The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 30, 1928, Page 10

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE NEBRASKA IS ~ MADE WINNER IN BIG 6 LOOP | Navy Wins Surprise 19 to 7 ‘Victory Over Army to Earn Holiday <2 CREIGHTON IS BEATEN Marquette Takes Iowa State, 6 to 0, Before 15,000 Shiver- ing Fans ago, N ng in th her—drea side their mo est was like | as six elevens ins for an- laid ! other year, | All six, because of an eccentric | weather man, w | nowstor: | ‘ort Sherid ska wallowed through a fog | w to the championship by downing the Kan- | egies 8 to0 ina by de of the Big A; steered ver the Fort v field, Chi- 's goul line I! of snow that melted almost oon as it touched , the y walked off to 7 vi . earning also a 30-day home leave for the holiday In Omaha the Missouri valley con ference title was devided when Dral univ ity turned back Creighto university 6 to played in a bli Fifteen tho a bitterly Marquette and lowa waukee, where the ¢ to the Wisconsin cleven 6 to 0. loss ended the season for lowa but Marquette has apo fame with Creighton Dec game will be ple in ard. nd shivered through ovght contest another game The h ed at Milwaukee. OREGON AGS JUST SIGHTSEERS; WON | EASTERN CONTEST New York, Nov. 30.—(AP)—Their pockets stuffed full of congratula- tory wires from home, the Beavers| of Oregon State college were just ordinary, peaceful sightseers today. At the Yankee Stadium yesterday, however, they were terrors of the gridiron, te-rors that manhandled New York university’s football team, setting it down with a 25 to 13 de- feat that rocked the football world. But Coach Paul J. issler of the Beavers, wasn’t surprised. ‘You! had it in you all year but you didn’t get it out until today,” the dapper little coach told his squad in the dressing room after the game. The Beavers displayed a lot of, smart football in a game which they faced with not a few handicaps. Seven members of the team who con- tracted influenza shortly after ar- riving here the first of the week, had temperatures during the game. But six of them played and played hard. The seventh, “Big Chief” Thompson, Indian fullback, was too ill to play. Captain Howard “Chubby” Maple, Vernon “Navy” Eilers and Bill McKalip were too sick to put on their uniforms at the final warmup practice the day be- fore the game. But they forgot their tempera- tures yesterda;;, picked up a nice at- tack of football fever and the only players on the field showing signs of runaing temperatures wore the violet colors of N.Y. U. The Violets were feverish in thei: frantie but futile efforts to check drives by land and by air that kept them backing mo and down the field most of the afternoon, The Beav-rs will be back at the stadium tomorrow afternoon, sup- porting Stanford in its game with Army. The Beavers together with the Stanford squad leave for the coast tomorrow night. | i Did you know that— | cael Sherry Magee, National ‘League umps, is a detectif for a string of one-arm hasheries in Philadelphia .. The Brooklyns are willing to give the Pitts- burghs Petty and Gink Hendrick for Glen Wright .. . Bancroft doesn’t hit enough .. Leo Du- rocher, the world’s freshest rookie, is spending the winter making speeches at luncheons and banquets around Spring- fieldmass .. Mickey Cochrane, the American League's most valuable player, i i make a record by managing the Reds for six years in a row. ‘Six Teams Lay Aside Mol | Hey, Get That Guy! i PG | 5 te-Notre D; won with a Here's a splended bit of action from the Penn § ' round right Notre Dame eleven maintained it shown in the (OREGON AGGIES PULL SURPRISE WIN OVER Ni Y. Utah Shows Surprising Rever- sal of Form to Clinch Rocky Mountain TEXAS LONGHORNS WIN Drake Takes 6 to 0 Win from Creighton; Tech Crushes Auburn Machine Philadelphia, in which the , captain of the victors, is 1 New York, Nov. 30.