Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 January 1940 — Page 12
Trojan
SPORTS... By Eddie Ash
PLACE THE lids on the
year, fire up the baseball stove league and turn on more
basketball juice. , . . In five
only upset was the fact that in four of them the pre-game favorites won and the Sun Bowl affair at El Paso wound
up in a scoreless tie.
However, Southern California’s margin of Gvictory was more than the odds called for and the same was true
of Georgia Tech’s decisive triumph over Missouri. None of The Times’ guest experts called the turn on the Catholic U.-Arizona State tie, but two of the prognosticators had clean slates on four tilts and shared Master Picker honors. The two who read the crystal ball like professionals are Hubert S. Raines, 131 S. Neal Ave., Indianapolis, and Lowell Fouch, Indianapolis. was Catholic University, while Fouch
. « « Raines’ choice at El Paso picked Arizona. ; Selections were made on five
Orange, Cotton and Sun. . . . The Catholic U.-Arizona clash was tough to tackle for grid fans in this area because of a shortage of information on Arizona’s 1939 record.
~ They Deliver on the Main
AT ANY RATE, Experts Raines and Fouch made good on the’ main attractions by coming up with Southern California, Texas
Aggies, Georgia Tech and Clemson.
New Orleans, but they had -the right whisker in stringing with the
Farmers.
Removing the scoreless Sun Bowl tilt from the “ticket” because of the tie, the following Times reader experts “landed in the “one
miss” class: Henri Harrell, 2144 E. 12th St. . Buck Embry, 219 N. New Jersey . Sam Feldman, K. of P. Bldg. ...
W. E. Ralph, 2703 Olney St. . . . Missed Georgia Tech. Anna Antin, 311 E. North St... . Muffed Texas Aggies. Ray Joseph, 1339 Prospect St. . . . Missed Georgia Tech.
P. S. Smith, 4507 E. 10th St. . .
R. J. Mendenhall, 3450 Hovey St. . . . Missed on Clemson.
Dorothy I. Chastain, 4304 E. 21st
Mike Keene, 3209 N. New Jersey St. ...
Walter Kent, Martinsville, Ind. . Benton Washburn, Boswell, Ind.
» » »
FIFTEEN amateur experts had two games on the wrong side of the ledger and three trailed with three misses. . , . The going in the pick ‘em league .also was rough on your correspondent who missed out on Georgia Tech afd Texas Aggies. : Our Sun Bowl choice was Catholic U. . . . Huge Southern Cal and little Clemson cushioned our fall off the limb.
Hats Off to Our Ice Caps
ICE CHIPS: Herb Lewis’ Indianapolis Capitals dealt out plenty of capital punishment on their Eastern tour and continue to furnish the surprise in the league hockey business. . . . The league leaders will be home Thursday to battle Pittsburgh at the Coliseum rink.
The Hoosier icers are entitled
leading the Western Division race by 13 points and hold & five-point margin over New Haven’s Eastern Division leaders. : { The Caps are just two games shy of the halfway mark, having . The schedule calls for 56, 28 at home, 28 on the road. . . . Playoffs follow the regular race. Cleveland was last season’s playoff champion and Indianapolis has humbled the Barons four times and got a tie in. a fifth game. ... In the five tilts the Hoosiers have tallied 16 goals while holding the
played 26 games. . .
defending champs to five.
| ao»
HOCKEY IS being played more and more in the United States, but there are two good reasons why the game hasn’t spread as fast as baseball ‘or some of the other national pastimes. . . is the lack of ice, despite the growth of artificial ice rinks, and the other is the high cost of equipment. | 've got to spend fresh money to equip a hockey player—
Yo about $
00 each—and the cost runs
up that all-important man in front of the cage, the goalie. ‘i. is dressed up in $135.75 worth of ice clothes, and that doesn’t derwear, or that cap you see on most of the goalers. A pair of socks for a goaltender isn’t one of those three-for-a- . The sum of $2.50 must be put on the line
“for the inside foot covering. :
include
dollar propositions, . .
ONE BIG item is what goes on ties—the shoes and skates. .
$45 for| a pair.
elbow pants?
stick, $3.75.
