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SP ORWS." THE EVENING *'STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C., - TUESDAY DECEMBER 8, 1925. . 3 = SPORTS. 7 Jones Will Not Become Pro Golfer : Firpo Seeking “Easy” Money in U. S. Rings CHANGE OF STATUS NEVER CONTEMPLATED BY BOBBY Great Amateur’s Position Likely to Get Him Much More Than He Could Earn by Commercializ- ing His Ability at Ancient Links Game. BY RAY McCARTHY. EW YORK, December 8.—Bobl has no intention of turning N he says he never will tained the thought of commerciali by Jones, the world's greatest golfer, professional, has never even cnter- g his ability as a golfer, and Bobby himself made this statement to the writer, who talked to the amateur champion this week in the South. in circulation of late that the Atlanta Grange.” Tones, as modest and as unassu country ever had, took great pains tc ports and to deny them emphatically. “T cannot too strongly deny this caused me great annoyance ever since Oakmont in September Nearly ever; kind of clipping writer stating I am professional and asking me any truth in the repor from some golf about to turn | if there is Makes General Reply. “It would be impossible for me to answer all of these inquiries directly s0 1 wish vou would issue for me seneral and widespread denial. 1 have done everything in my own power to contradict these reports, but apparently 1 have not yet made my ition clear to the sport public. ody should ask you again if I | any intention of ever turning professional, I yYou would say, emphaticall; The reasons why turn professional a obvious first place, he is a university man of | standing and of keen intellect. Bobby | will continue to earn his living by his business acumen instead through his skill as a golfel i On graduating from Georgia Tech, | will not | In the Ja Persistent reports have been wizard was considering doing a “Red ming an amateur champion as this » point out the absurdity of the re- He said: sinister, persistent report, which has I won the amateur championship at day 1 receive some]where he was an honor student, Bobby | located with the Adair Realty firm of | time has | of | Atlanta and in two y troved such a valuable member that concern that he now occupies a responsible executive position. He will spend the Winter months oking after the business interests of his firm at Sarasota, Fla., and in April will return to Atlanta, where he has a permanent residence. Another reason why Bobby intention of turning professional is that golf is a game to him_and his hest means of recreation. Were he to become a professional, he would be commercializing the thing that } given him one of his greatest ple: ures in life. Bobby loves the game too well to make a business of it. Another reason why it would be foolhardy for Jomes to turn profes- sional is that as a professional his earnings would decline with increas- ing vears, whereas in business his {n- coma would become greater as he grew older. (Copyright. 1923.) NTRAMURAL TO BE BOOMED IN DIXIE aa By the Assoclated Prese of Dr. S. of the Southern Conference. Intercollegiate sports public, such as track, basket ball an benefit from the avowed policies of ti It was to these things President Sanford pointed in answering critics of so-called ‘‘commercialized” college foot ball. “Commercialism in necessarily an evil,” the conference head declared. “It is not how much money a college receives from its foot ball contests—it is how the mone) is spent. Have Place for Mone) Adnitting that colleges cleared large sums from their major gridiron clashes,. President Sanford asked: “What of the return from track mests, basket ball and cross-country con- t 82 “These activities require the trans- portation of teams, in many instances | as large as, or larger than, the aver- age foot ball squad,” he said. “Gate re- pts usually amount to next to noth- ing. Yet these are important athletic sports and must be encouraged by the colleges if well rounded programs of athletic training are to be main- tained. “Foot ball solves the question of expense and it is to foot ball alone the majority of southers Institutions must turn.” Lacking in endowments and appropriated funds, conference colleges must spread the earnings of foot ball over the entire program “Few conference se teams -ver draw sufficient crowds to meet | the expenses of a season. How, then, | is base ball to be maintained? Not to mention the salaries of athletic i structors and other expenses inci- dental to a college’s progi of | sports.” The conference president will con- | tinue to sponsor the one foreign game freshman foot ball schedule. He will not