OCR Text |
Show I SPRING VS. FORM j ; .; ' Natural spring Is pitted against perfect per-fect form when Cory of Ontario High school, California and Voorhles of Pomona collego, California, compete against each other in the high junip. They are opposites when Is comes to Jumping. Corey, tho high school boy. has cleared the bar at C foot, 4 inches repeatedly re-peatedly thl3 year. He taKos otr straight in front of the standard, does; not use the scissors or Horlne form, and Is not very consistent in his work. He Is a natural Jumper, his legs are veritable veri-table springs, and, when he learns to lay flat as he crosses the bar, experts ex-perts bellevo he will do C feet, C inches. Voorhles of Pomona, is not a natural Jumper, but ho takes advantage of every calory of energy In him. He runs an unusually long ways before taking tak-ing off. and, when he gets Into the ah- he lays perfectly flat he rolls over tho bar Voorhles recently tied for first with Templeton of Stanford, I whon they both cleared the bar at C foet, 2 Inches. ! Stanford and California will send two star high jumpers to take part in the Pacific Olympic tryouts at Pasadena, Pasa-dena, June 20, in Templeton and Muller. v Muller holds the coast interscnol-astlc interscnol-astlc high Jump mark of C feet, 4 1.-2 Inches. It appoars that. California, the land of high jumpers, the land of Doc Bee-son Bee-son and Horlne, will furnish the United States Olympic team with an avalanche of Jumpers. There are a dozen Jumpers in California Cali-fornia who clear G feot consistently. |