Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 March 1939 — Page 7
Resignation
| Is Accepted
p-
p * 9 ket, 38.
|. Resionation Is Submitted by
Pitt Coach After Series Of ‘Incidents.
7”
PITTSBURGH, March 6 (U. P.). —The resignation of Dr. John Bain * (Jock) Sutherland as head football coach at the University ef Pittsburgh was accepted today by Chan-
J Cellor Dr. John G. Bowman. After 15°years as head coach, Dr.
Sutherland asked to be released
from his contract because “the future athletic course is so indefinite
« *and vague at Pitt.
“I know from my conversations that you have no desire to have me stay on under conditions which <Cause me great worry and unhap-
*piness,” Dr. Sutherland wrote in his|
letter of resignation. z Two Meetings Held
® He referred to two meetings last
week, the first at which he verbally asked for acceptance of hy nina; tion and the second meeting at "which the entire athletic setup was
\discussed by Sutherland, Dr. Bow-{
man and athletic department heads.
« Dr. Bowman said he thought “we| had ironed out differences of opin- .
ion” by recent talks. “I ‘tried to meet you half way, more than half way,” Dr." Bowman ‘wrote referring to Thursday afternoon’s meeting when details of the Code Bowman, scholarships, plans for new material and personnel : e discussed for three hours. feel confident that you have
given full and deep thought to the|
whole program,” Dr. Bowman's letJer said. fore, assuming from your spoken word and from your letter that you wish to resign, I accept your resignation from the university by this]
, - letter, effective at once, as you re-
‘quest.” Wishes Him Happiness
| “Let me add a personal word.
+ «hope that you will be very happy
in your new work. You have my good will and my wish always that many victories be yours.”
-* Although Sutherland refused to
comment on his future plans, Dr. Bowman's letter’ was interpreted as ¢ meaning Sutherland may have arranged for another coaching position. Sutherland termed athletic conditions at Pitt intolerable but ab- ' solved the chancellor of any blame. Sutherland’s action was not unex-
pected ds ‘it was known generally
that he resented recent develop-
' aments in which football was made
h rticular target of a plan to|: ite pate] g p Wn is that he ran himself out in {vine |
de-emphasize Pitt sports. It followed two incidents in which football players had rebelled against
Yeunfair” treatment.
Basketball The Falls City team won the North Side sectional of the Dearborn Sunday tournament by defeat~ ying the Fashion Cleaners, 40-32, in ? the final contest. Other tourney scores: © Arlington Market, 45; East Club, 32.
Side Boys
«. 3 Falls City, 2; Universal Carloading, ©
°
I.
A
(forfeit). Fashion Cleaners, chants, 27. Goldsmith Secos, 41; Trimble Oilers. 286. » Falls City, 37%; Arlington Market, 30. Fashion Cleaners, 35: Goldsmith Secos, 33. Yesterday's non-tourney scores at the Dearborn Gym: ? | Mt. Jackson Buddies. Aces, 23. : Blasengym Funeral Home, Oilers, 27. Drikold Refrigerators.
64; Danville Mer-
33; Castleton
32; Texaco
49; Lang's Mar-
Shawnee A. C., 26: Woodstock A. C. 24. Tonight's schedule in the Central States Tournament at the Dearborn . 9 Gym: %7:00—DeGolyer Printers vs. Fashion Cleaner Aces. } 8:00—Eli Lilly vs. Beveridge Paper. 9:00—Kingan Knights vs. Mt. Jackson > Buddies. :
Stewart-Warner cagers shot their way to victory in the Em-Roe state
; basketball tournament at the Hoo-
} sier Athletic Club last night when they nosed out Liehr’s Tavern, 41 to 39, in the final round. The deciding
stilt was settled in the last 10 sec-
onds when Mikel connected for a
field goal te break a 39-all deadlock. The champions earned a chance
x at top honers by thumping the
Royal. Crcwn Colas, 43-to 22, in one semifinal engagement yesterday aft-
° ,ernoon and Liehr’s by turning back
x Michigan, tate
Schwitzer-Cummins, 39 to 28. R. C. A. downed Linton Radio, 26 to 18. in the final round to win the Em-Roe girls’ four-team tournament, which also was conducted at : the Hoosier Athletic Club yesterday. In opening :iilts R. C. A. conquered Real Silk, 26 to 22, and Linton . shaded Delco Remy of Anderson, 29 to 28. H. A. C. girls eked out a 19-to-18 _ decision over the Twenty Grands of Louisville, Ky., in an added attraction.