favor an athlete engaging in suc- cessive sports, and he will fight the infringement of athletics upon the | academic life of the educational in- stitution. This he made plain more than one time during the last session »f_the conference. Tulane officials favor even a more re- strictive freshman athletic rule. They lost_their proposal, though, to limit freshman foot ball games to intra- | mural contests. Encounter Opposition. Ga., December itself is not | | | | | am | Faculty members of the conference | body will encounter opposition from | some coaches on many of theif pro- posed restrictive programs. Limita- tion of freshman contests to the campus will cause good high_ school and prep school material to seek insti- tutions where the ruling does not pro- hibit them from playing foreign games, the mentors contended. “The colle it men to graduate,” President & stressed. “*Athletics must not submerge the academic side | of college life. The two must go, side | by side, into a fuller and more rounded development. The freshman year is a critical period when the most stress must Dbe laid upon the academic things.” The conference took no action, as had been predicted, to_compile a con- Sorence basket ball schedule. It was generally the opinion that the large ! membership and territorial expanse stood in the way of such arrangement. At the last meeting of the executive committee, held on September 19, 1925, it had been decided to limit the teams entering the conference tournament to 16, these teams to be selected on the basis of percentage in eight confer- ence games. If there are not 16 teams which play ecight conference games, teams that show special excellence may be invited. GOLF STARS TO CLASH. ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., December & UP).—Walter 1lagen, American pro- fessional champion, and Nichols, Yasadena professional. will meet Bob Gardner, Chicago, and George Rotan, JHouston, crack amateurs representing the delegates to the Investment Bank- ers’ Association of America conven- tion, in an 18-hole matéh today at the Pasadena Golf and Country Club. DENT PLAYS LEPPINE. Morris Dent and Chick Leppine will furnish tonight’s match in the District pocket billiard tourney. Parsons de- feated Hampton last night, 100 _to_4 FALLING HAIR Successfully Checked By Newbro’s Herpicide “The Quality Hair To SOLD AT _DRUG STORE: APPLIED AT BARBER SHOPS ATHLETICS Intramural athletics, neglected through | lack of funds by Southern institutions, but highly developed in the colleges of other sections, will be promoted under the leadership V. Hanford of the University of Georgia, re-clected president | the variety that find less patronage from the nd cross-country contests, will also he conference leader. Inside Golf By Chester Horton. There are times when an intention ally hooked iron shot to the green is| a great advantage. Some players make it a rule to send up every ap- proach with a slight hook or a tade-away on the end of it. Observa- tion of approaches shows that far more of them are short than long. This results per- haps from the player's caution not to be over the sreen and in trouble. So many golfers prefer to impart_a the ball after it hits the green, and generally this is a good practice when it is not nec- essary to make the byll stop dead. Also You hit a green occasionally with slope. The best way'to get to the pin in such circumstances is to hit the near corner of the green above the pin and roll down—a hook if the pin is to the left. a fade-away if it is to the right. The slightest roll of the forearms, over or under, as the ball is hit will vield this effect near the end of the ball's flight. (Copyright, 19: 25.) OUGHT FOR DAVIS CUP PLAY By the Associated Press. PARIS, December 8.—The French Tennis Federation has requested the United States Lawn Tennis Asso tion to arrange that at least se days shall elapse between the comple- tion of the interzone final and the gh:lllen:r‘ round of Davis cup play in 926. The federation was influenced in its action by the near collapse of Jean Borotra and Rene La Coste'at the end of last Summer’s Davis cup matches against the American team. The French organization also has requested that important rounds of Davis cup tennis be scheduled for F) v. Saturday and Monday to give the vlayers a full day’s rest between the doubles and final singles matche: Borotra and La Coste, - France's 5 Davis cup representatives, played strongly against Tilden and Johnston n their opening matches, but weak- | ened at the end. You seem rather certain of going to the United States again next year,” it was remarked to Capt. Max Decugis of the French Davis cup team, who was largely instrumental in having these requests made. “I feel that we have a pretty good chance,” he answered. .