Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 54, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 May 1936 — Page 18

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By Eddie Ash DAY OF UPSETS IN THE MAJORS m m m LUCK FORSAKES GOLFER LITTLE

N ow that the tail-end Dodgers boast of a win over Dizzy Dean and the Cards maybe the Brooklyn bosses will call in their scouts from the semi-pro fields. . . . Chick Frasier, ivory hunter, has been combing the sandlots of Chicago for talent. ... And that club is supposed to send help to the local Indians. / Even the lowly Browns turned on the chesty Yankees yesterday. . . . Murderers’ row was handcuffed and took a shellacking. . . . With big league leaders losing, the baseball bookies cleaned up as all “combinations” were knocked in. Apparently Lady Luck has deserted Lawson Little, the golf wizard. . . . The double winner of American and British amateur titles, quit Stanford University, got married, turned pro and then failed to qualify for the National Open! . . . It’s tough to go into a slump after you get hitched. a tt tt a a it r T''HE Western League opened Its fifty-first season with night games A m all parks. . . . That's going the A. A. one better, which opened on the Sabbath. Chicago writers describe the Cubs as dejected and subdued. . . . Well, perhaps Arkansas Lon Warneke will puli 'em out of it today. . . . He’s due to face the Giants. Old Diz, the Voice of St. Louis, will have a hard time explaining how he was smacked for 13 blows yesterday. . . . Watch out for another explosion in the Gas House. . . . Ali Baba (Harry Ezikian), the wrestling champ, was attached to the submarine base at New London during his days as a U. S. sailor.

The Detroit Tigers blanked Boston’s Golden Red Sox yesterday and broke a fourth-place tie with the White Sox. Don’t sell the Tiger tail short. The Giants won four pennants in a row, 1021 to 1924, inclusive. a tt a AFTER his Browns squelched the haughty Yankees in St. Louis yesterday, Manager Hornsby emerged Irorp the ball park dressed in brown from head to foot. It’s mighty sweet to take one from the . league leaders after losing 13 consecutive games. And so Rogers put on the dog. tt it it Prosperity note—Lafayette had its biggest baseball "gate” in 15 years last Sunday when the hometown Red Sox defeated the Richmond Kautskys in an IndianaOhio League tilt. . . Carmen Hill, former Indianapolis and big league chucker, twirled for the Sox, and caught two Kautskys napping off first. . . Five double plays were made, proving the semi-pros know how to throw that apple. tt n tt Wot grounds at Milwaukee gave the Indianapolis Indians a day off yesterday. . . Between off-days and days off, the Redskins arc having a peck o’ trouble. . . (let going, boys. ... A couple o’ wins and the fans will begin to exercise their voices for the night opener here next Tuesday. tt n tt IT took 22 innings, but the fighting Colonels of or Kaintuck ; finally tucked one away at St. Paul yesterday and snapped the Apostles’ victory streak at 16 straight. . . ' James (Choppie) Adair, Louisville second sacker, blasted a circuit Avallop in the eleventh to win, G-5. . . On Monday the Saints edged the Colonels in 11 rounds, 3-2. Calendar AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Won. Lost. Tct St. Paul 21 a .80S Kansas City 15 7 .682 Milwaukee 15 8 .652 Minneapolis 14 0 -609 Louisville 11 16 .40 1 INDIANAPOLIS 6 13 .316 Columbus 2 18 .280 Toledo 5 18 .217 AMERICAN LEAGUE Won. Lost. Pet. New York 17 8 .680 Boston 17 9 .654 Cleveland 15 9 .62n Detroit 12 It .522 Chtcngo 10 10 .500 Washington 13 14 .481 Philadelphia 8 15 .348 St. Louis 4 20 .167 NATIONAL LEAGUE Won. Lost. Pet. St. Louis 14 8 .636 Pittsburgh 12 9 .571 New York 13 10 .565 Chicago 12 11 .522 Cincinnati 12 13 .480 Boston 10 12 .455 Brooklyn 10 14 .417 Philadelphia •• ■ 10 16 .385 Games Today AMERICAN ASSOCIATION INDIANAPOLIS at Milwaukee. Louisville at St. Paul. Columbus at Kansas city. Toledo at Minneapolis. AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston at Detroit. New York at St. Louis. Philadelphia at Cleveland. Washington at Chicago. NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago at New York. St. Louis at Brooklyn. Pittsburgh at Boston. Cincinnati at Philadelphia. Results Yesterday AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Toledo 100 131 000— 6 10 2 Minneapolis 010 052 12x—11 17 0 Smoll. Boone and Wlnton; Bean. W Rvan and George. (Eleven Inningsi Louisville . 040 010 000 01— 6 11 t St Paul 01.1 300 000 00 - 5 9 2 Schaefer, Lamastcr and Thompson. Rtnghofer; Rignev. FiscTier and Pasek. Fenner. Columbus no nno oni— 3 10 3 Kansas City . .. 410 000 POx— 5 7 1 Cox, Macon. Potter and Owen; Niggellng and Madjeski. Indianapolis at Milwaukee, wet grounds NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincinnati 100 030 200— 6 9 a Philadelphia . . 000 103 000— 4 9 1 Grissom. Fray and lombardi, Jorgens E. Moore and Wilson. (Ten Innings: Tie; Darknessl Pitt burgh . ..nno 400 002 0- 6 11 (, Boston 030 000 300 0— 613 It Blur ion. Weaver. Bush and PaddenMcCloakev. Blanche. R. Smith. Cantwell and Lopez. St. Loula 100 000 100 2 4 9 Brooklvn 300 101 OOx— 5 13 2 J Dean and Osrodowski: Brandt. Butcher and Berres. Chicago 200 010 010— 4 14 0 New York 002 200 001— 5 8 3 French Hensha?'. Root and Hartnett O Dea; Castleman, A. Smith and Mancuso. AMERICAN LE.vGI E Boston 000 000 000— 0 3 2 f>' ro „ 301 010 OOx— 5 8 1 Icociiran'e, e “ * nd * rren: Sorren and New York 000 000 000-_ 0 8 2 •• 340 000 00x-- 7 11 1 .nd 01uU.n! Udley and DiCkev; Thom * s Washington at Chicago, wet grounds. Philadelphia at Cleveland.- rain. backaches KIDNEY DISORDERS corrected by taking diurex Sold and Guaranteed HAAG’S Cut Price Drugs