-
College Scores
‘(Saturday’s Games) STATE COLLEGES
Mich 53; {Arjan and. 4“. A (Dig Shut on hans: Bi, cordia, Ft Wayne, 23. OTHER COLLEGES
43; Con-
ad Carnegie Tech, 33; Penn Stats, 28. C .
ase, 46; Western Reserve, Central, 32; Columbia, Ia., 31. Chicago. : Wisconsin, 33. Col 30: Pennsylvania, 27. ( . 31; Oklahoma Axxies, 28. Dartmouth, Be Brow ? ' John Carroll, 50 } Si Wallace, 28.
Lake Forest. k no Fe Tech, 5 : St. Mary's. Mich., 45. 8): Ohio University, 40. Montana Mon State, 45. BW York niversit. 19; Rutge ahoma City University, any Fort avs ate,
40. 3 Stina, 53; Nebraska, 45. 44: Georgetown, 39. Princeton, "36; Cornel 58: George Washington, 4. Mink. 41; t. Thomas,
St. Vince Rs 4 RL 31. tah ‘Stal Hoh dats 2 and J te ayne, 45; Western, Mich., State Teach1 3 gz. 486; nN mitister, 45.
Vyoming, 40: Co Svea ado, fale, 4% Harvard, 3
0 TEE
Bubatremiog pinpies, rich rashes and other ishes relieved with
Sutherland's As Bull Lea
“With real regret, there-|
1
asking .
roan, Yo "feat Vir<||
Widener Cup at Hialeah Park, Fla,,
By JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer
MIAMI, ,March 6—What nap-
pened to stagehand in the Wicener
Cup Race Saturday? .. . If there ever was a horse that figured to win from here to China it was Stagehand. ... It was his distance, the field was small and he was supposed to be razor sharp. . had been singing praises to Earl Sande for the conditioning john he had done. . . But when the race was over Stagehand was third... You can get any number of explanations for his defeat for the . br without’ even asking. . The ‘one we put the most faith
ning his first start down here. . He was put into a miie and an eighth test three days after he aad been taken off a train. . . To. win
By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent
© HOT SPRINGS, Ark., March €.— Gerald Walker, the happy-go-lucky Mississippi boy who plays outfield for the Chicago White Sox, always wears a smile. But the other night Gerald was smiling bigger than
| usual. He was happier than Huckle-
berry Finn With a fishing pole in his hand. You see, Walker, who was here assisting Rogers Hornsby coach some 125 youngsters with baseball
| aspirations in the Rajah’s diamond
school, thinks he has discovered another Dizzy Dean. His name is Mel Kramer, and he hails from Slater, Mo. “He’s the nearest thing I've evar seen to Dizzy,” said Gerald. He's just a 17-year-old kid but his actions on and- off the field are just like Diz’s. First time I ever saw him was in the armory, where we worked out one day when the weather was bad. He was firing that ball so hard it sounded like 2a machine gun when it plopped ‘in the catcher’s mit. I watched him a while and then told him, ‘Don't throw another hard ball for two weeks.’ ” Overlooked by Scouts
Half a dozen major league scouts were here looking over Hornsby's talent, and half a dozen of tho brighter prospects were signed up but this lad didn't get a tumble from any of them. Then Walke:
its preliminary work here unde: Manager Hornsby's direction. “He showed me plenty,” said Walker. “He had speed and a sharp curve and what I liked about him he justi.cut loose and threw the ball. He didn’t have to aim. Throwing just comes natural with him like it did to Diz. He had so much stuff the Itimore players couldn’t hit him. After he finished I told him to run right straight back to his rooming house and talk to no one.
field and ‘asked me where I'd been. hiding him. 'I told ’em to lay off. I had him all wrapped up for. the, White Sox.” Walker signed ip. Kramer, giving him $150. The White Sox will farm him out, to their Longview East Texas League farm club this year. {‘He’s about three years away,” said Gerald, “but I'd stake my own money on that kid making good in baseball.” : ~ He was a soda jerker in Slater, Mo., last year, and before that
ey're. all une Prouzply | stere
styles—All co ors All & AE
RIILT
invitingly | .