- GAINS TWO RING TITLES. MANILA, December § (#).—Johnny Hill, Filipino lightweight, established claim to the lightweight, feather- weight and bantamweight champion- ships of the Orient by defeating Kid Moro in a 12-round boxing bout. FLORIDA ELECTS SARRA. GAINESVILLE. Fla.. Decernber 8 (®).—Lamar Sarra, University of Florida center, has been’ elected cap- tain of the 1926 'Gator eleven. Jet us put on| Y GTERIRDW Enjoy youy car L. S. JULLIEN 1443 P St. N.W, Main 811 has no | roll to| NOTRE DAME BOOKS GAMES WITH U. S. C. By the Associated Pres LOS ANGELES, December home-and-home foot ball has been arranged betwgen Southern California and Notre Dame, Gwynn Wilson, graduate manager of U. c., has announced. The first of the two games will be played in Los Angeles December 4 next year, while the Southern Califor- nia team will go East the following vear. The second game probably will be sgiving day, Wilson said. Dame triumphed over the West last New Year day, defeat- ing Stanford, to 10, in the annual tournament of roses at Pasadena. Southern California has played four | intersectional games and has won all of them. OLD LINERS ARE LISTED ON TARHEEL GRID CARD CHAPEL HILL, N. C., December $§ (P).—Tennessee will be a newcomer on the 1926 foot ball schedule of North Carolina, according to the list just announced. The Tarheels have a card of nine games for next year, four of them being at home. The schedule follow: September 25—Wake Forest, at Wake Forest. October October October October 8.—A agreement 2—Tennessee, t Knoxville. H—South Carolina. 16—Duke University. Muryland, Park, Md. g ‘Ociober 30—North Carolina State. November 6—Virginin Military November 13—Davidson, at Davidson. i, at Charlotteaville. KENTUCKY GRID TEAM LISTS NINE CONTESTS| LEXINGTON, Ky. December § (P).—The 1926 foot ball schedule of the University of Kentucky has been completed as follow: e ut Bloomington. ton and Lee. 3—Virginia Poly. 0—Florida, at J‘;lrkmnlillo November G—Alabama, at Birmi November 13—Virginia Military at_Churleston, W. Vi November November | | | i ngham. Institute, BAMA HAS DECIDED TO PLAY COAST GAME CHICAGO, December 8 (#).—Ala bama, foot ball champion of the South, will clash with a Pacific Coast team in the tournament of woses at Pasadena New Year day, The Coast Conference meets Friday and Saturday in Seattle, when an- | nouncement of Alabama’s opponent is | thing | With what I collected today By the Associated Prese N In his dash for the new goal admission. citizen, riding around in his car. Grange's statements as to his fature came after a day of signing pape which enriched his cause by some- | like $375,000. The Arrow Pic- tures Corporation produced a check for §300,000 for his appearance in mo- | tion pictures. Manufacturing firms | contributed $40,000 for the use of his name in_connection with various articles. The New York professional | foot ball management paid $35,000 for | his performance in the game here Sun- | day. 1 Just before departing for W ton, where he plays again Grange managed to recover himself | long enough to remark: “I told father that I was leaving college before graduating because 1 thought |1 could earn encugh in pro- fessional foot ball to repay him for what he spent on my education. But I got that much so quickly I figured I'd better go on and get set for life. I'y ready got salted away in the nearly half a million dollars. “Of course, Pyle (his manager) gets his share of that money. but if things break right this Winter I will clear n 1y a million, When I get that much I will go back home and be a GRANGE FIXES A MLLION AS GOAL BEFORE QUITTING W YORK, December 8—“Red” Grange, who has crossed other people’s goal lines so often that he has become the Nation's most famous foot ball character, has set one for himseli—$1,000,000. Red” has stiff-armed love, by his own When he makes his “touchdown” he plans to go back to Wheaton, TIl, now become famous for its ice and redheads, and be a solid prominent citizen and ride around in my car. 0. T don’t think I'll ever go into politics. No, I'm not figuring on be- ing married soon. 1 don't at the mo- ment know any girl who would have me.” The check for $300,000 which he re- ceived yesterday will be deposited in a bank at Champaign, TIl., home town of the university which gave Grange his fame. It will be held in trust for Red until he is ready to work for the pictures. His contract with the firm says that he will share at a certain percentage in the gross receipts from his first picture, the $300,000 being the mini- mum