. . Although the net minder isn’t supposed to do much skating he’s got to have the best and this means an outlay of $35. . . . Costliest of the equipmént are the shin pads—
ads, $6.50; suspenders (how do you think he keeps up his $5.50
Other pieces of accoutrement and costs are—shoulder pads, $11; ¥ are $1.25, gloves, $10.75; body pad, $8.50; sweater, $6, and
i Blinder in water polo can get dressed up much cheaper.
Football Bowls for another
Bowl games yesterday the
Bowl attractions—Rose, Sugar,
Line
.. . It was just by a whisker at
« « Muffed Georgia Tech. St. . . . Missed Southern Cal. Picked Rose Bowl game a tie.
. Missed Southern Cal.
issed Georgia Tech. uffed Georgia Tech. . » Missed on Clemson, « « « Missed on Georgia Tech.
St. ....
» =
to a big hand. . . .| They are
s Ed »
. One reason
higher when it comes to padding . He
. s » » the outside of the pedal extremi-
East-West Fray Called Best Played in 10 Years
SAN| FRANCISCO, Jan. 2 (U. P.). —Sports experts, writers, officials and t of the 45,000 persons who, in a nching rain, watched the West heat the East, 28 to 11, for the benefit of the Shrine Children’s Hos- _ pital, agreed today that it was the
best game played hére in 10 years. Not (content with setting a new by scoring 39 points, the band Americas on each team per- | with ‘amazing dexterity cong the condition of the ball, the field and the day. The West team, made up of senior players from colleges and universities on the west side of the Mississippi, were led by Kay Eakin of Arkansas and Leroy Zimmerman of San Jose. Zimmerman even scored two points for the East squad when he deliberately walked out of the ne rather than hazard a kic ‘ of the scoring was done in
a quagmire. The game was just three minutes old when Eakin fired a pass to Bill Anahu of Santa Clara who sprinted for a score. The play was for 56 yards. The East tied it when Ed Boell of New York U heaved a 26-yard pass to George Stirnweiss of North Carolina. 3 Ollie Cordill of Rice produced the second score for the West in the second period when he went over from the 2-yard line. With Zimmerman throwing passes that totaled 35 yards, the West scored again in the second period on a line buck by Frank Emmons of Oregon. Midway of the third period the East got two points when Turner blocked Eakin’s punt. The West put over its final touchdown in the final period when Lee Artoe of California recovered a bad pass from center that went high over the head of Boell and into the end zone. Zimmerman then gave the East its final two points.
s Too Big, To
Troy Piles
It On for One Hour
Sadder, - Sorry, Wiser and Richer Vol Eleven on - Its Way Home.
PASADENA, Cal, Jan. 2 (U. P).
back toward Knoxville today, sadder, sorry, wiser and richer. The Volunteers were sadder because they were beaten, 14 to 0, in the Rose Bowl. Sorry because Southern California’s Slants banged them from pillar to post. Wiser because they had had a look at the best football team in the country, and richer because their cut of the s¢llout game netted them upwards of $115,000. Tennessee's proud record exists no more. They went into the Rose Bowl unbeaten in 23 games, and unscored upon during the 1939 season. Now the Vols will have to start all over again. Because the Trojans messed up that beautiful record by banging across touchdowns in the second and fourth quarters. !
No. 6 for Trojans
The 14-0 triumph of the Southern Calfornians marked their sixth straight Rose Bowl win, and, it was absolutely deserved. As Zuppke, famed Illinois coach, said after the game, “The Trojans didn’t finesse the Vols, they just knocked them off the field.” And that is just what they did. Using 25 fremendous specimens of manhood, Southern California relied on power, and still more power, to fear the Tennessee defense apart. the Trojans piled
it on. And
"| Tennessee, game as it was, simply
couldn't withstand the ceaselkss pressure. No one was higher in praise of the Southern California juggernaut than Maj. Bob Neyland; coach of the beaten invaders. :
All a Coach Could Ask
“They were terrific,’ Neyland said, “I have never seen a better team than Southern California was in the Bowl today. The line was great but the backfield was the deciding factor. Lawdy, there was no end to the big, fast and tough backs they threw at us. I want to especially congratulate Amby Schindler. He not only was a great runner, but he ran the team with brilliance. His choice of plays was all that a coach could ask.” The tipoff on how good Schindler was comes from the statistics. The entire Tennessee téam gained 7 yards net and Schindler’s persona
playing his last game, who carried or passed the ball on every play in Southern Cal’s first touchdown march of 47 yards.