. All week horsemen!
and K
RR,
Warren Wright's 4-yea; old 3 Bull Les is shown winning the $50,000
three lengths ahead of Sir Damion.
C. S. Howard's Kayak II set a new track record to win the $100,000 Santa Anita Handicap, shown above at the finish, with Whichcee sec-
Williams Thinks Stagehand Ran Himself Out in Race Before Cup
he had fo come from 14 lengths back and he was under the whip all through the stretch Tun. ...
This could take a lot out of a horse and the painful {fact still remains that Stagehand ran a dull, spiritless race. . . As the race was run Bull Lea fully deserved to win. . . He was pounds the best horse 'in the race. . . . Just the same it was not a great win for Bull Lea. . . The [time was too ordinary. . . This in ifseli indicates it was not an improved Bull Lea that won so much as a faded Stagehand that lost. . Another popular explanation is that the pace was too slow... |Stagehand is traditionally slow away from the gate... . In all is races he comes from behind and theoretically the faster the pace the faster he comes. .. For the first
three quarters Saturday the pace|.
was off almost two seconds com-
| Boy Soda Jerker Hailed As Another Dizzy Dean
$150 from his grandmother to enter Hornsby’s school and came here
with a pair of $1.50 mail-order thoes and no other equipment. When he first reported he wore a hat on the field because he had no cap. “When I gave him the $150 I asked what he was going to do with 15,” relates Walker. “He said, I'm sending $130 to Grandma and keeping twenty for spending money.’ Next day he came up to my room and showed me a new ‘suit and asked me how I liked it. I told bim, fine and he sajd it was his roommate’s, Then I gave him one of my suits. After that'the scouts accused me of giving away my wardrobe to entice players away from them, ”
15 City Bowling Fives Win Prizes
told Kramer to cut loose one day| against the Baltimore club, doing!
Times Special - CHICAGO, March - 6.—Fifteen Indianapolis bowling teams have won awards for the first week of prize competition in the nationwide Red Crown Bowling Sweepstakes, officials at central headquarters of the tenpin classic announced today. Seven Indianapolis team were
winners in Class A, three took down awards in Class B, while five teams were winners in the Class C division. All teams competed in Section 2, which comprises Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana and Kentucky. The winning teams, their places
All the scouts poured out on the ®:
worked on a Mississippi River boat
in ‘their respective classes and their scores follow:
CLASS A ion gees. Pritchett RecreaBoves Seal Pat 2068 3035
big 12th p McCarty Furnitire, 30th prize | 2897 C. A, Radiotrons. Uptown RecreaHon, 37th priz 2814 Dee Jewelry, Tinos Alleys, 43d prize 2772 a Cola, Pritchett Recreation. 46th rize 2719 Hoo sier 47th p } 2705
Fritchess Recrea2907
' 2883 “41st 2861
Ted:rowe pir esisls. viott,
Kiefer Stewart Ne 2, Beam’ s Recreation, second pn Four Trip 8 Dinos. 18th prize Wissner Markets, tion, 31st prize Jopes 34a, Sentral Alleys, 36th brie 2612 26
2728 2656
Central Alleys,
.|there were better horses
for his grandfather. He borrowed:
A
position.
Stagehand, favorite in the rich race, is shown Raisin in “show”
Tim Telephotos
| ond and Main Man third. The new record of 2:012-5 is a fifth of second faster than the mark Stagehand set last year. {
pared with the corresponding distance in the first race Stagehand ran here this year... All of which is pretty technical stuff and we don’t follow it any too closely, either. , , . As we saw the race Stagehand could have won if he had been himself regardless of the pace. . . , With less than half a mile to go he made up enough ground to overtake everything in the race if he had been right. . We were told before the race that in the Widener Cup than in the Santa Anita. . . . Well, all we know about that is the time was much better in the California race, and that the winner, Kayak II, smashed the
winning the same race a year ago. . » What’s more, down here they tell you the Hialeah strip is faster than the Santa Anita strip. . .. If this adds up the way we think it does, the Santa Anita Handicap was the better race...