—(AP)—Five g gain. of the country’s seven major football championships have been decided. IN ANOTHER YEAR, WRITER ANNOUNCES ream campion Se te ALUMMNT PLANS sas ~ NODAK FEASTS mer and Says He Wiil Win; Jack Says Little About Op- ponent; Will Take Vacation Universi "age Squad’ to Be Saar Welcomed on Their 5,080 Ry DAN THOMA on Los Angeles, Calif., No Less Mile Trip |than 12 months from now Jack Dempsey will again reign as king} Rees: okie Tea v(wvalnits Grand Forks, N. D., Nov, 20— the eentieman -wiose . | Tentative plans for the reception o' fight racket to million-do! the Unive y of North Dakota bas- is himself authority for that state- | Ketball team ‘on its ment jduring the Chri | “Iam going to fight again nex te Beatie ied ‘i i Ree irae » | Nod ami residing in lgacircentnntnsuestes gas ng worked out by Frank J. arrival from New Y tary of the Alumni as- | Plans are going for 0 North Dak t. That is entirely up | d._ In all probability | the ‘ it will be the winner of his heavy- | in weight eliminations this winter. a banquet in one of the dack Sharkey, Paulino Uzcudun and | “ity peels: nue in a <nute Hansen scem to have the best North Dakota meets hic y and Le vola, and chances through the clim- Cugncen ‘ot coming through then will play Ilinois at Ur " Jack’s Not Eager On the Pacific coast ai “I am not a bit anxious to fight are being completed to bring the 120 again, but of course money talks | 2!umni in Seattle to a banquet hon- and Rickard has made it very much | ¢ring the touring basketeers. About worth my while to return to the 300 former students and graduates ring. My eyes, which gave me con-, Will gtect the team at Los Angeles, siderable trouble some months a 0, Where another dinner is scheduled. are all right again and I feel I can| North Dakota will leave Dec. 14 on knock out any of the men in Rick.| the jaunt, and will be absent from ard’s elimination tournament.” Grand Forks until the second week However, even though the heavy- | in January. Leading colleges on the weight crown is again placed on! Pacific coast will be encountered, Jack's head, his staunchest support-| 82d the excursion will carry the ers can’t consider him as anything | Utiversity colors over 5,000 miles more than a synthetic king—unless | °f the United States BOUT PLANNED in Chicago when Champion Gene | Tunney was given the now famous | “long coun ‘unney’s retirement! from the fight racket left the heavy- weight division wide open for any man who can whip the mediocre fighters left in it. Dempsey should | be able to take any of them into| Detroit, Nov. 30—(AP)—A gen- camp despite his age, long layoff, | 'ine slugging bee with a chance at and any other handicaps you may | 2 World title in the offing is antici- pie arlene pated in tonight's 10 round bout be- Dempsey flatly refused to discuss | tween Jimmy Molar any of the conferences he has had | Weight from the Pac with Rickard to date. “Tex told me | Ra to keep mum,” he says. However, | P™™ it is reported from quite authentic | [° sources that he will receive $500,000 | ¥! or more for a fight next summer. | And he will earn it, as he can still | draw two or three times as much money as any other living fighte: not excepting Tunney. | Will Take Vacation | “T plan to stay at home until after | the holidays and then Mrs. Dempsey and I probably will take a trip to, Florida, lared the one-time | “man-killer s, I will see Rick- | 7 grad area ae ard while Tam in Florida and we | ASCE 208 sear probably will talk business. But [| Charley Crowl : ie cant say anything about thet. All|ite and now, coach at Columbia, such news will have to come from |1723 Dares Leese en ed arvard next fall. “For the next few weeks at least | »— Trish light- Coast and e of a bout lightweight ‘ith Sammy champion, Q n is heavier than Miller, but both are at their igeal fighting weight, They were to'weigh in at fternoon. HE OWNS IT ALL Rogers Caldwell, Memphis, banker and newspaper publisher, now owns "stock in the Nashville Southern Ray Miller of Chicago who has the| surmountable odds and dishearten- Only the east and south still are in the doubtful stage upd the ctnlneos are that both will remain that way even after all the returns are in. Illinois captured the western con- ference title last Saturday on the same day that southern California won the crown on the Pacific coast but the other three conference win- ners waited until Thanksgiving day to make their titles clear. A driving snowstorm at Lincoln, Neb., made good football next to im- possible but the Cornhuskers of the University of Nebraska took ad- vantage of what breaks there were to score an 8 to 0 victory over the Kansas Aggies and walk away with the “Big Six” championship. Nebras- ka finished its conference schedule undefeated. Showing a surprising reversal of form, the Utah Redskins clinched the Rocky Mountain conference title by defeating the Utah Aggies, 20 to 0. The Redskins had held the lead all season but gave their