That Pass Fooled 'Em And it was Schindler, alternating with Jack Banta, who swept 85 yards in the closing minutes of the game
.|to account for the second touch-
down and put the game on ice. Schindler’s quarterbacking reached its peak in the scoring of the second touchdown. = With one yard to go, fourth down, he faked a buck and then drifted a pass to Krueger to score. “It fooled me completely,” Maj. Neyland said. “It was daring brilliant play-calling, and Schindler deserves a nod for doing it.” Schindler was ably abetted by four other California pile-driving backfield men. Grenny Lansdell plowed forward 48 yards of gain, Banta had 35, Bob Peoples 29 and Doyle Nave 25. Only Johnny Butler, swivelhipped sophomore, did anything in an offensive way for Tennessee—he picked up 40 yards, most of .it the hard way. Cafego, shackled by a bad knee made only one yard, and the remainder of the Vol backs accounted for an embarrassingly small amount of yards. ;
Molinski Is Disappointing Butler was one of the four Ten-
with a good game. The others were Ackerman, substitute center; Suffridge, guard, and Cifers. The other Vols were adequate, but no more. The biggest disappointment of the day was Ed Molinski. All-America guard Ed took a whale of a beating from the Trojans and was never a factor. The “name” players in the Trojan line—Harry Smith and Ben Sohn—did- not distinguish them-
standout performance in the forward wall were the ends Fisk and Winslow. They had Tennessee
finish. To sum it up: Southern California was too big, too fast, and too many and surprisingly enough because southern teams usually are “hopped up.” The Trojans had more lift,
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—Tennessee’s football force rolled|
From kickoff to the final whistle|
gain was 75 yards. It was Ambrose, retire as active promoter and be-
nessee players who came through’
selves. They played all right but the’
tackles under control from start to!
2)
Cotton Tilt Is Financial Flop
But 15,000 Fans Witness Colorful Contest.
By STEVE SNIDER United Press Staff Correspondént
DALLAS, Tex., Jan. 2—J, Curtis Sanford, the Tyler, Tex. tycoon, bowed out today as promoter of the Cotton Bowl football classic after an artistic success and financial flop in his last venture with Clem son and Boston College. : : The colorful Country Gentlemen
stands. Each team, however, reportedly was guaranteed $15,000 and the es-
loss in four years.
board of directors which hopes to
future Cotton Bowl games. A clipping penalty on a pass in-
Trexler punted out, Boston’s Charley O'Rourke raced 27 yards to Clemson's 13 as the first period ended.
the middle. - A punt exchange followed the
back, Charlie Timmens, who per-|
gotiated the final 20 yards in three plays, scoring from the 2-yard line. Banks McFadden, much-publi-cized Clemson halfback, carried the ball only four.times, averaging 11 yards per try. He was the threat, | Timmons the ball carrying hero. McFadden earned his share of the glory by batting down two goal line passes in the fourth period as Boston College strove desperately to regain the lead.
a
Hawks Up Notch In Hockey Chas
By UNITED PRESS The Chicago Black Hawks moved into fourth place in the National Hockey League by beating the De-
troit Red Wings, 1-0, last night, while the New York Americans moved into sixth with a similar win over the Montreal Canadiens. John Gottselig caged an unassisted goal at 19:28 of the second period to give the Hawks their win before 10,187. The Americans won when Buzz Roll scored on a from Murray Armstrong at 12:21 of the second period. The standings: W. L. Pts.
ast and
from Clemson, S. C., whipped Bos- |like. ton’s rugged Eagles yesterday, 6 to|there is between such teams as the
3, in a bruising battle of two great ones mentioned in the sentence lines, desperate rallies and goal line [above and Southern California.
ing, fighting back the enemy. next Southern Californians were running all over the place. A back
Ambrose Schindler, Southern California’s quarterback (24), smashes through Tennessee's line to score 92,000 watched the Coast team smother the Southerners, 14-0, in the apnual Rose Bowl classic.
‘Paid Out’ Key on Henry's
Cash Register Kept Busy
my pocketbook for a count of ten
it was flattened for ‘sure.