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JOHNNY KRUKEMEIER, above, former city Golden Gloves champion, is to return to, the ring after several months’ absence when he opposes Bill Wilson, Lafayette lightweight king, in a feature bout on the amateur program at the Armory Friday night. Harry Brown, welterweight, and Elza Thompson, heavyweight, other local champs, also are on the card.

I. U. Hurlers Give Rivals Single Hit Beat Sycamores, 7-1; Oppose Butler Here Today. Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., May 13. Indiana University's baseball team invades Butler University today after handing the Indiana State Teachers a 7-to-l defeat here yesterday. Two I. U. pitchers, Adler and Hosier, worked on the mound and limited the Sycamores to a single hit. The Hoosiers collected 11 safeties off Stockram and Carr and registered five runs in the sixth inning. Stockram obtained Indiana State’s lone hit in the third inning off Adler. Louis Grieger and Hosier will be ready to face the Bulldogs today. Score: Indiana State 001 000 000— 1 1 2 Indiana U 000 150 lOx— 7 113 Stockram. Carr and Waters; Adler, Hosier and Wilson, Grieger. Danville Defeated by Silent Hoosiers With Fields turning back the Danville High School batters with one hit, the Silent Hoosiers won the first game of the series, 12 to 4. yesterday at the School for the Deaf diamond. The winning pitcher struck out 12 batters. Hendrix clouted a home run for the winners in the first inning and Gall starred with three hits, including a triple. The teams will clash again tomorrow at Danville. Scoie: Danville 201 010 0— 4 1 5 Silent Hoosiers 610 005 x—l 212 2 E lis and Downard; Fields aud Martin. Coach Collard's Leg Broken by Foul Ball By I nited Press BOSTON, May 13.—Merrill (Mel) Coliard, Ecston University baseball coach, suffered a broken right leg when shit by a batted ball during practice before yesterday's game with William and Mary College. A foul from the bat of George Ba<4?r, Boston player, struck Collaid, who was standing behind third base during batting practice. He passed it off as a shin bruise and coached his team from the bench throughout the game, which William and Mary won, 6 to 5. But X-rays taken last night disclosed tne fracture.

