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・ Earl Thomas Conley
・ Earl Thomas Conley discography
・ Earl Thomas with Paddy Milner & the Big Sounds
・ Earl Thompson
・ Earl Thompson (author)
・ Earl Thomson
・ Earl Thorfinn
・ Earl Tilly
・ Earl Torgeson
・ Earl Township
・ Earl Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania
・ Earl Township, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania
・ Earl Township, LaSalle County, Illinois
・ Earl Tupper
・ Earl Turner
Earl Turner (baseball)
・ Earl Turner (film editor)
・ Earl Tylney
・ Earl Tyree
・ Earl Ubell
・ Earl V. Johnson
・ Earl Va'a
・ Earl Valiquette
・ Earl Van Dorn
・ Earl Van Dyke
・ Earl Vann
・ Earl Verney
・ Earl W. Bascom
・ Earl W. Brannon
・ Earl W. Brydges Artpark State Park


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Earl Turner (baseball) : ウィキペディア英語版
Earl Turner (baseball)
Earl Edwin Turner (May 6, 1923 – October 20, 1999) was an American professional baseball player. Turner was a backup catcher in Major League Baseball who played in 42 total games for the Pittsburgh Pirates during the 1948 and 1950 seasons. A native of Pittsfield, Massachusetts, Turner batted and threw right-handed; he stood tall and weighed . He served in the United States Army during World War II.〔(Baseball in Wartime web site )〕
In a two-season MLB career, Turner was a .240 hitter (18 hits in 75 at bats) with three home runs and five RBI. His three homers, all solo shots, were hit in 1950 off Ralph Branca (June 24), Bobby Hogue (July 16, in a game in which Turner went 3-for-4), and Johnny Sain (July 17, his next-to-last Major League game).〔(Retrosheet )〕
Turner retired from pro ball after the 1952 minor league season and died in Lee, Massachusetts, at the age of 76.
==References==


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