I went for the Volunteers like a
pointer goes for a quail. I thought they were invincible, and maybe 1 was right since they played Citadel, Mercer, Mohler Barber College, International Correspondence and the
But men, what a difference
Can’t Use You, Shorty They raise them rugged out here.
timated 15,000 fans who dotted the |Perhaps nature sees that they do Cotton Bowl probably contributed|in order that they will be able to considerably less than promotion Wiipsiand eatinquskies, Sou 2 uel expenses. It was Sanford’ ’ D u's second that comes out of the taps in this As soon as all the checks are Section. BO Satever the Season made out, the wealthy oilm any man that repo owar y ollman, wil Jones at Southern California, and come a member of the Cotton Bowl [Says he is a football player, had better stand six feet one in his arch obtain the promise of the Southwest |Supporters, scale 212, naked, at Lig-
Conference to send its champion to [8etts and be able to run the 100 in five seconds flat.
Tennessee started to the Rose
terception. by Clemson led to the|Bow! with what appeared to be an first Cotton Bowl score yesterday. all right squad. To the human eye It set the Carolina Tigers back to|it looked like a group of men who their one-yard line and when Bru|could take care of itself.
Rather. Big, Don’t You Think? But how quickly they learned this
was all wrong. Out of the players’
Clemson held, but on fourth down [tunnel came U. S. C. They were Alex Lukachik, Boston end, booted |dinosaurs on the loose, giants who
a 24-yard place-kick straight down |ached to throw their strength against the enemy.
For a while Tennessee managed
subsequent kickoff and Clemson |to hold the Trojans in check. But started a 57-yard touchdown march |it was obvious from the start that led by an obscure sophomore full-|it was only a matter of time until the flood broke. sonally carried the ball 32 yards in |Plug the dyke only so long. There five plays during the series. He ne- {must come a breaking point, and, as a man who had wagered his chances for a new watch fob on the Volunteers’ winning, it came all too soon.
The thumb can
One minute Tennessee was holdThe
who couldn’t make five yards was given a demerit, and a lineman who didn’t open a hole wide enough for the Dionne Quins to walk through, arm in arm, was spoken sharply to and told to do better or be sent to the ‘second table.
Mac Learns a Lesson
There was a lesson to be learned from the Rose Bowl game of yesterday—a fine lesson. . And this is it: There is no sense in betting on a team that buys its clothes in the boys’ department to beat a team that has to shave twice a day and is fitted for suits in the adult or grownups section; also, one is reminded to remember that Pickett led a grand charge, but couldn’t make it when the opposition started throwing its weight around. P. 8. The collecting line will form on the right. Don’t shove, boys, it’s all counterfeit.
Grid Results
By HENRY M'LEMORE ; United Press Staff Correspondent PASADENA, Cal, Jan. 2—If . I were a strictly honest man, and didn’t have Morris Plan agents scouting me at every turn, I wouldn’t even take the time to write a colu I would be hurrying from home to home in this vicinity paying off my debts, because it is no secret that Tennessee’s defeat knocked down
today.
and then jumped on it to be sure
Lansdowne-Kudo Bout Tops Mat Bill
Lord Lansdowne, 178, Barrington, England, will go against Kiman Kudo, 177, speedy Japanese grappler, in tonight’s headline wrestling attraction at the Armory. They. clash for two falls out of three. : Kudo, who never has been | defeated here, took a disputed verdict over Lansdowne two months ago and the latter is determined to “even up” in tonight's encounter. Lansdowne returned here two weeks ago to toss Coach Billy Thom. The Lansdowne-Kudo meeting is expected to result in one of the best action-producers of the season as both are skilled and clever performers. L : | The appearance of George (Cry Baby) Zaharias, 245, Colorado Creek, serves as a second feature. The head man of the Zaharias “clan” of matmen will face Hans Schnable, 228, rugged wrestler from Holland. It is for one fall, or 60 minutes. Ray Eckert, 234, St. Louis, and Len Macaluso, 226, Buffalo, open the program carded for one fall, or 30 minutes. | :
Sun Foes Don’t Show Expected Grid Punch
EL PASO. Tex. Jan. 2 (U. P.).— Catholic University’s football squad packed up today for the long train ride back to Washington, D. C., after playing Arizona State College to a scoreless tie in the fifth annual Sun Bowl game New Year's Day. Both teams put together rockribbed defenses which were almost impregnable, and the predicted colorful, wide-open ‘offensive game failed to develop. Official attend-
Times-Acme Telephoto. the Trojans’ second touchdown as
Tech Gridmen Hard to Find
Missouri’s Eleven Chases
Shadows All Afternoon.