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. Indianapolis Times Sports

PAGE 18

BROWNS RESUME TROUBLE-MAKER ROLE

Begin Afresh After Spilling | Loop Leaders Hornsby Uncovers Starting Hurier as Al Thomas Blanks Yankees. j By United Press NEW YORK, May 13.—The St. Louis Browns just couldn’t go on losing forever and it probably gave 1 Manager Rogers Hornsby a lot more satisfaction to snap the Brownies 13-game losing streak at the expense of the league-leading New York Yankees than any other team in the circuit. Noted trouble makers —in the past—for pennant contenders, the Browns stepped out of role on their recent road trip by dropping a pair of lilts to each of the Yankees, the Boston Red Sox and the Cleveland Indians, the three clubs who have held the American leadership since April 27. Also the 7-0 shutout victory over the Yanks yesterday uncovered lor the Rajah a, new starting pitcher —AI Thomas, who set Joe McCarthy's new ‘‘murderers’ row” back with six hits. Thomas is a veteran of 35 who has been bounced around the majors. It was his first assignment with the Browns. . Fat Muffs Big Chance However, the loss may have paved the way out for Pat ißluboer) Malone. Joe McCarthy apparently figured that if Pat was good for any wins this season, he could hardly miss agamst the Browns I who hadn’t won a game since April 25 when Mahafley stopped the Cleveland Indians. But Pat was in hot water from the start, and was yanked in the second. Victor Sorrell, bespectacled veteran, gave up only three hits as the Detroit Tigers shut out the secondplace Boston Red Sox, 5 to 0. Goose Goslin led the Tiger attack against Wes Ferrell with a homer and a double. Washington at Chicago and Philadelphia at Cleveland were rained out. Dodgers Bombard Dean In the National, the Brooklyn Dodgers climbed all over Dizzy Dean and pounded out a 5-to-2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals, which enabled them to climb out of the cellar. Ed Brandt, the winning pitcher, stopped the Cards’ winning streak at five straight. The New York Giants went into a virtual tie with the Pittsburgh Pirates for second place by scoring a 5-to-4 win over the Chicago Cubs. Little Mcl Ott, who homered in the ninth to win for the Giants the day previously, scored the winning run against the Cubs. Deadlocked 4-all, Ott opened the ninth with a single, stole second and came home on Jackson’s single. Smith, who relieved Castleman, was the winning pitcher. Riggs Conics Through A potent single by Lew Riggs in the seventh which drove in two | runs enabled the Cincinnati Reds ! to defeat the Philadelphia Phillies, I 6 to 4. The game between the secondplade Pittsburgh Pira<-'< and the Boston Bees a 6-6 tie. Coming from be' ~ the Pirates tied it up in the ninth when Lucas, pinch hitting with the bases full, singled to drive ir. two runs. Darkness forced postponement at the end. of the tenth.. Brubaker and Cuccinello homered. Greyhounds Trim Ball State Squad Errors Contribute to 4-1 Victory Margin. Indiana Central triumphed over Eall State Teachers, 4 to 1, yesterday afternoon at the University Heights diamond in the second game bf the series. Each team gathered six safe hits, | but the Greyhounds took advantage of Cardinal errors in the sixth in- j Ding to clinch the game. Two hits and a pair cf miscues by the visit- I ors enabled Coach Harry Good’s ; squad to tally three times. Keene blanked the invaders until | the ninth frame when R. Dudicel tripled and M. Rudicel singled for the only run. Score: Ball State COO 000 001—1 6 3 Indiana Central ... . (110 003 OOx—4 6 1 Richardson and Thompson: Keene and ! Collier. EMIL DLSEK WINS By United Press NEW HAVEN, Conn.. May 13. Emil Dusek. Omaha grappler, won over Jack Donovan of Boston in the feature. attraction of the local wrestling show last night. MARTIN PINS COHEN NEW YORK. May 13.—Max Martin of Denver tossed Sammy Cohen of New York in the main event of | the wrestling show here last night. FREE—to Victims of Stomach Uleers Due to Acidity I Here’s a treatment so good it has j brought over 54.000 letters of praise i from victims of stomach ulcers, gas, pain, heartburn, nausea, vomiting or other distress . due to hyperacidity. It is based on a physician’s prescription. Called Udga. Its makers are so proud of it they want : you to try it FREE. Safe, pleasant, quick. Get generous free trial package cf Udga before supply is exhausted. Call for it TODAY at Hook Drug Stores and Haag Drug Stores. If you can't come to above stores*, get 1 t DGA at low cost at your own. drug- j gist’s. Money back if not delighted ; with results.—Adv.