Cameramen Foiled
There was a dramatic after-mo-ment to the day’s racing down here. . « The leading rider of the meeting was Don Meade who was ruled off three years ago for crookedness. . « » The track always presents a $500 gold watch to the leading rider and Joe Widener who operates the track always makes the presentation. If it had been left to Widener Meade would probably never have been reinstated . . . The camermen wanted to take a picture of the presentation. . . . They had always done so in the past. . . . But Widener wiggled out of this by taking Meade into his office and making the presentation in privacy. .. . We could see the scene from the outside and we saw Widener give Meade a long talk. . .. Meade didn’t look at Widener but kept his eyes glued to the watch and at intervals nodded his head. . . . We couldn’t hear what Widener was saying but we suspect he was giving the repentant Jock one of those old fashioned sermons.
Baseball and Golf
‘ Just to keep the records straight Bill Dickey signed with the Yankees for $23,000). , . and all we know about the Di Maggio contract is that he asked for $30,000 and signed for less. . .
We watched Walter Hagen play in the four-ball matches at the
had a 68 for his morning round and needed a four for a 69 in the afternoon. . . . What made these two rounds remarkable is the fact that Hagen had been on a golf course only six times since September. , . . We think this proves the value of a sound game. . . . It reminds us of Uncle Wilbert Robinson’s philosophic utterance. . . . “Once you've learned how to snore you never forget it.” . . . Hagen’s golf seems to have been learned along identical lines. . On the short 14th in the afternoon he missed a hole in one by inches.
Heath Accepts Terms NEW ORLEANS, March 6 (U. P.).
additions to the Cleveland Indians
year.
track record, set by Stagehand in
—Ken Keltner, looking lean and]; fit, and Jeff Heath were the only ||
squad today. Heath came to salary |G terms ‘with President Alva Bradley |&# Saturday at a reported $12,000 a |i
Ohio State In After 14 Years
Buckeyes Win Bit Big 10 Cage Title the Hard Way.
BIG TEN STANDINGS
WL Pct. TP OP Ohio State .. 10 £533 498 415 Indiana ! 150 508 446 Illinois 667 433 358 545 370 373 545 354 347 A455 340 373 333 369 421 213 374 406
[EER RN] 9
Northwestern. . Wisconsin .... 4 Iowa ...os00ee 3 Michigan ..... 3 213 361° 396 Chicago ...... 3 213 323 405 By United Press It took one of those never-say-die chases to give Ohio State’s Buckeyes the Big Ten basketball title, but they're finally in—sall alone at the top for the first time in 14 years. For the sake of the record, Indiana didn’t lose the title, Ohio State won it—the hard way—with 10 victories and two defeats. When the heat was on in the last two games of
the season, the Bucks whipped both the teams that routed Indiana from the lead after six weeks of undisputed possession. Final blow to the Flying Hoosiers
C000 00 00 NUT Uv
defeat at: Michigan, 53 to 45, and Ohio State’s title triumph over Purdue, 51 to 35. Purdue Plays Chicago
Three contests winding up the season tonight are an anticlimax. Minnesota and Purdue each with six voctories and five defeats have a battle on their hands for fourth place. Minnesota plays at Iowa, Chicago at Purdue, and Northwest-
final engagement. Indiana’s sudden collapse gave Ohio State an undisputed title, but
most of the shooting over in Columbus is for the gallant race of the Bucks, themselves, and of their captain, Jimmy Hull. This quiet sharpshooter, new Conference scoring champion with 169 points, virtually clinched the title himself Saturday night by scoring 20 points as Ohio State overwhelmed Purdue. It was the same Purdue team that had upset Indiana the week before, but it didn’t look that way. Led by Hull and Big John Schick, the champions pushed into a 13-to-3 lead in the first seven minutes and kept it that way until the game was
Miami Biltmore yesterday. .. . He|over
Despite their collapse, the Hoosiers must be reckoned the prize team of the year. Coach Branch McCracken, a newcomer himself, took a handful of sophomores and built around high-scoring Ernie Andres a powerful team. Sophomore
Ten.
Mungo Accepts Cut CLEARWATER, Fla., March 6 (U. P.)—Van Lingle Mungo, temperamental Brooklyn Dodger pitcher, today signed a contract for $5,000, a slash of $10,000 from the salary he received last year. i OUTFITTERS To EE MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN
Livingston
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WiLL GIVE YOU 2 MANY THRILLS!