guarantee drawn against the percentage. Grange's sports starring vehicle will be a tory, the Arrow officials having announced that it will be writ- ten by a well known sporting writer while Red is runing around gridirons from here to Florida and thence to California. His team, the Chicago Bears, play in Washington today, Boston tomor- row,” Pittsburgh Friday, Detroit Sun- day and then departs for the South- land. F OOT BALL'S 1925 today triumph if they wou campus privileges by the sophs. Now the local varsities will be busy | arranging gridiron schedules for next vear and preparing teams fc sports to be fostered this Winter. The dinner at holic University last night was sponsored by the Dod Noon Club and the diners were ad- dressed by Athletic Director Charles Mor: and other men prominently pected to be made. Reports from Seattle indicated that the University of Washington, which declined an invitation to would reconsider. SOUTH CAROLINA ADDS WOFFORD TO SCHEDULE COLUMBIA, S. C., December 8 (#). —\Wofford College has been given the foot ball schedule for 1926. The schedule: September 25—Erskine. October 2—Maryland. October 9—North Carolina, at Chap- el Hill October 15—Wofford. October 21—Clemson (State fair). October 27—Citadel, at Orangeburg. November 6—Virginia Poly, at Ric! mond. November 13—Furman. November lina State PASSING IS STOPPABLE. BOSTON, December 8 (&). Brown, backfield ccach for Brown | Universit and co-worker with the late Percy Haughton at Harvard, | holds that no aei tack has been devised that cannot be stopped by a shrewdly coached eleven. He points out that Brown this vear stopped the | forward passing of Dartmouth Reggie HARVARD GRID LIST CAMBRIDGE, Mass., December 8. | Harvard's foot ball schedule for 1926, which has just been completed, con' tains two games which were not on last season's card. Also there have been several shifts, calculated to make igssgoing a little easier than it was in Geneva College, coached by “Bo” MeMillan, former Centre College star, has been'listed as the opening oppo: nent. Tufts is again on the schedule, com- ing to the stadium between Harvard’s games with Dartmouth and Princeton. Holy Cross will be playved a weel earlier than jt was last Fall, and the game with William and Mary two weeks earlier. Also the Brown game, which was played at Providence this Fall, will re- turn to the Stadium here. The only game to be played away from home is that of November 20, with Yale, at New Haven. The sched ule: October 20, Geneva; 16, William and Mar) 30, Tufts. November 6, Princeton; 13, Brown; 20, Yale, at New Haven. ——— RADIATORS, FENDERS BODIES MADE AND REPAIRED NEW RADIATORS FOR AUTOS WITTSTATT’S R. & F. WKS. £ Give an WATERBURY 9, Holy Cross; 1 , Dartmouth A jeweled watch that combines stamina with style. 12-size; nickel case. It has the dependability that everyone expects’in an Ingersoll. | compete, | last open date on the South Carolina | SHOWS NEW RIVALS | identified with the university. In his | talk the athletic director urged great- er co-operation between alumni and and paid a glowing tribute to the foot ball team and its coach, Jack Mc- Auliffe. Basket ball and boxing will claim the attention of the athletes at Catho- lic University the remainder of the Winter. The court squad now is training to go through a strenuous campaign and a number of matches have been arranged for the boxers. Coach Mitchell has announced that his team will meet the Penn Roxers at home February 6 and that the Washington and Lee and Virginia Polytechnic Institute teams also will appear Brookland. Navy will be met at Annapolis and a home engage- ment with Colgate is pending. Next fall Catholic University will open its foot ball season at home on September 25, playing Blue Ridge Col lere. On October 2 Boston College will visit Brookland October 9 and a rame with Holy Cross at Worcester | has been scheduled for November 13. | George Washington probably will be | facea on Thanksgiving da: The Brooklanders also are seeking dates with Villanova, Dickinson, | Franklin and Marshall, D orgetown, 17 members of the Varsity squad were awarded let- vesterday and a captain for next { vear ‘may be.chosen later this week. | Those getting “G's” were Capt. Jac Hagerty, Anthony Brennan, Harry Connaughton, Emmett Foley, Gene | Golsen, Bob Gormley, Heinie Jawish | Frank McGrath, Lou Metzger, Mossy | Mosko, George Murtagh, O'Neil, Tony Plansky, Otto Saur, Jerry Thompson, Carl Waite and Claude Grigsby. With a deal of brilliant talent at hand, Georgetown is preparing to enter a big track season. Coach | O'Reilly has under his direction such fine performers as