supporters many an anxious moment in the last two weeks when they were tied by Creighton and Brigham Young. Forty-five thousand persons, the largest crowd that ever saw a foot- ball game in Texas, watched the Texas University Longhorns win the Southwestern conference champion- ship by defeating their old rivals, Texas A. and M., 19 to 0. A touchdown scored in the closing minutes of play gave Drake a 6-0 triumph over Creighton and the title in the reorganized Missouri Valley conference, sf New York University’s crushing . defeat by the Oregon Aggies mud- SS ae eee dled up the championship situation TEAM CAN FIGHT Tech and Florida are left in a posi- tion to broadeast any loud titular claims. Tech crushed Auburn, 51 to 0 while Florida was rolling yp a 60 to 6 tally on Washington and Lee. These two might teams only of the Tueson, Ariz, Nov. 30.—(AP)—|22 southern conference members The scrappiest team Knute Rockne| have met neither defeat nor tie. ever has coached at Notre Dame, according to his own statement, will carry the football banner of the South Bend institution into the inter- | Sectional struggle at Los Angeles to- | morrow with southern California. Basketball Coaches!! Do you want the basketball games in which your teams take part durine the comigg season reported accurately in the newspapers of the state? If your answer is “yes,” please let the sports editor of The Bismarck Tribune know it at once. The Bist Tribune is |] cager to Dlanks to interested in fair and accurate stories. Coaches may fill them out after the games and send them immediately to The Bis- marek Tribune. The s-oring blank makes it easier for the coaches and the |] newspaper alike. Questions pertinent to the game are asked on the blank and space is al- lotted for the answer of the coach or spectator sending it to || The Tribune. The blank insures i] The Tribune that all essential {] facts will be included in the re- port, Blanks will be sent upon re- ceipt of a request from a coach. | All games reported in this manner will be printed in The Tribune and turned over to the state headquarters of the Asso- ciated Press for distribution to other newspapers throughout the state. eskins After Dreary C ——— ee FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1928 losing Contests . (Three of Country’s. Football Championships Are Decided Yesterday Help for “* ® Earl Averill That the rich’ owners of the Cleveland Indians are willing to spend all the money necessary to obtain the seen in that club’s recent purchase minor league outfielders, Averill was obtained from Cleveland se # Four Players and $90,000 Paid for Two Promising ' Rookie Outfielders Dick Porter best baseball talent available, can be of Earl Averill and Dick Porter, at a total sum of approximately $100,000. San Francisco for while Porter came up from Baltimore for $40,000 and two'players, Both were outstanding players of their respective expected to play regularly for the Indians next summer. $50,000 and two players, leagues last fall and. are Bill McKechnie Is Rewarded for Winning National League Pennant by a Free Trip to the Minors; Frank Snyder, Houston, Also Is Out’ By JAY R. VESSELS New York, Nov. 30.—(AP)—Win- ning pennants and even higher hon- ors in baseball doesn't always mean Peace and permanency for the man- ager. ; Bill McKechnie piloted the Cardi- nals’ to the 1928 National League flag. His reward is a trip to the minors. Frank Snyder headed the Hous- ton club to the Texas league pen- nant and the Dixie title, clashed with the management and is look- ing for a job for 1929. Houston had won its last gonfalon 14 years pre- viously. Bruno Showed Way Bruno Betzel showed the way to the first pennant Indianapolis of the American Association won in 11 years, hence to victory in the junior world’s series and now is understood Football Player Dies from Fractured Back |. The sage of South Bend pessimis- tically views the outcome of the im- Milwaukee, Wis., Nov. 30.