MIAMI, Fla., Jan. 2 (U. P)— Missouri's Big Six football cham-
pions were convinced today that the |
author of “The Little Man who Wasn't There” had Georgia Tech in mind when he wrote the ditty. For while Missouri was busy chasing phantom ball-carriers, Tech rolled up a 21-to-7 triumph in the sixth annual Orange Bowl game yesterday before a holiday crowd of 36,500 that filled Burdine Stadium and overflowed onto the field. Tech didn’t get started until after All-American Paul Christman & Co. roared to a touchdown the first seven minutes of play, but once moving, they put on a dazzling display of deception and scored in the first, second and third periods.
Who's Got It Now? Time after time Missouri boys crashed through to nail one player only to find that another had the ball. . At least two of Tech’s touchdowns came under those circumstances— in the second period when Bob Ison on an end-around play romped 59 yards to pay dirt, and in the third period when Earl Wheby, coming from nowhere, raced 34 yards to score. Missouri was on the march only once, when Christman sparked a 43-yard drive and rammed over for a touchdown from the 6-inch liné in the opening minutes of play. The Tigers threatened late in the fourth period, but were halted 2 yards from the goal.
Bosch Takes Command
a touchdown before Tech even knew what was happening and it looked like Missouri would win.in a walk. Little Johnny ° Bosch, who was one of the best actors in the Tech cast, took command at this point and Missouri chased shadows the rest of the afternoon.
How YouDo Lug the Ball _
Kimbrough Proves to All at Sugar Bowl That He's One Sweet Player.
By LESLIE AVERY United Press Staff Correspondent
NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 2.—Texas
claimed the top-hand of the na~ #
tibn’s gridirons today.
Jarrin’ John Kimbrough estabe = §
lished himself yesterday before 72,000 persons sitting around the Sugar Bowl. He was as easy on the field as the tumbleweed that bounds ‘over the windswept plains, as mean to
‘| handle as a Shorthorn steer charge B ing a red flag. : :
‘Big John ounted for both touchdowns with ywhich Texas Aggies’ beat Tulane, 14-13. When the game ended, the 210-pound Kime brough had carried the ball 159 yards through the dreaded might of the Green Wave. The yards he gained were more than half of the total that showed on the Aggies’ side of the statistic sheet. ‘His Move First
‘Big John didn’t wait for a man bearing down on him to reach out his arms—Kimbrough lowered his head and charged into the tackler first, Usually, the tackler, from a sprawling. position on the ground, watched Big John tear into another victim. : od .Gains of 10; 15, 20 yards were pars of his day's work, and he stepped over such beef as Tulane’s 235-\ pound tackle, Harley McCollum, (
i
Experts who marveled at his) gi
playing said he was the greatest fullback of all time, that he ran like a ‘halfback, but halfbacks suitable for.comparison were few and far between. ; He was present when the passes were tossed and encirclement didn’t daunt him. - Big John butted Tulane out of the way and was gone. Football players, coaches, officials were alike in their praise of him, His own coach, Homer Norton, ree peated his previous modest boast that Kimbrough was the greatest football player he'd ever seen.
A 60-Minute Man
Referee Ted Arnold, who was in a position to observe Kimbrough more closely than anyone else, said: “I've never seen any player come up to him, offensively or defensively.” Big John played 60 minutes yesterday, and he played 60 minutes a ‘game the rest of the season when A, & M. was sweeping the Southe west. : He still has another year to play and it looks as if 1940's terror of the Southwest already is marked. It wasn’t the power of Texas A. & M. they talked about today, nor the failure of Tulane’s 206 and 210pound lines: It was John Kime brough. Big John shook his tough head and grinned.