Plansky, Ascher, Burgess, McClain, Haas, Swinburne, Norton, Dussault and Gegan. Having no hall here large enough o accommodate a track meet, Wash- ingtonians desiring to see the Hill- top flyers in action will have to go abroad. Georgetown will start its sea- son at the Fordham games in New York on January 16. A week later, Gift gift that will st preciative interest heart.? beard to shave wants one. be imprinted in gold free. your money back. students in promoting college spirit | state | wili be encountered in the Hub. Lovola | Bucky | C. U. BANQUETS GRIDDERS; reign was ended formally at Catholic University last night when the Red and Black gridders were feted by faculty and students, and was to be concluded at Georgetown University with a game between freshmen and sophomore elevens. The annual contest that was to be staged at the Hilltop this morn- ing is known as the “battle of the caps,” In which the freshmen must 1 cast aside their skull caps and be conceded other | Just the Kind of Gift a Man Buys for Himself RealMan’s LIFETIME of pleasant shaves—can you imagine a e a more ap- in a man’s The Spiro-Strop puts a super-keen edge on lette or Durham Duplex blades. Name in Gold Free Bring this ad to your favorite druggist, dept. store or sporting goods dealer and an: If hubby doesn’t like it after using 10 days get THE AMERICAN STROPPER CORP. BALTIMORE, MD. The SPIRO-STROP For Better, Cleaner Shaving | meet and thereafter will be kept busy other | he Hilltoppers will enter the Bucknell competing in various meets in York, Boston and Buffalo. New BASKET BALL “SECRETS By Sol Metzger. In Shooting for Basket. While it is true that the easiest way to shoot for the basket is the underhand toss, as all experienced players will agree, the better and more successful method from scrimmage is the chest shot as depicted in the fllus- tration on the left. The chest shot is r harder to stop, as the reader can see. The underhand toss is not prac- | tical in sclentific basket ball. It is| too easy to stop and it takes a bit longer to execute. Use the chest shot. | shooting with hoth hands and Ionmngl‘ the ball in it course to the basket. (Copyright. 19 DAVIDSON WILL PLAY TEN GRIDIRON GAMES DAVIDSON, N. C., December 8.— Davidson College has completed its foot ball schedule for 1926 as follows: September 18—FElon College. September 25-—Wofford. at Spartanburg. October 2—Presbyterian, at Rockhill, 8. C. October 9—Guilford. g October 14—North Carolina State, Raleigh. October 23—Wake Forest, at Charlotte. Qetober 3 at ‘Lexington, \a. November 6—Hampdén-Sidney (place un- decided): % 33—North Carolina. November ovember 25—Duke. at Durham. at TO COACH HARVARD NINE. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., December 8 (®).—Fred Mitchell, former big league player and scout, pitching coach and business manager of the Boston Braves, has signed a three-year con- tract as head coacH of Harvard base ball. Mitchell has been battery coach of the Crimson team for the past two seasons. y name d®signated will FOOT BALL IS AGAIN ATTACKED, DEFENDED By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, December §.—Foot ball's greatest season in history has developed a discussion of its merits which bids falr to last until another | season approaches. The latest attack on the college sport comes from Dr. Stewart Paton, | psychiatrist and author, a. member of | the Princeton faculty and trustee of Carnegie Institution” at Washington. He calls foot ball a menace to the mental and physicai well being of the players, declaring that long prac- tices impose an often unbearable emotional strain. that the “organized support for the team called for from the whole stu- dent body is bezinning to have its effect in lowering the mental life of American universitics to the dead wi nos N He also contends | war debts. wares before the home folk, and witl COIN MORE THAN CHANCE AT DEMPSEY LURES LUIS Argentine Heavyweight Probably Not So Eager to Encounter Champion Again, But Would Like to Meet Set-ups for Fat Purses. BY SPARROW McGANN, EW YORK, December 8—Why is Luis country? To fight Dempsey, he moter’s siren voice. Also he has heard of rpo con say He ha the Florida land boom and t In the Spring he will be here. Then prepare to lau Just now the tamed cow of the pampas is busy fulfilling engagemer th the movie people. What he wants to do first is to show his pugili great show of bravery he unced that he was ready for any man picked level ioss Coach Tad Jones of Yale and Coach | Gil Dobie of Cornell took up arms for foot ball one of the finest influences for rood in the life of any university, years of experience with the actual game, not from the outside