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 1936

Former Hoosier Returns With Flashy Mount

Louis Begins Grind for Schmeling Go Joe Celebrates Birthday in Camp; Belts Awarded. By United Press LAKEWOOD, N. J., May 13. Joe Louis celebrated his twentysecond birthday today by going into serious training for his bout with Max Schmeling in Yankee Stadium June 18. Before he boxed a round with a sparring partner in the late afternoon, Joe was to be presented with a gold belt by Nat Fleischer, editor of Ring, for having done more for the boxing game in 1935 than any other fighter. The presentation was to be made at Joe’s birthday dinner tendered by Promoter Mike Jacobs for ring notables and sports writers. James J. Braddock was to be given a belt emblematic of the world's heavyweight championship, and Tony Canzoneri was to get one for Jkeeping the lightweignt division active during the last year. Louis and his retinue of managers, trainers, bodyguards, press agents, and a cook arrived by automobile late yesterday from Lafayetville, N. Y., his early training site. Joe s wife did not accompany him, and she will not visit the camp until the day before the fight with Schmeling.

Reno 1-Up in Two-Hit Club

MARVIN RENO is one up on Ralph Shearer in the standing of the Two-Hit Club at Tech High School. For the third time this season, Reno restricted opposing batsmen to a pair of safe blows yesterday afternoon as Ben Davis bowed to the East Siders, 11 to 1. It was Tech's seventh consecutive victory since baseball waS revived at the school this season and the fifth time that Big Green rivals have been ilmited to two paltry bingles. Shearer is credited with the other two achievements. Reno blanked the Giants until the last frame while his mates were swatting the offerings of Reynolds and KimmeW for 13 safeties. Emmett McCleerey and Keith Jackson led the winners’ attack at the plate. Score: Ben Davis 000 000 1— 1 2 o Tech 013 610 x—ll 13 3 Reynolds. Kimmell and Buzzard; Reno and Stoshitch. FLARES IS FIRST IN NEWMARKET STAKES By United Press NEWMARKET, Eng., May 13. William Woodward’s Flares w'on the Newmarket Stakes today. The Woodward horse finished ahead of A. Gordon Smith’s Fearless Fox. Lord Carnarvon’s His Grace was third in the field of eight which included King Edward’s Fairey. The horses carried 122 pounds. O’GORMAN, FOX DRAW NEW YORK. May 13.—Joe O’Gorman. Boston lightweight, earned a draw with Lew Fox of New York in a six-round windup bout here last night.

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V\7'ILBUR SHAW, California * ’ race driver who introduced the crash helmet to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway several years ago, has stepped to the fore with the latest design in chargers. It is the ultra-modern Offenhau-ser-motored car. pictured above. The veteran pilot aroused unusual interest at Gasoline Alley yesterday when he unloaded one of the most radical departures from the usual type of body design seen at the Speedway. Shaw (above, right) designed the entire car with the aid of his riding mechanic, Myron Stevens (left), who is a metal expert. The former

Bold Venture Tops Entry List for Preakness Field Derby Winner Favored t)ver 16 Probable Rivals in Pimlico Feature; Brevity Not Nominated. By United Press BALTIMORE. Md„ May 13.—Seventeen 3-year-olds headed bv the Kentucky Derby winner, Bold Venture, today made up the prosDective field for the forty-sixth running of the $25,000 added Preakness Stakes at Pimlico track Saturday. With Raymond (Sonny) Workman scheduled to ride the Morton L. Schwartz colt, Bold Venture probably will go to the post an odds on favorite to be the fifth horse in history to capture both the Derby and the Preakness. • ——

