL Today and 11 a.m.

game between Minnesota and Chicago, Channel Notre Dame in Action, 11 a.m., Channel American Conference football (teams to be announced) 1 p.m., Channel Rams vs. 49'ers, 1 p.m., KMPC, KPRO; Trojan Football USC-Stanford) 4 p.m., Channel UCLA-Oregon films, 4 p.m. Channel NCAA action, films of Saturday's top games, 4 p.m. Channel Tape of USC-Stanford game 10 p.m. Channel 11.

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About The San Bernardino County Sun Archive

Pages Available:
1,350,050
Years Available:
1894-1998