770 GET THERE TAKE Al ILLINOIS -FAIRGROUNDS
THE HOOSIER
= STREET CAR
) csueem——)
was Saturday ‘night’s unexpected|
ern travels to Michigan in the other
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Is Ovoposite Us |
CIRCLING TF IE CIT y-
Represent liam A. AYkins, vice president of E.
|C. Atkins & Co., and William A. Carson, president of the Sunbeam
Electric Manufacturing Co., Evansville, have been named on committees of the National Association of Manufacturers. Mr. Atkins was named to the Industrial Practices Commiliee and Mr. Carson was appointed to the Economic Policy Committee.
Confers . with Students—Harold Colvin, associate national executive secretary of the student ¥. M. C. A. will confer with student gioups here tomorrow and Wednesday. He will meet Butler University ¥. M. C. A. cabinet committees at 7 p. m. to-
morrow at Butler and Wednesday |
noon he will address college officials and students at the Central Y build-
ing. Famed Train Coming—Great
Britain’s most modern, streamlined ‘passenger train, the “Coronation
Scot,” will be exhibited at the Union |’
Station here March 30; G. S, West, general superintendent ne Pennsylvania Railroad, announced today. The train will stop here pn a 3100mile tour over the United States before being placed on exhibit at the New York World's Fair.
School's Drum Major Honored— James W. Caldwell, drum major of the Washington High School R. O. T. C. Band, has been elected president of the All-American Drum Major's Club. Mr. Caldwell became eligible for the all-American club membership by winning a national championship in the baton twirling class.
. Street Complaints Awaited—The Brookside Civic League will receive complaints from East Side residents on street conditions at a meeting at ‘8 o'clock tonight at the league hall. A league committee will study the complaints and report them to City officials.
EARLHAM COLLEGE TRUSTEE RESIGNS
Times Special RICHMOND, March 6.—Dr. Warder C. Allee, one of the three Earlham College trustees elected by alumni,
has resigned, Dr. Leon T. Cox, alumni president, announced today. Dr. Allee, University of Chicago zoology professor who has been a trustee since 1925, resigned on his physician’s advice. One year of his term remains. Nominations for the vacancy, signed by 10 or more Earlham graduates, must be received by Luther M. Feeger, Richmond Palladium-Item editor, election committee chairman, before April 15. The term of Dr. Laurence Hadley, Purdue University mathematics professor, also expires this year.
NEW CASTLE NLRB HEARING DUE TODAY
Times Special NEW CASTLE, March 6.—An NLRB hearing to determine the collective bargaining representative of 3500 employees of the Chrysler Corp. will open here today. The: United Automobile Workers of America, C. I. O.,, and the Die Sinkers division’ of the International Association of Machinists, A. F, of L., seek to represent employees, Board officials said.
3-POUND BABY DIES DESPITE INCUBATOR
Emma Hon, who weighed only three pounds when she was born Wednesday to Mr. and Mrs. Athol Hon at their home, 4064 E. 16th St., died yesterday at City Hospital. Physicians who took her from the Hon home in the new City Hospital “baby ambulance” to a hospital incubator, were unable to save her failing strength. No services have yet been arranged.
JOBLESS HUSBAND TAKES OWN LIFE
PLYMOUTH, March 6 (U. P.).— Despondency over his inability to supply his wife with food today was blamed by police for the suicide of 22-year-old Robert Ellis. Ellis, recently discharged from WPA, walked from jis home to a nearby cemetery and shot himself.
. Hours: 12
A Show P in Species tests:
ess Sledge Far EN Archery: |
Larry L Exhibits; Boats; an
Manufacturers—Wil-
|
Emmett J. Junge of Lincoln, | Neb., will be one of leaders at the Phi Delta Theta Fraternity North midwestern regional conference [Friday and Saturday at the Columbia Club. He is a newly elected member of the fraternity’s general council, and a graduate of the University of Nebraska.