Workman was engaged by Schwartz’s trainer, Max Hirsch, after Ira Hanford drew a 15-day suspension for rough riding in winning the Derby. Bold Venture will be shipped from Belmont Park, N. Y., tomorrow in the same car with Brookmeade Stable’s Corundum. Greentree Stable’s Memory Book had a satisfactory workout at Belmont yesterday and was pronounced a positive Preakness starter. Brevity, the Kentucky Derby favorite, which finished second, • was the only prominent 3-year-old not nominated for the Preakness, and Col. E. R. Bradley announced that he would not send Bien Joli to Baltimore, preferring to keep him at Belmont for the $20,009 Withers Stake, May 23. Bradley will depend upon Bow and Arrow, already at Pimlico, to take the Preakness Stake. Expected starters for the $25,000 Preakhess prize are: Granville, Grand Slam, Bow and Arrow, Delphinium, Memory Book, Brush Hook, Jean Bart, Giant Killer, He Did, Bold Venture, Bright Light, Transporter, Knight Warrior, Snark, Teufel, Corundum and Hollyrood. SHORTRIDGE SQUAD IN TIE WITH ARTISIANS The Shortridge High School golf team played to a tie match yesterday with Artesian strokers at Martinsville. Morey of Martinsville and Truitt of Shortridge fired 84s to lead the field. In match play, Morey (M) defeated Truitt (S), 2 to 1; Meyers (S) defeated Pruitt (M), 2 to 1; Owens (S) defeated Pearcy (M), 3 to 0, and Garr (M) defeated Nelson (S), 3 to 0. The Blue Devil golfers are to play a return engagement with the Artesians on the Speedway course Friday.

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Shelbyvilie pilot, who now resides in California, is to make his 1936 bid for 500-mile fame in his own mount, new in every detail. He chased Lou Meyer across the line in 1933 and Kelly Petillo last year. He introduces for the first time a radiator which intercepts air from beneath the streamlined nose of the car. Shaw expects to “break in” the new motor this week and be ready Saturday to qualify for the May 30 race. Shaw injured his hand recently while preparing his new “buggy,” and although he has not regained his full grip, he expects the member to be in shape for the rigorous grind.

Stengel, Durocher Exchange Punches Fist Fight Follows Game in Brooklyn. By United Press NEW YORK, May 13.—Manager Casey Stengel of the Brooklyn Dodgers and Leo Durocher, St. Louis Cardinals’ shortstop, traded a few blows under the grand stand after yesterday’s game. The clash climaxed an argument they had on the playing field. This resulted in a challenge to fight. Both landed a few light blows, but members of the teams separated them before any damage was done. It was believed the battle was of such a minor nature that President Ford Frick probably would ignore it. German Heavy Fails to Last Round One By United Press LOS ANGELES, May 13.—Hank Hankinson, Akron (O.) heavyweight, stemmed a foreign invasion last night by scoring a first-round technical knockout over Karl Walker, German battler, in their scheduled 10-round bout. The Ohio Swede dropped Walker five times before knocking him out after two minutes and 47 seconds. Walker weighed 189 and Hankinson 220.

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Another Bagby on Mound Sixteen years ago Cleveland won the American League pennant and the World Series. Jim Bagby was one of the Buckeyes' star pitchers. Now Jim Bagby Jr. is a hurier in the Piedmont League.