—(AP) aoa ehinpers, whi of ts ee | pending battle however, and has| Waukee normal football team, died a | gone so fav as to concede defeat. But| 8" ,Aurora, Ill, hospital Thursday he leaves that answer to his players,| ight as the result of injuries re- saying to them: ceived in a football game at Napier- “I have had a lot of fighting foot- ball teams during my years at Notre ville, Ill., Saturday. Shinners suf-' fered a fractured vertebrae when he Dame, but I never coached an eleven i that has fought harder against in- made a tackle near the end of the game with North Central college. He is a nephew of Ralph Shinners, the baseball player. ME aaron aces | Football Scores : ing obstacles than this 1928 ma- chine.” Rochne and his ramblers board a Los Angeles bound train this morn- ing for the last lap of the westward journey, The team was due in the California Metropolis at 5 o'clock this afternoon, Oklahoma 14; Missouri 0. Syracuse 14; Columbia 6. Pittsburgh 25; Penn State 0. W. Virginia 14; Washington and Jefferson 0. Georgia Tech. 51; Auburn 0. HE ALSO PLAYS THIRD Dick Porter, purchased recently jby Cleveland from Baltimore as an outfielder, also plays third base in Brown 16; Colgate 13, _ nice style. N. Carolina 24; Virginia 20. ———_—_ Kentucky 0; Tennessee 0. NET STAR OF WISCONSIN Bucknell 7; Temple 7. Roy Gotfredson of Milwaukee is Marquette 6; Iowa State 0. considered the best tennis player in Vanderbilt 13; Sewanee 0. Wisconsin. iia 49; Cornell 0. I hope to spend considerable time at Tijuana. I still have an interest in m and then I have another volf, whom I think 1 make quite a showing this win Besides that, I like horse racing a sport. Every time the hors under the wire I get a new thrill.” lempsey appeared to be very little overweight upon ‘his arrival here. About three weeks in the open under the watchful eye of faithful Jerry the Greek, who still refers to Jack as “the chomp,” and every trace of fat will be gone. Although he will do no regular training for-the pres- ent, Jack plans to do some light road work, and he will work out occa-| sionally in his Manhattan gymna- sium here. * Tackle Long, of Detroit, His Sensat by Forks Rotarians) Grand Fork: D., Nov. -..I€ he gets through 1929 + Dick Porter, whose freight rom Baltimore cost the Cleve- Tands has a middle name... It's Twilley ... Joe - Glick dropped 16 grand in a and suet venture ... But got 11 back when his fight with y Joe Gans clicked huge Bs 4 « Mizell, the Georgia Tech : who writes pieces for, the Sys that Holm of the Mabamas is the best fullback he saw year.... Notre Deme and lows have rotten “press accommodations. N Se Members of the University of North Dakota football squad. were guests - of honor at a dinner in the Hotel Da- cotah Wednesday evening which was sponsored by the local Rotary club. “A program of speeches and misic’| ‘ was followed by dancing. Those at- tending included the football squad and their guests; Rotarians and their. escorts; the University coaching staff; and representatives of the university faculty. n E. K. Smiley, a member of the Rotarians was in general charge of arrangements. — Fights Last Night ills A cbancerl he lad : i recognition, says that the greatest above, of the who has been getting most of the Detroit it eleven came up in the discussion, but the boys think that as a} theatre here tackle Mr. Long is much better than Mr. Brazil is.as a a ighs 196 pounds and is extremely fast. He usuall man down on Detroit punts. He is weit first to be a better tackle than eer ee ee ee Ranks With the Best One of the mid-western experts, whose football thoughts are Fy ng, — i troit eleven. Now, Frank Brazil, halfback, is ‘the lad| New: England—Arvid Wiklund Raskowski of other noted tackles of the MUST LIKE OHIO ELEVENS Officials at Washington and Jef- ferson, who already have arranged to play Wittenberg in 1929, hope to get two other Ohio teams on their 1929 menu. (ee | STATE BRIEFS ! eS 2 New England—The New England high school glee club will present the operetta, “Windmills of Hol- land,” at the State theater in New England, December 5 and 6. s 2% Is Creating Much Talk by tional Play Pleasant View—Pie will be prom- inent when the ladies of Pleasant View entertain Saturday, December 1, It is the annual pie sale of the community. Watford City—Students of the Norwegian language in Watford City high school will present a Nor- wegian play early in ember. The cast is coached by Harold Nj structor. Hettinger—This basketball “mad” town is proud of the new uniforms that have been purchased for the Hettinger Hawks. Hi s—Daniel F. Flegel and Adeline Maier were married at the home of hael Flegel here with Reverend Gagereng D., performing the ceremony. Van Hook—Charles Crode suffer- a broken leg when a» chunk of coal fell from the ceil of the mine in which he was working, pin: given much] ning him to the