Heads Fraternity Alumni—Richard T. Hill has been elected president of the Indiana Alumni Association of Delta Kappa Epsilon Fraternity. ciation’s annual dinner Saturday night at the. Naval Armory are Wilson Mothershead, vice president; K. L. VanMetre, secretary-treasurer; Dan W. Flickinger, executive committee - chairman, and H. Foster Clippinger, vice chairman. Other committee members are Frank R. Weaver, Burford Danner and Kenneth J. Galm.
Supplies Traffic Wiest of streetcar, trackless trolley and bus lines operated by Indianapolis Railways and the Peoples Motor Coach Co. will be given away tomorrow to those calling Riley 1571 or calling at 806 Traction Terminal Building, i was announced today.
" Sixty Orchestras to dompotes-Ap: proximately 60 ‘high school orchestras are expected to compete in the
National High School Orchestra Association’s third regional contest| pm in Indianapolis May 18, 19 and 20. The contest, one of 10 in the United States, will be held at Shortridge High School. Nearly 5000 students, teachers and parents are expected from Indiana, Illinois, Ohio and
Kentucky.
Dr. J. A. Martindale fo Spcak— Dr. J. A. Martindale of Bloomington will speak at the Indiana Association of Optometrists, Zone 7, meeting at 7 p. m. Wednesday at Hotel Severin,
Three Doctors on Program—Three Indianapolis physicians will speak at the Indianapolis Medical Society's meeting at 8:15 p. m. tomorrow in
‘the Indianapolis Athletic Clyb. They
are Dr. J. H. Hawk, Dr. A. 8. Johnson and Dr. Foster Hudson.
Airways ~ Executive .to Warren A. Pine Jr. of Chicago, district manager of Pan-American Airways, will speak at the Indianapolis Real Estate a luncheon
! Speak—
Thursday at Hotel Washington. His subject will be “Transoceanic Flying. ” | : Wins Clark Award—! erton -B. Scharenberg of the Rose Poly Institute chapter of Alpha > Omega Fraternity has been awarded the Thomas Arkle Clark 1938 national fraternity award for holarship and leadership. The esentation was made at the fraternity dinner in the Claypool Hotel Saturday.
‘ment; Benjamin Olsen, ticket sales,
Others elected at the asso-|-
Rooms 435-441 in the Federal Build. ing. Offices included in the suite | will be those for directors of Com- | modity, Federal Land Bank and Production Credit Loans and de- | partment heads, which have been | located elsewhere in the City.
Dan C. Hess, In Indianapolis Power & Light. Co. superintendent, is in ‘charge of the’ Electric League of In-
Other committee members are A. J, Calloway. - and: . Thomas .C. Polk, speakers; David Lurvey, arrange= ments; Roy 1. Brown, entertaine
and L. O. Rainier, publicity.
“Dean Gavit to Speak—Dean Bernard C. Gavit, Indiana Unis versity Law School, was to speak today at the Indiana University
the Columbia Club. = Indiana University - law ‘graduates who are members of the Supreme and Appellate Courts were to be guests of honor.
Nurses Meet Wednesday — Miss Nellie G." Brown, registered nurse associated with Ball Memorial Hospital, Muncie, will speak at the March meeting of Central district, Indiana State Nurses’ Association at 2:30 p. m. Wednesday in the World War Memorial. Miss Ger= trude Upjohn and Mrs. Ruby Time merman are cochairmen of the proe gram.
Corse on ‘Appraising’—George T,
man, will give a course on “Appraising” during the next semester of the American Savings & Loan Instie tute, Chapter 79. Mr. Whelden is past president of the Society of Residential Appraisers of the Real Estate . Board and is at present HOLC chief appraiser.
Parade to Precede Relays—Gold trophies will be awarded to winning floats in a Butler University fra-
ternity and sorority parade to be held downtown March 17, as a preliminary event of the seventh annual Butler Indoor Relays, according to William Hart, student relay manager,
‘Discuss Seal Sale—The Marion County Society for Crippled Children will meet at 5 p. m. today at 148 E. Market St. to discuss the Easter seal sale sponsored by the National Society for Crippled Children.
Slated to Get Degree—Miss Edith Stander, State Public Welfare Department. employee, will receive a masters degree at the University of Chicago convocation March 14.
Men’s and Women's CLOTHING ON EASY CREDIT
Askin & Marine Co. 127 W. WASHINGTON ST.
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