looking in, but from the inside looking out. What | ing to recommend foot ball needs today more than any- thing else is fewer reformers.” ducted as to be of no detriment to academic procedure. coach, and Parke Davis, foot ball his- torian, yesterday joined the opposition Then, on the quict, he wired his old shock absorbe rub bear’s grease on his joints, and beat it for the Argentine But some one must have wised up | mistake Wei the boxing authbrities down there to | toss the Tate, for they refused to sanction the | blond idly in tt match. They have not forgotten the | rounds vear. He Farmer Lodge and Al Reich fiascos. | full of coura 1 he pushed And while they dearly love to see the | lefts into F face thar Bull, they don’t fall for all his Bull had ever n hefore, of bunk. of mediocrity. This brings I in initiative and freedom of thought, he says. 1 by throwing Upon reading Dr. Paton’s criticism | e Charley was not who went out ti the previous 3 me 1 of mor “I firmly believe that foot ball is wi the " Jones 2 %0 aolina. o gay Paree lumbering Sidestepped me sald. “This opinion is based on Firpo No Marvel. Then « the Ri American | fell fo fight fans. Clever press agents and |/ade m: matchmakers who got him & string of | Would f set-ups to kayo all over the country GUATter of a m succeeded in getting Luis a champion- | Tunney would ship bout as well as a_quarter of 2 mil- | than that. Cornell players | lion dollars. He is doing well at home | Well. Firpo work under ideal conditions and foot | with his moving picture shows and |A8ainst Faolina, ball in no way interferes with their |his agency of an easy-selling American | “hopper, and snapy scholastic obligations or motor car. There need be no !'”‘ul !\:wx:»:!lm. 1 ut when he physical well-being.” He added that criticisms mpathy for him in this sympathetic = being directed at the game by those who have no interest in it. | Some folks continue to point to his | sensational fight against Dempsey and | h¢ 80 back I this will surely be ballvhooed to the | I pesetas and | tmit when he arrives here. But it is | come here and fight . e |a matter of fact and history t to the Views of E. K. Hall, chairman | Dempaey floored. the fierce one. with. doubt Dempsey we of the foot ball rules committee, on (gt undue effort. | to ‘accommodate him in plac professionalism and all-American team | “"Svell, ¢ ‘will be said, he knocked Wills next year. This be selections. oy ion Cor it e roally | least serve to sidetrack the professional game has become |pe is eredit which time Harry m solid and that material could be found | The idea of & novice with less than | Pressed down by his years and be both in and outside of the college |4 vears' experience and 30 fghis prey for the younger Dempsey ranks. He found no evil influence In | mest of them against Set-ups—hittir t.1925.) selecting all-American team: |an experienced man flush on the chit au Fundamentalism in 100t iall is out | 1 hard to believe INS MATCH. date,” he asserted. “The game 3 2l outgrown old fogey ideas.” | Fell for Movies? December S (P).—P; Lieut. F. W. o long as professional foot ball is | @ There are those who think Dempsey | played honestly and capably managed | took that dive for the pictures Sna Tt Attt hostile criticism is not deserved,” | Movies of the fight woul t have e ata e Das A been worth 30 cents in South Ame; L oo naent ica unless the foreigner did something el e el telling effect Firpo, as a matter of fact, has noth him - to You bet lither Demy Dobie said: : P Wills o “Athletics at Cornell are so con- v f for les woo ed it on th ith Americ Why shot d fight iope Sanford, former rope Foster Rutgers of Harr would the months, begin to b be ed with being (Copyr of PRINCE W. LONDON Wales de nd in the showed i walls The GAIN BOWLING OMAHA, Nebr., December 8 (#).— | Champions were named in the Mid west Bowling Association tournament | here in the final contests. The Flint- | Durkee Motors team of Kansas City won the fiveman team stake, with | 2,950; W. Anderson of Sioux Falls,|found in the big black an opponent Iowa, took the singles with 668; L.|who could handle him with ease. A Triego and A. Nelson, Denver, won |left in the pit of the stomach nes the doubles with 1,211, and J. Looney, | ruined him and a _crack on the te Omaha, won the all-event medal with | practically broke him 1,840. | Then Luis tried to o AJA NASH-BUILT sensational. Hence the dive. After Firpo ceased to be to draw the suckers was turne vose for anybody to smack around Luis believed all the stories told abo: Harry Wills' age and faint-heartedn and took on the negro. 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