tunnel floor. ts) in- tackle of the year is nice words said abobt him when this| has become sole owner of the State e interest of his partner, A. 0. Lona, to be the |Mr. Lona will continue as assistant the Detsott cashier of the Farmers and said by followers Ohio State, Sprague of ee sires Lemmon, 8. re = be in the market for a new posi- ion. McKechnie, who has been in the National League spotlight in recent years by virtue of his successes at Pittsburgh and St. Louis, didn’t ex- actly perform any miracles ‘with the 1928 Cardinals. But he did pull the team together after a danger- ous late-season slump to make a pretty finish for the senior loop championship. The team collapsed in the world’s series, however, and from then on it was just a matter of time until he was formally deposed. In a newspaper poll for the Cardinal managerial post McKechnie receiv- ed 313 out of 1,350 votes. His oppo- nent in the balloting was Billy Southworth, an old St. Louis favor- ite, who subsequently was named Cardinal managet. Snyder Piloted Houston Snyder, an old National League catcher, steered his Houston outfit WINNING PENNANTS DOESN'T GIVE MANY MAJOR MANAGERS PERMANENT POSITIONS M’CANN DEVOURS A WHOLE TURKEY Jack McCann, North Dakota’s heavyweight ring champion, disre- garded his training diet yesterday to conform with the age-old Thanks- giving custom of feasting. The Sanger pounder partook of turkey at a local hotel at 7 p. m. yesterday. And he says he ate oe but the talons and the The big boy is carrying out a heavy training campaign in Bis- marek this week and next in antici- pation of an important go with eith- er Mike Mandell, Minneapolis, or Ralph Alexander, Waterloo, Iowa, on a Twin City card in the near future. He is doing his regular roadwork every morning and going through seven or an rounds of jumping rope, sandbagging, punching the bag, and shadow-boxing each after- noon. He has established training quarters at Roberts’ gymnasium. to a brilliant triumph in the series to decide the championship of base- ball in Dixie. His team made a splendid comeback to defeat Bir- mingham, pennant winners in the Southern Associati. :. Snyder fin- ished second in a tussle with the management and was a_ former manager before the fans had quit cheering over the team’s triumph. Betzel, the Indianapolis manager, had a ball club that showed its heels to the American Association title aspirants during a large part of the season. Then the Indians overwhelmed Rochester, Interna- tional League champions, in the traditional little world’s series. It was the first Indianapolis pen- nant since 1917. The latest reports have it that the Hoosier club will be minus Betzel when the 1929 season opens. Betzel, Snyder, McKechnie — they're all singing “The Managerial Blues” now. |154-YEAR-OLD TURK’S MATRIMONIAL DESIRES AROUSE EMBASSY’S WRATH English Girls Flood British Consulate With Wedding Letters Constantinople, Turkey, Nov. 30. Turkey’s “grand old man, 154-year-old Zaro Agha,. has unwit tingly roused the ire of the British foreign office. Some time ago he expressed to the Constantinople press his desire to divorce his eleventh wife and to marry a twelfth, younger and prettier, pref- erably an American or English Recently the British consul gen- eral here received a letter from Eng- land saying: “Sir, in response to your advertisement, I should like to apply for the position of your wife. T am fond of aged people and should love to care for you in your old age. T have ‘never used paint or in my life. Hoping for a prompt and favorable reply, etc.” His majesy’s consul general dis- missed the letter as a practical jok: but discovered that the British em- THREE FOR WILL ROGERS les Moines, Iowa—()—Election returns show that three voters in Black Hawk county wanted Will Rogers for president. FRANCE LIKES MOVIES Roubaix, France. — () — Cinema enthusiasts abound in the north of France. Of a population of 200,- 000 in Roubaix and the sister town of Tourcoing, 75,000 go each week to the movies. KING FEEDS GOATHERDS Bitolj, Macedonia. — () — King Alexander of Jugoslavia - recently shared a picnic lunch with four lit- tle goatherds who were tending their flocks by the way side. The young rustics and the ruler chatted ee length of their life in the moun- ins. TAMMANY IN CONNECTICUT Torrington, Conn. — () — This town has had a “Tammany Hall” for years, unawares, Years ago a window in a central