State Prep Golf Schedule Drawn Trester Announces Tourney Starting Times. Starting times for the state high school golf tournament, drawn by lot, were announced today by Commissioner Arthur Trester of the I. H. S. A. A. Forty-six teams are to compete Saturday at Speedway course. Trester warned that teams not reporting acccording to schedule will forfeit their right to participate. Schedule: 8 A. M.—Kokomo, Lafayette, Shortridge and Franklin. B:2o—Greensburg, West Lafayette. Martinsville and Columbus. B:4o—Muncie. Warren Central, Manual (Indpls.l and Crawfordsville. 9:oo—Newcastle, Washington (Indpls.), Marlon and Elwood. 9:20 —Plainfield, Greencastle, Tech. (Indpls). and Broad Ripply. 9:4o—Richmond, Hammond, Peru and Central of South Bend. 10:00—Huntington, Elmhurst of Ft. Wayne, Riley of South Bend and Connersvllle. 10:20—Logansport, Bedford, Scottsburg and Auburn. 10:40—Silver Creek, Hobart, Seymour and Rochester. 11:00—State Laboratory of Terre Haute, Valparaiso, Attica and batesville. 11:20—Michigan City, Bluffton, Mishawaka and Fowler. 11:40—Wiley of Terre Haute and Griffith. BOILERMAKERS SHADED BY ILLINI SQUAD, 2-1 Times Special LAFAYETTE. Ind., May 13.—Murray Franklin, University of Illinois third baseman, provided the punch that enabled Hale Swanson to win a pitchers’ battle from Bob Rosser of Purdue, 2 to 1. The Illini chalked up their eighth victory in nine Big Ten games as each hurier yielded six hits. Martin hit two triples and scored both of the winners’ runs. Score: Illinois 010 100 000— 2 8 2 Purdue 100 000 000— 1 6 1 Swanson and Daukus; Rosser and Krause. Hanover Defeated by Louisville , 8-6 Times Special * HANOVER. Ind., May 13.—Hanover College was defeated here yesterday, 8 to 6, by the University of Louisville baseball team. It was the fourth consecutive loss for the Panther nine. Score: Louisville 020 100 500—8 7 3 Hanover 100 001 400—6 8 1 Schmidt, Zunny and Steull; Lee, Stuckyard, Stillhammer and Mclntosh

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Wilbur Shaw Arrives With New Charger ‘Vacuum Sweeper’ Radiator Introduced by 1935 Race Runner-Up. by HARRISON MILLER Wilbur Shaw pulled into the Speedway yesterday with the aristocrat of race cars, and the denizens of the roaring road perked up their eyebrows to survey the new' Gilmore charger which embodies innovations in body design and mechanical construction. Bearing the appearance of a gigantic vacuum sweeper, the car has never fired a spark in actual test, but Shaw, formerly of Shelbyvilie, Ind., is staking everything on years of experience. Still bearing factory price tags in many respects, the racer is new from stem to stern and is powered with a four-cylinder Offenhauser motor. "We are going to win the 1936 race,” Shaw informed those who gathered around. But there was neither arrogant boast nor idle prattle in the tone of the suave veteran whose knowledge of motors is founded on years of seasoned driving. Shaw says he has the fastest car on the track, one that will attain a top speed of 160 miles an hour. Interest centers around the new streamlined nose of the charger. Resembling the construction of foreignmake cars, its design is not patterned from other creations. The hood is beveled in a gradual curve from the cowl to the front axle. The grilled screen almost is hidden from view below the front of the car, the chromium-plated bars giving the appearance of a vacuum sweeper. The new design, which, incidentally, Shaw predicts will be adopted by stock car manufacturers, has a two-fold advantage: 1. It will relieve the "drag” below the car and eliminate a certain amount of air friction. 2. It will eliminate the turbulent air currents and wind resistance which most square-faced radiators encounter. Shaw’s Own Design The air will pass through the lower grill and an air shaft to the radiator, Shaw is confident in his assertions that greater speed may be attained and that the lower level at w'hich the air is intercepted will not attract any more heat from the track than do the other cars. The entire car was designed and perfected by Shaw and his riding mechanic, Myron Stevens of LO3 Angeles, who will ride with him this year. The brakes are of his own conception, and new type shock absorbers and spindles have been incorporated in the blue prints. It has a piston displacement of 255 cubic inches. The exhaust pipe is chromiumplated and originates from four outlets on the right side of the hood. Although the car has not been proved nor passed the inspection of the technical committee, Shaw expects to introduce it in competition with the stop watch Saturday during the opening-day qualifymg (Turn to Page Nineteen)

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