——
L.S. U. Player Wins
Junior Court Title
NEW YORK, Jan. 2 (U. P.).—Bill
-| Umstaedter of Louisiana State Uni{versity was the new national ine Missouri started as it was expected to, alternating passes and power. The Tigers drove from the 43, where Bob Waldorf had pounced on a fumble by Howard Ector, to
door junior tennis champion today. Umstaedter, seeded favorite in the tournament, beat his doubles mate, Dick Bender of Westfield, N. J., in the final yesterday, 6-3, 1-6, 6-3, 6-4, Bob Bensinger of Washington, D. C., took the boys' title, and Irv Dorfman and Bensinger won the boys’ doubles championship. In the final junior doubles, Fred V. Krais of New York and Dick Shipp, Lee~ moyne, Pa. defeated Umstaedter
and Bender, 8:6, 7-5, 5-7, 6-4.
ance was set at 12,000. | rl17o =
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half before the field became more zeal, more oomph.
State Basketball Back to Normal
By UNITED PRESS Indiana’s prep basketball returns to normal this week with tourneys temporarily over following a week lapse during the holidays. Mitchell, Lawrenceburg and New| Hersh Castle were major winners in tour-|g ney firing yesterday, with Mitchell | Pittsburgh taking Martinsville and Blooming-| / ton at the Bloomington tourney; Lawrenceburg eliminating North Vernon and Madison at North Vernon, and New Castle downing Logansport and Anderson at the Mun-} cle scramble, . Virtually all games on the docket this week are set for Friday or a in 81. Jeg 11. ay Sa ay. Yeans OF AGE AND OVER Headline scraps Friday are Alex-andria-Muncie Burris; Bedford-New Albany, Ft. Wayne North-Ft. Wayne South, Franklin-Shelbyville, JasperSalem, New Castle-Kokomo and Marion-Muncie Central. Saturday night- features Vin-cennes-Bedford, Gary Froebel-Ft. Wayne South, and New AlbanyMartinsville. > Kokomo captured the rubber game [4 . of its series with Marion last night, Mail or bring entry blanks te Golden Gloves Headquarters. 416 8. downing the Giants, 41 to 32, only
feridian St.. Indianapolis. Ind. Phone RI lev 06E4, {a few days after the Marion
Boston = 29 29 27 17 16 15 13
As late as 1870 Indians were still bunting buffalo over the unfenced prairies of America and ambitious young men from the Atlantic seaboard were trecking west 10 "grow wp with the country.”
Rose Bowl-Southern California, 14; Ten-
nessee, 0. Sugar Bowl—Texas A.-M., 14: 3 Orange Bowl—Georgia pits Tne, 13.
. ENTRY BLANK —
Golden Gloves , Gis Boxing Meet "Ng
National Guard Armory, Indianapolis, Jan. 19, 26, Feb. 2, 9. Auspices Bruce Robison Post American Legion Sponsored by The Times |
0 Montreal .... Americans
Detroit souri, 7.
Cotton Bowl—Clemson, 6; Boston Cole, 3. * Un Baw Catholic U., 0; Arizona State, e). ; wiieapple Bowl--Oregon State, 29; Ha-All-Stars an Franeis 3 z2l-sta y 8 rancisco—West, 28;
Amateurs to Fight On Richmond Card
s Times Special E] RICHMOND, Ind, Jan. 2.—Eight bouts are scheduled on the amateur boxing program to be staged here tomorrow night at the new arena on N. Eighth St. The pro-
«
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Attucks Win Sixth Straight Cage Tilt
STINESVILLE, Ind, Jan. 2.—Indianapolis Crispus Attucks, after holding a 16-4 lead at the half, went on to score a 37-24 victory over Stncaville High I Sa a pases game here last night. It was the | cq L1-6789 for instant Road ‘Servsixth straight victory for the. un-ijce Daily and Sunday from 6:30
beaten Attucks five. - ‘ \ : Beasley collected 18 points to pace| ma fa POINT DELAWARE
BREWED BY THE GEO. WIEBEMANN BREWING ce, INC, NEWPORT, a. local Golden Gloves show. ; Lx iL ; vy
Specie. BEE
will meet fighters from the Leeper Athletic Club, Indianapolis, on a 1999, The Geo, Wiedemann Brewing Co, Inc.
gram next Wednesday night. Both “GAPITOL OITY SUPPLY 0O., ING.
ENTRIES LIMITED TO AMATEURS 16
me (print) $9000000900000000080930000000000000000t00000s Age ®00c0cenvan
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shows are to begin at 8:30 p. m.
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