building was bassy here had also received 15 sim- ilar letters, mystery "was cleared when it was Giscovared that a London newspaper Pl up old Zaro Y Sateen de- asa ite advertisement for wife, and had inserted “ should through be mupren cases ‘bass; Eng’ having purchased the|Suar general have no inowiedge of the s alluded to, and fi aera nes ee approached as matri- bricked up. The man who did the job inserted a cement block with “Tammany ” carved in it. The lettering has been noticed only re- cently. - HIGH-PRICED CHESS Paris. —(#)— The dearest chess peat in the world has year—at the Gilli Ball at 1 Castle, Scotland and queen of England enjoy dancing and playing with E NEBRASKA HAS SEVEN ON ALL- STAR ELEVENS Cornhuskers Take Lion’s Share of Big Six All-Conference Honors Kansas City, Nov. 30.—(P)—Ne- braska, which has never lacked for football stars, produced a banner crop of players this year and snared the lion’s share of honors on the 1928 Big Six all-Conference team chosen by The Associated Press with the cooperation of conference coaches, athletic directors, officials and sport writers. Seven Cornhuskers were named on the first team and three on the second team. The preponderance of Huskers bears evidence to the su- periority of the machine which bowled over all conference opposi- tion and fared well in intersectional games. The Cornhuskers defeated Syracuse and Montana State, tied Pittsburgh and lost only to the Army, The Missouri Tigers, who shared second place honors with Oklahoma in the conference, final standings, placed two men on the first team while Oklahoma and the Kansas Ag- gies landed one each. Every con- ference member gained recognition on the second team. Besides Ne- breska’s three places, Iowa State won three, Kansas two, Missouri one, Oklahoma one, and the Kansas Aggies one. Elmer Holm, co-captain Blue Howell at Nebraska, named first team captain. Blue Howell, Nebraska fullback, and the conference's leading scorer, was a unanimous choice of the crit- ics. ° The first team’s line averages better than 200 pounds, with the backfield averaging in excess of 180. Mehrle, weighing 165 pounds, is the lightest man on the first team. The selections: with was First Team Pos Second Team Churchill, Okla le — Hauser, Kan, Lyon, Kas. Ag. lt Richards, Neb. Holm, Neb. (c) lg Shannon, Kan. James, Neb. ¢ Pearson,K. Ag. McMullen, Neb. rg Kern, Iowa St Broadstone, Neb rt Munn, Neb Brown, Mo. re Ashburn, Neb Russell, Neb qb Lindblom, Ia. Sloan, Neb. th Haskins, Okla Mehrle, Mo. th Trauger, Ia St Howell, Neb fb Waldorf, Mo. TBCH PREPARES FOR ROSE GAME Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 30.—()—Geor- gia Tech’s athletic board today set about the formality of obtaining permission of the faculty and the southern conference for participation in\the annual Rose bow! classic at Pasadena, Calif., on New Year's Day. The board acted favorably yester- day on the formal invitation from the University of California, pre- viously selected as western repre- sentative, and the Rose bowl com- mittee, Georgia Tech has won six confer- ence games and turned back Notre Dame. The University of Georgia alone remains between Tech and a perfect record. These two traditional rivals will meet on Dec. 8 in Atlanta. THIS IS PRETTY SOFT Admirers of Bill Fincher, assist- ant coach at Georgia Tech, gave him an automobile in appreciation of his work as a coach recently. LEARN A LESSON HERE Two scalpers of tickets for the recent Chicago - Illinois game were arrested and fined $25 by Chicago authorities. YOUTH RULES IN MEXICO The best tennis player in Mexico is Ricardo Tapia and the best wom- an player {s his sister. and she is 16. $40 FOR BERT Cherbourg, France. — () — Bert Acosta, the flier, has $40 waiting for him here. A misunderstanding resulting when he landed at an air- field without a permit last summer caused him to deposit 1,000 francs as a good faith guarantee. Since then the courts have settled the matter, leaving the flier $40 credit. IN PUBLIC, TOO Child in bus (to stranger): Daddy, Daddy! Mother: Hush, darling, That isn't daddy. It’s a gentleman.— Answers. THATA BABY “They tell me you kiss with your eyes open.” “Yes—I always look before I lip. —Life. The first lightning conductor was dnvented by a Bohemian monk in their subjects. Queen Mary danced srnry, Same thls rears, bs gi: He is 18 iS co

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